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Arbitration Defined
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Arbitration is the most traditional form of private dispute resolution.
Arbitration is a binding procedure. It is often "administered" by a
private organization that maintains lists of available arbitrators and
provide rules under which the arbitration will be conducted. Such
organizations can also manage the arbitration in whole or in part.
Parties often select arbitrators on the basis of substantive expertise.
Arbitration is adjudicatory, as opposed to advisory, because of the fact
that the arbitrator (usually a retired judge or attorney) renders a
decision at the end of an arbitration hearing, and that decision is final
and binding, subject only to a very limited court review. Arbitration is
sometimes referred to as "non-binding" if the parties agree to make
it so, but that is really a misnomer. Think of arbitration as a binding,
adjudicatory process.
The Process
Most arbitration is driven by a pre-dispute contract entered into by the
parties, in which they agree that if a dispute should arise, it will
never get into the court system. The Federal Arbitration Act, coupled
with the state arbitration law of the place of arbitration, generally
governs the process. If the parties choose an administering authority,
such as JAMS, that authority's arbitration rules will govern the
procedure that will be followed.
By agreeing to arbitration, the parties, perhaps among other things, are
waiving their fundamental, constitutional right to a trial by a jury of
their peers. They can have no de novo (second trial) after they have
gone to arbitration. Unless otherwise agreed, the decision is legally
bindingand non-appealable, except in extremely limited circumstances,
such as in the case of fraud or collusion on the part of the arbitrator.
In general the arbitrator is an impartial person chosen by the parties.
The arbitrator reads briefs and documentary evidence, hears testimony,
examines evidence and renders an opinion on liability and damages in
the form of an "award of the arbitrator" after the hearing. Once
confirmed by a court of appropriate jurisdiction, the award can be
subsequently entered as a judgment.
High-Low Arbitration
Also known as Bracketed Arbitration. This is an arbitration wherein the
parties have agreed in advance to the parameters within which the
arbitrator may render his or her award. If the award is lower than the
pre-set "low," the defendant will pay the agreed-upon low figure; if
the award is higher than the pre-set "high," the plaintiff will accept
the agreed-upon high; if the award is in between, the parties agree to
be bound by the arbitrator's figure. The high and low figures may or
may not be revealed to the arbitrator.
Baseball Arbitration
A form of binding arbitration wherein each of the parties chooses one and
only one number, and the arbitrator may select only one of the figures as
the award. In a baseball arbitration, there are only two possible
outcomes.
Night Baseball Arbitration
Like baseball arbitration, this is a form of arbitration wherein the
parties exchange their own determination of that value of the case, but
the figures are not revealed to the arbitrator. The arbitrator will
assign a value to the case and the parties agree to accept the high or low
figure closest to the arbitrator's value.
Non-Binding Arbitration
A procedure sometimes called "non-binding arbitration" is conducted much
like a (binding) arbitration, except that when the arbitrator issues the
award after the hearing, it is not binding on the parties and they do
not give up their right to a jury trial. In that case, the arbitrator's
award is merely an advisory opinion. Many cases go to settlement or
(binding) arbitration after this phase, or they can choose to
go to a trial.
Mandatory Arbitration
Also known as Judicial Arbitration or Court-Ordered Arbitration. A
legislatively mandated or court administered scheme for the resolution of
pending court cases (usually valued at under $50,000), utilizing informal
rules of evidence and procedure in a non-binding, advisory arbitration
process that is ordered by the court at an early stage of a lawsuit. The
availability of this process depends upon local state laws or
court procedures.
© Copyright 2003 JAMS. All rights reserved.
For more information, please visit our website at
www.jamsadr.com, or call your local JAMS office at
1-800-352-5267.
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