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Arbitration Clauses: Do's and Don'ts for Leasing Lawyers

By Stephen Jagusch, Laura Martin and James Kwan
June 29, 2005

When faced with a transaction in which the arbitration of potential future disputes would offer advantages over court litigation or other forms of dispute resolution, a critical first step is to create a workable, enforceable arbitration agreement. In most instances, this agreement will be the “arbitration clause” included in the lease. A poorly drafted arbitration clause can create time-consuming and costly delays to the arbitration process. Arbitration agreements must be drafted carefully, and expert advice should be sought on all but the most straightforward two-party, single-contract cases. For U.S. parties involved in cross-border transactions, an arbitration agreement may be more appealing than court litigation because of the Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards (the “New York Convention”) under which awards may be enforced abroad with relative ease. The New York Convention currently has 137 signatory countries. No analogous treaty currently exists for court awards rendered in the United States.

What to Do

1) Make sure you have a clear, unequivocal agreement to arbitrate. A clause that does not firmly commit the parties to arbitrate their disputes may not be enforceable;

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