Arbitration
Chris Honeyman
President, CONVENOR
Director, Broad Field Project
Definition:
Arbitration includes any process in which parties agree to refer a dispute
to a third person or group for a decision.
Users:
Users of arbitration may include anyone involved in a small claim against
a store or other business, as well as attorneys, business and labor officials,
and other repeat players.
Description:
Arbitration is often used to obtain a quicker, less expensive, and more expert
decision than the courts are thought to provide. Sometimes the decision is
advisory (that is, not binding), but more often, both parties agree in advance
to follow the arbitrators decision (called an award ). Generally when
there has been such an agreement, the courts will enforce an arbitration
decision, unless it obviously violates the law.
Because the purpose of arbitration is to get a relatively quick and expert
decision, and because there is usually no appeal, the selection of the arbitrator
matters greatly. Systems of selecting arbitrators vary. In thousands of labor-management
disputes, arbitrators are typically selected case-by-case from an established
list, with each party striking the names least acceptable to it until one
name remains. But in international or large commercial cases, the process
of defining a mutually acceptable arbitrator may be much more involved, while
in small claims court cases and non-union employment disputes, the customer
or employee may have little direct influence over who the arbitrator might
be. Arbitrators are typically lawyers or other experienced professionals
with a specific background in the type of case involved. In consumer and
other small-scale disputes, they may simply be local citizens who are willing
to serve in this capacity.
In labor-management cases and some other disputes, the arbitrator normally
writes a decision explained in almost as much detail as a full written opinion
by a court. But in other settings, awards are delivered with no written or
oral explanation. In general, full-length written awards are used where parties
expect that the case may be a guide for future similar problems between them;
the no-explanation approach is generally used where parties either are more
interested in speed and economy, or where they are concerned that a losing
party might use any arguable error in the decision to challenge the result
in court. Thus both small claims and some quite large disputes, such as those
over future rents for the land underlying a large office building, may follow
this pattern.
Example:
Joe Smith is late for work four times in two months; his employer says this
is unacceptable and fires him. Smiths union complains that this is unfair
because he was not properly warned that being late was seen as so serious
that it could get him discharged. In three successively higher-level meetings,
union and management representatives argue over the case, but are unable
to reach an agreement. Under the parties three-year contract covering hundreds
of workers, arbitration is the final step of the grievance procedure; the
union requests arbitration. The union then submits a form requesting a panel
of five arbitrators to the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service, one
of a number of government and private agencies which maintain rosters of
professional arbitrators. The agency sends each party a short list of five
arbitrators and their biographies, chosen at random from the hundreds on
file with the agency (the computer selecting the random list is set to select
only from arbitrators in the same part of the country as the parties.) The
parties then strike names alternately until one name is left; this becomes
the selected arbitrator. The parties then arrange a date for a hearing with
the arbitrator; as is usual, the hearing takes less than a day, although
in this instance the parties agree that they will file briefs afterward,
and give themselves thirty days to do so. A month or two after that, the
arbitrator issues her decision, which is binding on all concerned. (Small
disputes are often resolved much quicker than this; big commercial cases
can take much longer. The only general rule is that for any given type of
case, the same case would probably take longer if submitted to court decision
rather than arbitration. But even this is not always true because arbitration
varies so much from one setting to another.)
Application:
Arbitration is useful whenever parties know that they will be unable to resolve
a dispute by negotiation or mediation, and want a decision that is at least
likely to be both faster and more expert than they think they will get in
court. It is also useful as a last resort built into a continuing relationship
in advance, at the end of a series of negotiation (and mediation) steps,
because the prospect of an imminent arbitration may help both parties concentrate
on settlement possibilities that are not ideal, but are seen as better for
both parties than any likely decision. Arbitration is not useful where the
parties must have a definitive answer that will stand as a public precedent
for similar cases in the future; but cases which appear to fit that profile
should be examined closely, because there is evidence that there are fewer
of them than parties tend to believe in the heat of the moment.
Links to Related Articles:
Arbitrator Certification, Credentialing, and Rosters
Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR)
Mediation
How to Find a Mediator
When to Arbitrate
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