Rationalizing Costs in Investment Treaty Arbitration

Susan D. Franck
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引用次数: 31

Abstract

International investment and related disputes are on the rise. With national courts generally unavailable and difficulties resolving disputes through diplomacy, investment treaties give investors a right to seek redress and arbitrate directly with states. The costs of these investment treaty arbitrations - including the costs of lawyers for both sides, as well as administrative and tribunal expenses - are arguably substantial. This Article offers empirical research indicating that even partial costs could represent more than 10% of an average award. The data suggested a lack of certainty about total costs, which parties had ultimate liability for costs, and the justification for those cost decisions. Although there were signs of balance and a preference for parties to be responsible for their own costs, there was neither a universal approach to cost allocation nor a reliable relationship between cost shifts and losing. Awards typically lacked citation to legal authority and provided minimal rationale, and the justifications for cost decisions exhibited broad variation. Small pockets of coherence existed. Tribunals typically decided costs only in the final award; and as the amount investors claimed increased, tribunal costs also increased. Such a combination of variability and convergence can disrupt the value of arbitration for investors and states. In light of the data, but recognizing the need for additional research to replicate and expand upon the initial findings, this Article recommends states consider implementing measures that encourage arbitrators to consider specific factors when making cost decisions, obligate investors to particularize their claimed damages at an early stage, and facilitate the use of other Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR) strategies. Establishing such procedural safeguards can aid the legitimacy of a dispute resolution mechanism with critical implications for the international political economy.
投资条约仲裁费用合理化
国际投资及相关争端呈上升趋势。由于国家法院通常不存在,通过外交途径解决争端也很困难,投资条约赋予投资者直接向国家寻求补救和仲裁的权利。这些投资条约仲裁的成本——包括双方的律师费用,以及行政和法庭费用——可以说是巨大的。本文提供的实证研究表明,即使是部分成本也可能占平均奖励的10%以上。这些数据表明,总费用、哪一方对费用负有最终责任以及这些费用决定的理由缺乏确定性。虽然有平衡的迹象,而且倾向于当事方对自己的费用负责,但既没有一种普遍的费用分配办法,也没有费用转移和损失之间的可靠关系。判决书通常缺乏对法律权威的引用,提供的理由很少,费用决定的理由也有很大的差异。连贯性的小口袋是存在的。法庭通常只在最终裁决中决定费用;随着投资者索赔金额的增加,法庭费用也在增加。这种可变性和趋同的结合可能会破坏仲裁对投资者和国家的价值。鉴于这些数据,但认识到需要进一步的研究来复制和扩展初步发现,本文建议各国考虑实施措施,鼓励仲裁员在做出成本决策时考虑具体因素,要求投资者在早期阶段具体说明其索赔损害,并促进其他替代性争议解决(ADR)策略的使用。建立这种程序性保障有助于解决争端机制的合法性,对国际政治经济具有重要影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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