Characteristics of Arbitration:
Voluntary: Parties must expressly agree to arbitrate in writing, or fall
within the ambit of legislation that mandates arbitration in a given situation.
If the parties have agreed to arbitrate, the court, on the motion of one of the
parties to the agreement, will generally require the parties to submit the
dispute to arbitration, unless it is found that the arbitration agreement is
null and void, inoperative or incapable of being performed.
Controlled: The parties and their counsel are able to control procedural
aspects of the process, including the choice of neutral, timing and location of
the hearing, as well as whom, other than the parties themselves, may be
present.
Private: Arbitration is usually conducted in private.
Informal: Subject to the CAA, there are no prescribed procedural or
evidentiary rules governing arbitration. The rules of procedure are established
by the adoption of existing rules, by a negotiated arbitration agreement
between the parties, or by the parties and the arbitrator.
Adjudicative: As in litigation, once a case has been presented by each side, the
arbitrator issues a decision. Article 31 of the Code requires that an arbitral
award shall be in writing, and that reasons be provided unless the parties have
agreed that no reasons are required.
Binding/Non-Binding: All federal arbitration under the Commercial
Arbitration Act is binding. Judicial review of an arbitral award is
available only on limited grounds such as incapacity of a party; invalidity of
an arbitration agreement; or that the award is in violation of law or public
policy.
Confidential: Arbitration is generally confidential, if the parties so elect. In
the federal context, the restrictions on divulging information and the
requirement to disclose information pursuant to the Privacy Act and
the Access to Information Act must be complied with. For
further information about the application of these Acts, see
"Confidentiality:
Adversarial: While the arbitration process is based on the adversarial style of
the litigation model, the demeanour and nature of the hearing are determined by
the parties, their counsel and the arbitrator.
Flexible: The parties have discretion in choosing an arbitrator and the
procedure to be followed in resolving the dispute.