Dispute resolution methods are litigation, negotiation, mediation and arbitration. Handing disputes requires litigation law firm with dispute lawyers in Vietnam having experience and knowledge to provide resolutions to complex cross-border issues, commercial and civil disputes.
In
the current business environment, most business agreements could contain a
clause stipulating that disputes arisen must be resolved in arbitration.
For a dispute to be referred to arbitration, there must be a valid
arbitration agreement in writing, either as an arbitration clause within a
contract or a separate agreement. If the agreement is included within the
context of a contract, the arbitration clause is considered independent, and
any modification, extension, or termination of the contract does not affect the
validity of the arbitration clause. Vietnamese law allows for a written
arbitration agreement to take the form in any written form, so long as the
writing clearly indicates the parties’ intent to resolve any dispute via
arbitration. If a dispute falls within the scope of a valid arbitration
agreement, but a party attempts to initiate court proceedings, the residing
court does not have jurisdiction over the matter, and must drop the case.
Moreover, an arbitration agreement does not have to stipulate specific dispute
matters and/or the arbitration organization authorized to resolve disputes
without supplemental agreement. Even if there is a valid arbitration
agreement, Vietnamese Arbitration Law stipulates that in order for a dispute to
go to arbitration, it must also fit into one of three categories:
(1)
disputes arising from “commercial activities”;
(2)
disputes where at least one party is engaged in commercial activities;
(3)
other disputes where the law stipulates that arbitration is a permissible means
of resolution.
In
category (1), the term “commercial activity” is defined in Commercial Law No.
36-2005-QH11 (31 December 2005) as “activity for profit-making purposes
comprising the purchase and sale of goods, provision of services, investment,
commercial enhancement, and other activities for profit-making purposes.”
The types of disputes that often fall into the second category are
noncommercial disputes, such as civil disputes, where at least one party to the
dispute is engaged in commercial activities. However, this category does not
apply in disputes between a good/service provider and a consumer. In this case,
the law allows the party to choose between litigation and arbitration.
Even the agreement includes a standard arbitration clause in the supply of
goods or services contract, the dispute may not be arbitrated without the
consumer’s consent. The final category of disputes permissible for arbitration
gives legislators discretion to expand or maintain the types of disputes resolved
through arbitration. An example of a category (3) dispute is a dispute
arising from investment activities governed by the Law on Investment.
Arbitration
has become an extremely popular method of dispute resolution, as many
businesses prefer it over the high costs of litigation.
For advise or service
request, please contact us via email ant@antlawers.vn,
or call +84 8 3520 2779 (HCMC Office), +84 4 39388751 (Hanoi Office). To
learn more about us, please visit www.antlawyers.vn
,
0 comments:
Đăng nhận xét