ARBITRABILITY OF CONCESSION DISPUTES IN SLOVENIA
ARBITRABILITY OF CONCESSION DISPUTES IN SLOVENIA
Author(s): Nastja Merlak, Nejc HumarSubject(s): Law, Constitution, Jurisprudence, Commercial Law, Court case
Published by: Institut za uporedno pravo
Keywords: arbitrability; concession contracts; authentic interpretation; arbitration.
Summary/Abstract: A fundamental question at the beginning of any arbitration is whether any public policy rules prohibit the dispute to be decided by arbitration. As arbitration became a widely accepted alternative to litigation in national courts, the scope of arbitrable disputes was expanded to allow for a wide range of disputes to be resolved through arbitration. The authority to restrict arbitrability lies with the legislator, which generally does so only in cases where it is warranted by serious public policy concerns. The Slovenian Arbitration Act is a modern act that provides for a wide concept of arbitrability. When the Slovenian legislator unexpectedly tried to restrict the arbitrability of concession disputes by adopting an authentic interpretation of law restricting arbitrability for concession disputes, it created significant uncertainty for the parties who have included an arbitration clause in their concession contracts or who were considering doing so. The Slovenian Constitutional Court confirmed that the authentic interpretation of law cannot be used to give binding interpretations on how to rule in specific cases because it would undermine the core principle of the separation of powers and independence of judges. While it has now been settled that the authentic interpretation should not be applied, it nevertheless remains a skeleton in the legislator’s closet since the legislator had not expressly invalidated or retracted the authentic interpretation.
Journal: Strani pravni život
- Issue Year: 68/2024
- Issue No: 4
- Page Range: 505-524
- Page Count: 20
- Language: English