Arbitrability in China
Arbitrability in China
Arbitrability in China
The PRC Arbitration Law also lists several disputes that are not capable
of settlement by arbitration, which include administrative disputes and
disputes of personal rights. In the following part, I’ll address several
kinds of disputes that may raise a question of arbitrability.
1 intellectual property
1
Redfern and Hunter on International Arbitration (Sixth Edition).
copyright disputes. Therefore, any disputes relating to copyright are
arbitrable now.
3 Securities transactions
4 Bankruptcy
5 Labor disputes
2
International Arbitration: Law and Practice
Chinese law does not impose any non-arbitrability restrictions on labor
disputes. On the contrary, it encourages arbitration of labor disputes.
According to Article 5 of Law of the PRC on Mediation and Arbitration of
Labour Disputes, parties to a labor dispute may apply to a special
arbitration institute, labour-dispute arbitration commission, for arbitration,
regardless of whether the parties have concluded any arbitration
agreement. Particularly, in China, labor arbitration is the pre-procedure
of litigation. If the labor dispute has not been submitted to the labour-
dispute arbitration commission and the party directly files a lawsuit, the
court will not accept it.
6 Consumer disputes
Chinese law permits the arbitration of both existing and future consumer
disputes. Article 39 of Law of the PRC on the Protection of Rights and
Interests of Consumers provides that disputes over consumer rights and
interests may be resolved through arbitration in accordance with the
arbitration agreement.
a. Arbitrability3
Pursuant to Art. 3 of the Arbitration Law, the following disputesshall not be subject to
arbitration:
(1) disputes concerning marital status, adoption, guardianship, maintenance and succession;
(2) administrative disputes that the law requires to be dealt with by administrative bodies.
It is not provided in the Arbitration Law whether the above enumeration is an exhaustive list.
3
Lu Song, 'National Report for China (2018)', in Jan Paulsson and Lise Bosman (eds), ICCA International
Handbook on Commercial Arbitration, (© Kluwer Law International; Kluwer Law International 1984,
Supplement No. 98, March 2018), p. 11.
Under Chinese law, those disputes directly relating to an individual's civil status, family
relations and succession are not considered appropriate matters to be dealt with by a private
dispute settlement mechanism.
Administrative disputes, in which the legality of an administrative decision by a government
body is the subject matter of the dispute, are also believed to be unsuitable for settlement by
arbitration. Chinese anti-trust legislation (effective from 1 August 2008) neither provides that
an anti-trust dispute can be referred to arbitration, nor specifically prohibits it. However, Art.
3(2) of the Arbitration Law provides that “administrative disputes that law requires to be
handled by administrative bodies” shall not be subject to arbitration. It would be reasonable
to conclude on the basis of the wording of Art. 3(2) that a dispute involving an administrative
decision by the government authority in respect of anti-trust issues may not be subject to
arbitration in China.
With regard to intellectual property disputes, if the dispute involves an administrative
decision by the State Intellectual Property Office of the PRC, for instance on the validity of
an intellectual property right, it may not be subject to arbitration. However, other disputes
where only private parties are involved, such as a dispute concerning a licensing agreement
or the sale of a trademark, can be subject to arbitration if the parties have so agreed.