No Op. - Arbitration clauses in peering agreements
Hi all, Apologies to Randy for the non-operational content here... I'm trying to modify our peering agreement to reflect more international standards and am having issue with arbitration procedures. From the 20-30 documents I've poured through in the past 24 hours: - most large US carrier peering agreements opt for senior management intervention prior to termination of the peering agreement - no arbitration - most mid-size US carrier peering agreements have very bland, offered in the state the governing law applies to, language for arbitration; - a few international carriers have UN arbitration (see wording below) that might make more sense for a global network; - very few international carriers have peering agreements in any form and default to the standard US format. A few international carriers have the following arbitration clause: "All disputes, controversies, claims or differences which may arise between the Parties, out of or in relation to or in connection with this Agreement, or the breach thereof, and cannot be solved to the mutual satisfaction of the Parties, shall be finally settled by arbitration in accordance with the United Nations Commission on International Trade Law ("UNCITRAL") Arbitration Rules as at present in effect with the following conditions. The award rendered by arbitrators shall be final and binding upon both Parties. a) The number of arbitrators shall be three (3), the first to be nominated by <peer who is the primary on the peering document>, the second by UNA, and the third to be nominated by two (2) aforementioned arbitrators. b) The place of arbitration shall be New York, NY. c) The language to be used in the arbitration proceedings shall be English." I am mostly okay with the format but would like to see the second arbitrator elected by the peer receiving the document and the third arbitrator selected by the UN Arbitration group. Replies are needed to put forth a reasonable document prior to wasting tons of legal time... Credit to the domain name of the reply authors is not what I'm looking for... I'm looking for reasonable expectance that an arbitration method like the outline above would not be out of hand rejected by most legal teams. If you have arbitration language in your document that has been accepted (signed by more than 5 peers) widely please do forward it to me. To prevent outrage, please do not reply to the NANOG list. Thanks in advance for your attention to this matter, -Ren Lauren F. Nowlin, ren@onyx.net / peering@onyx.net Director, Peering & Interconnects Onyx Networks, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Pacific Gateway Exchange Voice: 650-558-3262, Fax: 650-558-3154, Cellphone: 650-281-6963
a) The number of arbitrators shall be three (3), the first to be nominated by <peer who is the primary on the peering document>, the second by UNA, and the third to be nominated by two (2) aforementioned arbitrators.
Revised: 'Three' shall be the number of the arbitrators, and the number of the arbitrators shall be three. 'Four' shalt thou not arbitrate, and neither abritrate thou two, excepting that thou then goest on to three. Five is RIGHT OUT. Once the arbitrator three, being the third arbitrator be reached, then lobbest thou thy Holy Legal Team to-wards thy carrier, who, being naughty in my sights, shall snuff it. Amen. I couldn't resist. I'm sorry, --msa
On Wed, 10 Nov 1999, Majdi Abbas wrote:
a) The number of arbitrators shall be three (3), the first to be 'Three' shall be the number of the arbitrators, and the number of the arbitrators shall be three. 'Four' shalt thou not arbitrate, and
This raises the question: What is the legalese of an unladen arbitrator? --==-- Bruce. or, what is the bandwidth of an unladen wireless card? ;) </ietf joke>
participants (3)
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Bruce Campbell
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Lauren F. Nowlin
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Majdi Abbas