What happens when two parties enter into a valid and binding arbitration agreement but the arbitral institution they named in that agreement is later abolished and replaced with another one before a dispute arises?
In Baker/Dynamic Saudi Arabia Ltd v. Dynamic Industries, Inc. et al.,2 a U.S. federal trial court faced with that exact question decided that: (1) the party resisting arbitration could not be compelled to arbitrate because the arbitral institution under whose rules the party had agreed to arbitrate—the DIFCLCIA—no longer existed, and (2) the successor organization—the Dubai International Arbitration Centre—was not one to which the resisting party had agreed.
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