Article

Arbitrators’ fees: securing payment through a navigation between statutory provisions and the common law in Nigeria

Details

Citation

Okoli P (2023) Arbitrators’ fees: securing payment through a navigation between statutory provisions and the common law in Nigeria. African Journal of International and Comparative Law.

Abstract
The arbitrator has a right of lien on the award at common law. The English Arbitration Act 1996 incorporates this right. Nigeria’s Arbitration and Conciliation Act 1988 (ACA) is, however, modelled after the UNCITRAL Model Arbitration Law. Thus, unlike its English counterpart it has no provision for arbitrator’s exercise of lien on the award. A lien is however, an effective and practical means of securing the arbitrator’s fees, especially as Nigerian parties may be disincentivised from following through with the arbitration process on account of being required to provide advance funding adequate to settle the arbitrator(s) entire fees. This article critically examines the ACA considering the school of thought that its section 26(4) impliedly repeals the arbitrator’s common law right of lien on the award. Based on a comparative analysis of statutory provisions and the common law, a core argument is that the arbitrator’s common law right to hold a lien on the award as security for fees is valid.

StatusAccepted
Date accepted by journal29/01/2023
ISSN0954-8890
eISSN1755-1609

People (1)

Dr Pontian Okoli

Dr Pontian Okoli

Senior Lecturer, Law