Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword by Professor Sir Elihu Lauterpacht, CBE, QC
- Authors' preface to the second edition
- Table of cases
- List of abbreviations
- Text of the ICSID Convention
- Procedural calendar
- PREAMBLE
- CHAPTER I International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes
- CHAPTER II Jurisdiction of the Centre
- CHAPTER III Conciliation
- CHAPTER IV Arbitration
- Article 36 Request for Arbitration
- Article 37 Composition of Tribunal
- Article 38 Appointment by Chairman
- Article 39 Nationality of Arbitrators
- Article 40 Qualities of Arbitrators
- Article 41 Decision on Jurisdiction
- Article 42 Applicable Law
- Article 43 Evidence
- Article 44 Rules on Procedure
- Article 45 Default of a Party
- Article 46 Ancillary Claims
- Article 47 Provisional Measures
- Article 48 Award
- Article 49 Dispatch, Supplementation and Rectification
- Article 50 Interpretation
- Article 51 Revision
- Article 52 Annulment
- Article 53 Binding Force
- Article 54 Enforcement
- Article 55 State Immunity
- CHAPTER V Replacement and Disqualification of Conciliators and Arbitrators
- CHAPTER VI Cost of Proceedings
- CHAPTER VII Place of Proceedings
- CHAPTER VIII Disputes between Contracting States
- CHAPTER IX Amendment
- CHAPTER X Final Provisions
- Final Clause
- Consolidated bibliography
- Index by article
- Index by subject
Article 49 - Dispatch, Supplementation and Rectification
from CHAPTER IV - Arbitration
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 September 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword by Professor Sir Elihu Lauterpacht, CBE, QC
- Authors' preface to the second edition
- Table of cases
- List of abbreviations
- Text of the ICSID Convention
- Procedural calendar
- PREAMBLE
- CHAPTER I International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes
- CHAPTER II Jurisdiction of the Centre
- CHAPTER III Conciliation
- CHAPTER IV Arbitration
- Article 36 Request for Arbitration
- Article 37 Composition of Tribunal
- Article 38 Appointment by Chairman
- Article 39 Nationality of Arbitrators
- Article 40 Qualities of Arbitrators
- Article 41 Decision on Jurisdiction
- Article 42 Applicable Law
- Article 43 Evidence
- Article 44 Rules on Procedure
- Article 45 Default of a Party
- Article 46 Ancillary Claims
- Article 47 Provisional Measures
- Article 48 Award
- Article 49 Dispatch, Supplementation and Rectification
- Article 50 Interpretation
- Article 51 Revision
- Article 52 Annulment
- Article 53 Binding Force
- Article 54 Enforcement
- Article 55 State Immunity
- CHAPTER V Replacement and Disqualification of Conciliators and Arbitrators
- CHAPTER VI Cost of Proceedings
- CHAPTER VII Place of Proceedings
- CHAPTER VIII Disputes between Contracting States
- CHAPTER IX Amendment
- CHAPTER X Final Provisions
- Final Clause
- Consolidated bibliography
- Index by article
- Index by subject
Summary
INTRODUCTION
Art. 49 is the second of two Articles in the Convention's Section 4 of Chapter IV entitled “The Award”. This Article deals with two diverse questions. Paragraph 1 addresses the modality of the award's transmission to the parties and the date of the award. Paragraph 2 deals with the award's supplementation and the rectification by the tribunal of technical errors in the award. Supplementation and rectification may be seen as one of several post-award procedures and remedies. These also include interpretation, revision and annulment. Interestingly, supplementation and rectification are not grouped with these measures. The latter are placed in a separate Section 5 entitled “Interpretation, Revision and Annulment of the Award”.
INTERPRETATION
“(1) The Secretary-General shall promptly dispatch certified copies of the award to the parties.”
A formal procedure for the delivery of a decision to the parties is part of an orderly judicial process. Rules governing international adjudication variously provide for oral delivery in open court or a mere notification of the decision's text.
The Preliminary Draft to the Convention only provided that the award shall be immediately communicated to the parties (History, Vol. I, p. 214). Subsequent discussions led to the conclusion that this task should be entrusted specifically to the Secretary-General (History, Vol. II, pp. 268, 272; Vol. I, p. 216).
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The ICSID ConventionA Commentary, pp. 840 - 865Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009