(ii) Information-gathering powers
Reference has previously been made to the extensive information-gathering powers of an arbitrator.72
Some of those powers are shared with courts. Discovery, interrogatories, and further particulars are obvious examples. The same is broadly true of the power to direct the appointment of an independent accountant to investigate and report. The courts can direct an investigation.73 The High Court (although not the Family Court) can also appoint an independent expert74 and/or order inspection of property and computer systems.75
However there is an important difference between arbitration and the courts when it comes to the examination of parties and witnesses in an inquisitorial setting.
The closest the High Court comes to a general power of oral inquiry lies in certain powers following insufficient answers to interrogatories76 or refusal to swear affidavits.77 But the process of issuing interrogatories, and establishing insufficiency of answers, is time-consuming and cumbersome. Cross-examination is rarely ordered and, if granted, remains an adversarial exercise limited to obtaining a proper answer to the interrogatory.78 The courts have also shown a marked reluctance to direct oral examination following refusal to make an affidavit, preferring to direct witnesses to make an affidavit with examination as a mere sanction to secure compliance.79 Such an order will be declined altogether if the witness is prepared to swear an affidavit, albeit not the one sought by a party.80
In the Family Court there is an important power to examine a party on oath where he or she fails to file any, or a sufficient, affidavit of assets and liabilities.81 Even there, however, there are severe limitations. The Court’s hands are tied until one party chooses to file a formal application alleging default. There will inevitably be argument about the sufficiency of any affidavit of assets and liabilities already filed. The examination is confined to the defaulting party, as distinct from his or her accountant and other witnesses. Most importantly, the examination does not extend to events and transactions during the relationship.82 Such evidence is usually critical.
Valuable though those court powers may be, they are no substitute for an arbitrator’s power to call the parties and their accountants to a conference, swear everyone present as witnesses, and lead a round table discussion designed to get to the bottom of a factual issue.
(iii) Speed
New Zealand has not escaped the world-wide pressure on family courts.83 It seems too early to say what effect the 2014 Family Court reforms will have on waiting times. What one can say with confidence is that in virtually all jurisdictions overseas, family courts struggle to cope with the number of cases requiring decision.
Judges have little control over their workloads. Arbitrators do not have that excuse. If they accept only those arbitrations that they can handle expeditiously, they should be able to resolve cases more quickly than judges.
(iv) Finality
Arbitrations offer greater finality than court proceedings. Once an award is issued, there is less opportunity to prolong matters by appeal or review than would be the case with an equivalent Family Court judgment.
The grounds for reviewing an arbitration award are circumscribed by statute. There is no opportunity to rehear the merits. For all practical purposes review under arts 34 and 36 is confined to excess of jurisdiction and denial of natural justice.84 An appeal from an arbitration award may or may not be possible depending on the wishes of the parties when drafting their arbitration agreement. If the right to appeal is desired, it must be limited to questions of law. Even then the appeal will be possible only with the Court’s leave unless the parties taking the unusual course of opting for appeals as of right.85 But if the parties really want a right of appeal to the courts, with its attendant costs, delays and publicity, it is hard to see why they would choose arbitration in the first place. In short, the opportunities for challenging an arbitration award are closely circumscribed.
That may be contrasted with successive opportunities for challenging decisions originating in the Family Court. Appeals may be taken to the High Court as of right. The appeals extend to the facts as well as the law. If the parties are the unfortunate beneficiaries of leave to bring more than one appeal, it is possible to have as many as six hearings (Family Court substantive hearing.
(v) Confidentiality
For all practical purposes relationship property hearings are private, whether in arbitration86 or court.87
The position is very different when it comes to publication of the decision. As a general principle, arbitration awards cannot be published. The same applies to any other information gleaned from arbitration proceedings.88 The discretion to override the presumption of confidentiality89 is easily side-stepped by contracting out of that power.90 Even if the parties have overlooked doing so in their arbitration agreement, it is hard to see any circumstances in which an arbitrator or judge would authorise disclosure of the award in the absence of an appeal or review.91
There is less certainty if one party chooses to take the arbitration award to the High Court on appeal, where the submission agreement so permits, or on review. Even there, however, one might reasonably expect a judge to take into account the fact that by submitting a private family matter to arbitration the parties had evidenced a wish for confidentiality. This would seem a powerful reason for continuing the confidentiality that the parties had enjoyed in the arbitration proceedings themselves.92
That may be contrasted with the position where the proceedings originate in the courts. With narrow exceptions, all decisions are published. The names of the parties will usually be anonymised on application and there are special protections for children, those under some form of special care, and domestic violence applicants.93 But with those qualifications the courts cannot prevent publication of a relationship property decision.94
Few are happy to have intimate details of their personal history published to all and sundry. That is likely to be seen by many as a significant reason for opting for arbitration.
(vi) Choice of decision-maker
Generalisations about the skill and experience of judges compared with arbitrators are pointless. The variation between individuals within those groups is much greater than any variation between the groups themselves. The real difference between judges and arbitrators, however, is the opportunity to choose. Only in arbitration do the parties choose their decision-maker.
Choosing the decision-maker may not matter in the general run of cases. However it can be important in cases where the issues are less about traditional family law concepts than about complex commercial and equitable relationships. Analysing a complex web of companies, trusts, partnerships, and inter-entity finances can be time-consuming and exacting. In such cases the parties may prefer to select a decision-maker whose skill-set and time availability are thought to fit the particular task in hand.
(vii) Ease of access
Arbitrators are usually accessible at short notice through direct emails (with the important proviso that they are copied to the other party) and telephone conferences with both counsel. Most interlocutory matters can be disposed of with a minimum of time and formality.
Court processes are necessarily more measured. The volume of cases filed in court is high. Standardised procedures are the only way of processing multiple cases and judges. Some classes of litigation (parenting, domestic violence etc) are particularly inflammatory. Family Court Judges must be protected from abuse. A system which permitted direct approaches to judicial officers would not be feasible, even where the communications were joint ones.
(viii) Continuity
Knowing that he or she will ultimately have to decide a case, an arbitrator will have a personal stake in its management from the outset. Arbitrators have the luxury of familiarising themselves with the file, running all interlocutory matters with the benefit of that knowledge, and structuring the hearing in a way that will suit their particular methods. It is no criticism of judges that rostering requirements usually make that level of continuity impracticable.
(ix) Party autonomy
In their agreement to arbitrate existing or future property disputes the parties choose the relationship property regime that will be applied, the procedure that will be followed, and the person who will make the decision. Parties are more likely to be satisfied with the result of a process that they themselves devised.95
It also accords with the 2013 Family Court Proceedings Reforms which were designed to place greater emphasis upon resolving family disputes by private agreement.96 It is a short step from agreement on the substantive outcome to agreement on the way in which the outcome should be achieved.
(x) The possibility of “med-arbs”
So long as an arbitrator does not caucus with the parties, or give the impression that the case has been predetermined, it is possible to combine an arbitration with a mediation.97 Similar benefits can be obtained during an expert determination. In the Family Court it is not appropriate to combine distinct forms of dispute resolution before the same judge.
Conclusions
So long as appropriate signing formalities are observed, and the adopted relationship property regime is an acceptable one, agreements to submit relationship property disputes to arbitration will be binding and the awards they produce enforceable.
Whether arbitration will serve the parties better than court proceedings depends on the nature of the particular dispute. There will be an overwhelming preference for court proceedings wherever it is foreseeable that resolution of a relationship property dispute will need to be combined with claims under other statutes such as the Trustee Act 1956 or the Family Protection Act 1955. The same will be true whenever the dispute is likely to involve third parties who are unable or unwilling to commit to arbitration. It seems doubtful whether court proceedings offer additional advantages of any significance.
For the remainder of cases, arbitration appears to offer significant advantages. These include speed, finality, procedural flexibility, confidentiality, choice of decision-maker, ease of access to the tribunal, continuity and the opportunity to combine the arbitration with mediation. Of particular importance is the efficiency of an arbitrator’s information-gathering powers. Information-gathering is normally the key to resolving relationship property disputes.
At present the use of arbitration to resolve New Zealand relationship property disputes is surprisingly limited. If overseas experience is anything to go by, that is about to change.
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