Arbitration is not yet prevalent as a method of resolving disputes in Poland, but it is a popular and respected means of dispute resolution.
According to data gathered in 2021 by Anna Tujakowska, in 2019-20 parties initiated 515 cases in Polish arbitral institutions, with a 36% increase year on year. This number excludes ad hoc proceedings, and cases heard by foreign institutions (at least several dozens more). By contrast, parties filed 1,780 cases with the ICC court in 2019-2020 and almost 1.5 million commercial cases with Polish courts in 2020.
In turn, according to the data we gathered in 2021, in 2020 parties filed 35 motions with Polish courts to set awards aside, 232 motions to recognise/enforce a domestic award, and 32 motions to recognise/enforce a foreign one.
All this data confirms that arbitration in Poland is becoming more and more popular as the country demonstrates its “arbitration-friendly” label.
The COVID-19 pandemic has impacted virtually every aspect of life and business in Poland, including arbitration.
Major Polish arbitral institutions reacted immediately to the COVID-19 pandemic. The Court of Arbitration at the Polish Chamber of Commerce reported that the first online hearing took place on 3 April 2020, just a few weeks after the pandemic started. In April 2020, the court also prepared recommendations for conducting a hearing in the form of a videoconference.
The Lewiatan Court of Arbitration also issued such recommendations in October 2020. Moreover, this court amended its rules in May 2020, allowed electronic filing, and underlined the possibility of conducting online hearings.
By contrast, it took several months for Polish state courts to launch online hearings. Electronic filings, despite several attempts, were not introduced. Therefore, a significant backlog in Polish courts grew even more prominent during the pandemic.
In our view, all these developments confirmed the flexibility and speed of arbitration. Digitalisation (e-filing, online hearings) was present in Polish arbitration even before the pandemic, with recent months only catalysing further digital transformations.
Furthermore, as described above (see 1.1 Prevalence of Arbitration) there was a 36% rise in cases before Polish arbitral institutions in 2020 despite (or perhaps because of) the pandemic.
According to data gathered by the Court of Arbitration at the Polish Chamber of Commerce, the following industries were present in its caseload (data from 2020 compared to 2019):
The Lewiatan Court Arbitration informed us that it heard the most significant number of cases from the construction and commercial transactions categories last year.
This data seems to confirm a common belief that complex cases are more suitable for arbitration than litigation. This is usually the case with construction cases, where parties file multiple claims and cross-claims, the facts are complicated, and the tribunal needs to adduce expert evidence.
Polish stakeholders usually choose the Court of Arbitration at the Polish Chamber of Commerce, the Lewiatan Court of Arbitration and the Court of Arbitration at the Polish Bank Association. The first of these is one of the oldest and the most popular and significant institutions in Poland. However, the Lewiatan Court is also gaining a reputation as a renowned institution.
Ultima Ratio, an online arbitration court specialising in small and simple cases established in recent years, is gaining in popularity as well.
There are no specific courts in Poland designated to hear disputes related to international arbitrations and/or domestic arbitrations. Courts of Appeal hear post-arbitral cases with a possibility to file a cassation complaint to the Supreme Court (concerning motions to set aside and motions to recognise/enforce a foreign award). Other state courts act in aid and in the course of arbitration (eg, in cases relating to challenges to arbitrators, evidentiary assistance or jurisdiction).
Book V of the Polish Code of Civil Procedure contains the Polish internal arbitration law. It was amended in 2005 to reflect the UNCITRAL Model Law on International Commercial Arbitration in its original version. Polish law does not diverge in a significant way from the Model Law. Poland is a party also to New York Convention and European Convention (see 12.1 New York Convention). These sources of law make Poland a jurisdiction with stable and predictable arbitration law.
Since the adoption of the new Polish arbitration law in 2005, the law has changed significantly.
2016 Amendments
2016 brought significant changes to the arbitration landscape were introduced:
2017 Amendments
2017 brought changes to consumer arbitration, as a result of implementing EU Directive 2013/11/EU of 21 May 2013 on alternative dispute resolution for consumer disputes:
2019 Amendments
2019 brought changes to the arbitration of corporate disputes:
Under Polish law, the arbitration agreement has to be (i) valid on the part of substance and (ii) form and also (iii) comply with certain other rules.
Substantive Requirements
The arbitration agreement needs to meet the following substantive requirements.
Formal Requirements
The arbitration agreement needs to meet the following formal requirements:
Other Rules
Furthermore, arbitration agreements:
Since the 2019 reform (see 2.2 Changes to National Law), all disputes regarding property rights (save for child support (alimony) disputes) and those non-property disputes in which parties may conclude a court settlement are arbitrable (Article 1157 CCP).
Most disputes in the commercial spectrum are arbitrable. Most importantly, since 2016, arbitration agreements concluded by an insolvent company do not automatically become ineffective at the date of the declaration of bankruptcy, and all ongoing arbitration proceedings do not necessarily have to discontinue.
National Court’s Approach to Enforcement of Arbitration Agreements
Polish courts usually enforce arbitration agreements. Under Polish law, if a party brings a claim covered by an arbitration agreement before a state court, the defendant can request that the court refer parties to arbitration by rejecting the statement of claims filed with the state court (unless the arbitration agreement is defective, Article 1165 §§ 1-2 CCP).
Polish courts may interfere with arbitration only in cases prescribed by law (Article 1159 § 1 CCP). Hence it is impossible to motion for a declaratory judgment on the validity of an arbitration agreement or an anti-arbitration injunction.
Applicable Law
As to determining the law applicable to the arbitration agreement, the New York Convention and the European Convention play a primary role. Additionally, Polish private international law will apply outside the scope of application of these two Conventions. This law differentiates between the law applicable to the form and to the substance of the agreement:
however, it is sufficient that the contract is effective under the law of the state in which the proceedings are pending or the arbitral tribunal has issued its award (Article 39 sec. 1-2 PIL).
Polish law enshrines the principle of separability of an arbitration agreement (Article 1180 § 1 CCP). Therefore, an arbitral clause may be considered valid and effective even if the rest of the contract in which it is contained is invalid.
Polish law provides for extensive parties’ autonomy to select the arbitrator. Any natural person, irrespective of their nationality, with full capacity to perform legal acts, can be an arbitrator, except for active judges (Article 1170 §§ 1-2 CCP). Some Polish institutions provide lists of recommended arbitrators and require the sole or presiding arbitrator to be chosen from such a list.
Parties are free to determine the method for selecting arbitrators (Article 1171 § 1 CCP) as long as the principle of equality is maintained (Article 1169 § 3 CCP, see 3.1 Enforceability). If this method fails, there is a default procedure. Parties can specify this procedure by applicable arbitration rules or Polish arbitration law (Article 1171 § 2 CCP). The leading Polish institutions’ rules allow the institution to nominate an arbitrator if parties or co-arbitrators fail to do so.
The default rule that applies in the case of multi-party arbitrations is that parties acting on the same side in multi-party arbitration shall appoint the arbitrator jointly unless the arbitration agreement provides otherwise (Article 1169 § 2-1 CCP).
Parties can agree on a procedure of appointment of arbitrators (eg, by adopting arbitral rules, see 4.2 Default Procedures). In the absence of such an agreement, any party can motion a state court to appoint an arbitrator that should have been appointed by the other party, by both parties, by the other arbitrators or by a third party (Article 1172 CCP). Apart from aiding in arbitrators’ appointments, Polish courts do not intervene in the selection of arbitrators.
Polish law recognises the basic standard for the challenge of arbitrators, ie, justifiable doubts as to their impartiality and independence (Article 1174 § 2 CCP). A challenge is also possible if the arbitrator does not meet the requirements specified in the parties’ agreement.
Parties are free to agree on a challenging procedure (Article 1176 § 1 CCP). If the arbitrator is not removed within one month from the challenge, the requesting party can file a motion to challenge the arbitrator with the state court within a further two weeks (Article 1176 § 2 CCP).
In the absence of parties’ agreement, the party challenging the arbitrator should file its request within two weeks and state reasons for the challenge (Article 1176 § 3 CCP). If the arbitrator does not resign or if the parties do not jointly remove him or her within the following two weeks, the party challenging has a further two weeks to file the challenge with the state court (Article 1176 § 4 CCP).
Polish law provides short deadlines for filing the challenge.
Arbitrators should be independent and impartial. They are required to submit a statement of independence to the parties and disclose any subsequent conflicts in each case (Article 1174 § 1 CCP). Polish law does not specify any particular requirements in this regard (see 13.2 Ethical Codes).
If a matter is arbitrable (see 3.2 Arbitrability), it can be referred to arbitration. However, since in labour and consumer cases, parties can only submit to arbitration after the dispute emerged (see 3.1 Enforceability), the use of arbitration in these sectors is very limited in practice.
Polish law recognises the competence-competence principle, and therefore a tribunal may rule on a party’s challenge to its jurisdiction (Article 1180 § 1 CCP).
A Polish state court can address the issue of a tribunal’s jurisdiction in the following cases.
Polish law prohibits the state courts from intervening in arbitration without having a direct statutory basis (Article 1159 § 1 CCP). Therefore, Polish courts have ruled that they cannot, eg, render an anti-arbitration injunction or issue a declaratory relief on the (non-)defectiveness of arbitration agreement. Poland is an arbitration-friendly jurisdiction in that respect.
Under a general rule, parties can challenge the jurisdiction of the arbitral tribunal no later than in the statement of defence or within another time limit specified by the parties, unless they did not discover and could not have discovered the basis of such an objection beforehand, or such a basis occurred only afterward (Article 1180 § 2 CCP).
Therefore, in principle, parties can file such a challenge at the initial state of the case. Challenges in the course of the proceedings are less frequent.
Parties can also challenge jurisdiction in post-arbitral proceedings (see 5.3 Circumstances for Court Intervention).
The prevailing opinion is that the law precludes a party from challenging jurisdiction in post-arbitral proceedings if it did not pursue its challenge in the course of the arbitration (see 11. Review of an Award and 12. Enforcement of an Award).
The standard of judicial review for the question of jurisdiction is not yet decided in Poland, as is the case in international practice. It seems that the state courts review legal aspects of the jurisdiction de novo, but usually defer to facts established by the tribunal.
As Poland is a civil law country, it does not explicitly recognise the notion of admissibility. Some issues recognised under admissibility in other legal systems (eg, the statute of limitation) fall within the scope of Polish substantive law. The review of awards from a substantive law perspective is limited and deferential (see 11. Review of an Award and 12. Enforcement of an Award).
If a party brings a claim covered by the arbitration agreement to the state court, the other party can ask the court to reject the statement of claim (see 5.3 Circumstances for Court Intervention). Polish courts usually act diligently in reviewing arbitral jurisdiction in such cases.
There is no clear case law on whether a party can claim damages for breach of the arbitration agreement.
The Polish law remains silent on the issue of the extension of arbitral jurisdiction to non-signatories. There is one exception (see 2.2 Changes to National Law): the arbitration agreement contained in the articles of association of a company binds not only the company and its partners (shareholders) but also the company's bodies and their members (Article 1163 § 1 CCP).
Polish courts have clarified that arbitration agreements can bind entities that are not parties to arbitration agreements. This is the case, eg, concerning:
However, eg, the buyer of a real estate is not bound by the arbitration agreement contained in the property's lease agreement.
Courts have not yet clarified whether doctrines extending the arbitral jurisdiction even further (ie, alter ego, chain of contracts, group of companies, piercing the corporate veil) apply in Poland.
Polish law allows tribunals to award preliminary or interim relief. Unless the parties have agreed otherwise, the arbitral tribunal, at the request of the party that has substantiated the claim, may decide to apply the type of interim relief it deems appropriate due to the subject matter of the dispute. By issuing such an order, the arbitral tribunal may make its execution conditional on the provision of appropriate security (Article 1181 § 1 CCP).
Under Polish law, parties are free to choose whether they wish to secure their claims before an arbitral tribunal or state courts. If they motion the arbitral tribunal (see 6.1 Types of Relief), its order can be enforced or recognised under rules on awards (Article 1181 § 3 CCP, see 12. Enforcement of Arbitral Awards).
Parties can also motion state court to secure the claim in aid of arbitration (Article 1166 §§ 1-2 CCP). Such a motion can be granted during or even before the arbitral proceedings started. Courts can grant such a motion also in aid of arbitration seated abroad. The state court will secure the claim if a party makes the existence of the claim probable and demonstrates that without securing the claim, the enforcement of the award will be impossible or difficult or that the purpose of the proceedings will be impossible or difficult to achieve (Article 730-1 § 1 CCP).
Polish law is silent on the issue of emergency arbitration, and therefore general rules described above apply. There are no arguments for the courts not to allow such measures if parties agreed that an emergency arbitrator might decide on security.
Polish law does not provide any guidance on security for costs. Therefore, general rules on securing claims apply (see 6.1 Types of Relief and 6.2 Role of Courts).
Polish law provides general rules governing the arbitral procedure (Articles 1183-1193 CCP). Most of the rules are not mandatory and parties can shape the procedure as they see fit (Article 1184 § 1 CCP). In the absence of such an agreement, the arbitral tribunal may decide on a procedure (Article 1184 § 2 CCP). In any case, both parties need to be treated equally and have the right to present their case (Article 1183 CCP).
The main default rules are the following:
Under Polish law, parties can initiate arbitration by filing a request for arbitration, which is the default procedure. The respondent answers the request, and then subsequently, the claimant files a statement of claim, followed by the respondent’s statement of defence (Articles 1186 and 1188 §§ 1-3 CCP). Parties can agree otherwise and they often do so by adopting institutional rules that provide only a statement of claim, without the need to file the request.
Parties need to describe the claim and the parties involved properly. Such steps allow for interrupting the limitation period under Polish law.
Polish law, like other jurisdictions, provides for vast autonomy of arbitrators to conduct the proceedings as they see fit absent the parties’ agreement (see 7.1 Governing Rules). The primary duties and obligations of arbitrators under Polish law are the following.
Duty of Impartiality and Independence
As described above (see 4.4 Challenge and Removal of Arbitrators), arbitrators need to be impartial and independent or they can be removed from the tribunal.
Right to Remuneration
Arbitrators are entitled to remuneration for their services. The parties’ responsibility is joint and several in this respect. The state court can specify the amount of remuneration if parties and arbitrators failed to reach an agreement (Article 1179 §§ 1-3 CCP).
Duty to Resolve the Case without Undue Delay
Any party can motion a state court to revoke an arbitrator if it is clear that they will not perform in due time or if they are in undue delay in resolving the case (Article 1177 § 2 CCP). This provision is rarely used in practice.
There is no particular rule obligating parties to hire a professional representative. Thus, the rules of parties’ representation in arbitration are liberal and a party can, eg, hire a foreign lawyer to represent them in a Polish arbitration.
However, in most if not all cases, parties are represented by members of one of two legal professions present in Poland, ie, attorneys-at-law and legal counsels. Both of these professions are organised in Bars and have their codes of conduct and rules of diligent performance of duties. These codes and rules do not differentiate between arbitration (both domestic and international) and state court litigation.
Parties are free to agree on and shape the rules on the collection and submission of evidence (Articles 1184 §§ 1-2, 1191 §§ 1-2 CCP). They generally refer to a particular set of arbitral rules or soft-law instruments, eg, the International Bar Association's Rules on Taking Evidence in International Arbitration. Unless parties decide otherwise, the tribunal can shape the procedure as it sees it fit. In all cases, however, all parties need to be treated equally (Article 1183 CCP).
Polish arbitral law regulates the taking of evidence in a very general manner.
The general approach to evidence in Polish state courts is that parties submit their evidence, discovery is very limited, and courts hear witnesses during several hearings (direct examination).
Polish arbitral practice differs and is in line with international standards. Written witness statements, tribunals’ flexibility as to discovery, and one hearing (often lasting several days) are common practice.
Moreover, the attorney-client privilege applies in Poland.
Under Polish law, arbitral tribunals have no compulsory measures to impose on parties or witnesses. They can draw adverse inferences, eg, from a party failing to present a document.
However, the tribunal may request the state court to assist it in evidentiary proceedings or any other activities that the tribunal is unable to perform (Article 1192 CCP). This means that the court can, eg, call witnesses who refuse to appear before the arbitral tribunal and fine them if they ignore the state court’s subpoena as well. The state court can also request anyone to present a document. It can impose a fine on a third party to the proceedings. However, the court cannot impose means of compulsion on a party to the proceedings under a general rule that a party cannot be forced to testify against itself.
Polish law does not explicitly state whether arbitration proceedings are confidential, although some argue that arbitration is confidential by nature. Of course, parties can clarify the issue and agree, explicitly or by adopting a particular set of arbitral rules, that their arbitration is confidential.
However, state court proceedings referring to arbitration are not confidential and hearings are open to the public. The Ministry of Justice provides a database of anonymised judgments.
Moreover, public companies have corporate disclosure obligations, which may include duties of information about arbitral proceedings or awards.
Polish law provides the following requirements for an arbitral award (Articles 1195 §§ 2-3, 1197 §§ 1-3 CCP):
Parties can settle the case, in which case the tribunal discontinues the proceedings; however, they can also motion for the award by consent (Article 1196 §§ 1-2 CCP).
The law does not provide for any time limits on the delivery of the award. Arbitral rules, to the contrary, require arbitrators to create timeframes (that can be extended under certain conditions), eg:
There are no statutory limits on the types of remedies that an arbitral tribunal may award under Polish law. However, case law clarified that certain remedies might be contrary to public policy; such was the case, eg, with punitive damages awarded in a US judgment. Therefore, parties motioning for a certain relief need to consider enforcement issues; certain reliefs available in common law jurisdictions may be unfit under Polish law, which is a civil law system.
Parties are entitled to recover interest and legal costs under general rules of Polish law:
Parties may agree otherwise as to the costs or the tribunal may adopt a costs-sharing approach, depending on the circumstances of the case.
Parties can only challenge an arbitral award on one of the grounds listed in law (Article 1206 § 1 CCP):
In the event of a challenge, parties can invoke, or a Polish court can rely ex officio on, the following grounds (Article 1206 § 2 CCP):
A party should file its recourse to a court of appeals within two months from the service of the award. The court orders a hearing and issues its judgment. A party unsatisfied with the ruling can file a cassation complaint to the Supreme Court (Article 1208 §§ 1-3 CCP).
Parties cannot limit the scope of the motion to set aside the arbitral award. All the more so, parties cannot waive the right to challenge an arbitral award. Thus, even if a party obliged itself not to challenge an award (or not to invoke one of the grounds for appeal), it will still be able to do so before the court.
Moreover, parties cannot expand the scope of review of an arbitral award by the state court. They can, however, introduce a second instance of proceedings with a full appeal to another arbitral tribunal. The Lewiatan Court of Arbitration in Warsaw introduced such optional appellate procedures to its rules.
Polish courts limit their control over the arbitral award to the circumstances listed in the law (see 11.1 Grounds for Appeal). They do not evaluate the facts of the case and, in this regard, defer to the tribunal’s findings (see 5.5 Standard of Judicial Review for Jurisdiction/Admissibility). The courts can adopt a different approach to a given question of law but can only set the award aside if it violates public policy.
Poland signed and ratified the 1958 New York Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards (see 2.1 Governing Law). It made both reservations possible under Article I (3) of the Convention, ie, declared that it would apply the Convention:
Furthermore, Poland signed and ratified the European Convention on International Commercial Arbitration drafted in Geneva, 21 April 1961.
The Conventions take precedence over Polish law.
Procedure for Enforcing an Award
Procedures and standards for enforcing an award in Poland are in line with international practice. First, the applicant should file a motion with a court of appeals and append the original or a certified copy of the award and arbitration agreement along with translations into Polish (if they were made in a foreign language, Article 1213 §§ 1-2 CCP).
In the case of domestic awards, the court hears the motion in camera, and its decision is subject to an appeal to a different bench of the court (Article 1214 §§ 1-4 CCP). In the case of foreign awards, the courts decide after a hearing. A party can only challenge the court's decision through an extraordinary challenge – a cassation complaint to the Supreme Court (Article 1215 § 3 CCP).
Grounds for Refusal of Enforcement
The court will refuse enforcement or recognition:
Relationship between Enforcement and Setting-Aside Proceedings
Polish courts can stay the enforcement proceedings pending the setting-aside proceedings, under both the New York Convention and Polish law (Article 1216 §§ 1-3 CCP). They decide on such a stay on a case-by-case basis.
Enforcement against State Entities
Polish law recognises a defence of sovereign immunity at the enforcement stage as a matter of public international law. Also, compulsory enforcement concerning the Polish state is limited to the bank accounts of the entity to whose activities the case refers. Also, it is not possible to secure claims against the Polish state.
State courts conduct the recognition and enforcement of arbitration awards in a professional and unbiased manner.
One of the reasons to refuse enforcement is that it would violate Polish public policy. This notion remains undefined, but courts describe it as referring to the most fundamental principles of Polish law. Polish law, at least explicitly, does not differentiate between domestic and international public policy.
Having said that, public policy should be interpreted narrowly. Moreover, the court should not take the evaluation of the facts of the case by the tribunal into account and cannot review the case de novo. Polish courts found that when examining the compliance of an arbitral award with the Polish public policy, the court does not examine whether the award is compliant with the applicable substantive law, whether it is based on facts, and whether the facts were established correctly. This interpretation is in line with international practice.
According to the data we gathered, 92% of foreign arbitral awards and 93% of domestic ones were enforced or recognised in Poland in 2020, making Poland an arbitral-friendly jurisdiction.
There are no rules on class-action arbitration or group arbitration in Poland. Rules of arbitral institutions allow parties to consolidate (see 13.4 Consolidation) or join third parties to disputes.
Polish arbitration law requires arbitrators to be impartial and independent with no particular rules introduced (Article 1174 § 1 CCP). This requirement is often specified in arbitral rules or clarified by the IBA Guidelines of Conflicts of Interest in International Arbitration.
As to party representation, general ethical codes of conduct of legal professions (attorneys-at-law and legal counsel) apply.
Polish law neither prohibits nor promotes third-party funding and introduces no rules in this respect. This issue is left entirely to be clarified in arbitral practice.
An arbitral tribunal with its seat in Poland can consolidate separate arbitral proceedings. However, arbitral law does not specify any rules in this regard, leaving this issue to parties’ agreements and arbitral rules. The Rules of major institutions (eg, Court of Arbitration at the Polish Chamber of Commerce and Lewiatan Court of Arbitration) provide similar rules in this respect with certain differences as to, eg, that entity deciding on the consolidation or the possibility to consolidate proceedings between different parties.
One notable exception refers to disputes relating to companies’ resolutions. In such cases, each partner or shareholder may join the proceedings on the side of one of the parties within one month from the date of the announcement of the initiation of the proceedings. The tribunal appointed in the case initiated the earliest hears all other cases referring to the same resolution (Article 1163 § 2 CCP).
As discussed above (see 5.7 Third Parties), there are no statutory rules that extend the effects of arbitration agreements to third parties. However, case law has provided a list of cases where an arbitration agreement can bind a non-signatory.
The case is similar concerning the extension of the effects of arbitral awards to third parties. A party that succeeded in pursuing arbitration can, of course, assign the claim to a third party, which can, under certain formal conditions, enforce the award.
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