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Samuel, Adam, Jurisdictional Problems in International Commercial Arbitration. A Study of Belgian, Dutch, English, French, Swedish, USA and West German Law, Zürich 1989

Title
Samuel, Adam, Jurisdictional Problems in International Commercial Arbitration. A Study of Belgian, Dutch, English, French, Swedish, USA and West German Law, Zürich 1989
Content
243

Pacta sunt servanda is one of the principal rules of the lex mercatoria172. It is true that it may be tempered by the principle of rebus sic stantibus173, but that is the case to varying degrees, in most municipal laws. Supporters of the lex mercatoria conclude, therefore, that the highly discretionary nature of amiable composition, which justifies the requirement that the parties expressly agree to its application, is not shared by the law merchant.

[...]

245

Even the generally accepted principles of the lex mercatoria, which can be derived from reported arbitral awards, such as pacta sunt servanda and rebus sic stantibus are incapable as yet of immediate and predictable application to actual disputes. In particular, there is currently no rule which indicates where the application of the first principle just mentioned ends and the that of the second begins181.

172B. Goldman, "La lex mercatoria dans les contrats et l‘arbitrage internationaux: réalité et perspectives" [1977 - 1979] Travaux du comité français de droit international privé 221 at pp. 245 - 246.
173Ibid at p. 245.
181M. Mustill, supra n. 109 at p. 174; See also B. Goldman, supra n. 170 [B. Goldman, "The applicable law: general principles of law - the lex mercatoria" in: Contemporary problems in international arbitration, supra n. 109, 113 at p. 117] at p. 125.

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