A CCA Blog: The Aardvark* It has been a while since you heard from me, but a recent case caught my attention. In Nuvasive, Inc. v. Absolute Medical, LLC, No.22-10214, the 11th Circuit affirmed a district court’s decision to overturn an arbitration award more than three months after the statutory deadline to challenge the award. It turned out that one of the respondents was coaching the witness who was testifying by video conference, by …
Remote Hearing
Root, Hog or Die: Arbitration Adaption in a Pandemic
In our last Blog entry, the Author wrote of the necessity of arbitrators, lawyers, arbitral institutions -- indeed, the entirety of the arbitration profession -- to adapt to the new day that has been brought about by COVID-19 and its impact on every facet of everyday life. His message was straightforward -- as arbitrators and as consumers of arbitration services -- we must adapt to the new reality of online arbitration proceedings or perish. In other words, “Root, hog or …
It Is Not the Strongest of the Species that Survives But the Most Adaptable: The Case For Online Commercial Arbitration
Variations of the quote “It is not the strongest of the species that survives, nor the most intelligent that survives. It is the one that is most adaptable to change,” are often attributed to Charles Darwin. Those may have not been Darwin’s exact words but the point stands that survival requires adaptation. That stands true in the world of commercial arbitration as well. For decades, parties, counsel and arbitrators have enjoyed the benefits provided by arbitration, among those: relatively …