Arbitration Act 2005: Malaysia Joins the Model Law Arbitration Community – Law Review 2006.
Arbitration Act 2005: Malaysia Joins the Model Law Arbitration Community – Law Review 2006.
Arbitration is an important part of commercial life and every legal system must
to some degree be concerned with it. The business and arbitral communities in
Malaysia had long clamoured for a total revision and updating of the Arbitration
Act 1952. Malaysia’s arbitration legislation has now seen a major overhaul with
the passing of the Arbitration Act 2005.
The Arbitration Act 2005, Act 646 (the new Act) received the Royal Assent on
December 30, 2005 and was published in the Gazette on December 31, 2005.
The Minister has fixed the commencement date as March 15, 2006 and thus, the
current 1952 Act (the old Act) will only continue to apply to arbitrations which
have already commenced, and the new Act will apply to all other arbitrations. It
is therefore timely for practitioners in the arbitration field to take a close look at
the new Act. In what material ways does the new Act depart from the old?
Following the pattern of the time, the old Act was based almost word for word
on the English Arbitration Act of 1950. While the old Act had the merits of
simplicity and clarity, it was long outdated. With the increasing emphasis on
arbitrations, there was more and more judicial grist exposing the infirmities,
shortcomings and lacunae found in the old Act. It has remained virtually
unchanged for over half a century; the major amendments made by the English
Acts of 1979 and 1996 and similar Acts in other common law countries have up
to now escaped us.
