• Sectors we work in banner(2)

    Quick Reads

Arbitration as an alternative to litigation

In an email to Central Family Court users published in The Law Society Gazette on 11 August, His Honour Judge Robin Tolson QC announced his intention to step down as Designated Family Judge for London, a role he has held since 2015, and painted a painful picture of a court system all too familiar to those of us practising in family law.

Despite the great efforts by judges and court staff alike, the problems facing the family courts are nothing new, and showed no sign of being resolved in the pre-Covid era. They have now been brought into sharper focus than ever before by the ongoing pandemic, leading in very many cases to intolerable delays in listing hearings, issuing divorce petitions and processing other court applications. 


In such circumstances, many parties are increasingly turning to alternative methods of dispute resolution, including family law arbitration. Arbitration as a means to resolve family disputes was launched by the Institute of Family Law Arbitrators (IFLA) in 2012 to deal with financial and property disputes, and in 2016 it was extended to include children matters.  The advantages are clear; the parties can select their own tribunal from a qualified panel of arbitrators maintained by IFLA, the dispute can be resolved more quickly than might otherwise be possible were the parties to enter the court system, the arbitral hearing will be private (there is a risk of press intrusion in some family courts) and the final arbitral award is binding on both parties with much more limited scope for appeal. 


For many families, arbitration as a bespoke process through which their dispute can be resolved quickly and privately, is an option worth considering. 

“You the court users will glimpse, perhaps more than glimpse, some of the difficulties we - judges and staff alike - have faced here in court and behind the scenes at the business end of a family justice system which, if I may offer a personal view just for a moment, seems increasingly incapable of meeting the needs of its users: not enough time or money for the necessary and deserving; and a tendency to concentrate resources on the unnecessary, complicating the simple and pandering to agendas which are at odds with reality or a diversion at best.”

Our thinking

  • Dominic Lawrance and Catrin Harrison write for Tax Journal on the implications of the Court of Appeal judgment in the case of ‘A Taxpayer v HMRC’

    Dominic Lawrance

    In the Press

  • The Telegraph quotes Sarah Jane Boon on Labour’s plans for cohabitation reform

    Sarah Jane Boon

    In the Press

  • Something Changed – Landlord recovers possession of iconic music venue

    Samuel Lear

    Quick Reads

  • When is 20% not 20%? The real impact of the proposed changes to business property relief on trading companies

    Sarah Wray

    Quick Reads

  • Relocating to Switzerland: trusts

    Alexia Egger Castillo

    Insights

  • Charles Russell Speechlys finds that Gen Z prioritises financial planning and saving amidst growing economic challenges

    Sally Ashford

    News

  • "I have finished the court case and I have decided that now is not the right time for you to see your Mum" - Judges writing letters to children could become the norm

    Matt Foster

    Quick Reads

  • The World’s Most Exclusive Gold Card

    Kurt Rademacher

    Quick Reads

  • What do the proposed changes to business property relief mean for Investors and Entrepreneurs and their businesses?

    Mary Perham

    Insights

  • The Good, the Bad and the Ugly - the inheritance tax Consultation on agricultural and business property

    Sarah Wray

    Quick Reads

  • Pet Ownership and Family Breakdown: Transatlantic Treatment of Pets on Divorce

    Miranda Fisher

    Quick Reads

  • Bank of Mum and Dad PLC

    George Harrison

    Quick Reads

  • Mike Barrington writes for Wealth Briefing on sole company directors

    Mike Barrington

    In the Press

  • Miranda Fisher and Matt Foster write for eprivateclient on the consequences of cohabitation

    Miranda Fisher

    In the Press

  • Sarah Jane Boon and Julia Cox write for Tax Adviser on safeguarding family wealth and the role of pre- and post-nuptial agreements

    Sarah Jane Boon

    In the Press

  • Living Together in the 2020s: Why more Gen Z’s are Saying 'Yes' to Cohabitation Agreements

    Cara Fung

    Quick Reads

  • Private wealth in motion: The great exodus

    Yacine Diallo

    Insights

  • Sarah Rowley writes for Charities Management on what charities should keep an eye out for this year

    Sarah Rowley

    In the Press

  • Yacine Diallo and Pierre-Philip Leroux-Moga write for Agefi Luxembourg on the migration of high-net-worth individuals

    Yacine Diallo

    In the Press

  • LADbible quotes Sarah Jane Boon on the legal binding nature of marriages from Netflix’s 'Love is Blind'

    Sarah Jane Boon

    In the Press

Back to top