Mathew Newman

Mathew leads Ogier's Dispute Resolution team in Guernsey, and is also global head of the firm's multi-disciplinary Restructuring and Insolvency practice. His practice encompasses commercial and financial dispute resolution, with a special focus on contentious insolvency and restructuring and regulatory matters, schemes of arrangement, shareholder disputes and matters involving investment schemes. Mathew also has considerable experience in relation to more general commercial disputes involving financial services businesses, Guernsey trusts and large scale construction claims.

Mathew qualified as an advocate of the Royal Court of Guernsey in February 2011, where he appears regularly on complex commercial and trusts disputes and insolvency/restructuring matters. In particular, Mathew frequently acts for trustees and beneficiaries in both hostile and administrative trusts proceedings, as well as for insolvency office holders and economic stakeholders in contentious cases involving distressed or insolvent structures, especially in cases of fraud and asset tracing. He also has substantial experience of civil cases involving breach of directors' duties, shareholder disputes and professional negligence, together with contentious regulatory cases in the context of proceeds of crime, sanctions and anti-money laundering legislation. Mathew is ranked by Chambers & Partners (tier 2) and by Legal 500 (leading individual).

Mathew joined the firm in 2008 from global firm DLA Piper where he was a member of the Restructuring Group. Mathew is a qualified commercial mediator and is a member of the executive committee of ARIES, the local chapter of INSOL International. He is a member of the Guernsey insolvency law reform committee, the Insolvency Lawyers’ Association, the Association of Business Recovery Professionals (R3) and is an overseas member of the Chancery Bar Association. Mathew is also a member of the editorial board of International Corporate Rescue magazine and a committee member of INSOL International's Webinar Series.

Mathew is also part of Ogier's Aviation and Marine sector group and has worked on litigation cases surrounding aircraft leasing in an insolvency situation as well as a case involving securing shipping vessels around the world on behalf of the liquidators of an oil and gas company.

Panel

  • Contributing Author

Qualified Year

  • 2002

Experience

  • DLA Piper (2000 - 2008)
  • Ogier (2008 - Present)

Membership

  • Insolvency Lawyers Association
  • Association of Business Recovery Professionals
  • INSOL International
  • Overseas Member of Chancery Bar Association

Qualifications

  • (LLB) (1996 - 1999)
  • INSOL Fellow (2024)
  • Mediator accredited by Chartered institute of Arbitrators

Education

  • Universite de Caen Normandie (2010)
  • Guernsey Bar (2011)
  • The College of Law, Chester (1999)
  • Cardiff University/ Prifysgol Caerdydd (1996 - 1999)

1 Contributions by Mathew Newman

Recognition, enforcement and execution of arbitral awards in Guernsey: domestic, New York Convention and Foreign Awards, refusal grounds, Royal Court procedure, and post-judgment enforcement methods
PRACTICE NOTES
Recognition, enforcement and execution of arbitral awards in Guernsey: domestic, New York Convention and Foreign Awards, refusal grounds, Royal Court procedure, and post-judgment enforcement methods
Introduction to the enforcement regime in Guernsey Guernsey’s system for recognising and enforcing arbitral awards rests on statute. The Arbitration (Guernsey) Law 2016 (the 2016 Law) refreshed the island’s arbitration framework to mirror best-practice jurisdictions, whereas the Arbitration (Guernsey) Law 1982 (the 1982 Law) governs domestic arbitral proceedings and the enforcement of awards (covering domestic, foreign and New York Convention Awards). The Royal Court has additionally promulgated the Royal Court (Arbitration) (Guernsey) Rules 1983 (the Rules), which prescribe the procedure for applications brought under the arbitration legislation. Guernsey is a contracting party to the Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards (the New York Convention), whose territorial application was extended to the Island in 1985. Under the 2016 Law, recognition and enforcement of awards issued pursuant to an arbitration agreement in the territory of a state that is a New York Convention member (New York Convention Awards) is now embedded in Guernsey law, while the 1982 Law continues to cater for recognition and enforcement of awards made pursuant to an arbitration agreement to which the Execution of Foreign Arbitral Awards, 26 September 1927 and the Protocol on Arbitration Clauses, 24 September 1923, apply within Guernsey’s statutory framework...
Arbitration
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