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No court power under CPR 3.1(2)(g) to stay LCIA arbitrations pending s24/s68 challenges: English Commercial Court reaffirms Arbitration Act 1996 non-intervention and exceptional circumstances threshold

Published on: 04 March 2026

Published by a LexisNexis Arbitration expert
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Arbitration—restraining arbitration proceedings pending a removal application or procedural challenge (A v B & another) Party A v Party B and Another [2026] EWHC 327 (Comm) What are the practical implications of this case?

This ruling has concrete, practitioner-focused consequences for arbitration specialists and commercial disputes lawyers. Two key themes emerge from the judgment. Each limits prospects for court intervention.

  • To begin with, it makes plain that the court will not halt an arbitration merely because a s 24 removal bid or a s 68 serious irregularity complaint has been filed. Section 24(3) expressly envisages the arbitration carrying on whilst a removal request is outstanding. Advisers should warn clients that launching a court challenge will not usually ‘pause’ the procedural timetable; delay-driven tactics are unlikely to prosper and may undermine credibility.
  • Further, the decision powerfully reaffirms the non-intervention tenet in AA 1996, s 1(c). The court’s doubt as to whether it even possesses authority to restrain a live arbitration—and its clear message that any such jurisdiction would be exercised only in rare, exceptional situations—materially reduces the room for judicial involvement mid-arbitration...

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