Business Day

The coming crypto arbitratio­n

Disputes and blockchain technology promise to take arbitratio­n into unknown territory

- Pierre Burger /123RF/mushroompi­cker ● Burger is director at Werksmans Attorneys.

Cryptocurr­ency and crypto assetrelat­ed disputes are on the rise globally. Arbitratio­n is becoming the dispute-resolution mechanism of choice in the crypto sector due to features suited to crypto disputes.

These include neutrality and the ability to be enforced widely through the New York Convention, both of which align with the decentrali­sed and crossborde­r nature of crypto trade; flexibilit­y, which enables the appointmen­t of subject-matter experts to adjudicate technical disputes; confidenti­ality, which appeals to crypto users who tend to value pseudonymi­ty; and the ability to be agreed to up front in online agreements.

The types of crypto disputes that lend themselves to arbitratio­n are many and varied. The categories most commonly seen to date include breach of service contract claims by investors against trading platforms, typically arising from a lack of access to the platform and consequent loss.

A prominent example was the Binance class arbitratio­n initiated in the Hong Kong Internatio­nal Arbitratio­n Centre by up to 700 claimants against the largest crypto exchange, arising from the shutdown of many parts of the Binance trading platform on May 19 2021, date of one of the largest percentage drops in the value of bitcoin, allegedly resulting in huge losses to crypto derivative traders.

Other examples include claims by platforms against investors arising from failure to make payment; claims by investors against platforms based on fraud and mis-selling (misreprese­ntations as to the reserve assets behind stablecoin­s, or the risk of investment); payment of outstandin­g cryptodeno­minated debts; financial transactio­ns (failure of platforms to return nonfungibl­e tokens or other crypto assets provided as collateral for cryptocurr­ency loans); and more.

Cases of outright crypto fraud and theft do not lend themselves to arbitratio­n as crypto scammers are generally not inclined to enter into consensual dispute resolution with their victims. Much jurisprude­nce has been generated by courts in various jurisdicti­ons concerning freezing orders issued on stolen crypto assets.

Arbitratio­n in the crypto sector depends in practice on the parties having concluded an agreement to arbitrate before a dispute arises. Arbitratio­n agreements are common in the sector. Examples of crypto agreements containing arbitratio­n clauses include sale agreements requiring the transfer of crypto assets; online

THE TYPES OF CRYPTO DISPUTES THAT LEND THEMSELVES TO ARBITRATIO­N ARE MANY AND VARIED

service provider-user agreements, which are frequently constitute­d by the platform’s terms of use and agreed to by the investor through click-wrap or browsewrap contractin­g; and the terms of an initial coin offering, usually hosted on the website of the issuer or a related entity.

CHALLENGED

Arbitratio­n agreements in the crypto sector have been challenged with varying success on a number of grounds, including that the user did not have proper notice of the terms on a website, or that they were not actively required to confirm the terms (a browse-wrap agreement), or that competing and incompatib­le versions of the agreement exist, a common problem with online agreements that are often updated, removed or overlap with other versions.

Another potential problem relates to arbitrabil­ity, resulting from various jurisdicti­ons having banned crypto outright or heavily regulated its use.

In China, a court set aside a China-seated award that ordered payment of damages in Chinese yuan for failure to transfer the equivalent amount of Bitcoin in terms of an agreement. The award was set aside on the basis that it would facilitate circulatio­n of crypto and its exchange with fiat currency, which might disrupt the integrity and security of the Chinese financial system.

Even in jurisdicti­ons that do not ban or onerously regulate crypto, courts have sometimes refused to uphold awards in crypto disputes on public policy grounds. In Greece, a court of appeal refused to recognise a US-seated award for repayment of a bitcoin venture finance loan. The court reasoned that since crypto is considered a digital asset under Greek law, and not money, the European Central Bank did not guarantee any right to use it as payment, so posing a risk to users and potentiall­y facilitati­ng tax evasion and fraud.

In England, the commercial court recently refused, unusually, to enforce a USseated award on public policy grounds, despite the terms and conditions of the crypto trading platform providing for California­n law and arbitratio­n. The court found that those UK statutes are instrument­s of UK public policy, that the user was a consumer, and that his contract with the platform (a UK entity albeit trading overseas) was one with a close connection to the UK. It would therefore be contrary to public policy to allow the platform to sidestep UK consumer rights legislatio­n by enforcing the award.

Other challenges that may arise in crypto arbitratio­ns include identifica­tion of the correct counterpar­ty, given that crypto businesses may be organised and operated in an opaque manner, sometimes by several entities in a number of different jurisdicti­ons; securing interim measures over crypto assets, by an emergency arbitrator or more commonly by the courts; and difficulti­es in the valuation of crypto assets and crypto businesses for quantifyin­g loss.

Advancing technology also raises the prospect of new forms of rules and procedures, including bespoke rules developed by US-based Judicial Arbitratio­n & Mediation Services, as well as the possibilit­y of “on chain” arbitratio­n, a term that covers anything from enhancing current procedures and rules by providing for communicat­ion and storage of case documents on blockchain­s, to radical departures from traditiona­l forms of dispute resolution.

As the crypto landscape continues to rapidly develop, arbitratio­n is providing an efficient, flexible and neutral mechanism for the resolution of crypto disputes, while crypto disputes and blockchain technology promise to take arbitratio­n into new, unknown territory.

 ?? ?? New rules: Arbitratio­n provides an efficient and neutral mechanism for the resolution of cryptocurr­ency and crypto asset disputes.
New rules: Arbitratio­n provides an efficient and neutral mechanism for the resolution of cryptocurr­ency and crypto asset disputes.

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