Delaware, the capital of business litigation, put into effect a rapid arbitration act this week.
Passed overwhelmingly by the Delaware House and unanimously by the Senate last month, the law “reflects the desire of many businesses to avoid the expensive, lengthy discovery that often accompanies full-blown litigation,” wrote Kellen Kasper, an associate with Foley & Lardner on the firm’s site.
Among requirements for its application are:
The act replaces a previous Delaware arbitration regime in which vice chancellors of the Court of Chancery served as arbitrators out of the public view. That system was declared unconstitutional in 2013 by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit as violating the First Amendment’s guarantee of public access to court proceedings.