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Anti-suit injunction
Order to restrain parallel action From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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An anti-suit injunction is an order issued by a court or arbitral tribunal that prevents an opposing party from commencing or continuing a legal proceeding in another jurisdiction or forum.[1][2][3] It is among the means available to address the problem of parallel proceedings or forum shopping, whether they are current or anticipated.[2]
In recent years[when?] many jurisdictions have placed a high standard to obtain an injunction such as where the proceedings are "oppressive or vexatious". Furthermore, in proceedings up until the milestone decision in Gazprom case, anti-suit injunction was considered inapplicable in litigation[4] or arbitration[5][6] among EU member states. The question was whether it applied to arbitration, being excluded from the Brussels Convention. This was resolved in Gazprom case and the specifics of the exclusion were covered in recital 12 of Brussels recast, therefore current[when?] position is that anti-suit injunction can be issued by EU arbitration tribunals and upheld by Courts of Justice of EU member states.
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