De las nulidades contractuales y el arbitramento en materia administrativa

When a contract contains a compromising clause, it is clear that each party has agreed to take away the competence of knowledge from the Justice (Ordinary or Administrative) of the decisions of the eventual conflicts that could come up about the interpretation, execution or liquidation of the same c...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Orozco Vanegas, Jesús David
Format: Article
Language:Spanish
Published: Universidad del Norte: Ediciones Uninorte 2003
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dialnet.unirioja.es/servlet/oaiart?codigo=2347518
Source:Revista de derecho: División de Ciencias Jurídicas de la Universidad del Norte, ISSN 0121-8697, Nº. 20, 2003, pags. 250-261
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Summary: When a contract contains a compromising clause, it is clear that each party has agreed to take away the competence of knowledge from the Justice (Ordinary or Administrative) of the decisions of the eventual conflicts that could come up about the interpretation, execution or liquidation of the same contract. In the special case of administrative contratation, it is the law who explicitly authorizes its use, but we must understand this authorization as limited, because it can not be forgotten than in this kind of contratation, the State is always a party, and as if, it has it's prerogatives and powers of it's own, in which is compromised the juridical order and the exercise of the public power; aspects that can not be disposed. In this essay I will tray to tackle just a few aspects and inconvenients of the arbitrage in administrative matters, most of all in those cases that is discussed about the vices and nullities of the contract as a legal figure.