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§ 9-9-32.Appointment of arbitrators; immunity from liability

Chapter 9. Arbitration · Article 1. General Provisions · Last amended 2017 · Last verified July 17, 2026

In one sentenceThis section lets parties agree on how to appoint arbitrators, supplies default appointment procedures with 30-day deadlines and court backup when they have not, bars nationality-based disqualification, directs the court to weigh independence and impartiality when it appoints, and shields arbitrators and administering institutions from liability absent bad faith.

Full Text of § 9-9-32

Text sizeJump to: (a) (b) (c) (d) (e) (f) (g)

(a) No person shall be precluded by reason of nationality from acting as an arbitrator, unless otherwise agreed by the parties.
(b) The parties shall be free to agree on a procedure to appoint the arbitrator or arbitrators, subject to the provisions of subsections (d) and (e) of this Code section.
(c) If the parties do not agree on the procedure to appoint the arbitrator or arbitrators:
(1) In an arbitration with three arbitrators, each party shall appoint one arbitrator, and the two arbitrators thus appointed shall appoint the third arbitrator; if a party fails to appoint the arbitrator within 30 days of receipt of a request to do so from the other party, or if the two arbitrators fail to agree on the third arbitrator within 30 days of their appointment, the appointment shall be made, upon request of a party, by the court specified in Code Section 9-9-27; or
(2) In an arbitration with a sole arbitrator, if the parties are unable to agree on the arbitrator within 30 days, the arbitrator shall be appointed, upon request of a party, by the court specified in Code Section 9-9-27.
(d) Where, under an appointment procedure agreed upon by the parties:
(1) A party fails to act as required under such procedure;
(2) The parties, or two arbitrators, are unable to reach an agreement expected of them under such procedure; or
(3) A third party, including an institution, fails to perform any function entrusted to it under such procedure, any party may request the court specified in Code Section 9-9-27 to take the necessary measure, unless the arbitration agreement on the appointment procedure provides other means for securing the appointment.
(e) A decision on a matter entrusted by subsection (c) or (d) of this Code section to the court specified in Code Section 9-9-27 shall not be subject to appeal. The court, in appointing an arbitrator, shall have due regard to any qualifications required of the arbitrator by the arbitration agreement and to such considerations as are likely to secure the appointment of an independent and impartial arbitrator and, in the case of a sole or third arbitrator, shall take into account as well the advisability of appointing an arbitrator of a nationality other than those of the parties.
(f) An arbitrator shall not be liable for:
(1) Anything done or omitted in the discharge or purported discharge of arbitral functions, unless the act or omission is shown to have been in bad faith; or
(2) Any mistake of law, fact, or procedure made in the course of arbitration proceedings or in the making of an arbitration award.
(g) Subsection (f) of this Code section shall apply to an employee or agent of an arbitrator and to an appointing authority, arbitral institution, or person designated or requested by the parties to appoint or nominate an arbitrator or provide other administrative services in support of the arbitration.

Plain-English Summary

This is the workhorse section for getting a tribunal seated. Subsection (a) starts with a nondiscrimination rule — nobody can be kept off a tribunal because of their nationality unless the parties themselves agreed to limit it. Subsections (b) and (c) then lay out how appointment happens: the parties are free to agree on their own procedure, and if they have not, the Code supplies one. For a three-arbitrator tribunal, each side appoints one arbitrator and those two pick the third; miss the 30-day windows for either step, and the court steps in on request. For a sole arbitrator, the parties get 30 days to agree before the court appoints instead.

Subsection (d) covers the appointment procedures parties design for themselves — if a party will not act, if the parties or two arbitrators cannot agree, or if a third party like an institution will not perform its role, any party can ask the court to step in, unless the agreement already provides its own fix. Subsection (e) makes the court’s appointment decision final — no appeal — and tells the court what to weigh: the qualifications the parties required, the independence and impartiality of the candidate, and, for a sole or third arbitrator, whether appointing someone of a different nationality than the parties would serve the case.

Subsections (f) and (g) close with an immunity shield. Arbitrators are not liable for what they do or fail to do in carrying out their duties unless it was done in bad faith, and they are not liable for honest mistakes of law, fact, or procedure. That protection extends to an arbitrator’s staff or agents and to the institutions and people who help appoint arbitrators or run the arbitration’s administrative side.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can someone be excluded from serving as an arbitrator because of their nationality?

No, unless the parties themselves agreed otherwise. Subsection (a) bars nationality-based exclusion absent such an agreement.

What happens if the parties agreed to three arbitrators but have not agreed on how to pick them?

Subsection (c)(1) has each party appoint one arbitrator, and those two appoint the third; if either step is not completed within 30 days, the court specified in Code Section 9-9-27 makes the appointment on request.

What happens with a sole arbitrator if the parties cannot agree on who it should be?

Subsection (c)(2) allows the court to appoint the sole arbitrator if the parties have not agreed within 30 days.

Can a party appeal a court’s decision appointing an arbitrator?

No. Subsection (e) states that decision “shall not be subject to appeal.”

Are arbitrators personally liable for mistakes they make while deciding a case?

Generally no. Subsection (f) shields arbitrators from liability for acts or omissions in discharging their duties unless done in bad faith, and for mistakes of law, fact, or procedure.

Amendment History

Code 1981, § 9-9-32, enacted by Ga. L. 2012, p. 961, § 1/SB 383; Ga. L. 2017, p. 774, § 9/HB 323.

Source & verification. Section text and amendment history are reproduced verbatim from the Official Code of Georgia Annotated, published by the Official Code of Georgia Annotated, Georgia Code Revision Commission / LexisNexis. Last verified July 17, 2026. · Official source
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