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A January 2026 judgment from Malawi’s High Court (Commercial Division) has reshaped the way arbitration clauses Malawi 2026 contracts must be drafted, interpreted and enforced. The decision, published on MalawiLII as Commercial Case No. 1 of 2026, addressed three issues that every general counsel and commercial director operating in Malawi needs to understand: when courts will grant a stay of proceedings in favour of arbitration, how clause headings and third-party exclusions affect enforceability, and the narrow circumstances in which anti-suit relief is available. This article provides a full breakdown of the ruling together with a drafting checklist, sample clauses and an immediate-action playbook for businesses facing parallel proceedings.
The Commercial Division of the Malawi High Court, sitting in Lilongwe, delivered its judgment on 29 January 2026. The dispute arose from a fuel-supply agreement between two commercial parties, where one sought a stay of court proceedings on the basis that the contract contained an arbitration clause. The respondent opposed the stay, arguing that the clause expressly excluded the escrow agent, the very party central to the dispute, and that the clause body required negotiation before any reference to arbitration could be triggered, despite bearing the heading “ARBITRATION.
” The court refused the stay, holding that the substantive wording of the clause, not its heading, determined its effect, and that an express exclusion of a named party from the arbitration mechanism was fatal to the stay application.
What this means for contracts:
The Commercial Division judgment 2026 affects every business that trades in or through Malawi and relies on arbitration as its preferred method of dispute resolution. The practical stakes are significant: a refused stay means a party that bargained for confidential, neutral arbitration could instead find itself in public litigation before the Malawi courts, with different procedural rules, different timelines and different cost exposure. Conversely, a party that never consented to arbitration in the first place now has clearer authority for resisting attempts to force disputes out of court.
For general counsel, the judgment raises three immediate questions. First, do your existing Malawi-connected contracts contain arbitration clauses that would survive scrutiny under the tests the court applied? Second, if a dispute has already arisen, what procedural steps must be taken, and within what timeframe, to secure or oppose a stay? Third, if foreign proceedings or a foreign-seated arbitration are already under way, can the Malawi courts intervene?
Industry observers expect the decision to accelerate a trend already visible in Malawi’s commercial bar: greater demand for specialist clause-drafting advice and a sharper focus on dispute resolution Malawi provisions during contract negotiations rather than after disputes crystallise. Local press coverage, including reporting by The Nation, has highlighted the judiciary’s willingness to look beyond contractual labels and examine the substance of party agreements, a development that aligns Malawi’s approach more closely with international arbitration best practice.
Malawi’s arbitration framework rests on the Arbitration Act (Chapter 6:03 of the Laws of Malawi), which governs both domestic and certain aspects of international arbitration conducted within the jurisdiction. The Act provides the statutory basis for the enforcement of arbitration agreements, the appointment of arbitrators, the conduct of proceedings and the recognition of awards.
| Statute / Instrument | Scope | Practical Effect |
|---|---|---|
| Arbitration Act (Cap. 6:03) | Domestic arbitration agreements and proceedings; applications for stay of court proceedings | Provides the court’s power to stay litigation where a valid arbitration agreement exists and a party applies before delivering any pleading or taking any step in the proceedings |
| New York Convention (1958) | Recognition and enforcement of foreign arbitral awards | Malawi is a signatory; foreign awards can be enforced through the High Court subject to limited grounds of refusal (public policy, lack of notice, excess of jurisdiction) |
| High Court (Commercial Division) Rules | Procedural rules for commercial cases, including arbitration-related applications | Applications for stay and anti-suit relief are heard on an expedited basis within the Commercial Division |
Under the Arbitration Act, a court must be satisfied of two threshold conditions before granting a stay of proceedings Malawi: (1) there is a written arbitration agreement between the parties to the dispute, and (2) the applicant has not taken a step in the proceedings that amounts to a submission to the court’s jurisdiction. Beyond these statutory minimums, the 2026 judgment confirms that the court retains a residual discretion to examine whether the clause genuinely commits the parties to arbitration, or whether its wording, scope or exclusions remove the dispute from the arbitral mechanism. This represents an important judicial gloss on the statute and makes the international commercial law principles of clause construction directly relevant to Malawi practice.
The dispute concerned a fuel-supply and distribution agreement between two commercial entities operating in Malawi. The agreement contained a dispute resolution clause headed “ARBITRATION” but structured as a multi-tiered mechanism: it required the parties first to attempt negotiation for a specified period, then to escalate unresolved disputes to mediation, and only thereafter to proceed to arbitration. Critically, the clause contained an express provision excluding the escrow agent, a third party that held funds under the agreement, from the arbitration mechanism.
When a dispute arose over the release of escrowed funds, one party commenced proceedings in the High Court (Commercial Division) in Lilongwe. The other party applied for a stay of those proceedings, arguing that the dispute fell within the arbitration clause. The applicant contended that the heading “ARBITRATION” demonstrated the parties’ clear intention to arbitrate all disputes. The respondent opposed, pointing to both the negotiation pre-condition (which had not been satisfied) and the express exclusion of the escrow agent from the clause’s scope.
The Commercial Division held that the statutory power to stay proceedings in favour of arbitration under the Arbitration Act requires the court to identify a valid, operative arbitration agreement that covers both the subject matter of the dispute and the parties before it. The court emphasised that the existence of a clause labelled as an arbitration provision is necessary but not sufficient. Where the substantive wording of the clause imposes mandatory pre-conditions, such as negotiation or mediation, that have not been completed, the arbitration agreement is not yet engaged, and no stay will be granted.
On the critical question of clause construction, the court drew a firm distinction between a clause’s heading and its operative text. The judgment holds that contractual headings are aids to navigation, not determinants of legal effect. A heading reading “ARBITRATION” does not convert a negotiation or mediation clause into an arbitration agreement. Courts must look to the mandatory, operative language of the clause to determine whether the parties have agreed to submit disputes to binding arbitration.
Equally significant was the court’s treatment of the express exclusion of the escrow agent. Because the clause expressly stated that disputes involving the escrow agent were excluded from the arbitration mechanism, the court found that the applicant could not rely on the clause to stay proceedings in which the escrow agent’s obligations were the central issue. The likely practical effect of this holding is that any express carve-out in a dispute resolution clause will be interpreted strictly against the party seeking to invoke the broader mechanism.
Although the primary dispute was domestic, the court addressed the question of anti-suit injunction Malawi jurisdiction in obiter, noting that the High Court retains inherent power to restrain proceedings commenced in foreign courts or foreign-seated arbitrations where those proceedings are oppressive, vexatious, or commenced in breach of an exclusive jurisdiction or arbitration agreement. However, the court stressed that such relief is exceptional. It requires the applicant to demonstrate that Malawi is the natural forum, that the foreign proceedings are unconscionable, and that the balance of justice favours intervention. This aligns the Malawi position with established Commonwealth authorities and with guidance from institutions such as the ICC and UNCITRAL on local court intervention in international arbitration.
Five key takeaways for counsel:
The 2026 decision provides a structured framework that businesses can use to assess the enforceability of their arbitration clauses Malawi 2026 contracts. The following checklist distils the court’s reasoning into five practical tests that any in-house team should apply before relying on an arbitration clause or seeking a stay of proceedings.
| Situation | Court Likely to Grant Stay? | Practical Drafting Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Clear arbitration agreement covering the dispute and all parties | Stay likely, absent an urgent exclusive-jurisdiction clause or competing public-policy issue | Keep clear, broadly worded arbitration scope; specify seat and governing law explicitly |
| Clause excludes a named third party (e.g., escrow agent) but that party is the sole applicant for the stay | Court may refuse stay, as the exclusion limits the clause’s personal scope | Avoid ambiguous exclusions; use specific language limiting only third-party rights where genuinely intended |
| Clause headed “ARBITRATION” but body requires negotiation first | Court may treat as a non-arbitration clause and refuse stay until negotiation is complete | Use unambiguous wording: “All disputes arising out of or in connection with this contract shall be finally resolved by arbitration…” |
| Multi-tiered clause with clear escalation steps all completed | Stay likely, provided the arbitration tier is mandatory and not merely permissive | Include express language that arbitration is mandatory at the final tier; document completion of each prior step |
| Applicant has filed a defence on the merits before applying for stay | Stay likely refused, submission to jurisdiction | Apply for stay at the earliest possible moment; do not file any substantive pleading |
The 2026 judgment makes drafting arbitration clause Malawi provisions a more precise exercise than it was before. The following checklist and sample clauses reflect the standards that the Commercial Division has now confirmed.
“Any dispute arising out of or in connection with this Agreement, including any question regarding its existence, validity or termination, shall be referred to and finally resolved by arbitration under the Arbitration Act (Chapter 6:03 of the Laws of Malawi). The arbitration shall be conducted by a sole arbitrator appointed by agreement of the parties or, failing agreement within 14 days of a written request to arbitrate, by the Registrar of the High Court. The seat of the arbitration shall be Lilongwe, Malawi. The language of the arbitration shall be English.”
“All disputes arising out of or in connection with this Agreement shall be finally settled under the Rules of Arbitration of the International Chamber of Commerce by one or more arbitrators appointed in accordance with the said Rules. The seat of arbitration shall be [Johannesburg / London / Singapore, as agreed]. The language of the arbitration shall be English. This clause, and the arbitration agreement contained herein, shall be governed by the laws of [governing law jurisdiction]. Nothing in this clause shall prevent either party from applying to any court of competent jurisdiction for interim or conservatory measures.”
“Any dispute arising out of or in connection with this Agreement shall be finally resolved by arbitration in accordance with the UNCITRAL Arbitration Rules. The appointing authority shall be [institution]. The seat shall be Lilongwe, Malawi. For the avoidance of doubt, the Escrow Agent is not a party to this arbitration agreement and any dispute relating exclusively to the performance by the Escrow Agent of its obligations under the Escrow Agreement shall be resolved by the courts of Malawi. Where a dispute involves issues relating to both this Agreement and the Escrow Agreement, the parties shall use reasonable endeavours to consolidate proceedings.”
Red lines to avoid:
Cross-border arbitration Malawi disputes increasingly involve parallel proceedings in foreign courts or foreign-seated arbitrations. The 2026 judgment provides limited but important guidance on when Malawi courts will intervene. The following timeline sets out immediate steps for businesses confronted with this scenario, and should be read alongside the international litigation guide.
For a detailed guide to hearing preparation, see the resource on preparation for and conduct of arbitration hearings.
Once an arbitral award has been obtained, the next step is to enforce it. To enforce an arbitration clause Malawi practitioners must navigate a relatively straightforward but procedurally specific regime.
Domestic awards are enforceable under the Arbitration Act by application to the High Court, which will enter the award as a judgment of the court unless a ground for refusal is established. Foreign awards are enforceable under Malawi’s obligations as a signatory to the New York Convention. The applicant must file with the High Court the original award (or a certified copy), the arbitration agreement, and where necessary a certified translation. Grounds for refusing enforcement mirror those in the Convention: lack of valid agreement, denial of due process, excess of arbitral jurisdiction, award not yet binding, or enforcement contrary to public policy.
Early indications suggest that the 2026 judgment will make courts more willing to scrutinise the scope of the underlying arbitration clause at the enforcement stage as well, reinforcing the importance of precise drafting. Common enforcement defences in Malawi include challenging the validity of the arbitration agreement (particularly where scope or party exclusions are ambiguous), alleging improper notice of appointment of arbitrators, and invoking public policy on narrow grounds.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Ralph Sauti at Sauti & Company, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
The following resources support the analysis above and are recommended for practitioners and in-house teams working on arbitration clauses Malawi 2026 contracts:
The 2026 Commercial Division judgment is a landmark for arbitration clauses Malawi 2026 and beyond. It demands that businesses move beyond template clause language and invest in precise, bespoke drafting that addresses scope, pre-conditions, third-party exclusions and mandatory arbitral commitment. Every existing contract with a Malawi nexus should be reviewed against the five-test framework set out in this article. Where gaps are identified, clauses should be renegotiated or supplemented by side agreements. For disputes already in progress, early and specialist legal advice is essential, the procedural windows for stay applications and anti-suit relief are narrow and unforgiving.
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