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EN
The article discusses the Rules of the Arbitration Court attached to the Economic Chamber of the Czech Republic and Agrarian Chamber of the Czech Republic. Notes that the provisions on obligational relations which concern the application of rights before court, court proceeding or court decisions, shall apply as appropriate to the application of rights before the Arbitration Court (arbitrator), to arbitration proceedings or to the award if they based on a valid arbitration agreement. The evidence is governed by § 20 of the Arbitration Act. The fundamental categories of evidence is documentary evidence that due to the nature of the settlement agreements, which are negotiated in arbitration, are usually sufficient to prove the facts alleged by the parties. The Act provides that evidence questioning the parties, witnesses or experts - the kind of evidence in civil proceedings before courts quite common and can say essential - potential tribunals shall be performed only if that person to control voluntarily attend and testify. Other evidence may only be used if they are provided to them. The cause of this specific adjustment during the proof is the fact that to carry out its tasks does not have an arbitrator or arbitral tribunal coercive state power for their regulation.
EN
The Bratislava Commodity Exchange (Bratislavská plodinová burza) was established in 1922. It had two sections, one for trade in agricultural crops and the other for trade in timber. Its organizational structure, administration and the activity of the exchange court were regulated by a statute. In an attempt to contribute to the development of grain production, it established exhibition markets for Slovak barley in the framework of the Danubian Trade Fair (Dunajský veľtrh), and strove to facilitate the international exchange of goods through the port of Bratislava. After the establishment of a grain monopoly and the resulting purchase of grain, animal feed and milled products only at official prices, the exchange lost its function in the field of fixing prices. After the formation of the Slovak Republic in 1939, it was transformed into the Bratislava Exchange (Bratislavská burza), and its activity was widened to include a financial section. It traded in securities and foreign currencies, but in shares only sporadically. The introduction of a planned economy and centrally planned direction of the economy narrowed its activity to an arbitration function and expert activity. It was dissolved in 1952.
EN
The Bratislava Agricultural Exchange was established in 1922. It had two sections, one for trade in agricultural crops and the other for trade in timber. Its organization structure, administration and the activity of the exchange court were regulated by a statute. In an attempt to contribute to the development of grain production, it established exhibition markets for Slovak barley in the framework of the Danubian Trade Fair, and strove to facilitate the international exchange of goods through the port of Bratislava. After the establishment of a grain monopoly and the resulting purchase of grain, animal feed and milled products only at official prices, the exchange lost its function in the field of fixing prices. After the formation of the Slovak Republic in 1939, it was transformed into the Bratislava Exchange, and its activity was widened to include a financial section. It traded in securities and foreign currencies, but in shares only sporadically. The introduction of a planned economy and centrally planned direction of the economy narrowed its activity to an arbitration function and expert activity. It was dissolved in 1952.
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