Jurisdiction - ISDA Provision
In gory detail
1992 ISDA
Nothing in this Agreement precludes either party from bringing Proceedings in any other jurisdiction (outside, if this Agreement is expressed to be governed by English law, the Contracting States, as defined in Section 1(3) of the Civil Jurisdiction and Judgments Act 1982 or any modification, extension or re-enactment thereof for the time being in force) nor will the bringing of Proceedings in any one or more jurisdictions preclude the bringing of Proceedings in any other jurisdiction. |
2002 ISDA
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On the disapplication of 13(b)(iii)
Where you wish to elect the exclusive jurisdiction of (say) English Courts in your Schedule, you may wish to explicitly disapply the proviso to 13(b) which provides that nothing in this clause precludes the bringing of Proceedings in another jurisdiction (in the flush language of the 1992 ISDA version; in 13(b)(iii) of the 2002 ISDA version).
Strictly speaking you shouldn't need to do this: Section 1(b) provides that the inconsistency created by the use of the expression "exclusive jurisdiction" in the Schedule will prevail over the provisions of the Master Agreement.
A word of caution: if you do purport to explicitly override it for good measure and a counterparty pushes back, having deliberately taken the clarifying language out of a draft, you may be in an inferior position when interpreting the meaning of "exclusive jurisdiction", precisely because the counterparty has refused to rule out the use of other jurisdictions.