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Home » News & publications » Latest news » 2018 » The art of adjudication – an overview of crucial arbitration case law in 2018
The court refused ESSA’s section 67 challenge. Its only claim was that the decree in November 2016 somehow
took away the arbitrator’s substantive jurisdiction. Baker J held that it did not do so. Had it done so, one would
expect ESSA (acting only with reasonable diligence) to have objected to jurisdiction a month or so earlier.
Instead, ESSA had taken part in the arbitral proceedings without making any objection that the arbitrator lacked
substantive jurisdiction.
Under section 73(1), a participating party cannot raise an objection as to the tribunal’s substantive jurisdiction
later unless they show that, at the time they took part or continued to take part in the proceedings, they did not
know and could not with reasonable diligence have discovered the grounds for the objection. ESSA had been
aware since late August 2016 that a decree as to nullity was distinctly possible yet it failed to act until late
December. In Baker J’s view, ESSA failed to comply with the requirement under section 73(2) to raise the
assertion as soon as possible ‘when it failed to do so within a working day or two of receiving [the decree]’
(paragraph 46).
Witness evidence
Baker J took the opportunity to remind the parties that: “The content of any witness statement, beyond a bare
identification of exhibited documents, can and should be limited to matters of fact intended to be proved, if
disputed, by calling the maker of the statement as a factual witness at the final hearing of the claim” (paragraph
25). The party’s case as to what those documents prove and the conclusions to be drawn from those documents
should be in the arbitration claim form as part of the ‘Remedy claimed and grounds on which claim is made’.
Setting out the detailed case as to the material facts, with explanatory comment or an outline of the argument in
a single witness statement from the solicitor may well be convenient – but that does not make it ‘necessary or
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appropriate’.
In Dreymoor Fertilisers Overseas PTE Ltd v Eurochem Trading GmbH [2018], the claimant, Dreymoor, was an
international trading company which, amongst other things, bought fertiliser from the defendant, ECTG, to re-sell
to third parties in India whilst acting as ECTG’s agent and receiving commission. ECTG claimed that there were
corrupt arrangements between Dreymoor and two of ECTG’s former senior employees: namely that Dreymoor
bribed the employees in order to guarantee itself volumes of high-margin products and substantially better
agency terms.
ECTG’s claims related to two umbrella agreements, and subsequent individual sales agreements. One of the
umbrella agreements contained the Short Form LCIA clause, and all its associated sales contracts contained the
Long Form LCIA clause. The other umbrella agreement did not contain an arbitration clause, but all the
associated sales contracts contained the Long Form LCIA clause. ECTG commenced arbitration proceedings in
reliance on these clauses.
Under section 67 of the act, Dreymoor challenged the tribunal’s jurisdiction to deal with the bribery claim on the
basis that the sales contracts were not intended to apply to bribery allegations, and these allegations were
dependant on an agency agreement, under which there was no agreement to arbitrate.
Butcher J held, applying Fiona Trust, that the arbitration clause applied to the bribery allegations as a reasonable
business person would not have intended that a question of whether a sales contract had been induced by
bribery should only be resolved under the dispute resolution procedure of the agency agreement, and not the
sales contract. A clause which refers disputes ‘arising out of’ the contract is apt to refer disputes which relate to
non-contractual claims, including for pre-contractual misrepresentation and antecedent bribery inducing the
contract (paragraph 53). Therefore, the section 67 challenge failed.
Similarly, in Uttam Galva Steels Ltd v Gunvor Singapore PTE Ltd [2018], the Commercial Court dismissed a
section 67 challenge, holding that bills of exchange were covered by the master agreements for the sale and
purchase of nickel. The master agreements incorporated the defendant’s general terms and conditions, which
included an arbitration clause. Although he found that the challenge had been made out of time, Picken J held
that “it ought, in general at least, to be assumed that, when agreeing an arbitration clause, reasonable (or
rational) businessmen would not contemplate fragmentation as regards dispute resolution”(paragraphs 47/48).
Arbitration clauses therefore remain very powerful and far-reaching in their scope. As the above cases
demonstrate, they may be deemed to catch not only the contracts in which they appear but also related
contracts; and not only contractual disputes, but any type of dispute arising out of the contract in question.
Shagang repudiated the charter and LOCL commenced arbitration, alleging that JSG had guaranteed Shagang’s
obligations under the charter. JSG denied any knowledge of the charter or guarantee at the time they were
alleged to have been made, arguing at the outset of the arbitration that the tribunal did not have jurisdiction, and
the tribunal rejected its application for the court to determine jurisdiction under section 32 of the act. The
tribunal then found for LOCL on the preliminary issue of whether JSG had authorised the guarantee on the basis
of the evidence before it, and subsequently found in favour of LOCL in terms of liability and quantum.
JSG then applied to the Commercial Court to have the award set aside on the basis that the tribunal did not have
substantive jurisdiction under section 67. An uphill struggle, you might think: but Mrs Justice Carr, hearing the
application, emphasised that a challenge under section 67 ‘proceeds by way of re-hearing rather than review …
and a party is (in general) entitled to adduce evidence which was not before the Arbitrators’ (paragraph 13). JSG
therefore had an unfettered right to a full judicial determination on the updated evidence.
Carr J held that the burden was on LOCL to positively establish the existence of an agreement to arbitrate (by
proving JSG guaranteed the charter). On the basis of the fresh evidence before the court, both written and oral,
LOCL had not established on the balance of probabilities that JSG authorised the guarantee. Accordingly, there
was no valid arbitration agreement between the parties such as to give the arbitrators substantive jurisdiction
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over LOCL’s claim, and the section 67 challenge was allowed.
Section 68(2)(d) allows a party to challenge an award where there has been a failure by the tribunal to deal with
all the issues. In this case, the claimant (Orascom) had sold the defendant (Veon) its shareholding in an Italian
telecoms group. A dispute arose whereby Veon asserted that Orascom was obliged to indemnify it for financial
loss suffered as a result of Veon settling claims made by the tax authorities post sale, but which related to audits
that pre-dated the sale. The tribunal made an award in Veon’s favour.
Orascom challenged the award on the basis that the tribunal failed to deal with the lawfulness of the settlement
under Italian law, which went to the reasonableness of the settlement.
Baker J held that it is not sufficient to engage section 68 by simply asserting that a specific finding of an issue
has not been dealt with separately by the tribunal in the award. Any proposition advanced by one party and
disputed by another creates an issue. If for some reason it is not dealt with in the award, a party could say that
there had been a failure by the tribunal to deal with an issue. However this, as the parties themselves agreed, did
not feel right: ‘because it does not feel right to say, no matter the circumstances, no matter the importance or
significance of the point to the way in which the case has been advanced overall or is determined by the
arbitrators, that failure to deal with something that was in issue before them is, without more, irregular’
(paragraph 27).
The word ‘issue’ used in section 68(2)(d) must ‘take colour’ from the way the section itself is drafted (paragraph
27) and also ‘from how it is said to matter… to the analysis of the claim or defence, as the case may be’
(paragraph 37). In essence, section 68(2)(d) will only be engaged if any failure to deal with the issue has caused
or will cause substantial injustice to the party. In this case, Baker J did not consider that failure engaged section
68.
Popplewell J dismissed the challenge, holding that: ‘It is always important to keep in mind the distinction
between a lack of opportunity to deal with a case and a failure to recognise or take such opportunity… It is
enough if the point is "in play" or "in the arena" in the proceedings, even if it is not precisely articulated’
(paragraph 32).
The court took a similar fairness-based approach in Grindrod Shipping PTE Ltd v Hyundai Merchant Marine Co
Ltd [2018], in which Sir William Blair looked at the substance of the parties’ arguments rather than the way in
which, or the heads under which, they were presented. There was no unfairness where the matters relied on by
the tribunal were in play, albeit raised in a different way.
Attention to detail
Baker J also took the opportunity in Orascom to give guidance on drafting an arbitration claim form when
applying to challenge an award under section 68 (or indeed section 67) of the act.
In these circumstances, the purpose of the claim form is not just to identify under which provision a claim is
being made. Given that there is no procedure for exchanging statements of case in these challenges, the claim
form should stand on its own as a sufficiently detailed and particularised statement of case. In other words, less
is not more here. The claim form should not just contain the bare statutory requirements; it should contain
enough detail to let the other parties and the court understand the nature of the challenge, the grounds on which
it is made and any questions or issues that will need to be dealt with at a hearing.
Baker J also returned to a familiar theme: witness statements, by contrast, should contain facts and evidence,
not comment or submissions. A party’s case should wholly be contained in the claim form.
Security for costs
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Parties should also be aware that the court may order security for the costs of a section 68 challenge, even
where the claimant is commercially funded (Progas Energy Ltd & Ors v The Islamic Republic of Pakistan [2018]).
In this case, Picken J held that an offer by the funders to meet any adverse costs order did not mean that the
claimant had assets available for the section 68 challenge. Definitely something to bear in mind if you are
considering raising, or indeed are required to defend, a challenge to an arbitral award.
Threshold questions
In Agile Holdings Corp v Essar Shipping Ltd [2018], another charterparty case, the court allowed an appeal on a
question of law. The charterer, Essar, argued that the court could not hear the appeal because the scope of the
phrase in issue was not something which the tribunal had been asked to determine. Accordingly, said Essar, the
appeal did not involve a question of law arising out of the award or one which the tribunal was asked to
determine (section 69(3)(b)).
In response, the claimant Agile argued that Popplewell J, who had granted leave to appeal, had done so on the
basis of very full written arguments, including on that point. Having granted leave, that particular point could not
now be re-argued and the court should move straight to a substantive consideration of the question of law.
Waksman J’s judgment gives useful guidance as to the threshold questions a judge must decide at the
permission-to-appeal stage. Some, such as whether the determination of the question would substantially affect
the rights of one or more of the parties, whether the question is one of general public importance and whether it
is just and proper for the court to determine the question, are final questions which will not arise again
(paragraph 18). Others, such as those dealing with the merits of the underlying question for appeal, will fall for
consideration again: ie was the decision of the tribunal ‘obviously wrong’ or at least ‘open to serious doubt’
(paragraph 19)?
However, he found that the proper characterisation of the requirements that first there is a question of law (the
law question) and second that the law question was one which the tribunal had been ‘asked to determine’ (the
determination question) is rather more nuanced. Only the determination question was in issue here, and Essar
argued that both questions could be freely re-argued at the appeal.
Waksman J did not agree: ‘While the threshold conditions must be satisfied, once a judge decides that they are,
surely the court then has jurisdiction to determine the appeal. If it were otherwise, then, presumably all of the
threshold conditions could be re-argued on the basis that if a different view was taken the court would in truth
have no jurisdiction to deal with the appeal at all, even if they were the conditions regarding public importance or
affecting the rights of the parties. In my view, that cannot be right’ (paragraph 26).
He concluded that, with regard to the determination question, it is quite difficult to see why that should
necessarily arise when dealing with the merits of the appeal, ie the answer to the question of law. It might be
less difficult where the law question itself is concerned. There were, moreover, strong policy reasons for making
the decision to grant leave as efficacious and immune from further consideration as possible.
Questions of timing
In Daewoo Shipbuilding v Songa [2018] the defendants applied to strike out or summarily dismiss the claimant’s
application for an extension of time to appeal two arbitral awards under section 69. The defendants succeeded
and the claimant’s application was struck out.
The court held that where a party applies to the tribunal to correct clerical errors in an award under section 57,
the 28-day time period for appealing under section 70(3) will ordinarily run from the date of the original award,
and not the date of the correction. Nonetheless, Bryan J recognised that there may be cases where correction to
the award is necessary to enable a party to know whether it has grounds for an appeal. In such cases, where
there is a material application for a correction under section 57, the 28-day period will run from the date of the
award as corrected.
What should a party do if there is doubt or disagreement as to the materiality of the corrections sought? Bryan J
suggests issuing an application for an extension of time before the 28 day period expires, and indeed seeking
permission to appeal to the extent possible at that time.
Conclusion
As these latest developments show, it remains hard – but not impossible – to challenge an arbitral award
successfully, whether on the grounds of substantive jurisdiction, serious irregularity or question of law.
Furthermore, they demonstrate that the UK courts support and will uphold the arbitral process the parties have
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chosen, as far as is compatible with the delivery of justice to the parties. A neat form of quality assurance, if you
will, while avoiding some of the downsides to the litigation process itself.