[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Emirates Trading Agency Llc v Sociedade De Fomento Industrial Private Ltd [2015] EWHC 1452 (Comm) (20 May 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2015/1452.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 1452 (Comm) |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
Emirates Trading Agency LLC |
Claimant |
|
- and - |
||
Sociedade de Fomento Industrial Private Limited |
Defendant |
____________________
Mr David Brynmor Thomas (instructed by Reed Smith LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 27, 28, 29 April 2015
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Popplewell :
Introduction
"10 TERMINATION AND CONSEQUENCES OF TERMINATION"
Any Party may without prejudice to any claim for any antecedent breach, be entitled at its option, on the happening of any of the following events to terminate this Agreement:
a) By delivering a written notice to the other Party, if the other Party becomes or is declared bankrupt or goes into voluntary or compulsory liquidation ; or
b) by delivering a written notice to the other Party if any distress or attachment is levied, or any receiver or administrator is appointed in respect of the business or a substantial part of the property or assets of the other Party ..; or
c) by delivering a written notice to the other Party if there is a government expropriation, nationalisation or condemnation of all or a substantial part of the assets or capital stock of the other Party ..; or
d) the other Party commits any substantial breach of this LTC.
In case of a breach mentioned in 10 (d) above, if such breach is not caused by an event of Force Majeure, the Parties shall seek to resolve any dispute or claim arising out of or under this LTC by friendly discussion. Any Party may notify the other Party of its desire to enter into consultation to resolve a dispute or claim. If no solution can be arrived in between the parties for a continuous period of three (3) months, then the non-defaulting Party can invoke the arbitration clause and the defaulting Party shall be liable to pay liquidated damages at the rate of USD ten (10) per wet metric tonne of the Cargo that remained to be supplied/taken delivery of for the balance of the Term of the LTC if it had been performed in full. The Parties hereby agree that the sum of USD 10 per wet metric tonne is a genuine pre-estimate of the damages which would be suffered in case of default.
Provided however that for the purpose of this Clause, the Seller shall not be considered in substantial breach of this LTC in the event it does not carry out its obligations required to be carried out at the relevant time under this LTC if the Buyer fails to comply with its duty under Annexure 2 in agreeing upon the schedule of shipment as proposed by the Seller.
Termination of this LTC shall not relieve any Party of any obligation or liability, under this Contract.
11. ARBITRATION
11.1 All disputes arising out of or in connection with this LTC shall be finally resolved by arbitration in accordance with the Rules of Arbitration of the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC). The place of arbitration shall be in London (UK). The arbitration shall be conducted in the English language.
11.2 The arbitration shall be referred to a tribunal of three (3) arbitrators who shall be appointed by the ICC. Any Award of a majority of the arbitrators shall be final binding upon the parties thereto, and may be entered for enforcement in any court having jurisdiction."
"7.2 The LTC was entered into on or about 23 November 2006 and SFI purported to terminate it by letter dated 7 November 2009.
7.3 Meetings and various discussions occurred between the parties both before and after the Notice of Termination, including 1 and 2 December 2009. The existence of such discussions is evidenced generally by ETA's letter dated 16 January 2010 and more specifically by Respondent's email dated 6 December 2009, where Respondent provided its draft minutes of the meetings, and also Claimant's reply to Respondent's letter dated 16 January 2010, Furthermore, during oral testimony, the existence of, and its attendance at, the December meetings was confirmed by ETA. Testimony given by Mr Mubarak Hussain, ETA's witness, admits that the purpose of the discussions was to find an "alternative solution which avoided arbitration".
7.4 Following these meetings, the Parties understood that the next step in the discussions would be for ETA to make a proposal concerning settlement of the claim. ETA failed to make any such proposal, save for a repeat of its suggestion that the LTC be reinstated, which SFI had already indicated was unacceptable.
7.5 Despite SFI making it expressly clear to ETA that it was willing to consider "any concrete payment schedule" in respect of the claim, no settlement was achieved.
7.6 Thus, the contemporaneous documentary record is supported by the oral testimony which establishes (in contrast with the position as it appeared from the witness statements) that:
(a) the Parties did have discussions about the claim, those discussions taking place (at least) at meetings on 1 and 2 December 2009,
(b) all discussions were "friendly";
(c) prior to 7 November 2009 the claim which was discussed at meetings, over the phone, and through written correspondence, was SFI's claim resulting from what it alleged to be ETA's failure to perform its obligations under the LTC and which led to the Notice of Termination. After 7 November 2009 the claim discussed was SFI's claim set out in the Notice of Termination. In these later discussions the parties considered a possible settlement of that claim by means of reinstatement of the LTC, but did not reach any agreement;
(d) it was ETA that requested the meetings which took place on 1 and 2 December 2009, thereby notifying SFI of its desire to have such discussions;
(e) following the meetings it was understood by the Parties that the next step would be for ETA to make a proposal for the resolution of the dispute;
(f) ETA made no such proposal, save for a repeat of its suggestion the contract be reinstated, which SFI had already made clear that it was not willing to do;
(g) it was also understood by the Parties that SFI was at all times willing to consider any further proposal made by ETA for a settlement of the claim; and
(h) no settlement was achieved either within three months of ETA's request for the meetings, or at all.
7.7 On 15 June 2010 the Claimant commenced arbitration by filing its Request for Arbitration.
7.8 These facts lead to only one possible conclusion, namely that the Objection fails on the facts. The Parties sought to resolve the disputes by friendly discussion, such discussions took place and did not, over a continuous period of three months, lead to any solution. Only subsequently did SFI commence these arbitration proceedings."
"When an arbitrator is to be replaced, the Court has discretion to decide whether or not to follow the original nominating process. Once reconstituted, and after having invited the parties to comment, the Arbitral Tribunal shall determine if and to what extent prior proceedings shall be repeated before the reconstituted Arbitral Tribunal."
"The Tribunal has given close and careful consideration to the Respondent's request that the Tribunal conduct a re-hearing of the objection to jurisdiction. The Tribunal considers that no sufficient basis has been advanced for the requested re-hearing. In arriving at this conclusion, which is unanimous, the Tribunal notes, without seeking to delineate the circumstances when such a request might succeed, that:
- no issue has been alleged, much less demonstrated, to undermine the independence or impartiality of any of the arbitrators who produced the Award dated 21 December 2011 (the Award);
- no issue has been alleged, much less demonstrated, concerning the process leading to, or the substantive correctness of, the Award;
- the Respondent chose not to challenge the Award under the Arbitration Act within the time limit for so doing (or at all);
- although other evidence is now said by the Respondent to exist that may have been relevant to the Award, the Respondent has not explained how or why such evidence was not put on the record prior to the Award and, more importantly, how such evidence contradicts the evidence of the Respondent's own witness, which was key to one of the central findings in the Award, namely that friendly discussions had taken place between the parties in advance of the Claimant commencing these proceedings."
Issues
(1) The issue has been finally and conclusively decided by the Tribunal in the Jurisdiction Award, from which there was no appeal. Accordingly an issue estoppel arises and the present application is barred by s. 73(2) of the Act.
(2) The friendly discussion provision in clause 10 is too uncertain to be legally enforceable.
(3) The friendly discussion provision was fulfilled on the facts of this case.
(4) The friendly discussion provision is not a condition precedent to the right to commence arbitration but only sounds in damages; accordingly it cannot affect the jurisdiction of the Tribunal.
Does the failure to challenge the Jurisdiction Award preclude ETA's s. 67 application?
"(2) Where the arbitral tribunal rules that it has substantive jurisdiction and a party to arbitral proceedings who could have questioned that ruling-
(a) by any available arbitral process of appeal or review, or
(b) by challenging the award,
does not do so, or does not do so within the time allowed by the arbitration agreement or any provision of this Part, he may not object later to that tribunal's substantive jurisdiction on any ground which was the subject of that ruling."
"There would also not seem to be any legitimate basis upon which a newly-constituted Arbitral Tribunal could choose, without the parties' agreement, to reopen proceedings that had already been the subject of a partial Award regarded as final under the law applicable to the arbitration proceedings, although prior decisions of a purely interlocutory or interim nature could conceivably be revisited, if necessary."
"Another question that has arisen in connection with the repetition of prior proceedings is the status of partial awards rendered by the previous arbitral tribunal. In general, an award has res judicata effect once rendered and cannot be revisited by either the arbitral tribunal that rendered it or a newly constituted tribunal in the same case. Therefore, arbitral tribunals have usually rejected as irrelevant the repetition of prior proceedings that have already resulted in a partial award. Usually, arbitral tribunals allow proceedings to be repeated only insofar as they relate to issues that have not yet been decided upon. It is of course an entirely different matter if a partial award has been set aside by a competent court and the arbitral tribunal is subsequently replaced. In such circumstances, the reconstituted arbitral tribunal may well be required to decide some or all of the same issues that were dealt with in the partial award that was set aside."
"(2) Serious irregularity means an irregularity of one or more of the following kinds which the court considers has caused or will cause substantial injustice to the applicant-
(f) uncertainty or ambiguity as to the effect of the award;
(h) failure to comply with the requirements as to the form of the award;"
The other issues
(1) an exploration of the reasons being put forward by ETA for failing to lift the contractual quantities, including default by Chinese buyers and an increase in the JSM index which resulted in the LTC contract prices, which were calculated by reference to the index, exceeding spot prices;
(2) ETA's desire to continue the LTC;
(3) SFI's unwillingness to continue with the LTC unless or until ETA paid the liquidated damages due for the prior shortlifting.
Conclusion