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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> National Iranian Oil Company v Crescent Petroleum Company International Ltd & Anor [2016] EWHC 1900 (Comm) (18 July 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2016/1900.html Cite as: [2016] EWHC 1900 (Comm) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
IN THE MATTER OF THE ARBITRATION ACT 1996
AND IN AN ARBITRATION CLAIM
The Rolls Building 7 Rolls Building Fetter Lane London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
NATIONAL IRANIAN OIL COMPANY |
Claimant/Arbitration Respondent |
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-v- |
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(1) CRESCENT PETROLEUM COMPANY INTERNATIONAL LIMITED (2) CRESCENT GAS CORPORATION LIMITED |
Defendants/Arbitration Claimants |
____________________
The Claimant/Arbitration Respondent did not attend and was not represented.
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE BURTON:
"Our client is discontinuing the Remaining Grounds of its challenge. Our client continues to have serious concerns about the issues raised by the Remaining Grounds; nevertheless, they are being discontinued. To that end please find enclosed by way of service a signed Notice of Discontinuance, which we shall file at Court today.
The decision to discontinue was taken by our client after very careful consideration and is without prejudice to all of the positions it adopted in relation to the Remaining Grounds. Further, our client's decision was made primarily to enable it to focus on the ongoing arbitral proceedings between the parties and, in particular, in order to focus on preparations for the upcoming written submissions, and hearing before the Tribunal. Our client's decision to discontinue should not, therefore, be deemed or interpreted in any way as an admission, concession of, or acquiescence to your clients' position and arguments with regard to the Remaining Grounds."
"26. Mr Mildon [that is counsel for the defendants to the arbitration claim] submitted that in the light of Sheltam's failures to comply with the orders made in the arbitrators' previous awards, then it was likely that Mirambo and Primefuels would have to enforce the award in either South Africa or Kenya or Mauritius (all New York Convention countries) in the future. He submitted that where a party has started an arbitration claim in order to challenge an award under section 67 of the Act, it should not be open to that party to subvert the supervisory jurisdiction of the English court at the last moment by entering a Notice of Discontinuance. To do so would enable the discontinuing party to keep the option of using the same jurisdictional objections to delay or resist enforcement in another New York Convention state."
"34 ... However, I agree with the note at 38.4.1 of the 2007 Edition of Civil Procedure (volume 1) that a court may set aside a Notice of Discontinuance if it concludes that it is an abuse of the process of the court."
He continued that even if he concluded that it was an abuse of process, the court must still have a discretion.
"In this case the Notice of Discontinuance was issued in respect of an arbitration claim in which the claimant challenged the validity of the Third Partial Final Award. In doing so, the claimant had invoked the supervisory jurisdiction of the court over an LCIA arbitration which has its seat in England and Wales and which is continuing. I have no doubt that if the Rules of the CPR had provided that a Notice of Discontinuance of an arbitration claim challenging the validity of an Award required the permission of the court before the arbitration claim could be discontinued, then, in the circumstances of this case, unconditional permission would not have been granted ...
37. It is quite clear from paragraph 5 of the Outline Argument of Mr Hales that Sheltam still regards its challenges under both sections 67 and 68 as being - at the least - arguable. It is, I think, striking that Sheltam did not take the course (which it could have done) of agreeing to the dismissal of the arbitration claim. I infer from this that Sheltam was attempting to achieve a position where it preserved its ability to challenge the validity of a Third Partial Final Award if Mirambo and Primefuels moved to enforce it in another New York Convention State."
"As Sheltam has now given such an undertaking to the court, it seems to me that the Notice of Discontinuance should be allowed to stand. If Mirambo and Primefuels do have to enforce the Third Partial Final Award in a New York Convention State and if Sheltam attempts to resist such recognition and enforcement by raising issues that it might otherwise be entitled to do under Article V.1(c) of the Convention, then Mirambo and Primefuels can apply to this court. It will then be able to reconsider their applications to have the Notice of Discontinuance set aside and for a further order dealing with the substance of the sections 67 and 68 challenges to the Award."
"Following the filing of the Claimant's Notice of Discontinuance dated 8 July 2016 ... the Claimant undertakes to the Court that it shall not resist the recognition or enforcement of the Tribunal Award dated 31 July 2014 by raising any argument based upon Grounds II(D), III(C) or III(D) of the Grounds of Appeal dated 28 August 2014, being the Remaining Grounds of Appeal identified at paragraph 4 of the Order of the Honourable Mr Justice Burton dated 18 March 2016."
"First of all, a serious irregularity. Secondly, a serious irregularity which falls within the closed list of categories in section 68(2). Thirdly, that one or more of the irregularities identified caused or will cause the party substantial injustice.
As Hamblen J said in Abuja International Hotels Limited v Meridian SAS [2012] 1 Lloyd's Rep, 461, at paras 48 to 49, the focus of the enquiry under section 68 is due process, not the correctness of the tribunal's decision. As the DAC Report states, and numerous cases since have reiterated, the section is designed as a long-stop available only in extreme cases where the tribunal has gone so wrong in its conduct of the arbitration that justice calls out for it to be corrected."
"Mr Hunt attempted to derive his concrete submissions from the general proposition that all members of an arbitral tribunal must participate jointly in all stages of the arbitral proceedings. That proposition can be accepted. On the other hand, in the terminology of Dworkin, it is clearly a principle rather than a rule. And it is too general to afford the answer to many concrete problems. This is illustrated by the express concession, which was rightly made on behalf of Bank Mellat, that the majority were not obliged, after the close of deliberations, to discuss the draft majority award with [the dissenting arbitrator]."
"The sole purpose of a further meeting or consultation would have been to enable [the dissenting arbitrator] to discuss with the majority the redrafting of the reasons for their majority award. [The dissenting member] disagreed fundamentally and comprehensively with the majority award and its reasons, and it is difficult to conceive of the utility, at that late stage, of a discussion with him of a drafting exercise which was intended to strengthen those reasons. No doubt courtesy between colleagues required a further reference to him, but in my view, the governing principle, which I have stated, did not require it as a matter of law. On his ground alone the application must fail ...
Finally, if I had been persuaded that there was a procedural flaw in that further consultation with [the dissenting member] should have taken place as submitted by Bank Mellat, I would nevertheless in the particular circumstances of this case have declined to set aside the award on the ground of misconduct. My reason for this conclusion is that, on the stated hypothesis, the flaw was a technical one and the inference is irresistible that such further consultation would not have been productive of any material changes to the revised majority award. In other words, if there was a procedural flaw, I am satisfied beyond any reasonable doubt that no injustice resulted from it."