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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> The Republic of Korea v Dayyani & Ors [2019] EWHC 3580 (Comm) (20 December 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2019/3580.html Cite as: [2019] EWHC 3580 (Comm), [2020] WLR(D) 2, [2020] Bus LR 884, [2020] 2 All ER (Comm) 672, [2020] 1 Lloyd's Rep 212 |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF
ENGLAND AND WALES
COMMERCIAL COURT (QBD)
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
AND IN THE MATTER OF THE ARBITRATION ACT 1996
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
THE REPUBLIC OF KOREA |
Claimant/ (Respondent in Arbitration) |
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- and - |
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(1) MOHAMMAD REZA DAYYANI (2) ABBAS DAYYANI (3) MOHAMMAD HOSSEIN DAYYANI (4) ALI DAYYANI (5) FETEMEH DAYYANI (6) KOSAR DAYYANI |
Defendants (Claimants in Arbitration) |
____________________
Ali Malek QC, Cameron Miles and Judy Fu (instructed by Gresham Legal) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 18-21 November 2019
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Butcher:
Background
The Parties and the Dispute
(1) The Purchase Price was to be KRW 577,775,000,000 (or approximately US$ 500 million).
(2) A Contract Deposit was to be paid by D&A "upon the date hereof", in the amount of KRW 57,777,500,000 (or approximately US$ 50 million), to be credited towards the Purchase Price.
(3) Closing of the SPA was to take place on 30 December 2010, but no later than three months after execution.
(4) Under Article 4, in the period between the date of the SPA and Closing "Each Party will use its Best Efforts to take all actions and do all things necessary, proper or advisable to consummate, make effective, and comply with all of the terms of this Agreement and the Transactions applicable to it … Each Party shall cooperate with each other and use commercially reasonable efforts to satisfy all of the Closing conditions in an expeditious matter (sic) …"
(5) Under Article 4.13, D&A was to submit to the Sellers letters of confirmation in the name of the investors in the transaction in a form and substance satisfactory to the Sellers by a date specified as at latest one month from the execution date of the SPA. Under Article 8.1(c)(i), the Sellers were entitled to terminate the SPA if D&A failed to submit the letters of confirmation in time. Under Article 8.2, if the SPA were terminated pursuant to Section 8.1(c)(i), "the full amount of the Contract Deposit (together with accrued interest) shall become the property of, and may be retained by, the Sellers as liquidated damages …"
(6) The governing law of the SPA was specified, in Article 9.5, as the laws of Korea, and the Seoul Central District Court was specified, in Article 9.6(b), as being the court of first instance having exclusive jurisdiction over any dispute arising in connexion with the SPA.
The Arbitration
(1) That KAMCO directed and controlled the sale of Daewoo. KAMCO's acts could be attributed to the Republic, or KAMCO acted under the instruction, leadership and control of the Republic.
(2) That the Republic breached the Fair and Equitable Treatment ("FET") standard in Article 4 of the BIT by:
a) Enacting a set of sanctions against Iran that went beyond those imposed by the United Nations, which prevented the transaction from closing;
b) Failing to assist them in any meaningful way, and withdrawing its financial support due to the change in policy towards Iran; and
c) Failing to negotiate in good faith and provide the Defendants with a real opportunity to cure defects in the letters of confirmation, and instead by itself "or acting via the Sellers and/or KAMCO" relying on pretextual reasons to terminate the SPA when it was the Republic's change in policy towards Iran which represented the true cause of the termination of the SPA.
(3) That the Republic expropriated the Dayyanis' investment, contrary to Article 6 of the BIT or breached other obligations under the BIT.
(4) That the Dayyanis had suffered damages in the amount of the Contract Deposit and the sums expended during the project, which they claimed together with interest.
(1) That the Tribunal had no jurisdiction over the claims submitted by the Dayyanis because they did not have an "investment" for the purposes of the BIT;
(2) That the Tribunal had no jurisdiction over the claims because the Dayyanis were not "investors" for the purposes of the BIT;
(3) That the acts impugned by the Dayyanis were not attributable to the Republic as a matter of international law and accordingly the Tribunal had no jurisdiction over the claims or alternatively the claims were inadmissible;
(4) That the Republic was not guilty of any expropriation of the Dayyanis' investment, and was not in breach of any other obligation under the BIT.
The Award
(1) Unanimously found that the Tribunal had jurisdiction over the claims submitted by the Dayyanis and that the claims were admissible;
(2) Unanimously found that the Republic had breached its obligation arising under Article 4 of the BIT to accord FET to the Dayyanis and their investment;
(3) By a majority decided that the Republic should pay the Dayyanis the amount of the Contract Deposit (KRW 57,777,500,000) together with simple interest;
(4) By a majority decided that the Republic should pay the Dayyanis the costs of the arbitration;
(5) Unanimously dismissed all other claims.
These proceedings
The Claim Form
"[67(1)] A party to arbitral proceedings may (upon notice to the other parties and to the tribunal) apply to the court –
(a) challenging any award of the arbitral tribunal as to its substantive jurisdiction; or
(b) for an order declaring an award made by the tribunal to be of no effect, in whole or in part, because the tribunal did not have substantive jurisdiction."
(1) That the assets purportedly invested were not "investments" of "investors" in the territory of the Republic for the purposes of Articles 1(1) and 12 of the BIT. This was stated to be because: (i) contingent rights under a share purchase agreement that remain conditional do not constitute an "asset"; and/or (ii) the SPA did not close; and/or (iii) a contract deposit paid into an escrow account, to which the Sellers had no entitlement until the closing of the transaction, was not an "asset" committed to the Republic; and/or (iv) the Dayyanis' shares in D&A could not be an investment in Korea because they were not shares in a Korean company; and/or (v) Article 1(1) of the BIT does not extend the term "asset" to include an indirect interest in the SPA entered into by D&A or the contractual deposit paid by D&A, through ownership of shares in D&A.
(2) That the Dayyanis were not "investors" who "invest" within the meaning of Articles 1(2) and 12 of the BIT. This was stated to be because: (i) they did not make an "investment"; and/or (ii) because there was not the necessary nexus between the purported investments and the Dayyanis; and/or (iii) because the Dayyanis did not have standing under the BIT to assert any alleged rights vested in D&A arising as a result of D&A having entered into the SPA and paid the Contract Deposit.
(3) There was no dispute "arising directly out of an investment between an investor of one Contracting Party and the other Contracting Party" because (i) the Dayyanis' dispute was "with a group of sellers party to a commercial transaction, not the Republic"; and (ii) the Republic did not consent to arbitrate disputes under Article 12 of the BIT in respect of the conduct of third parties for which the Republic "is not responsible under international law, applying international law principles of attribution."
Order of Picken J
(1) Do the SPA before Closing and/or the Contract Deposit, individually or together, constitute an "investment" within the meaning of Article 1(1) of the BIT?
(2) Did D&A have a right to participate in the acquisition process of Daewoo? If so, did any such right constitute an "investment" within the meaning of Article 1(1) of the BIT?
(3) Taken together, do the efforts expended by the Dayyanis and/or D&A in the conclusion and carrying out of the SPA constitute an "investment" within the meaning of Article 1(1) of the BIT?
(4) Do the Dayyanis have standing under Articles 1(1) and 1(2) of the BIT to claim in respect of the SPA, the Contract Deposit and/or other claimed investments identified under questions 1-3 above?
(5) Are the questions of attribution raised by the Republic, i.e. whether the acts of (i) the Sellers and/or (ii) KAMCO are attributable to the Republic for the purposes of Article 12 of the BIT, jurisdictional questions within the meaning of s. 67?
(6) At paragraphs 487-495 of the Award, did a majority of the Tribunal find that the Republic was directly responsible for a breach of the BIT, independently of the acts of KAMCO and/or the Sellers being attributable to the Republic? If so:
(6a) did the Tribunal have jurisdiction under Article 12 of the BIT to make such a finding; and
(6b) what are the consequences for the dispositive sections of the Award, including the damages awarded?
The Legal Framework
"1 Any legal dispute arising directly out of an investment between an investor of one Contracting Party and the other Contracting Party shall be settled amicably between the two parties concerned.
2 If this dispute has not been settled within a period of six (6) months from the date at which it was notified in writing by one party to the other, it shall be submitted, at the request and choice of investors for settlement to:
(a) The competent court of the Contracting Party in the territory of which the investment has been made; or
(b) an ad hoc arbitral tribunal; or
(c) the International Center for Settlement of Investment Disputes established by the Convention on the Settlement of Investment Disputes between States and Nationals of other States, if both Contracting Parties are signatories to the Convention."
"Article 31. General Rule of Interpretation
1 A treaty shall be interpreted in good faith in accordance with the ordinary meaning to be given to the terms of the treaty in their context and in the light of its object and purpose.
2 The context for the purpose of the interpretation of a treaty shall comprise, in addition to the text, including its preamble and annexes:
(a) Any agreement relating to the treaty which was made between all the parties in connexion with the conclusion of the treaty;
(b) Any instrument which was made by one or more parties in connexion with the conclusion of the treaty and accepted by the other parties as an instrument related to the treaty.
3 There shall be taken into account, together with the context:
(a) Any subsequent agreement between the parties regarding the interpretation of the treaty or the application of its provisions;
(b) Any subsequent practice in the application of the treaty which establishes the agreement of the parties regarding its interpretation;
(c) Any relevant rules of international law applicable in the relations between the parties.
4 A special meaning shall be given to a term if it is established that the parties so intended.
Article 32. Supplementary Means of Interpretation
Recourse may be had to supplementary means of interpretation, including the preparatory work of the treaty and the circumstances of its conclusion, in order to confirm the meaning resulting from the application of article 31, or to determine the meaning when the interpretation according to article 31:
(a) Leaves the meaning ambiguous or obscure; or
(b) Leads to a result which is manifestly absurd or unreasonable."
Analysis
The most relevant terms of the BIT
"1 The term 'investment' refers to every kind of property or asset, and in particular, though not exclusively, including the following, invested by the investors of one Contracting Party in the territory of the other Contracting Party in accordance with the laws and regulations of the other Contracting Party (hereinafter referred to as the 'host Contracting Party'):
(a) movable and immovable property as well as rights related thereto, such as mortgages, liens, leases or pledges;
(b) shares or any kind of participation in companies;
(c) money and/or receivables;
(d) industrial and intellectual property rights such as patent, utility models, industrial designs or models, trade marks and names, know-how and goodwill;
(e) rights to search for, extract or exploit natural resources.
2 The term 'investors' refers to the following persons who invest in the territory of the other Contracting Party within the framework of this Agreement:
(a) natural persons who, according to the laws of either Contracting Party, are considered to be its national and have not the nationality of the host Contracting Party …"
Questions 1-3
(1) Do the SPA before Closing and/or the Contract Deposit, individually or together, constitute an "investment" within the meaning of Article 1(1) of the BIT?
(2) Did D&A have a right to participate in the acquisition process of Daewoo? If so, did any such right constitute an "investment" within the meaning of Article 1(1) of the BIT?
(3) Taken together, do the efforts expended by the Dayyanis and/or D&A in the conclusion and carrying out of the SPA constitute an "investment" within the meaning of Article 1(1) of the BIT?
The assets relied on are not "property or assets"
"[251] The Tribunal is also satisfied that the Contract Deposit constitutes an investment under the BIT.
[252] Ex facie, the Contract Deposit meets the definition of "every kind of property or asset […] invested by the investors of one Contracting Party in the territory of the other Contracting Party in accordance with the laws and regulations of the other Contracting Party."
[253] The Tribunal notes that the Contract Deposit was transferred by Iranian investors into the Korean territory for the purpose of entering into a major M&A transaction. Although the forfeiture stands revived as if back ab initio to December 2010, the moneys paid remain in Korea within the control and disposition of the Sellers. It is common ground that the Contract Deposit was obtained in compliance with the laws of Korea.
[254] Hence, the Contract Deposit therefore falls expressly under the definition of Article 1(1)(c) as being "money and/or receivables", and "movable and immovable property as well as rights related thereto". It is a sum of money invested for the purpose of acquiring an economic enterprise and, if certain conditions are met, it, or its monetary equivalent, may be returned to the investors."
I find this reasoning compelling.
The purported investments lack the characteristics of "investments"
No investment in the territory of the Republic
Answer to Questions 1-3
Question 4
Do the Dayyanis have standing under Articles 1(1) and 1(2) of the BIT to claim in respect of the SPA, the Contract Deposit and/or other claimed investments identified in questions 1-3 above?
"The Dayyanis do not have standing under the Treaty to claim in respect of the Purported Assets. Even if any of the Purported Assets was an 'investment' under Article 1(1) of the Treaty, the Dayyanis still have no right to claim under the Treaty, because those Purported Assets belong to D&A, a separate corporate entity, and are not capable of enforcement by a third party. …. The Dayyanis are not parties to the SPA and did not pay the Contract Deposit. They lack standing to claim direct ownership of D&A's alleged assets."
(1) The Dayyanis' claim was in respect of the loss caused by interference with what, if they were property or assets at all, were property or assets of D&A. The SPA was a contract to which D&A was party. The Contract Deposit was paid by D&A. The Dayyanis had not even produced evidence that they provided the funds for the Contract Deposit. They were simply shareholders in D&A. And (though the Republic would not have accepted that such a claim could be brought under the BIT), the Dayyanis' claim was not one for diminution of the value of their shareholding in D&A.
(2) The type of claim which the Dayyanis sought to bring was not one which they could bring under the BIT. The BIT must be interpreted in accordance with the rules set out in the Vienna Convention. Those rules included, at Article 31(3), that there "shall be taken into account, together with the context … (c) any relevant rules of international law applicable in the relations between the parties." The relevant rules of international law included that recognised or established by the ICJ case of Case Concerning Barcelona Traction, Light and Power Company (Belgium v Spain) [1970] ICJ Rep 1, confirmed in Case Concerning Ahmadou Sadio Diallo (Guinea v Democratic Republic of the Congo), Preliminary Objections [2007] ICJ Rep 653.
(3) The substantive rule recognised or established in those cases was that international law will look to the relevant municipal law to ascertain whether shareholders in a company have any independent (and if any what) rights to claim in respect of damage done to the company by a foreign government.
(4) In the present case, D&A was a separate entity, having a recognised existence distinct from its shareholders under Singapore law. Further, it was the party to the SPA and the making of the Contract Deposit, and Korean law, which governed the SPA, recognises a principle of privity of contract and recognised D&A as the party to the SPA. In such circumstances, the shareholders cannot make a claim under a bilateral investment treaty such as the BIT. That result is supported by a number of investment awards and in particular that in Poštová Banka A.S. and Istrokapital SE v Hellenic Republic (ICSID Case No. ARB/13/8; 9.4.2018).
(5) The objection to shareholders such as the Dayyanis making the type of claim which they made in the arbitration may be described as a lack of standing, but it is jurisdictional because there is no "investment" of the Iranian investors who are claiming pursuant to the BIT. Any investment was of the Singapore company D&A. Therefore, for the purposes of Article 12 of the BIT, there is no dispute arising between an investor, directly out of any investor's investment, and furthermore there is no relevant "investment".
"[256] The Committee does not consider that the line of decisions in the International Court of Justice, beginning with Barcelona Traction, lays down a general principle of international law which precludes investors like the Claimants from maintaining a claim under the terms of a BIT if those terms are wide enough to permit them to do so. The International Court of Justice was not dealing in those cases with claims brought by shareholders under the terms of a BIT but with the exercise of diplomatic protection by a State which asserts that a wrong has been done to the State itself though the treatment of its national. That these cases are not addressing the situation of investors claiming under a BIT is made clear in the following passage from [paragraph 88 of] the 2007 Judgment in Diallo … [quotation omitted] The Barcelona Traction and Diallo judgments establish that there is no right under customary international law for a State to exercise diplomatic protection in respect of a wrong done to a company on the basis that the shareholders of the company are its nationals. They in no way preclude the possibility that States may agree by treaty to grant such a right to a State … or to the shareholders themselves. Whether they are considered to have done so will depend upon the terms of the treaty, which in this case are clear.
[257] The Committee notes that the consistent practice of other tribunals and ad hoc committees has been the same in this respect as the approach taken by the Tribunal in the present case. Thus, the ad hoc committee in CMS held that –
… nothing in general international law prohibits the conclusion of treaties allowing 'claims by shareholders independently from those of the corporation concerned … even if those shareholders are minority or non-controlling shareholders'. Such treaties and in particular the ICSID Convention must be applied as lex specialis.
A similar approach can be found in the other cases which have considered this issue. [citation of four awards, said to be by way of example]"
"[317] One final issue remains for discussion: namely, to whom these investments belonged. This question arises because the von Pezold Claimants have brought their claims primarily in relation to loss suffered to investments held not by them personally, but by the locally-incorporated Zimbabwean Companies – an approach challenged by the Respondent. The only investments owned directly by the von Pezold Claimants are, strictly speaking, the shares they hold in the companies directly below them in their corporate organograms. This issue becomes particularly significant in the context of the Tribunal's remedial jurisdiction, because the von Pezold Claimants claim not only for the indirect expropriation of the value of their shares, but seek restitution of (or in the alternative, compensation for) the Zimbabwean Properties – assets that they themselves have never directly held. Moreover, in seeking for the Tribunal to restore the status quo ante through an award of restitution, the von Pezold Claimants ask that these assets be returned not to their possession, but to the possession of the Zimbabwean Companies which directly held them prior to 2005.
[318] The Respondent argues that claims by foreign shareholders cannot encompass measures directed against a locally-incorporated company, nor loss incurred by that company. It submits that '[N]either the German nor the Swiss BIT expressly allows shareholders to file claims on behalf of companies … The von Pezold Claimants, in response, have made it clear that they do not seek to bring a claim on behalf of the Zimbabwean Companies. Rather, they submit they are entitled to bring a claim for their own losses in respect of what are, as a result of their 'control' of the Zimbabwean Companies, their own investments…"
Answer to Question 4
Question 5
Are the questions of attribution raised by the Republic, i.e. whether the acts of (i) the Sellers and/or (ii) KAMCO are attributable to the Republic for the purposes of Article 12 of the BIT, jurisdictional questions within the meaning of s. 67 Arbitration Act?
Answer to Question 5
Question 6
At paragraphs 487-495 of the Award, did a majority of the Tribunal find that the Republic was directly responsible for a breach of the BIT, independently of the acts of KAMCO and/or the Sellers being attributable to the Republic? If so:
(6a) did the Tribunal have jurisdiction under Article 12 of the BIT to make such a finding; and
(6b) what are the consequences for the dispositive sections of the Award, including the damages awarded?
(1) The structure of the entire section between paragraph 470 and paragraph 495 has to be considered. This includes the heading before paragraph 471, which is "a) First breach: KAMCO's objection to the return of the Contract Deposit". That heading may be contrasted with the heading before paragraph 487 which is "b) Second breach: The Government of Korea's failure to compel the return of the Contract Deposit." The difference in the wording is clearly intended to be significant.
(2) The Tribunal unanimously held that there was a breach of the FET standard by KAMCO's objection to the return the Contract Deposit. That is what is referred to in paragraph 470(a). That was a positive act of KAMCO for which the Republic is said to be responsible. The reasoning for this is at paragraphs 471 to 486.
(3) Separately and in addition, a majority of the Tribunal found that "the Respondent" (paragraphs 488, 489, 490, 491, 495) or "the Government of Korea" (the heading before paragraph 487) had breached the FET standard by failing to intervene to compel the return of the Contract Deposit, i.e. an omission, which included a failure to instruct KAMCO not to block the return of the Contract Deposit (paragraph 488).
Answer to Question 6
Conclusion
Note 1 Cf. Jan de Nul N.V. and Dredging International N.V. v Arab Republic of Egypt (ICSID Case No. ARB/04/13; 16.6.2006) Decision on Jurisdiction, para. 85. [Back]