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England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Republic of Kazakhstan v Istil Group Inc [2006] EWHC 448 (Comm) (03 April 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2006/448.html Cite as: [2006] EWHC 448 (Comm), [2006] ArbLR 41 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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The Republic of Kazakhstan |
Claimant |
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and - |
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Istil Group Inc |
Defendant |
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Hugo Page QC (instructed by Messrs Penningtons) for the Defendant
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice David Steel :
a) Contract No.505/293-04/320 13 dated 15 June 1994 between Metalsrussia Corp. Ltd ("Metalsrussia") and The State Foreign Trade Company Kazakhstan Sauda ("Sauda").
b) Contract No.OLT- B-027/95, undated, between Metalsrussia and Oltex Trading Ltd ("Oltex").
c) Contract No.OLT-B-026/95 dated 21 July 1995 between Metalsrussia and Oltex.
The claims
i) As regards Sauda, Istil pointed to an order of the Prime Minister of ROK dated 17 October 1995 appointing Sauda as "general agent" for the sale of Karmet's products.ii) As regards Oltex, Istil pointed to a Contract for Control dated 15 June 1995 whereby ROK retained a consortium known as Group United Steel Management ("GUSM") to manage Karmet's business and a letter dated 28 August 1995 from GUSM describing Oltex as "the sole and exclusive trading organisation of GUSM…"
iii) The various "verifications of debt" relating to monies due from Karmet to Metalsrussia referred to below.
"6… from the 18th October 1995, the effect shall be suspended of entered export and selling agreements, agreements for supply of raw materials… and it shall be delegated to the trusted administrator of [Karmet] to re-enter the Contracts."
"9.1 [The Republic and Karmet] shall continue to be responsible for and shall pay, satisfy or discharge all of their debts, obligations and liabilities whether actual or contingent as at the First Completion Date… Such debts…include, without limitation, the following:
…
9.1.1 all debts, obligations and liabilities, losses (including consequential losses) ….damages …and expenses arising from the carrying on of the business…".
The French proceedings
a) because Metalsrussia was claiming that ROK was liable for Karmet's debts under the original sale contracts, it was bound to submit its claims to arbitration in accord with the arbitration clauses contained in those contracts;
b) alternatively, ROK enjoyed sovereign immunity in respect of Metalsrussia's claims and, accordingly, the French courts were bound to decline jurisdiction.
"Nevertheless, in view of the fact that the claims which are being presented today relate to the compliance by the Republic with the undertakings which it made during the bankruptcy procedure and the subsequent liquidation of Karmet and not to the performance of the contracts entered into with that company; that by means of various regulatory decisions, the Republic has settled the outcome of the undertakings, the assets and the liabilities; that the State Rehabilitation Bank, the officiating body, is responsible for verifying the receivables and that its intervention led to the admission or rejection of the actual form of the claims made by the creditors.
In view of the fact that, in these circumstances, the defendants are wrongly relying on an arbitration clause which does not apply to what concerns them.
In view of the fact, however, that the regulatory decisions made by the Republic of Kazakhstan in order to handle the bankruptcy of the State company, Karmet, and to organise, following the sale of its assets, the terms and conditions for settling its liabilities, were not intended and did not replace the debtor by the State subject to this special liquidation-privatisation procedure implemented in a context coming under the scope of sovereign prerogatives rightly invoked; that in fact, whilst the Republic did make certain undertakings for guaranteeing liabilities in the contract for the sale of Karmet's assets, this was destined for the assignee and not for the third parties whose position had been settled by means of decrees intended for them.
In view of the fact that, consequently, the Republic of Kazakhstan's exception of non-jurisdiction shall be accepted in favour of the courts having jurisdiction in Kazakhstan."
"The Court ruling by judgment in the presence of all the parties in the first instance… accepts the exception of non-jurisdiction for the Republic of Kazakhstan and sends the parties to go before the courts having jurisdiction in Kazakhstan."
"In this case the first judges ruled on the merits by … upholding the plea in bar arising from the immunity from jurisdiction invoked by the Republic of Kazakhstan which they more specifically defined as an exception of non-jurisdiction. They also ruled on the jurisdiction, explicitly as regards the grounds and implicitly, by sending the parties to go before "the Kazakhstan court having jurisdiction" in the dispositif, by excluding the application of the arbitration clauses claimed by the Republic of Kazakhstan and the National Bank of the Republic of Kazakhstan."
The LCIA proceedings
"The Republic is not directly a party to the contracts. The contracts were in fact entered into by companies wholly owned or controlled by the Republic. Despite the fact that the Republic was not a signatory of the contracts, the Republic has pleaded in the French proceedings on various occasions that the arbitration clause in the contracts bind it……There is therefore a voluntary acceptance by the Republic to submit to the jurisdiction of the arbitral tribunal, alternatively the submissions constitute an offer that MCL hereby accepts by commencing proceedings before the LCIA."
a) ROK was "closely involved in the privatisation of Karmet";
b) ROK played a "decisive role in its manifold capacities" in regard to privatisation;
c) Clause 9.1 of the privatisation agreement confirmed the "continued responsibility of the respondent for such debts";
d) It was a "justified interpretation that the respondent as co-seller accepts its contractual obligation to be responsible to trade creditors of Karmet…";
e) The Respondent succeeded to Karmet not merely by reason of Clause 9.1 but also by reason of the debt confirmations, Decree 1564, Decree 1579 and Resolution No.770.
Finding of nullity
a) was the tribunal right to find that its partial award was a nullity and
b) are the parties bound by the tribunal's decision that its partial award was a nullity?
a) ROK did not challenge the partial award as regards jurisdiction to hear Metalsrussia's claim.
b) ROK could have challenged it pursuant to section 67.
c) By reason of section 73 of the Act it could not thereafter challenge the tribunal's substantive jurisdiction.
d) Accordingly ROK cannot challenge the final award which found in favour of jurisdiction to determine Istil's claim again ROK.
"73.2 Where the arbitral tribunal rules that it has substantive jurisdiction and a party to arbitral proceedings could have questioned that ruling – a) by any available abitral 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 the Part, he may not object later to the tribunal's substantive jurisdiction on any ground which was the subject of that ruling."
Was the Partial award a nullity?
"6.3 The Effect on the Award on Jurisdiction
BVI Metalsrussia as Initial Claimant in the present arbitration proceedings has ceased to exist on 2 April 2002 as a consequence of the first merger and thus before the Award on Jurisdiction was made. Hence, the interim award was made in respect of a party which was no longer existent. As a matter of English procedure (see above 5.2) an award, be it a final or interim award, in respect of a party which did no longer exist can have no legal effect.
As the award on jurisdiction is a nullity, it is necessary for the Arbitral Tribunal to decide on its jurisdiction anew. However, significant conclusions made in the Award on jurisdiction still hold true and are persuasive.
6.4 Substitution of BVI Metalsrussia by the Claimant
BVI Metalsrussia as Initial Claimant was succeeded by Metalsrussia Group Holdings Ltd and then by the Claimant. In the present arbitration proceedings, this double succession on the Claimant's side became effective only when the Claimant in its submission of 14 April 2003 gave notice of the two mergers to the Tribunal and the Respondent.
As a consequence of the two mergers, the claims of BVI Metalsrussia under the Three Contracts were transferred to the Claimant. Such transfer under the two mergers was made by universal succession and not by separate assignments. The claims under the Three Contracts were not affected by the two mergers, only the identity of the creditors changed twice, from BVI Metalsrussia to Metalsrussia Group Holdings Ltd and then to the Claimant.
In pending arbitration proceedings, it is permitted to make a legal assignment of the title to sue. What is required is the debtor and the Arbitral Tribunal are given notice. This is established in Montedipe S.p.A. v JTP-RO Jugotanker (the "Jordan Nicolov"), Queen's Bench Division Commercial Court, 21 December 1989 per Mr Justice Hobhouse. What is right for a legal assignment, applies the more in the case of a transfer by way of universal succession. The surviving companies, first Metalsrussia Group Holdings Ltd and thereafter the Claimant, acquired the claims under the Three Contracts and the benefit of the arbitration agreements as well. As a legal assignee may continue the arbitration proceedings already commenced, so may the surviving companies as a consequence of mergers.
Under English court proceedings it is possible to substitute one party by another (see CPR 19 (2) (4)). The same applies in English arbitration proceedings which will take an even more liberal view. Hence, the Arbitral Tribunal has no hesitation in permitting the substitution of the Claimant in place of BVI Metalsrussia. The Tribunal also take notice that Metalsrussia Group Holdings Ltd had been interposed between BVI Metalsrussia and the Claimant."
a) The assignment of a cause of action included all the remedies in respect of that cause of action.
b) The assigned right could not be asserted without acceptance of the obligation to arbitrate.
c) The position was no different where the arbitration clause had been partly executed.
d) However, for the assignment to take full legal effect, notice must be given both to the other party and to the arbitrators.
"I would decide the present case on this simple ground. An assignee does not automatically become a party to a pending arbitration on the assignment taking effect in equity. Something more is required. It must give at least notice to the other side and submit to the jurisdiction of the arbitrator. Since this was never done I would answer the first question in favour of the plaintiffs.
What is the consequence? The immediate consequence was undoubtedly that the arbitration lapsed. An arbitration requires two or more parties. There cannot be a valid arbitration where one of the two parties had ceased to exist." per Lloyd LJ at p.619.
"Because of the nature of arbitration as a consensual matter of settling disputes, it may be that the consent of the arbitrator and of the other party to the arbitration is required. If this is the correct analysis then only exception might be where foreign law creates a universal successor…"
"In Baytur, however, as in Morris v Harris, there was no application under Order 15 and the court was dealing with the matter only at second hand, as it were, in circumstances where in the arbitration the dead company had never been substituted. At first instance in Baytur at p.145 Mr Rokison QC having correctly stated the effect of Mercer Alloys and Rolls Royce simply distinguished it on the ground that it had no application to arbitration. In the Court of Appeal Lord Justice Lloyd pointed out (p.152) that the Morris and Harris rule applies equally to arbitration and to court proceedings. That must be so but there remains the point that Order 15 r.7 has no direct application to arbitration."
"It may be that Lloyds LJ's reservation in relation to universal succession was intended to relate only to the question of consent rather than the question of notice. But if the consent of the other party to the transferred contract is not necessary in a case of universal succession (as in manifest it cannot be), it becomes clear that the notice is no more than at most a procedural requirement. The question whether any such notice is a matter to be resolved by the law of the forum. English law does require such notice and it has now been given. In the Baytur S.A. case the rejected argument was that the assignee had automatically become a party once the assignments was effective in equity. All I decide in this case is that the merger did not automatically kill the arbitration."
"Once the decision has been taken that the identification (and acceptance) of Sphinx as the arbitrating party goes beyond a case of mere misnomer then it seems to be that the consequence must be that the further conduct of the arbitration in the name of the claimant who was never in truth a party to the charter party or to the arbitration agreement was a nullity, and it is for this court to say so. Sphinx therefore never had any possible role to play in the arbitration; I cannot ratify what has been done in its name. … However, it has been established that the arbitration was in fact invoked and commenced by and on behalf of Internaut. Such an arbitration is valid and has not been concluded. It is therefore still in being."
a) I accept that section 78 of the BVI International Business Company Act is to the same effect as the Bahamian Statute considered in Baytur.
b) It makes provision for universal succession in respect of all proceedings including, in my judgment, arbitration proceedings.
c) Accordingly, as a matter of BVI law, no notice of merger is required to establish the right to claim in the proceedings.
d) As regards English law, notice is required, but once given it allows the arbitration to continue and reinstitutes any orders or awards already made by the tribunal.
Ad hoc agreement
Agreement for arbitration in the course of the French proceedings
Parties to the contracts
a) that the contracts were concluded by Sauda and Oltex as agents for the Republic, or
b) that the contracts were concluded by Sauda and Oltex as agents for Karmet which was not a separate legal entity from ROK.
It is convenient to take the second proposition (which was also advanced rather tentatively before the French court) first.
a) Although Sauda was appointed agent for Karmet, on the face of it Oltex acting on GUSM's behalf in entering into the agreement for counter deliveries with Karmet dated June 1995 and there were, in due course, counter deliveries between those parties as principals.
b) The evidence is consistent with an assignment by Oltex to Karmet of its rights and obligations on the two contracts in October 1995.
c) These assignments appear to have been coincident with the deeds of reconciliation.
a) The Decree 1564 provided: -
"Under such, the Ispat Karmet Company shall acquire the plant's assets only and then under the agreement the government shall provide the capital for payment of pending debts of the plant in the amount of U.S $50 million. The remaining issues related to the plant's debt obligations shall be considered by the Commission on Debts appointed by the Government of the Republic of Kazakhstan."
b) Decree 1579 appointed the Deputy Chairman of the State Committee on the Management of State Property and gave him "under a prior approval of the Government of Kazakhstan, to make payments of the debiting and crediting debts of all kinds of property including securities and property rights, conclude agreements on waivers of credit claim, sales of debts."
c) In the Resolution 770 the Commission indicated that for creditors in countries other than the republics of the former Soviet Union, debt would be repaid: 50% of the total debt owed by Karmet by way of shipment of metal and "the other half of the debt owed by Karmet shall be repaid by issuing convertible state promissory notes on the same terms as applied to creditors of the Republic of Kazakhstan."
Res judicata
Conclusion