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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 >> Guangzhou Dockyards Co Ltd v ENE Aegiali I [2010] EWHC 2826 (Comm) (05 November 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2010/2826.html Cite as: [2011] 1 Lloyd's Rep 30, [2010] EWHC 2826 (Comm), 133 Con LR 139 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION CLAIM
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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GUANGZHOU DOCKYARDS CO., LTD (formerly known as GUANGZHOU CSSC-OCEANLINE-GSW MARINE ENGINEERING CO. LTD.) |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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E.N.E. AEGIALI I |
Defendant |
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Mr Bernard Eder QC and Mr Sean O'Sullivan (instructed by Ince & Co) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 18 October 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Blair:
"ARTICLE 22 - APPLICABLE LAW AND ARBITRATION
22.1 The Contract shall be governed by and construed in accordance with English law;
22.2 Any dispute concerning the Vessel's compliance or non-compliance with the rules, regulations and requirements of Class shall be referred to the head office of Class, the decision of which shall be final and binding upon the Parties hereto.
22.3 All other disputes or differences arising out of or in connection with this Contract or otherwise shall be referred to arbitration in London, England before a tribunal of three (3) arbitrators. One (1) arbitrator shall be appointed by each Party to this Contract and the third by the two (2) so chosen. All arbitrators shall be full members of the London Maritime Arbitrators Association ("LMAA") and all arbitrations shall be conducted in accordance with the then current Rules of the LMAA and the Arbitration Act 1996. The Parties agree that either Party may appeal to the English High Court on any issue arising out of any award. The Parties agree that any final unappealable judgment of the English High Court (or higher court on appeal therefrom) shall be referred back to the arbitrators and the arbitrators shall issue a final unappealable award in the form of the said judgment."
Jurisdiction: the Dockyard's submissions
Jurisdiction: discussion and conclusion
For those concerned in this case that is a statement of the obvious. But it matters. It defines the limits of the jurisdiction of the Court hearing an appeal under the 1979 Act. The arbitrators are the masters of the facts. On an appeal the Court must decide any question of law arising from an award on the basis of a full and unqualified acceptance of the findings of fact of the arbitrators. It is irrelevant whether the Court considers those findings of fact to be right or wrong. It also does not matter how obvious a mistake by the arbitrators on issues of fact might be, or what the scale of the financial consequences of the mistake of the fact might be. That is, of course, an unsurprising position. After all, the very reason why parties conclude an arbitration agreement is because they do not wish to litigate in the Courts. Parties who submit their disputes to arbitration bind themselves by agreement to honour the arbitrators' award on the facts. The principle of party autonomy decrees that a Court ought never to question the arbitrators' findings of fact.
He went on to say that, "From time to time attempts are made to circumvent the rule that the arbitrators' findings of fact are conclusive", which he listed, saying that, "This catalogue of challenges to arbitrators' findings of fact points to the need for the Court to be constantly vigilant to ensure that attempts to question or qualify the arbitrators' findings of fact, or to dress up questions of fact as questions of law, are carefully identified and firmly discouraged" (p.228).
"Starting therefore with the proposition that the court is concerned to decide, on the hearing of the appeal, whether the award can be shown to be wrong in law, how is this question to be tackled? In a case such as the present, the answer is to be found by dividing the arbitrator's process of reasoning into three stages:'
(1) The arbitrator ascertains the facts. This process includes the making of findings on any facts which are in dispute.
(2) The arbitrator ascertains the law. This process comprises not only the identification of all material rules of statute and common law, but also the identification and interpretation of the relevant parts of the contract, and the identification of those facts which must be taken into account when the decision is reached.
(3) In the light of the facts and the law so ascertained, the arbitrator reaches his decision.
In some cases, the third stage will be purely mechanical. Once the law is correctly ascertained, the decision follows inevitably from the application of it to the facts found. In other instances, however, the third stage involves an element of judgment on the part of the arbitrator. There is no uniquely "right" answer to be derived from marrying the facts and the law, merely a choice of answers, none of which can be described as wrong."
"The second stage of the process is the proper subject matter of an appeal under the 1979 Act. In some cases an error of law can be demonstrated by studying the way in which the arbitrator has stated the law in his reasons. It is, however, also possible to infer an error of law in those cases where a correct application of the law to the facts found would lead inevitably to one answer, whereas the arbitrator has arrived at another: and this can be so even if the arbitrator has stated the law in his reasons in a manner which appears to be correct — for the Court is then driven to assume that he did not properly understand the principles which he had stated.
Whether the third stage can ever be the proper subject of an appeal, in those cases where the making of the decision does not follow automatically from the ascertainment of the facts and the law, is not a matter upon which it is necessary to express a view in the present case. The Nema and The Evia show that where the issue is one of commercial frustration, the Court will not intervene, save only to the extent that it will have to form its own view, in order to see whether the arbitrator's decision is out of conformity with the only correct answer or (as the case may be) lies outside the range of correct answers. This is part of the process of investigating whether the arbitrator has gone wrong at the second stage. But once the Court has concluded that a tribunal which correctly understood the law could have arrived at the same answer as the one reached by the arbitrator, the fact that the individual judge himself would have come to a different conclusion is no ground for disturbing the award."
"[Counsel for the charterers] has, however, contended that the position is different in the present case, because the parties had agreed in advance that there should be a right of appeal on any question of law. This shows, so it is maintained, that the parties wanted an authoritative ruling on the question of frustration and this they would not get from a mode of appeal which precluded the Judge from substituting his own opinion for that of the arbitrator on the 'judgmental' stage of the reasoning process. I am afraid that I cannot read the agreement as showing any such intention. Its obvious purpose was to save the time and expense involved in a contested application under s. 1 (3) (b) of the Act. I cannot go on to infer that the parties also wished to vary the substantive basis of the appeal, in such a way that the respondent would be more likely to lose than if the appeal had followed upon an unsuccessful resistance to an application brought under s. 3 (1) (b)."
"Moreover, I am very doubtful whether, even if this had been the intention, it could validly have been put into effect. The Court has no jurisdiction to review the arbitrator's decision otherwise than by an "appeal" on a "question of law", and the interpretation given to these expressions in The Nema would preclude the Court from deciding on any basis other than the one which I have summarized."
The construction of Article 22
Conclusion