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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 >> X v Y [2018] EWHC 741 (Comm) (12 February 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2018/741.html Cite as: [2018] EWHC 741 (Comm) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
IN THE MATTER OF THE ARBITRATION ACT 1996
AND
IN AN ARBITRATION CLAIM
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
X |
Claimant |
|
- and - |
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Y |
Defendant |
____________________
The Claimant did not appear.
Hearing date: 12 February 2018
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE BRYAN:
Introduction
The alleged serious irregularity
"(i) First, that the Tribunal failed to take into account evidence that the claimant was not intended to be bound by the services contract and that the services contract was merely for show ("the first argument"). "
(ii) Secondly that the Tribunal failed to take into account evidence that the purpose of the services contract was to create the appearance that the defendant's business relationship was with the claimant and not with P in order to avoid payment and/or other difficulties ("the second argument").
(iii) Thirdly, the Tribunal failed to decide an issue in the case, namely whether the services contract, although designed to appear valid and binding on its face, was in fact not intended to create legal relations between the claimant and the defendant ("the third argument")
(iv) Fourthly, that the Tribunal decided the case on the basis of a point not argued by the other party and on which the claimant was not invited to comment ("the fourth argument")."
(i) First, a preliminary objection that under section 70(2)(b) of the Act, the claimant was required to exhaust any available recourse under section 57 of the Act before applying under section 68, but did not do so; and
(ii) Secondly, to submit that none of the four arguments are well founded and that there is no serious irregularity. Further, it is submitted that the challenges as well as being misconceived on the facts are in any event not permitted under section 68, being attempts to re-open the Tribunal's evaluation of the evidence and findings of fact, which it is said dress up complaints about the Tribunal's legal reasoning as procedural irregularity and which are said to be reliant upon a reading of the award that is not merely uncharitable but simply untenable.
1. The preliminary objection
(1) The parties are free to agree on the powers of the Tribunal to correct an award or make an additional award.
(2) If or to the extent there is no such agreement, the following provisions apply.
(3) The Tribunal may on its own initiative or on the application of a party
(a) Correct an award so as to remove any clerical mistake or error arising from an accidental slip or omission or clarify or remove any ambiguity in the award, or
(b) Make an additional award in respect of any claim (including a claim for interest or costs) which was presented to the Tribunal but was not dealt with in the award.
"Article 27 Correction of Awards and Additional Awards
27.1: Within 30 days of receipt of any award, or such lesser period as may be agreed in writing by the parties, a party may by written notice to the Registrar (copied to all other parties) request the Arbitral Tribunal to correct in the award any errors in computation, clerical or typographical errors or any errors of a similar nature. If the Arbitral Tribunal considers the request to be justified, it shall make the corrections within 30 days of receipt of the request. Any correction shall take the form of separate memorandum dated and signed by the Arbitral Tribunal or (if three arbitrators) those of its members assenting to it; and such memorandum shall become part of the award for all purposes.
27.2 The Arbitral Tribunal may likewise correct any error of the nature described in Article 27.1 on its own initiative within 30 days of the date of the award, to the same effect.
27.3 Within 30 days of receipt of the final award, a party may by written notice to the Registrar (copied to all other parties), request the Arbitral Tribunal to make an additional award as to claims or counterclaims presented in the arbitration but not determined in any award. If the Arbitral Tribunal considers the request to be justified, it shall make the additional award within 60 days of receipt of the request. The provisions of Article 26 shall apply to any additional award".
"In my judgment section 57(3)(b) which uses the word 'claim' only applies to a claim which has been presented to a Tribunal but which has not been dealt with as opposed to an issue which remains undetermined as part of a claim. It is noteworthy that the terms of section 57(3)(b) differ from the terms of section 68(2)(d) and the language used. I consider that the terms of section 57(3)(b) are apt to refer to a head of claim for damages or some other remedy (including specifically claims for interest or costs) but not to an issue which is part of the process by which a decision is arrived at on one of those claims."
"If however Torch had reverted to [the arbitrator] applying for clarification as to whether he had decided against it on [a particular issue], it would have been clear in this court whether or not he had determined the issue. It seems to me that section 57(3)(a) can be used to request further reasons from the arbitrator or reasons where none exist. The policy which underlies the Act is one of enabling the arbitral process to correct itself where possible without the intervention of the court. Torch contended that it was clear that the arbitrator had not decided the issue and that therefore there was no ambiguity in the award which required clarification, but the very existence of a genuine dispute on this question militates against that argument. If there was an arguably clear failure to deal with an issue it could be said that there was no ambiguity in the award, but, as set out in Al-Hadha at paragraph 70, an award which contains inadequate rationale or incomplete reasons for a decision is likely to be ambiguous or need clarification. There was therefore room for an application by Torch under section 57."
"28. The language of Article 27.3 of the LCIA Rules 1998 and of s.57(3)(b) of the Arbitration Act 1996 is not identical, but I do not consider the differences material for present purposes.
29. The language of Article 27.1 of the LCIA Rules 1998 and of s. 57(3)(a) of the Arbitration Act 1996 is also not identical. Article 27.1 refers to "correct[ing] in the award any errors in computation, clerical or typographical errors or any errors of a similar nature". S.57(3)(a) refers to "correct[ing] an award so as to remove any clerical mistake or error arising from an accidental slip or omission or clarify or remove any ambiguity in the award".
30. It was the words "clarify or remove any ambiguity" that were the focus of Cooke J's observations cited above. Mr Alexander Gunning QC, for the Defendant, submitted that the omission in the LCIA Rules 1998 of reference to a power to clarify or remove ambiguity was deliberate, referring to the article by Mr Martin Hunter and Mr Jan Paulsson entitled "A Commentary on the 1985 Rules of the London Court of International Arbitration" (1985) 10 YCA 167, at 172. Mr Gunning QC drew attention to the fact that in the LCIA Rules 2014 Article 27.1 does now contain reference to "ambiguity". He uses that point to reinforce his submission that there is significance in those words being absent in the LCIA Rules 1998.
31. I do not see, with respect, that the article relied on bears out the submission. Indeed in my view it tends against the submission. The article references a choice by the LCIA to take a different course from the UNCITRAL draft Model Law, by omitting provision for the parties to request "interpretations" of awards. That is one thing. However the article says something quite different of the authority that is given by Article 17 in the LCIA Rules 1985 (the forerunner of Article 27 in the LCIA Rules 1998): "If such an authority did not exist, there might be a problem if arbitrators having rendered an award were considered functus officio and therefore without jurisdiction to correct the clerical mistakes and omissions which occasionally may be made". And more generally the article describes the "guiding principles" for the LCIA Rules 1981 and 1985 as "party autonomy, on the one hand, and giving the Tribunal maximum discretion and powers, on the other hand".
32. In my judgment clarifying or removing ambiguity would fall within the words "any errors of a similar nature" in Article 27.1 of the LCIA Rules 1998. I regard the amendment to the LCIA Rules 2014 as stating expressly what was previously implicit."
2. General Principles Section 68
(i) the award should be read in a reasonable and commercial manner and not by nit-picking and looking for inconsistencies and faults (see Primera Maritime (Hellas) Ltd & Ors and Jiangsu Eastern Heavy Industry Co Ltd and Anor [2014] 1 Lloyd's Reports 255 per Flaux J, at paragraph 30).
(ii) Section 68 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, see Merkin Arbitration Law looseleaf, at paragraph 20.8.
(iii) Section 68(2)(d) ("failure by the Tribunal to deal with all issues which were put to it") does not require a Tribunal to set out each step by which they reached their conclusion or to deal with each point made by a party. There is a distinction between criticism of the reasoning and a failure to deal with an issue. See Hussman (Europe) Ltd v Al-Ameen Development Trade & Co [2000] 2 Lloyd's Rep 83; [2000] CLC 1243, at page 97, column 1.
(iv) There may be substantial injustice if it can be shown that the irregularity in the procedure caused the arbitrators to reach a conclusion which, but for the irregularity, they might not have reached so long as the alternative was reasonably arguable, see Colman J in Vee Networks v Econet Wireless International Ltd [2005] 1 Lloyd's Rep 192, at paragraph 90.
"Having considered these authorities, my understanding of the law regarding allegations that an Arbitral Tribunal has overlooked evidence is as follows. A contention that Tribunal has ignored or failed to have regard to evidence relied upon by one of the parties cannot be the subject matter of an allegation of serious irregularity within section 68(2)(a) or (d) for several reasons. First, the Tribunal's duty is to decide the essential issues put to it for decision and to give its reasons for doing so. It does not have to deal in its reasons with each point made by a party in relation to those essential issues or refer to all the relevant evidence. Second, the assessment and evaluation of such evidence is a matter exclusively for the Tribunal. The court has no role in that regard. Third where a Tribunal in its reasons has not referred to a piece of evidence which one party says is crucial the Tribunal may have:
(i) considered it but regarded it as not determinative,
(ii) considered it but assessed it as coming from an unreliable source,
(iii) considered it but misunderstood it, or,
(iv) overlooked it.
There may be other possibilities. Were the court to seek to determine why the Tribunal had not referred to certain evidence, it would have to consider the entirety of the evidence which was before the Tribunal and which was relevant to the decision under challenge. Such evidence would include not only documentary evidence but also the transcripts of factual and expert evidence. And such an inquiry (in addition to being lengthy as it certainly would be in the present case) would be an impermissible exercise for the court to undertake because it is the Tribunal not the court that assesses the evidence adduced by the parties. Further, for the court to decide that the Tribunal has overlooked certain evidence, the court would have to conclude that the only inference to be drawn from the Tribunal's failure to mention such evidence was that the Tribunal had overlooked it but the Tribunal may have had a different view of the importance, relevance or reliability of the evidence from that of the court and so the required inference cannot be drawn. Fourth, section 68 is concerned with due process. Section 68 is not concerned with whether the Tribunal had made the "right" finding of fact any more than it is concerned with whether the Tribunal has the made the "right" decision in law. The suggestion that it is a serious irregularity to fail to deal with certain evidence ignores that principle. By choosing to resolve disputes by arbitration the parties clothe the Tribunal with jurisdiction to make a "wrong" finding of fact".
3. The Four Arguments Relied Upon
The First Argument
"No contemporaneous evidence was put before us to indicate that [the claimant] had conveyed this purported intention to [the defendant] in the gestation of the services contract."
The second argument
The third argument
"We were invited by [the claimant]'s counsel, in effect to look behind the bare words of the services contract and through a variety of devices to find that [the claimant] was not in fact bound to make [the defendant] the payment claimed by [the defendant]. "
(1) There was no basis for construing the services contract in a way that would avoid the claimant's liability (see paragraph 83 of the award).
(2) Mr A did not sign thinking that it was anything other than what it was (see paragraph 86C of the award).
(3) There was "no merit whatsoever" in the suggestion that the claimant was not a party at all (see paragraph 88 of the award).
(4) The services contract was not a sham in the sense that the real agreement had been made earlier (see paragraph 89 of the award).
(5) Nor was it a sham in the sense that the real duties intended to be performed by the claimant were other than those actually set out in the services contract (paragraph 90).
The fourth argument