Article V(2)(b)
2. Recognition and enforcement of an arbitral award may also be refused if the competent authority in the country where recognition and enforcement is sought finds that:
(a) The subject matter of the difference is not capable of settlement by arbitration under the law of that country; or
(b) The recognition or enforcement of the award would be contrary to the public policy of that country.
Travaux préparatoires on Article V(2)(b)
A. Draft Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards and Comments by Governments and Organizations
A.1. ECOSOC: Report of the Committee on the Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards: 18 March 1955
A.2. Comments by Governments and Organisations on the Draft Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards: January 1956 - March 1958
- E/2822 - Report by the Secretary-General, Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards, 31 Jan 1956
- E/2822/Add.1 - General Observations, Comments on Articles 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15
- E/2822/Add.4 - Comments by the Netherlands and the UK on Articles 1, 3, 4, 8, 9
- E/CONF.26/3 - Comments by New Zealand on Articles 1, 4, 5
- E/CONF.26/3/Add.1 - Comments by the Netherlands on Articles 4, 5 and Suggestion of an Additional Article
A.3. Activities of Inter-Governmental and Non-Governmental Organizations in the Field of International Commercial Arbitration: Consolidated Report by the Secretary-General - 24 April 1958
A.4. Comments on the Draft Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards: Note by the Secretary-General: 6 March 1958
B. United Nations Conference On International Commercial Arbitration: Documents
B.2. Amendments to the Draft Convention Submitted by Governmental Delegations : 21 -28 May 1958
- E/CONF.26/L.8 - Sweden: amendments to Articles 3, 4 and suggestion of additional articles
- E/CONF.26/L.15 - Japan: amendments to Articles 2, 4
- E/CONF.26/L.15/Rev.1 - Japan: amendments to Articles 3, 4
- E/CONF.26/L.17 - Netherlands: amendments to Articles 3, 4, 5
- E/CONF.26/L.31 - Israel: amendments to amendments as proposed by the Netherlands (E/CONF.26/L.17)
- E/CONF.26/L.35 - Yugoslavia: amendment to articles 3, 4
- E/CONF.26/L.34 - Federal Republic of Germany: amendments to Articles 3, 4, 5
B.3. Comparison of Drafts Relating to Articles III, IV and V of the Draft Convention - 29 May 1958
B.5.Further Amendments to the Draft Convention Submitted by Governmental Delegations - 29 May -3 June 1958
B.7. Text of Articles III, IV and V of the Draft Convention Proposed by Working Party III: 3 June 1958
B.10. Text of Articles Adopted by the Conference: 4-6 June 1958
B.11. Text of the Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards as Provisionally Approved by Drafting Committee 6-9 June 1958
- E/CONF.26/L.61 - Text of the Convention as provisionally approved by the Drafting Committee on 6 June 1958
- E/CONF.26/8 - Text of the Convention as as provisionally approved by the Drafting Committee on 9 June 1958
B.14. Final Act and Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards
C. Summary Records of the United Nations Conference on International Commercial Arbitration, New York, 20 May - 10 June 1958
- 2 nd meeting [E/CONF.26/SR.2 - Adoption of the rules of procedure (continued), consideration of the draft Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards (E/2704 and Corr.1, E/2822 and Add. 1 to 6, E/CONF.26/2. 26/3 and Add.1, 26/4)]
- 7 th meeting [E/CONF.26/SR.7 - E/2704 and Corr.1, E/2822 and Add.1 to 6, E/CONF.26/2, 26/3 and Add.1, 26/4, 26/7, E/CONF.26/L.6 to 13]
- 11 th meeting [E/CONF.26/SR.11 - E/2704/Rev.1, E/2822 and Add.1-6, E/CONF.26/2, 6/3 and Add.1, 26/4, 26/7, E/CONF.26/L.6-L.31]
- 13 th meeting [E/CONF.26/SR.13 - E/2704 and Corr. 1, E/2822 and Add.1 to 6, E/CONF.26/2, 26/3 and Add.1, 26/4, 26/7, E/CONF.26/L.8 and Corr.1, L.15/Rev.1, L.16, L.17, L.22 to L.25, L.30 to L.36]
- 14 th meeting [E/CONF.26/SR.14 - E/2704 and Corr.1, E/2822, E/CONF.26/L.17, L.31, L.33/Rev.1, L.34. L.38 and L.40]
- 17 th meeting [E/CONF.26/SR.17 - E/2704 and Corr.1, E/CONF.26/L.31, L.37/Rev.1, L.43 and L.45]
- 21 st meeting [E/CONF.26/SR.21 - E/2704 and Corr.1, E/2822 and Add.1 to 6, E/CONF.26/2, 3 and Add.1, E/CONF.26/4, 7, E/CONF.26/L.16, L.28, L.49, L.52, L.55, L.56]
- 24 th meeting [E/CONF.26/SR.24 - Adoption and signature of the Final Act and Convention (E/CONF.26/8 and 9, E/CONF.26/L.63), Report of the Credentials Committee (E/CONF.26/10)]
D. Committee on the Enforcement of International Arbitral Awards
- E/C.2/373 - Enforcement of international arbitral awards: statement submitted by the International Chamber of Commerce, a non-governmental organization having consultative status in category A
- E/AC.42/1 - Comments received from Governments regarding the Draft Convention on the Enforcement of International Arbitral Awards
- E/AC.42/4 - Report of the Committee on the Enforcement of International Arbitral Awards
D.1. Summary Records of the Committee on the Enforcement of International Arbitral Awards
- 1 st meeting [E/AC.42/SR.1]
- 2 nd meeting [E/AC.42/SR.2]
- 5 th meeting [E/AC.42/SR.5]
- 7 th meeting [E/AC.42/SR.7]
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INTRODUCTION
1. Article V (2)(b) of the New York Convention enables the courts of a Contracting State to refuse recognition and enforcement of an award when they find that such recognition or enforcement would be contrary to its public policy.
2. Public policy is not a concept unique to the New York Convention. Rather, public policy forms part of a wider range of tools, such as the mandatory rules of the forum that override private autonomy, that allow a court to protect the integrity of the legal order to which it belongs. It is, therefore, impossible to sever the concept of public policy in the sense of article V (2)(b) of the New York Convention from the concept of public policy as is understood in international law.
3. Nor did the New York Convention first introduce public policy as a ground for refusing the recognition and enforcement of awards. Article 1(e) of the 1927 Geneva Convention required that, in order for recognition and enforcement to be granted, it had to be positively demonstrated that such “recognition or enforcement of the award [was] not contrary to the public policy or to the principles of law of the country in which it is sought to be relied upon”. The New York Convention simply provides, in article V (2)(b), that recognition may be refused on the basis of public policy.1049 In addition, the omission in the New York Convention of any reference to an award being contrary to “principles of law”1050 is notable and underscores the strong pro-enforcement bias of the Convention.1051
1049. See Anton G. Maurer, The Public Policy Exception Under the New York Convention: History, Interpretation and Application 61 (2012); Bernard Hanotiau, Olivier Caprasse, Public Policy in International Commercial Arbitration, in Enforcement of Arbitration Agreements and International Arbitral Awards: The New York Convention in Practice 787, 802 (E. Gaillard, D. Di Pietro eds., 2008).
1050. For various comments on this phrase which was eventually omitted, see Travaux préparatoires, Report of the Committee on the Enforcement of International Arbitral Awards, E/AC.42/4/Rev.1, p. 13; Report by the Secretary-General, Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards, E/2822, Annex II, pp. 20-21 and 23; Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards: Comments by Governments on the draft Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards E/2822/Add.4, p. 2; Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards: Comments by Governments on the draft Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards, E/CONF.26/3, p. 3; Activities of Inter-Governmental and Non-Governmental Organizations in the Field of International Commercial Arbitration: Consolidated Report by the Secretary-General, E/CONF.26/4, p. 29; Comments on draft Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards, E/CONF.26/2, pp. 6-7; Yugoslavia: amendment to Articles III and IV of the draft Convention, E/CONF. 26/L.35; Federal Republic of Germany: amendment to Articles III and IV of the draft Convention, E/CONF. 26/L.34; Summary Record of the Sixth Meeting, E/AC.42/SR.6, p. 11; Summary Record of the Seventh Meeting, E/AC.42/SR. 7; Comments of the representative of the Peruvian Government, Mr. Maurtua: Summary Record of the Fourteenth Meeting, E/CONF.26/SR.14, pp. 9; Summary Record of the Seventeenth Meeting, E/CONF.26/SR.17, pp. 15-16. See also Joel R. Junker, The Public Policy Defense to Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards, 1977 Cal. W. Int’l L.J. 228, 229-30.
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ANALYSIS
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A. Concept
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a. The public policy exception under the Convention
4. Although different jurisdictions define public policy differently, case law tends to refer to a public policy basis for refusing recognition and enforcement of an award under article V (2)(b) of the New York Convention when the core values of a legal system have been deviated from. Invoking the public policy exception is a safety valve to be used in those exceptional circumstances when it would be impossible for a legal system to recognize an award and enforce it without abandoning the very fundaments on which it is based.1052
1052. For the exceptional nature of the defence, see the Comments of the Netherlands Government, Travaux préparatoires, Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards: Comments by Governments on the draft Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards E/2822/Add.4, p. 2. See also the Comments of the representative of the French Government, Mr. Holleaux, Travaux préparatoires, Summary Record of the Eleventh Meeting, E/CONF.26/SR.11, p. 7. See also Jan Paulsson, The New York Convention in International Practice—Problems of Assimilation, ASA Special Series No. 9, 100, 113 (1996).
5. In the words of the often-quoted judgment of the Second Circuit of the United States Court of Appeals in Parsons, “[e]nforcement of foreign arbitral awards may be denied on [the basis of public policy] only where enforcement would violate the forum state’s most basic notions of morality and justice”.1053 Several jurisdictions outside the United States have relied on this passage when assessing the public policy exception.1054
1053. Parsons & Whittemore Overseas v. Société Générale de L’Industrie du Papier (RAKTA), Court of Appeals, Second Circuit, United States of America, 508 F.2d 969, 974 (1974). Dealing with the argument of the party opposing enforcement that its actions had been dictated by the severance of diplomatic relations between the United States and Egypt, the Second Circuit of the United States Court of Appeals stated that “[t]o read the public policy defence as a parochial device protective of national political interests would seriously undermine the Convention’s utility. This provision was not meant to enshrine the vagaries of international politics under the rubric of ‘public policy’”. See also National Oil Corp. v. Libyan Sun Oil Co., District Court, District of Delaware, United States of America, 15 March 1990, 733 F. Supp. 800, XVI Y.B. Com. Arb. 651 (1991) (concerning an award whose recognition and enforcement was alleged to violate the United States sanctions against Libya). See also Ameropa A.G. v. Havi Ocean Co. LLC, District Court, Southern District of New York, United States of America, 16 February 2011, 2011 WL 570130 (concerning an award whose recognition and enforcement was alleged to violate the United States sanctions against Iran). See also Linda Silberman, The New York Convention After Fifty Years: Some Reflections on the Role of National Law, 2009-2010 GA. J. Int’l & Comp. L. 25, 35.
1054. See, e.g., BCB Holdings Limited and The Belize Bank Limited v. The Attorney General of Belize, Caribbean Court of Justice, Appellate Jurisdiction, 26 July 2013, [2013] CCJ 5 (AJ); Traxys Europe S.A. v. Balaji Coke Industry Pvt Ltd., Federal Court, Australia, 23 March 2012, [2012] FCA 276; Uganda Telecom Ltd. v. Hi-Tech Telecom Pty Ltd., Federal Court, Australia, 22 February 2011, [2011] FCA 131; Petrotesting Colombia S.A. & Southeast Investment Corporation v. Ross Energy S.A., Supreme Court of Justice, Colombia, 27 July 2011; Hebei Import & Export Corp. v. Polytek Engineering Co. Ltd., Court of Final Appeal, Hong Kong, 9 February 1999, [1999] 2 HKC 205; Renusagar Power Co. Ltd. v. General Electric Company & anor., Supreme Court, India, 7 October 1993, 1994 AIR 860; Brostrom Tankers AB v. Factorias Vulcano S.A., High Court, Dublin, Ireland, 19 May 2004, XXX Y.B. Com. Arb. 591 (2005).
6. Similarly, the Federal Court of Australia has recently decided that “it is only those aspects of public policy that go to the fundamental, core questions of morality and justice in [the] jurisdiction [where enforcement is sought] which enliven this particular statutory exception to enforcement”.1055 In the same vein, the Hong Kong Court of Final Appeal defined an award that violates public policy as an award that is “so fundamentally offensive to [the enforcement jurisdiction]’s notions of justice that, despite its being party to the Convention, it cannot reasonably be expected to overlook the objection”.1056
1056. Hebei Import & Export Corp. v. Polytek Engineering Co. Ltd., Court of Final Appeal, Hong Kong, 9 February 1999, [1999] 2 HKC 205. For a similar definition, see Karaha Bodas Company LLC v. Perusahaan Pertambangan Minyak Dan Gas Bumi Negara and P.T. PLN (Persero), Alberta Court of Queen’s Bench, Canada, 9 December 2004, 2004 ABQB 918. For an insistence on the “essential” nature of the legal principles that public policy seeks to protect, see Soc. Des Ciments d’Abijan v. Soc. Burkinabè des Ciments et Matériaux, Court of First Instance, Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso, 13 June 2001.
7. The Swiss courts have also defined the public policy exception under the Convention by reference to the concept of justice. In a seminal judgment regarding the definition of public policy, albeit in the context of an action to set aside, the Swiss Federal Tribunal held that an award contravenes public policy “if it disregards essential and widely recognized values which, according to the conceptions prevailing in Switzerland, should form the basis of any legal order”.1057 In more recent decisions, the Swiss Federal Tribunal has defined an award which is contrary to public policy as an award which violates the Swiss concepts of justice in an “intolerable manner”.1058
1057. X S.p.A. v. Y S.r.l., Federal Tribunal, Switzerland, 8 March 2006, Arrêts du Tribunal Fédéral (2006) 132 III 389; Paolo Michele Patocchi, The 1958 New York Convention: The Swiss Practice, 1996 ASA Bull. 145, 188-96. For a similar definition, see Kersa Holding Co. Luxembourg v. Infancourtage Famajuk Investment & Isny, Superior Court of Justice, Luxembourg, 24 November 1993, XXI Y.B. Com. Arb. 617 (1996).
1058. See, e.g., Federal Tribunal, Switzerland, 10 October 2011, Decision 5A_427/2011; Federal Tribunal, Switzerland, 28 July 2010, Decision 4A_233/2010. For a similar definition, see Supreme Court, Austria, Case 3Ob221/04b, 26 January 2005, XXX Y.B. Com. Arb. 421 (2005): it is for the Austrian courts to decide “whether the arbitral award is irreconcilable with the fundamental principles of the Austrian legal system because it is based on a foreign legal principle which is totally irreconcilable with the domestic legal system”.
8. The French courts have taken a similar approach. For example, the Court of Appeal of Paris defined international public policy as “the body of rules and values whose violation the French legal order cannot tolerate even in situations of international character”.1059
9. The German courts have considered that an award contravenes public policy when it violates a norm which affects the basis of German public and economic life or irreconcilably contradicts the German perception of justice.1060 The Supreme Court of Cyprus also interpreted public policy exception under the Convention to mean the fundamental principles which a society recognizes, at a given time, as governing transactions as well as other manifestations of the life of its members, and on which the legal order to which the enforcement court belongs is based.1061
1060. See, e.g., Oberlandesgericht [OLG] München, Germany, 34 Sch 019/05, 28 November 2005; Oberlandesgericht [OLG] Düsseldorf, Germany, VI Sch (Kart) 1/02, 21 July 2004; Hanseatisches Oberlandesgericht [OLG] Bremen, Germany, (2) Sch 04/99, 30 September 1999; Bundesgerichtshof [BGH] Germany, III ZR 269/88, 18 January 1990.
1061. The Attorney General of the Republic of Kenya v. Bank für Arbeit und Wirtschaft AG, Supreme Court, Cyprus, 28 April 1999, XXV Y.B. Com. Arb. 641 (2000). See also for a similar definition, Court of Cassation, Greece, Case No. 1665/2009, 30 June 2009, XXXVI Y.B. Com. Arb. 284(2011); Misr Insurance Co. v. Alexandria Shipping Agencies Co., Court of Cassation, Egypt, 23 December 1991; BCB Holdings Limited and The Belize Bank Limited v. The Attorney General of Belize, Caribbean Court of Justice, Appellate Jurisdiction, 26 July 2013, [2013] CCJ 5(AJ).
10. There have been occasions where courts considered that public policy is not a concept that lends itself to a precise definition. The Court of Appeal of England and Wales held that the public policy exception under the New York Convention encompasses cases where “the enforcement of the award would be clearly injurious to the public good or, possibly, enforcement would be wholly offensive to the ordinary reasonable and fully informed member of the public on whose behalf the powers of the state are exercised”.1062 At the same time, the Court of Appeal acknowledged that “[c]onsiderations of public policy can never be exhaustively defined, but they should be approached with extreme caution”.1063
1062. Deutsche Schachtbau-und Tiefbohrgesellschaft m.b.H. v. Shell International Petroleum Co. Ltd., Court of Appeal, England and Wales, 24 March 1987, [1990] 1 A.C. 295.
1063. Id.
11. Some jurisdictions have emphasized the relationship between public policy and national interest or national sovereignty. For example, when reviewing the compatibility of awards with public policy under the New York Convention, the Brazilian Superior Court of Justice has indicated that “the issue [before it] does not have a public policy character and that it does not relate to the concept of national sovereignty”.1064 Similarly, the Indian courts have held that an award is contrary to public policy if its enforcement would be contrary to “the interests of India”.1065
1065. See Renusagar Power Co. Ltd. v. General Electric Company & anor., Supreme Court, India, 7 October 1993, 1994 AIR 860; Penn Racquet Sports v. Mayor International Ltd., High Court of Delhi, India, 11 January 2011; Shri Lal Mahal Ltd. v. Progetto Grano S.p.A., Supreme Court, India, 3 July 2013. See also for a national-interest-based analysis of public policy, Petrotesting Colombia S.A. & Southeast Investment Corp. v. Ross Energy S.A., Supreme Court of Justice, Colombia, 27 July 2011. The Indonesian courts are also reported to have taken a similar approach by which national interest is considered part of Indonesian public policy: see Fifi Junita, Refusing Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards Under Article V (2)(b) of the New York Convention: The Indonesian Perspective, 2009 Contemp. Asia Arb. J. 301, 320.
12. The Russian courts have taken the following view. The Highest Arbitrazh Court of the Russian Federation has relied on the concept of public policy to deny recognition and enforcement of awards that produce results contrary to the “universally recognized moral and ethical rules or threaten the citizens’ life and health or the security of the State”.1066
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b. International – transnational public policy
13. It is widely accepted that public policy within the meaning of article V (2)(b) of the New York Convention refers to the public policy of the forum State.1067 Indeed, article V (2)(b) explicitly refers to “the public policy of that country”, in reference to the country where recognition and enforcement is sought.1068 However, in relation to the assessment of the international or domestic character of public policy, most jurisdictions recognize that a mere violation of domestic law is unlikely to amount to a ground to refuse recognition or enforcement on the basis of public policy.1069
1067. See, e.g., Traxys Europe S.A. v. Balaji Coke Industry Pvt Ltd., Federal Court, Australia, 23 March 2012, [2012] FCA 276; IPCO (Nigeria) Ltd. v. Nigerian National Petroleum Corp., High Court of Justice, England and Wales, 27 April 2005, [2005] EWHC 726; Gao Haiyan & anor v. Keeneye Holdings Ltd. & anor, Court of Appeal, Hong Kong, CACV 79/2011, 2 December 2011; Renusagar Power Co. Ltd. v. General Electric Company & anor., Supreme Court, India, 7 October 1993, 1994 AIR 860; Brostrom Tankers AB v. Factorias Vulcano S.A., High Court, Dublin, Ireland, 19 May 2004, XXX Y.B. Com. Arb. 591 (2005); A v. B & Cia Ltda. & ors, Supreme Court of Justice, Portugal, 9 November 2003, XXXII Y.B. Com. Arb. 474 (2007); Federal Tribunal, Switzerland, 10 October 2011, Decision 5A_427/2011; Agility Public Warehousing CO. K.S.C., Professional Contract Administrators, Inc. v. Supreme Foodservice GmbH, Court of Appeals, Second Circuit, United States of America, 6 September 2012, 11-5201-cv. See also Anton G. Maurer, The Public Policy Exception Under The New York Convention: History, Interpretation And Application 54 (2012).
1068. See BCB Holdings Limited and The Belize Bank Limited v. The Attorney General of Belize, Caribbean Court of Justice, Appellate Jurisdiction, 26 July 2013, [2013] CCJ 5 (AJ).
1069. See, e.g., Traxys Europe S.A. v. Balaji Coke Industry Pvt Ltd., Federal Court, Australia, 23 March 2012, [2012] FCA 276; Petrotesting Colombia S.A. & Southeast Investment Corporation v. Ross Energy S.A., Supreme Court of Justice, Colombia, 27 July 2011; Agence pour la sécurité de la navigation aérienne en Afrique et à Madagascar v. M. N’DOYE Issakha, Court of Appeal of Paris, France, 16 October 1997; K.M. v. UAB A. Sabonio Žalgirio krepšinio centras, Court of Cassation, Lithuania, 4 November 2011.
14. In relation to the question whether there is a universal or transnational character to the concept of public policy, different jurisdictions have taken different approaches. The Supreme Court of India has held that providing a transnational definition of the concept of public policy is unworkable and accepted the principle that public policy in article V (2)(b) of the New York Convention should be taken to mean the public policy of the enforcement forum.1070 In contrast, the Italian courts have stated that public policy refers to “a body of universal principles shared by nations of the same civilization, aiming at the protection of fundamental human rights, often embodied in international declarations or conventions”.1071
1070. See Renusagar Power Co. Ltd. v. General Electric Company & anor., Supreme Court, India, 7 October 1993, 1994 AIR 860. See also Hebei Import & Export Corp. v. Polytek Engineering Co. Ltd., Court of Final Appeal, Hong Kong, 9 February 1999, [1999] 2 HKC 205, agreeing with the conclusion reached by the Supreme Court of India.
1071. Allsop Automatic Inc. v. Tecnoski snc, Court of Appeal of Milan, Italy, 4 December 1992, XXII Y.B. Com. Arb. 725.
15. The Highest Arbitrazh Court of the Russian Federation has often referred to public policy as constituting “universally recognized moral and ethical rules”1072 or “fundamental and universal legal principles of highest imperative nature, of particular social and public significance, and forming the basis of the economic, political and legal system of the State”.1073
1073. Presidium of the Highest Arbitrazh Court, Russian Federation, Information Letter No. 156 of 26 February 2013.
16. In Switzerland, a 2006 decision of the Federal Tribunal concluded that “an award is incompatible with public policy if it disregards essential and widely recognized values which, according to the conceptions prevailing in Switzerland, should form the basis of any legal order”.1074
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c. Mandatory rules as public policy
17. As public policy is generally interpreted to mean those fundamental rules of the State where recognition and enforcement of an award is sought from which no derogation can be allowed, the question arises as to whether the forum’s mandatory rules should be considered as part of its public policy, and consequently an exception to recognition and enforcement of an award under the New York Convention.1075
1075. Bernard Hanotiau, Olivier Caprasse, Public Policy in International Commercial Arbitration, in Enforcement of Arbitration Agreements and International Arbitral Awards: The New York Convention in Practice 787, 791-94 (E. Gaillard, D. Di Pietro eds. 2008).
18. It is not disputed that certain mandatory rules meet the standard of the public policy defence to recognition and enforcement of awards.1076 However, different views have been expressed as to whether specific sets of mandatory rules do rise to that standard in the context of recognition and enforcement of foreign awards in fields such as of competition law, bankruptcy, employment and consumer protection, interest rates, foreign exchange regulations, export prohibitions and futures contracts.
19. For example, in the field of competition law, the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) held that article 101 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union (TFEU), which renders automatically void certain anti-competitive agreements or decisions, constitutes “a fundamental provision which is essential for the accomplishment of the tasks entrusted to the [Union] and, in particular, for the functioning of the internal market”. The CJEU held that for this reason it should be regarded as a matter of public policy within the meaning of article V (2)(b) of the New York Convention.1077 It has thus imposed on the courts of the EU Member States the obligation to refuse recognition and enforcement to all awards which conflict with article 101 TFEU.1078
1077. Eco Swiss China Time Ltd. v. Benetton International NV, Court of Justice of the European Union, 1 June 1999, Case C-126/97, [1999] ECR I-3055, paras. 37-39.
1078. See, e.g., SNF SAS v. Cytec Industries B.V., Court of Appeal of Paris, 23 March 2006, XXXII Y.B. Com. Arb. 282 (2008), where the French court accepted that EU competition law forms part of French public policy; Oberlandesgericht [OLG] Düsseldorf, Germany, VI Sch (Kart) 1/02, 21 July 2004, Court of Cassation, Greece, Case No. 1665/2009, 30 June 2009, XXXVI Y.B. Com. Arb. 284 (2011), and Marketing Displays International Inc. v. VR Van Raalte Reclame B.V., Court of Appeal, The Hague, Netherlands, 24 March 2005, XXXI Y.B. Com. Arb. 808 (2006), where the German, Greek and Dutch courts respectively recognized that article 101 TFEU formed part of their public policy.
20. In proceedings to set aside an award handed down in Switzerland regarding a dispute between two Italian companies, the Federal Tribunal acknowledged the existence of other economic systems based on a planned economy and favoring State intervention in the economy. It concluded though that “no one would consider labeling them immoral or contrary to fundamental legal principles simply because they do not follow the Swiss model.1079 The Federal Tribunal thus held that “the provisions of competition law do not form part of the essential and widely-recognized values, which, according to the prevailing position in Switzerland, should form the basis of any legal order”.1080
1079. X S.p.A. v. Y S.r.l., Federal Tribunal, Switzerland, 8 March 2006, Arrêts du Tribunal Fédéral (2006) 132 III389.
1080. Id.
21. These decisions highlight the fact that Article V (2)(b) refers to the public policy of the country where recognition and enforcement is sought. It does not require a New York Convention signatory to uphold the public policy of another State. As Switzerland has not acceded to the European Union, it is not required to consider that Article 101 TFEU forms part of Swiss public policy.
22. The United States Supreme Court held that claims arising out of the Sherman Antitrust Act are arbitrable but that public policy can be used to ensure that the legitimate interest in the antitrust issues had been appropriately addressed, leaving the issue to be decided on an ad hoc basis.1081
23. In the field of insolvency, the French courts have held that the principle according to which individual actions brought by creditors against the estate of the bankrupt are stayed during bankruptcy to be part of public policy,1082 while the German courts have not considered the arbitration of insolvency disputes to be contrary to public policy.1083
1082. Mandataires judiciaires Associés, in the person of Mrs. X as liquidators of Jean Lion et Cie S.A. v. International Company for Commercial Exchanges, Court of Cassation, France, 6 May 2009, XXXV Y.B. Com. Arb. 353 (2010).
1083. Oberlandesgericht [OLG] Karlsruhe, Germany, 9 Sch 02/09, 4 January 2012.
24. In the context of interest rates, while acknowledging that a mere incompatibility of a foreign award with domestic mandatory rules does not amount to a breach of public policy, several courts have refused to recognize and enforce awards, or the part of the award which was considered to be contrary to public policy,1084 where they considered that the awarded interest was unreasonably high.1085
1084. See J. J. Agro Industries (P) Ltd. v. Texuna International Ltd., High Court, Hong Kong, 12 August 1992.
1085. See Supreme Court, Austria, Case 3Ob221/04b, 26 January 2005, XXX Y.B. Com. Arb. 421 (2005). See to the same effect, Laminoires-Trefileries-Cablerie de Lens S.A. v. Southwire Co. and Southwire International Corp., District Court, Northern District of Georgia, United States, 484 F. Supp. 1063 (1980); Misr Foreign Trade Co. v. R.D. Harboties (Mercantile), Court of Cassation, Egypt, 22 January 2008; Belaja Rus v. Westintorg Corp., Court of Cassation, Lithuania, 10 November 2008.
25. Other examples of domestic mandatory rules that have been considered to be a public policy matter under which recognition and enforcement can be refused, include foreign exchange regulations, with regard to which the German Federal Court of Justice held that an award conflicting with German foreign exchange regulations is contrary to public policy;1086 export prohibitions, in relation to which the Indian courts have refused recognition of awards which conflict with an Indian ban on the export of hot rolled steel sheet coils due to a shortage in the domestic market;1087 and offshore futures transactions, in relation to which the Chinese courts have refused recognition to an award on the basis that it conflicted with the Chinese mandatory rules forbidding futures contracts.1088
1086. See Bundesgerichtshof [BGH], Germany, II ZR 124/86, 15 June 1987. See also Susan Choi, Judicial Enforcement of Arbitration Awards Under the ICSID and New York Conventions, 1196 N.Y.U. J. Int’l L. & Pol. 175, 202-04 (1995).
1087. See COSID Inc. v. Steel Authority of India Ltd., High Court of Delhi, India, 12 July 1985, XI Y.B. Com. Arb. 502 (1986).
1088. See ED & F Man (Hong Kong) Co., Ltd. v. China National Sugar & Wines Group Corp., Supreme People’s Court, China, 1 July 2003, [2003] Min Si Ta Zi No. 3. See also Lanfang Fei, Public Policy as a Bar to Enforcement of International Arbitral Awards: A Review of the Chinese Approach, 26(2) Arb. Int’l 301, 305-06 (2010).
26. The criteria forming the basis of the determination as to whether mandatory national law constitutes public policy are often not specified by national courts. Commentators note that it is consistent with the letter and spirit of the New York Convention that, as a matter of principle, the mandatory rules of the enforcement forum should be considered as part of its public policy when they reflect that forum’s fundamental concepts of morality and justice, from which no derogation can be allowed.1089
1089. See Fouchard Gaillard Goldman On International Commercial Arbitration 996 (E. Gaillard, J. Savage eds., 1996).
-
d. Public policy and constitutional principles
27. Constitutional principles may also interact with the public policy exception to the recognition and enforcement of foreign arbitral awards under the New York Convention.1090
1090. BCB Holdings Limited and The Belize Bank Limited v. The Attorney General of Belize, Caribbean Court of Justice, Appellate Jurisdiction, 26 July 2013, [2013] CCJ 5 (AJ).
-
-
B. Application
28. Public policy allows the courts of the Contracting Party where recognition and enforcement is sought to consider the merits of an award so as to satisfy themselves that there is nothing in the award that would infringe the fundamental values of that State. The enforcement court’s assessment also extends to procedural matters, such that it might refuse to recognize or enforce an award where the procedure followed by the arbitral tribunal contradicts the understanding of basic procedural fairness in the State where recognition and enforcement is sought.1091
29. The Swiss Federal Tribunal distinguishes between substantive and procedural public policy (ordre public matériel et ordre public procédural).1092 In its words: “[t]here is a difference between substantive and procedural public policy [...] procedural public policy guarantees parties the right to an independent judgment on their submissions and the facts submitted to the arbitral tribunal, in accordance with the applicable procedural law; substantive public policy is breached when fundamental and generally recognized principles are breached, leading to an untenable contradiction with the notion of justice, so that the decision appears incompatible with the values recognized in a state governed by the rule of law”.1093
1092. For a similar distinction between substantive and procedural public policy (ordre public quant à la procédure et ordre public quant au fond), see Soc. Excelsior Film TV v. Soc. UGC-PH, Court of Cassation, France, 24 March 1998, 95-17.285.
-
a.Substantive public policy
30. Even though the defence of public policy allows courts to consider the merits of the award, the scope of such review is not unlimited. Courts have recognized that public policy does not furnish an opportunity to the party opposing recognition and enforcement to reargue the merits of the case or to allege that the case was wrongly decided.1094
1094. See, e.g., BCB Holdings Limited and The Belize Bank Limited v. The Attorney General of Belize, Caribbean Court of Justice, Appellate Jurisdiction, 26 July 2013, [2013] CCJ 5 (AJ); Karaha Bodas Company, L.L.C. v. Perusahaan Pertambangan Minyak Dan Gas Bumi Negara and P.T. PLN (Persero), Alberta Court of Queen’s Bench, Canada, 24 October 2007, 2007 ABQB 616; Atecs Mannesmann GmbH v. Rodrimar S/A Transportes Equipamentos Industriais e Armazéns Gerais, Superior Court of Justice, Brazil, 19 August 2009; GRD Minproc Limited v. Shanghai Feilun Industrial Co., Supreme People’s Court, China, 13 March 2009, [2008] Min Si Ta Zi No. 48; Société I.A.I.G.C.- Inter-Arab Investment Guarantee Corporation v. Société B.A.I.I.- Banque arabe et internationale d’investissement S.A., Court of Appeal of Paris, France, 23 October 1997; Oberlandesgericht [OLG] München, Germany, 34 Sch 26/08, 22 June 2009, XXXV Y.B. Com. Arb. 371 (2010); Oberlandesgericht [OLG] Karlsruhe, Germany, 9 Sch 02/05, 27 March 2006; Qinhuangdao Tongda Enterprise Development Company, et al. v. Million Basic Co. Ltd., High Court, Supreme Court of Hong Kong, 5 January 1993, XIX Y.B. Com. Arb. 675 (1994); C.G. Impianti S.p.A. v. B.M.A.A.B. & Sons International Contracting Co. WLL, Court of Appeal of Milan, Italy, 29 April 2009, XXXI Y.B. Com. Arb. 802 (2010); Inter Maritime Management S.A. v. Russin & Vecchi, Federal Tribunal, Switzerland, 9 January 1995, XXII Y.B. Com. Arb. 789 (1997); Odfjell SE v. OAO PO Sevmash, Highest Arbitrazh Court, Russian Federation, Ruling No. VAS-4369/11, 26 May 2011; Presidium of the Highest Arbitrazh Court, Russian Federation, Information Letter No. 156 of 26 February 2013; Supreme Court, Austria, Case 3Ob221/04b, 26 January 2005, XXX Y.B. Com. Arb. 421 (2005). See also William W. Park, Private Adjudicators and the Public Interest: the Expanding Scope of International Arbitration, 1986 Brook. J. Int’l L. 629, 646-47.
31. In addition, most courts ascribe a narrow interpretation to public policy. It is thus not surprising that applications to refuse recognition and enforcement of a foreign arbitral award made under article V (2)(b) of the New York Convention have rarely been successful.1095
1095. See Pieter Sanders, A Twenty Years’ Review of the Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards, 1979 Int’l Law 269, 270; Susan Choi, Judicial Enforcement of Arbitration Awards Under the ICSID and New York Conventions, 28 N.Y.U. J. Int’l & Pol. 175, 206-07 (1995-1996).
32. Such rare instances include cases where:
- • The award conflicted with a previous judgment of the courts of the forum;1096
- • The award ordered the party opposing recognition and enforcement to pay interest at an amount considered excessive according to the standards of the lex fori;1097
- • The parties to the arbitration settled secretly from the arbitral tribunal and the claimant in the arbitration failed to stop the arbitration so as to acquire an award condemning the respondent to pay twice the same debt;1098
- • The award contravened mandatory rules of the forum in the area of competition law, consumer protection, foreign exchange regulation or bans on exports;1099
- • The award was contrary to core constitutional values such as the separation of powers and sovereignty of Parliament;1100
- • The award was contrary to the national interest of the forum State.1101
1096. See Hemofarm DD, MAG International Trade Holding DD, Suram Media Ltd. v. Jinan Yongning Pharmaceutical Co. Ltd., Supreme People’s Court, China, 2 June 2008, [2008] Min Si Ta Zi No. 11; Ciments Français v. OAO Holding Company Siberian Cement, Istanbul Çimento Yatırımları, Highest Arbitrazh Court, Russian Federation, No. VAS-17458/11, 27 August 2012.
1097. See Supreme Court, Austria, Case 3Ob221/04b, 26 January 2005, XXX Y.B. Com. Arb. 421 (2005); Ahmed Mostapha Shawky v. Andersen Worldwide & Wahid El Din Abdel Ghaffar Megahed & Emad Hafez Raghed & Nabil Istanboly Akram Instanboly, Court of Appeal of Cairo, Egypt, 23 May 2001; Harbottle Co. Ltd. v. Egypt for Foreign Trade Co., Court of Cassation, Egypt, 21 May 1990, 815/52; Belaja Rus v. Westintorg Corp., Court of Cassation, Lithuania, 10 November 2008, 3K-3-562/2008.
1098. See Bayerisches Oberstes Landgericht [BayObLG], Germany, 4 Z Sch 17/03, 20 November 2003.
1099. See Court of Cassation, Greece, Case No. 1665/2009, 30 June 2009, XXXVI Y.B. Com. Arb. 284 (2011); SNF SAS v. Cytec Industries B.V., Court of Appeal of Paris, 23 March 2006, XXXII Y.B. Com. Arb. 282 (2008); Elisa María Mostaza Claro v. Centro Móvil Milenium SL, Court of Justice of the European Union, 26 October 2006, Case C-168/05, [2006] ECR I-10421; Marketing Displays International Inc. v. VR Van Raalte Reclame B.V., Court of Appeal of The Hague, Netherlands, 24 March 2005, XXXI Y.B. Com. Arb. 808 (2006); Oberlandesgericht [OLG] Düsseldorf Germany, VI Sch (Kart) 1/02, 21 July 2004; Eco Swiss China Time Ltd. v. Benetton International NV, Court of Justice of the European Union, 1 June 1999, Case C-126/97, [1999] ECR I-3055; Bundesgerichtshof [BGH], Germany, II ZR 124/86, 15 June 1987; COSID Inc. v. Steel Authority of India Ltd., High Court of Delhi, India, 12 July 1985, XI Y.B. Com. Arb. 502 (1986).
1100. See BCB Holdings Limited and The Belize Bank Limited v. The Attorney General of Belize, Caribbean Court of Justice, Appellate Jurisdiction, 26 July 2013, [2013] CCJ 5 (AJ).
1101. See United World v. Krasny Yakor, Federal Arbitrazh Court of the Volgo-Vyatsky Region, Russian Federation, Case No. A43-10716/02-27-10, 17 February 2003. See the chapter of the Guide on article V (2)(b).
33. By contrast, without purporting to set out an exhaustive list of instances where applications made under article V (2)(b) of the New York Convention have been unsuccessful, courts have dismissed such applications on the merits where:
- • It was alleged that the law applicable to the merits of the dispute was incorrectly applied by the arbitral tribunal;1102
- • It was alleged that the recognition and enforcement of the award would violate the exceptio non adimpleti contractus;1103
- • The benefit of domestic mandatory rules was sought by a sophisticated business person who should have been aware of the risks he/she had undertaken;1104
- • The award debtor would have to obtain regulatory approval in order to perform an act necessary to comply with the award;1105
- • The award included a substantial sum which appeared to represent an acceleration of future damages;1106
- • It was alleged that the arbitration agreement was null and void because the parties submitted a non-foreign-related dispute to a foreign arbitration tribunal;1107
- • The transaction in question was an offshore future transaction which violated the enforcement forum’s mandatory rules;1108
- • Compliance with the award was alleged to offend the law of the place of incorporation of the respondent company;1109
- • The award concerned matters that were normally subject to the exclusive jurisdiction of the employment tribunals;1110
- • The award granted compensation for legal costs;1111
- • It was alleged that the arbitral tribunal awarded damages in an arbitrary fashion;1112
- • It was alleged that the award debtor had no legal remedies against the decision of the sole arbitrator;1113
- • It was alleged that the contractual penalty imposed by the arbitral tribunal rising to 40 per cent of the value of the main obligation under the contract was disproportionately high;1114
- • It was alleged that the arbitral tribunal should have applied the Convention on the International Sale of Goods to the contract rather than the governing law chosen by the parties;1115
- • Lump sum damages were prohibited under the law of the country where recognition and enforcement was sought but were allowed by the law applied to the dispute by the arbitral tribunal1116
- • The award granted compound interest which was allowed under the law of the seat of the arbitration;1117
- • It was alleged that the award was contrary to EU competition law;1118
- • The arbitrator had failed to expressly order one of the parties to pay certain taxes due in the United States;1119
- • The party opposing enforcement failed to establish that the contractually stipulated penalties imposed by the tribunal was not reasonably related to the actual damages resulting from the breach;1120
- • Compliance with the award resulting in the making of certain payments to the Iranian Government breached United States sanctions;1121
- • The party opposing enforcement alleged that an order of specific performance breached public policy because an award of monetary damages would have been adequate and appropriate;1122
- • The party opposing enforcement alleged that the award improperly imported and endorsed the conclusions of foreign prosecuting authorities;1123
- • The award conflicted with judgments handed down by the courts of a foreign country;1124
- • The party opposing enforcement alleged that its actions that resulted in the breach of the contract were justified as compliance with a change in its country’s foreign policy;1125
- • The tribunal calculated interest that would not be available under the law of the enforcement forum;1126
- • The person seeking the enforcement was not a party to the arbitration but a successor to that party.1127
1102. See Presidium of the Highest Arbitrazh Court, Russian Federation, Information Letter No. 156 of 26 February 2013; Sei Societa Esplosivi S.p.A. v. L-3 Fuzing and Ordnance Systems, Inc., District Court, District of Delaware, United States of America, 17 February 2012, 11-149-RGA; Penn Racquet Sports v. Mayor International Ltd., High Court of Delhi, India, 11 January 2011; Odfjell SE v. OAO PO Sevmash, Highest Arbitrazh Court, Russian Federation, 26 May 2011, Ruling No. VAS-4369/11; Atecs Mannesmann GmbH v. Rodrimar S/A Transportes Equipamentos Industriais e Armazéns Gerais, Superior Court of Justice, Brazil, 19 August 2009.
1106. See Schreter v. Gasmac, Ontario Court (General Division), Canada, 13 February 1992, 89 D.L.R. (4th) 365.
1109. See Soinco SACI & anor. v. Novokuznetsk Aluminium Plant & Ors., Court of Appeal, England and Wales, 16 December 1997, [1998] CLC 730.
1111. See Oberlandesgericht [OLG] München, Germany, 34 Sch 14/09, 1 September 2009.
1112. See Oberlandesgericht [OLG] Frankfurt, Germany, 26 Sch 13/08, 16 October 2008.
1113. See Oberlandesgericht [OLG] Frankfurt, Germany, 26 Sch 1/07, 18 October 2007.
1114. See Oberlandesgericht [OLG] Celle, Germany, 8 Sch 06/05, 6 October 2005.
1115. See Oberlandesgericht [OLG] Cologne, Germany, 9 Sch 13/99, 15 February 2000.
1116. See Oberlandesgericht [OLG] Dresden, Germany, 11 Sch 06/98, 13 January 1999.
1117. See Hanseatisches Oberlandesgericht [OLG], Germany, 6 U 71/88, 26 January 1989. For the view that the domestic prohibition of compound interest does not amount to public policy see Inter Maritime Management S.A. v. Vecchi, Federal Tribunal, Switzerland, 9 January 1995, XXII Y.B. Com. Arb. 789 (1997).
1118. See X S.p.A. v. Y S.r.l., Federal Tribunal, Switzerland, 8 March 2006, Arrêts du Tribunal Fédéral (2006) 132 III 389. For the opposite view, see SNF SAS v. Cytec Industries B.V., Court of Appeal of Paris, 23 March 2006, XXXII Y.B. Com. Arb. 282 (2008); Oberlandesgericht [OLG] Düsseldorf, Germany, VI Sch (Kart) 1/02, 21 July 2004; Court of Cassation, Greece, Case No. 1665/2009, 30 June 2009, XXXVI Y.B. Com. Arb. 284 (2011); Marketing Displays International Inc. v. VR Van Raalte Reclame B.V., Court of Appeal of The Hague, Netherlands, 24 March 2005, XXXI Y.B. Com. Arb. 808 (2006).
1120. See Chelsea Football Club Ltd. v. Adrian Mutu, District Court, Southern District of Florida, United States of America, 13 February 2012, 1:10-cv-24028-FAM. See also See Presidium of the Highest Arbitrazh Court, Russian Federation, Information Letter No. 156 of 26 February 2013; Stena RoRo AB v. OAO Baltiysky Zavod, Presidium of the Highest Arbitrazh Court, Russian Federation, 13 September 2011, Resolution No. 9899/09.
1121. See The Ministry of Defense and Support for the Armed Forces of the Islamic Republic of Iran, as Successor in Interest to the Ministry of War of the Government of Iran v. Cubic Defense Systems, Inc, Court of Appeals, Ninth Circuit, United States of America, 15 December 2011, 665 F.3d 1091. See also Ameropa A.G. v. Havi Ocean Co. LLC, District Court, Southern District of New York, United States of America, 16 February 2011, 2011 WL570130.
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b. Procedural public policy
34. In applying article V (2)(b) of the New York Convention, courts review not only the substantive outcome of the award but also the procedure leading to the award.
35. Where the procedure followed in the arbitration suffered from serious irregularities, recognition and enforcement may be refused under article V (2)(b). It is thus common for courts to review awards brought before them for recognition and enforcement for fraud, bribery or some other significant due process irregularity.1128
1128. See, e.g., Karaha Bodas Company, L.L.C. v. Perusahaan Pertambangan Minyak Dan Gas Bumi Negara and P.T. PLN (Persero), Alberta Court of Queen’s Bench, Canada, 24 October 2007, 2007 ABQB 616; Gater Assets Ltd. v. Nak Naftogaz Ukrainiy, High Court of Justice, England and Wales, 15 February 2008, [2008] EWHC 237, [2008] 1 CLC 141; Westacre Investments Inc. v. Jugoimport-SPDR Holding Ltd. & others, Court of Appeal, England and Wales, 12 May 2000, [2000] 1 QB 288; Karaha Bodas Co. LLC v. Perusahaan Pertambangan Minyak Dan Gas Bumi Negara (Petarmina), Court of Appeal, Hong Kong, 9 October 2007; Karaha Bodas Co. LLC v. Perusahaan Pertambangan Minyak Dan Gas Bumi Negara, Court of Appeals, Fifth Circuit, United States of America, 23 March 2004, 364 F.3d 274; Oberlandesgericht [OLG] Düsseldorf, Germany, I-4 Sch 10/09, 15 December 2009; Oberlandesgericht [OLG] Frankfurt, Germany, 26 SchH 03/09, 27 August 2009; Oberlandesgericht [OLG] München, Germany, 34 Sch 019/05, 28 November 2005; Drummond Ltd. v. Ferrovias en Liquidación, Ferrocariles Nacionales de Colombia S.A., Supreme Court of Justice, Colombia, 19 December 2011; SAS C22 v. Soc. John K. King & Sons Ltd. Frontier Agriculture Ltd., Court of Appeal of Paris, France, 10 April 2008; Cie de Saint-Gobain-Pont-à-Mousson v. The Fertilizer Corporation of India Ltd., Court of Appeal of Paris, 10 May 1971. See also Stephen M. Schwebel, Susan G. Lahne, Public Policy and Arbitral Procedure, in Comparative Arbitration Practice and Public Policy in Arbitration, ICCA Congress Series No. 3, 205 (P. Sanders ed.,1987).
36. As with substantive public policy, applications to refuse recognition and enforcement on the basis of procedural public policy have rarely been successful. Courts have found a violation of public policy in cases where they considered that the right to be heard had been breached. For example, the Canadian courts have refused recognition and enforcement of an award where the tribunal had granted a remedy not requested by the parties on the basis that it violated the principle of audiatur et altera pars.1129
37. The same conclusion has been reached in a case in which the court found a failure of the arbitral tribunal to give reasons where the agreement of the parties contained stipulations to that effect. In such circumstances, the Canadian courts have refused to grant recognition and enforcement of an award on the basis that “recognition of the award would be contrary to public policy because [the award], contrary to the express wish of the parties, does not contain reasons. [...] What is at odds with fairness, equal treatment of the parties and consequently public policy, is not that an award lacks reasons but that it lacks reasons contrary to what the parties wanted. [...] in a democratic country one cannot imagine that the judiciary renders a decision without being able to verify if that decision is not arbitrary”.1130
1130. Smart Systems Technologies Inc. v. Domotique Secant Inc., Court of Appeal of Quebec, Canada, 11 March 2008, XXXIII Y.B. Com. Arb. 464 (2008). For circumstances where the failure of the arbitrators to adhere to the agreement of the parties was considered to amount to a breach of public policy see also Société Dubois & Vanderwalle S.A.R.L. v. Société Boots Frites BV, Court of Appeal of Paris, France, 22 September 1995.
38. Courts have also found a breach of procedural public policy where arbitrators have acted in a manner that breaches the principles of independence and impartiality. For example, in a dispute involving two parallel arbitrations between the same parties, one of the arbitrators, who was sitting in both panels, provided false information to one tribunal about the other arbitration which had an impact on that tribunal’s decision regarding its jurisdiction.1131 In that case, the French Court of Cassation found that by acting in this manner, the arbitrator created an inequality between the parties which contravened the most basic requirements of due process.
39. In a Swiss case, the fact that counsel for one of the parties in contractual negotiations inserted a provision in the contract appointing himself as the sole arbitrator should a dispute arise between the parties, was held to violate public policy.1132 The Swiss court found that “the behavior of arbitrator Dr. E. is so extreme, that it is hard to imagine that any free and democratic legal system could equate the award rendered by such an arbitrator to a sovereign State act and enforce it. [...] it is totally unacceptable that the person who draws up a contract must also, as an arbitrator, give a binding interpretation of it, particularly when he has been for years one of the parties’ lawyer”.1133
1132. See District Court of Affoltern am Albis, Switzerland, 26 May 1994, XXIII Y.B. Com. Arb. 754, paras. 18-24 (1998).
1133. Id., paras. 21-22
40. Another significant example of breach of procedural public policy, albeit in the context of an action to set aside, is that of the case where two parties to a tripartite contact and dispute were required to appoint one arbitrator. The French Court of Cassation considered that the principle of equality of the parties in the appointment of arbitrators was part of the French understanding of international public policy and could be waived only after a dispute had arisen. The court concluded that an award which was rendered by a three-member tribunal, one of whom was appointed, under protest and with all reservations, jointly by the two defendants, should be set aside.1134
1134. See Siemens A.G. v. BKMI Industrienlagen GmbH, Court of Cassation, France, 7 January 1992, XVIII Y.B. Com. Arb. 140 (1993). See also Martin Platte, Multi-Party Arbitration: Legal Issues Arising out of Joinder and Consolidation, in Enforcement of Arbitration Agreements and International Arbitral Awards: the New York Convention in Practice 481, 491, 492-94 (E. Gaillard, D. Di Pietro eds., 2008).
41. An unusual example of a breach of procedural public policy is that of a case where the party opposing enforcement in Germany was a small franchisee that sold sandwiches and salads in a German provincial town but had been ordered by the arbitral tribunal to attend a hearing in New York. The German courts held that the location of such hearing placed an excessive burden on that party given its small size and refused recognition and enforcement on grounds of public policy.1135
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c. Relationship with article V(1)
42. The public policy defence can be based on facts which may also give rise to a defence under article V (1) of the New York Convention. This is particularly so in cases in which the arbitration agreement is invalid1136 or where there has been a violation of due process1137 amounting to a breach of public policy.
1136. See the chapter of the Guide on article V (2)(b), para. 36.
1137. See the chapter of the Guide on article V (2)(b), paras. 36, 38-39
43. For example, the Brazilian courts found that the fact that an arbitral tribunal had established its jurisdiction despite the failure of a party to sign the contract containing the arbitration agreement amounted to lack of consent to arbitrate and thus constituted a breach of public policy.1138 Similarly, the German courts have refused recognition and enforcement on public policy grounds due to the arbitral tribunal’s failure to examine whether the arbitration agreement was valid.1139
1138. See, e.g., Kanematsu USA Inc. v. Advanced Telecommunications Systems do Brasil Ltda., Superior Court of Justice, Brazil, 18 April 2012; Indutech S.p.A. v. Algocentro Armazéns Gerais Ltda., Superior Court of Justice, Brazil, 17 December 2008; Plexus Cotton Ltd. v. Santana Têxtil S/A, Superior Court of Justice, Brazil, 15 February 2006.
1139. See Landgericht [LG] München, Germany, 20 June 1978, V Y.B. Com. Arb. 260 (1980).
44. Some courts have taken the view that a proper characterization of the matter as one falling either under article V (1) or under article V (2)(b) is necessary. For example, the Highest Arbitrazh Court of the Russian Federation endorsed the practice of Russian lower courts according to which improper notice of the appointment of an arbitrator or of the arbitration proceedings as well as the inability of a party to present its case constitute an independent defence to recognition and enforcement of a foreign award pursuant to article V (1)(b) and that, in light of its exceptional nature, there is no need to apply the public policy defence contained in article V (2)(b) of the New York Convention.1140
1140. See Presidium of the Highest Arbitrazh Court, Russian Federation, Information Letter No. 156 of 26 February 2013, 10. See also Anton G. Maurer, The Public Policy Exception Under The New York Convention: History, Interpretation And Application 67-70 (2012).
45. Other courts have simply acknowledged this duplication of grounds on which the same matter could be raised. For example, in the words of the Court of Final Appeal of Hong Kong, “[i]t has become fashionable to raise specific grounds in [...] Article V.1(b) [...], which are directed to procedural irregularities, as public policy grounds (Article V.2(b)). There is no reason why this course cannot be followed”.1141 Several courts have followed this approach. They simply address under article V (2) the allegations of procedural irregularities, without taking issue with the fact that they could also be properly brought under one of the grounds of article V (1).1142
1142. See, Inter-Arab Investment Guarantee Corporation v. Banque Arabe et Internationale d’Investissement, Court of Appeal of Brussels, Belgium, 24 January 1997, XXII Y.B. Com. Arb. 643 (1997); Oberlandesgericht [OLG] Frankfurt, Germany, 26 Sch 03/09, 27 August 2009, XXXV Y.B. Com. Arb. 377; Oberlandesgericht [OLG] München, Germany, 34 Sch 26/08, 22 June 2009, XXXV Y.B. Com. Arb. 371 (2010); Kammergericht [KG] Berlin, Germany, 20 Sch 02/08, 17 April 2008; Oberlandesgericht [OLG] Frankfurt, Germany, 26 Sch 1/07, 18 October 2007; Goldtron Ltd. v. Media Most B.V., Rechtbank, Amsterdam, Netherlands, 27 August 2002, XXVIII Y.B. Com. Arb. 814 (2003); Shaanxi Provincial Helath Products I/E Corporation v. Olpesa S.A., Supreme Court, Spain, No. 112/2002, 7 October 2003, XXX Y.B. Com. Arb. 617 (2005); Federal Tribunal, Switzerland, 28 July 2010, Decision 4A_233/2010; G. S.A. v. T. Ltd., Federal Tribunal, Switzerland, 12 January 1989, XV Y.B. Com. Arb. 509 (1990). See also Albert Jan van den Berg, The New York Convention of 1958: An Overview, in Enforcement of Arbitration Agreements And International Arbitral Awards: The New York Convention in Practice 39, 57-58 and 64 (E. Gaillard, D. Di Pietro eds. 2008); Herman Verbist, Challenges on Grounds of Due Process Pursuant to Article V (1)(b) of the New York Convention, in Enforcement Of Arbitration Agreements And International Arbitral Awards: The New York Convention In Practice 679 (E. Gaillard, D. Di Pietro eds., 2008).
46. Indeed, nothing in article V prevents a party from putting forward an argument under article V (2)(b) that could also properly be brought under one of the grounds of article V (1). To the contrary, there is some support in the travaux préparatoires for the proposition that parties wishing to argue that their procedural rights had been violated should be free do so on the basis of a violation of public policy.1143 It should be noted that courts have generally taken a restrictive interpretation of public policy and implemented a high standard of proof in that respect, by comparison to the standard of proof under article V (1). One notable difference between the two paragraphs of article V is that article V (2)(b) allows a complaint to be examined by the court ex officio1144 whereas a complaint under article V (1) can only be brought by the party seeking to oppose recognition and enforcement of an award.
1143. See Travaux préparatoires, Report of the Committee on the Enforcement of International Arbitral Awards, E/AC.42/4/Rev.1, p. 10; Comments of the Representative of the Egyptian Government, Mr. Osman: Summary Record of the Sixth Meeting, E/AC.42/SR.6, p. 4.
1144. See the chapter of the Guide on article V (2)(b), paras. 53-61.
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C. Procedural issues in raising the defense of article V(2)(b)
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a. Estoppel and waiver
47. The question has arisen whether a party may be estopped from raising the defence of article V (2)(b) of the New York Convention where, to the extent possible, it has failed to do so before the arbitral tribunal.
48. In some instances, courts have held that failure of a party to raise a defect in procedure or on the merits of the award amounts to a waiver of its right to avail itself of this ground of complaint at the recognition and enforcement stage. One court however indicated that although a party may be precluded from raising complaints at the recognition and enforcement stage that it could have raised before the arbitral tribunal, this does not apply to complaints brought under article V (2)(b) of the New York Convention.1145
49. Certain courts have endorsed the proposition that a substantive complaint will not be entertained as a public policy complaint at the enforcement stage if it existed at the time of the arbitral proceedings and it could have been raised before the arbitral tribunal,1146 or if it has been raised and rejected on the merits by the arbitral tribunal.1147
1146. See Soinco SACI & anor. v. Novokuznetsk Aluminium Plant & Ors., Court of Appeal, England and Wales, 16 December 1997, [1998] CLC 730;Oberlandesgericht [OLG] Saarbrücken, Germany, 4 Sch 03/10, 30 May 2011; Epis S.A. v. Roche Diagnostics GmbH, District Court of Jerusalem, Israel, 23 November 2004, XXXI Y.B. Com. Arb. 786 (2006).
1147. See Bundesgerichtshof [BGH] Germany, III ZR 269/88, 18 January 1990.
50. This conclusion is more commonly reached with regard to procedural irregularities. For example, in a case where it was alleged that the award was procured through fraud, the English courts held that it would not be appropriate to refuse recognition if the relevant evidence was available at the hearing before the arbitral tribunal or if the allegation has been raised with the tribunal and has been rejected.1148 Other common law jurisdictions have also held that a party that failed to raise a procedural irregularity with the arbitral tribunal, while it could do so, has waived its right to do so at the enforcement stage.1149
1148. See Westacre Investments Inc. v. Jugoimport-SDPR Holding Co. Ltd., Court of Appeal, England and Wales, 12 May 1999, [2000] QB 288; Minmetals Germany GmbH v. Ferco Steel Ltd., High Court of Justice, Queen’s Bench Division, Commercial Court, England and Wales, 20 January 1999, [1999] CLC 647; Omnium de Traitement et de Valorisation S.A. v. Hilmarton Ltd., High Court of Justice, Queen’s Bench Division, Commercial Court, England and Wales, 24 May 1999, [1999] 2 Lloyd’s Rep. 222.
1149. See, e.g., Gao Haiyan & anor. v. Keeneye Holdings Ltd. & anor., Court of Appeal, Hong Kong, CACV 79/2011, 2 December 2011; Karaha Bodas Co. LLC v. Perusahaan Pertambangan Minyak Dan Gas Bumi Negara, Court of Appeals, Fifth Circuit, United States of America, 23 March 2004, 364 F.3d 274; Europcar Italia S.p.A. v. Maiellano Tours Inc., Court of Appeals, Second Circuit, United States of America, 2 September 1998, 156 F.3d 310; AAOT Foreign Economic Association (VO) Technostroyexport v. International Development & Trade Services Inc., Court of Appeals, Second Circuit, United States of America, 23 March 1998, 97-9075, XXIV Y.B. Com. Arb. 813 (1999).
51. Similarly, civil law jurisdictions have considered that a party that has failed to seize the arbitral tribunal of a procedural irregularity should be barred from doing so at the enforcement stage.1150 By contrast, where the party has lodged the complaint with the arbitral tribunal and reserved its rights, the French Court of Cassation held that that party ought to be permitted to raise the same complaint at the enforcement stage.1151
1150. See, e.g., SAS C22 v. Soc. John K. King & Sons Limited Frontier Agriculture Ltd., Court of Appeal of Paris, France, 10 April 2008. See also Bundesgerichtshof [BGH], Germany, III ZR 12/87, 14 April 1988, where the German Federal Supreme Court held that there is no breach of public policy where a party fails to raise a procedural irregularity in a timely manner with the tribunal or the institution administering the arbitration. See also Bundesgerichtshof [BGH], Germany, VII ZR 163/68, 6 March 1969; K.S. A.G. v. C.C. S.A., Execution and Bankruptcy Chamber of Tessin, Switzerland, 19 June 1990, XX Y.B. Com. Arb. 762 (1995); Oberlandesgericht [OLG] Hamm, Germany, 20 U 57/83, 2 November 1983.
1151. See Siemens A.G. v. BKMI Industrienlagen GmbH, Court of Cassation, France, 7 January 1992, XVIII Y.B. Com. Arb. 140 (1993).
52. Certain courts have accepted that procedural irregularities may not be raised at the enforcement stage if the party opposing recognition and enforcement has failed to raise them in annulment proceedings brought before the courts of the seat of the arbitration.1152 Given the rejection by the New York Convention of the double exequatur requirement,1153 this line of case law seems somewhat at odds with the text and spirit of the Convention which enables a party to rely on an irregularity in the procedure before the arbitral tribunal in order to oppose recognition and enforcement under the New York Convention.
1152. Oberlandesgericht [OLG] Frankfurt, Germany, 26 Sch 1/07, 18 October 2007.
1153. See the chapter of the Guide on article V (1)(e).
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b. Ex officio review, burden of proof and standard of proof
53. Article V (2)(b) of the New York Convention provides that a foreign award may be refused recognition if the court where recognition and enforcement is sought “finds that” that the recognition and enforcement is contrary to the public policy of the forum where recognition and enforcement is sought. The question has thus arisen as to whether the courts can review an award on grounds of public policy ex officio, the identity of the party which bears the burden of proof, and the standard of proof to be met.
54. Regarding the ability of a court to review a foreign award on public policy grounds ex officio, there is a notable difference in wording between article V (1) and V (2) of the New York Convention. Article V (1) states that recognition and enforcement of an award may be refused “at the request of the party against whom it is invoked”. By contrast, article V (2)(b) provides that recognition and enforcement may be refused “if the competent authority in the country where recognition and enforcement is sought finds that [...] the recognition and enforcement of the award would be contrary to the public policy of that country”.1154
1154. During the negotiation of the Convention, the Netherlands Government pointed out that courts are allowed to proceed to an ex officio review of public policy: see Travaux préparatoires, Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards: Comments by Governments on the Draft Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards, E/CONF.26/3/Add.1, p. 4. The same view was expressed by the Swedish Government: Summary Record of the Seventeenth Meeting, E/CONF.26/SR.17, p. 2. See also Albert Jan van den Berg, The New York Convention of 1958: An Overview, in Enforcement Of Arbitration Agreements And International Arbitral Awards: The New York Convention In Practice 39, 56, 64 (E. Gaillard, D. Di Pietro eds. 2008).
55. On the basis of this difference of wording, certain courts have acknowledged that they can review an award for breach of public policy ex officio.1155
1155. See, e.g., Hebei Import & Export Corp. v. Polytek Engineering Co. Ltd., Court of Final Appeal, Hong Kong, 9 February 1999, [1999] 2 HKC 205; Kammergericht [KG] Berlin, Germany, 20 Sch 4/07, 11 June 2009, XXXV Y.B. Com. Arb. 369 (2010); Oberlandesgericht [OLG] München, Germany, 17 December 2008, XXXV Y.B. Com. Arb. 359 (2010); Efxinos Shipping Co. Ltd. v. Rawi Shipping Lines Ltd., Court of Appeal of Genoa, Italy, 2 May 1980, VIII Y.B. Com. Arb. 381 (1983); Petrotesting Colombia S.A. & Southeast Investment Corp. v. Ross Energy S.A., Supreme Court of Justice, Colombia, 27 July 2011; BCB Holdings Limited and The Belize Bank Limited v. The Attorney General of Belize, Caribbean Court of Justice, Appellate Jurisdiction, 26 July 2013, [2013] CCJ 5 (AJ). See also Albert Jan van den Berg, The New York Arbitration Convention of 1958: Towards a Uniform Judicial Interpretation 299, 359 (1981).
56. However, the ability to review an award for breach of public policy does not solely arise out of the difference in wording of paragraphs (1) and (2) of article V. It is also linked to the essence of public policy as a concept that allows the courts to reject a violation of it most fundamental norms of justice. The English courts have thus held that “the defence that enforcement would be contrary to public policy is stated without an express burden of proof [...]. This is no doubt because it must always be open to the court to take a point of public policy of its own motion”.1156
57. Irrespective of whether a jurisdiction has the authority to review an award for breach of public policy ex officio or solely at the request of the party challenging recognition or enforcement, the burden of proof rests on this latter party.1157
1157. See, e.g., Oberlandesgericht [OLG] Düsseldorf, Germany, VI Sch (Kart) 1/02, 21 July 2004; Gater Assets Ltd. v. Nak Naftogaz Ukrainiy, Court of Appeal, England and Wales, 17 October 2007, [2007] EWCA Civ 988, [2007] 2 CLC 567; Hebei Import & Export Corp. v. Polytek Engineering Co. Ltd., Court of Final Appeal, Hong Kong, 9 February 1999, [1999] 2 HKC 205; NTT Docomo Inc. v. Ultra D.O.O., District Court, Southern District of New York, United States of America, 12 October 2010; Europcar Italia S.p.A. v. Maiellano Tours Inc., Court of Appeals, Second Circuit, United States of America, 2 September 1998, 156 F.3d 310; Telenor Mobile Communications AS v. Storm LLC, District Court, Southern District of New York, United States of America, 2 November 2007, 524 F. Supp. 2d 332; Stawski Distributing Co., Inc. v. Zywiec Breweries plc, District Court, Northern District of Illinois, United States of America, 29 September 2004, 02 C 8708.
58. The exceptional nature of the public policy defence explains the heightened standard of proof that courts normally require in order to refuse recognition and enforcement under article V (2)(b). Thus the Canadian courts have requested that the party opposing recognition and enforcement should present compelling evidence.1158 It is thus of no surprise that, while the enforcement courts recognize in principle that recognition of an award should be refused on the grounds of public policy in specific instances, such as for example bribery or fraud, parties alleging a breach of public policy more often than not fail on the facts.1159
1159. See, e.g., El Nasr Company for Fertilizers & Chemical Industries (SEMADCO) v. John Brown Deutsche, Court of Cassation, Egypt, 10 January 2005; Compagnie française d’études et de construction Technip (Technip) v. Entreprise nationale des engrais et des produits phytosanitaires (Asmidal), Court of Appeal of Paris, France, 2 April 1998; Soc. I.A.I.G.C.-Inter-Arab Investment Guarantee Corporation v. Soc. B.A.I.I. - Banque arabe et international d’investissement S.A., Court of Appeal of Paris, France, 23 October 1997; Soc. Unichips Finanziaria S.p.A. & Soc. Unichips International B.V. v. Consorts Gesnouin, Court of Appeal of Paris, France, 13 February 1993; Oberlandesgericht [OLG] München, Germany, 34 Sch 26/08, 22 June 2009, XXXV Y.B. Com. Arb. 371 (2010); Oberlandesgericht [OLG] Hamm, Germany, 25 Sch 09/08, 28 November 2008.
59. In a case heard by the Court of Appeal of Hong Kong, it was held there was no proof of actual bias in a case where one of the arbitrators had had dinner with a person related to the respondent in the arbitration in the context of mediation, even though that would have been seen as bias in Hong Kong, because such dinners were normal course of business in the context of mediation at the place of the arbitration.1160 The Court of Final Appeal of Hong Kong held that what is required is proof of actual bias and not of mere impartiality.1161
60. Although it is not clear whether other courts would have followed the reasoning of the courts of Hong Kong in assessing the existence of bias by reference to the standard existing at the place where the relevant facts took place, rather than the standard existing under their own law, several courts have demanded that the party alleging fraud should present clear and convincing evidence to that effect, show that the fraud in question was not discoverable during the arbitration and that it was materially related to an issue in the arbitration. In other words, in cases of fraud or bias, where the public policy exception under the New York Convention is invoked, courts often require an additional fact to be proven, namely that the defect is such to influence the outcome of the arbitration.1162
1162. See, e.g., Westacre Investments Inc. v. Jugoimport-SPDR Holding Ltd. & others, Court of Appeal, England and Wales, 12 May 2000, [2000] 1 QB 288; Karaha Bodas Co. LLC v. Perusahaan Pertambangan Minyak Dan Gas Bumi Negara (Petarmina), Court of Appeal, Hong Kong, 9 October 2007; Karaha Bodas Co. LLC v. Perusahaan Pertambangan Minyak Dan Gas Bumi Negara, Court of Appeals, Fifth Circuit, United States of America, 23 March 2004, 364 F.3d 274. German courts apply the same approach as to fraud, namely that it should be such to influence the outcome of the arbitration, also to due process violations: see Hanseatisches Oberlandesgericht [OLG] Bremen, Germany, (2) Sch 04/99, 30 September 1999; Bundesgerichtshof [BGH] Germany, III ZR 192/84, 15 May 1986.
61. This heightened standard of proof is compatible with the exceptional nature of the public policy defence as well as with the fact that article V (2)(b) provides a mere facility to the courts and not an obligation. Although courts may proceed to an ex officio review of the award for a breach of public policy, the fact that they place the burden of proof on the party opposing recognition and enforcement as well as the heightened standard of proof demonstrate an international consensus as to the pro-enforcement bias of the New York Convention and the conservative manner in which the public policy defence should be employed.
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c. Consequences
62. The sanction for an award that is found to be contrary to public policy is that the courts of a Contracting State may refuse to grant recognition and enforcement. While that power is discretionary in the sense that the New York Convention does not require that recognition and enforcement be refused (“[r]ecognition and enforcement of an arbitral award may also be refused”), certain courts have decided that, where it is possible to sever the part of the award which is contrary to public policy, the rest of the award will be recognized and enforced.
63. The High Court of Hong Kong was faced with this issue in a case concerning an award which had been challenged on the ground of fraud and in particular that a witness had been kidnapped and forced to make a false affidavit. The High Court held that “[i]f an award contained an objectionable part it would be absurd if the remainder of the award was to fail as well”.1163 It thus allowed the enforcement of the award insofar as it related to the reimbursement of a deposit for the sale of undelivered goods, an issue which in its view would not be affected by the public policy challenge.
64. While article V (2)(b) of the New York Convention does not explicitly limit itself to the part of the award which is challenged under public policy, the High Court of Hong Kong considered that such an interpretation was appropriate and compatible with article V (1)(c), which provides for the severability of the part of the award that “deals with a difference not contemplated by or falling within the terms of the submission to arbitration, or contains decisions on matters beyond the scope of the submission to arbitration”.
65. Other examples of awards where the part contrary to public policy was severed and the recognition and enforcement was granted to the rest of the award include cases where the award ordered the payment of interest of such magnitude that was considered contrary to public policy. In those cases, the courts severed either the part of the award on interest as a whole1164 or the part of the interest sum exceeding what would be considered appropriate in the enforcement State.1165
1164. See Laminoires-Trefileries-Cablerie de Lens S.A. v. Southwire Co. and Southwire International Corp., District Court, Northern District of Georgia, United States, 484 F. Supp. 1063 (1980); Oberster Gerichtshof, Austria, Case 3Ob221/04b, 26 January 2005, XXX Y.B. Com. Arb. 421 (2005).
1165. See Harbottle Co. Ltd. v. Egypt for Foreign Trade Co., Court of Cassation, Egypt, 21 May 1990.
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