T14C
T14C
T14C
SEATED AT
KETTARDAM
Under Art 10, Nigen-Kettardam BIT
TABLE OF CONTENT
[B.3] The Joint Venture Agreement between Kushkan and COEC is lawful………23
TABLE OF ABBREVIATIONS
& And
¶ Paragraph
§ Section
BIT Treaty
JV Joint venture
Art. Article
CLAIMANT Kushkan
RESPONDENT Nigen
v. Versus
Vol. Volume
Ltd. Limited
Hon‟ble Honourable
Id.
Immediate
i.e., That is
HYPL
Herme Yevgnye Private Limited
INDEX OF AUTHORITIES
CASES REFERRED
INTERNATIONAL CASES
AWARDS
S. NO. FULL CITATION
10. Saluka Investments B.V. v. Czech Republic, UNCITRAL, Partial Award (17
Mar. 2006).
11. Técnicas Medioambientales Tecmed, S.A. v. The United Mexican States, ICSID
Case No. ARB (AF)/00/2, Award (29 May 2003).
12. White Industries Australia Limited v. The Republic of India, UNCITRAL, Final
Award (30 November 2011).
13. Daimler Financial Services AG v. Argentine Republic (ICSID Case No.
ARB/05/1) ¶ 20.
14. Impregilo S.p.A. v. Argentine Republic (I)(ICSID Case No. ARB/07/17) ¶99.
16. RosInvestCo UK Ltd. v. The Russian Federation (SCC Case No. 079/2005)¶132.
22. Noble Ventures v. Romania, ICSID Case No. ARB/01/11, Award, Oct. 12, 2005 ¶
164.
23. Oxus Gol v. The Republic of Uzbekistan, Ad hoc Arbitration UNCITRAL 1976,
Final Award, Dec. 17, 2015, ¶ 355.
LEXICONS REFERRED
REPORT REFERRED
WEB SOURCES
S. NO. NAME OF THE SITE
2. Hein Online
3. JSTOR
4. Kluwer Arbitration
5. Manupatra
7. SCC Online
STATEMENT OF JURISDICTION
The CLAIMANT has approached the Hon‟ble tribunal under Article 10 of the Nigen Ketterdam
BIT.
Any dispute in relation to investments under this Treaty, which concern an alleged breach of
an obligation of a Contracting Party shall be referred to ad hoc arbitration in accordance
with the United Nations Commission on International Trade Law (UNCITRAL) Arbitration
Rules as in force at the commencement of the proceedings.
The law governing the arbitration shall be UNCITRAL Model Law on International
Commercial Arbitration (2006 version).
The arbitral tribunal shall comprise of 3 arbitrators. Each party shall appoint one arbitrator.
The two arbitrators thus appointed shall choose the third arbitrator who will act as the
presiding arbitrator of the arbitral tribunal.
STATEMENT OF FACTS
KETTARDAM BIT
KUSHKAN OIL EXPLORATION
LOAN AGREEMENT
19.02.2006
11.01.2009
49.99%
JOINT VENTURE
29.06.2008
(Fig. 1.1)
~AGREEMENTS~
19th February 2006 Nigen and Ketterdam signed a BIT (“Nigen-Ketterdam BIT”) to
encourage investment in oil and gas sector of Nigen.
29 June 2008 Kushkan and COEC entered into a Joint Venture Agreement to
Operationalize Ravka Oil Fields.
28 August 2008 Edoras, a special purpose vehicle was incorporated in Nigen.
Kushkan owned 49.99% shares pursuant to USD 300,000,000
equity investment. COEC owned 50.01% shares.
11 January 2011 Kushkan, Edoras and COEC entered into a Loan agreement. A share
Charge Agreement (SCA) was executed for creation of charge of
25.01% in Kushkan‟s favor in case of non-repayment.
~DESTRUCTION CAUSED~
29 November 2017 Two major fires broke. One broke inside Edoras refinery and the
other in Ravka‟s residential area.
ISSUES RAISED
Whether the claims raised by Kushkan are maintainable in view of the commercial arbitration
proceedings between Kushkan and COEC?
Whether Nigen afforded the adequate standard of full protection and security under the
Nigen-Ketterdam BIT?
Whether the purported acts of COEC or Nigen qualify as a breach of the fair and equitable
treatment under the Nigen-Ketterdam BIT?
Whether the following acts amount to unlawful expropriation under the Nigen-Ketterdam
BIT?
1. the termination of the JV Agreement by COEC
2. the SC Judgment refusing the enforcement of the Award
3. refusal by Nigen Companies‟ House to enforce the share charge as per the terms of
the SCA and the SCA Judgment
F
Whether the SC Judgment violates the Most Favoured Nation clause of the Nigen-Ketterdam
BIT?
G
Whether Dr. Morbi Casi KC is fit to continue as the presiding arbitrator due to the alleged
conflict of interest?
SUMMARY OF ARGUMENTS
ISSUE A
The cause of action for invoking commercial arbitration proceedings was „unlawful
termination of the JV agreement‟ as compared to the cause of action under the BIT is breach
of treaty obligation. Nigen has defaulted in the treatment which it was obligated to maintain
under the treaty obligations. Therefore, it is submitted that Kushkan‟s claims constitute a
valid dispute in relation to investments under the Nigen Ketterdam BIT.
ISSUE B
ISSUE C
The FPS standard required the government to have a more proactive measures to ensure
protection of both investor and investment. RESPONDENT did not accord the same in light of
the circumstances. The FPS protection states two full statements, each listing in sequence a
standard of treatment to be accorded to investments: full protection and security and police
protection under customary international law. Nigen has breached both the standards
therefore amounting to breach of full protection and security clause.
ISSUE D
The RESPONDENT has impaired the investment of the CLAIMANT by the way of a breach of
their legitimate expectation and discriminatory measures by Firstly, By enactment of the
Promotion of Renewable Energy Act, 2022 (“Act”) Secondly, rules enacted by NOFSI were
ISSUE E
The measure of the RESPONDENT has resulted in a substantial deprivation of the economic
benefits to the CLAIMANT‟S investment. The actions are not exercised within the legitimate
powers of the state. The actions amount to unlawful expropriation as have not been exercised
following due process of law and also were not in the nature to fulfil public purpose.
ISSUE F
Treatment of Most Favoured Nation to the contracting party is a treaty obligation of the host
state. The state has acted discriminatory by providing an exemption only to its own nationals
and by refusing to enforce the Arbitral Award. Therefore, the RESPONDENT has violated the
MFN clause by not adhering to clause 4, 5 of article 5 of Nigen-Volantis BIT.
ISSUE G
The appointment of Dr. Morbi Case Kc does not give rise to any reasonable doubt in regards
to his impartiality and independence. It is submitted that a common third party funder in
another arbitration where the arbitrator has acted as a counsel does not form a ground to
challenge arbitrators removal quoting conflict of interest.
ARGUMENTS ADVANCED
1. The scope and extent of an Arbitral Tribunal‟s jurisdiction can only be understood in
light of the arbitration agreement and the underlying agreement between the parties 1.
Art.10 of the treaty covers „any dispute‟2 in relation to an „investments‟. The
RESPONDENT submits that [A.1] The Award constitutes an investment [A.2] Breach of
the JV Agreement falls within the Umbrella clause and [A.3] Termination of the JV
Agreement amounts to a violation under Art. 9 BIT.
1
Blackaby, Nigel. Redfern and Hunter on International Arbitration. Oxford; New York: Oxford University
Press, 2009.
2
CASE RECORD, Art10, Annexure A.
3
Romak S.A. (Switzerland) v. The Republic of Uzbekistan, UNCITRAL, PCA Case No. AA280 Award (26
November 2009).
4
Saipem v. Bangladesh, ICSID Case No. ARB/05/07, Decision on Jurisdiction of 21 March 2007, ¶ 127.
5
White Industries Australia Limited v. Republic of India, Permanent Court of Arbitration, UNCITRAL, Final
Award (30 November 2011).
5. It is a settled principle of law that the ground of public policy is extremely narrow and
restricted. An exceptional case has to be made to demonstrate that the award was in
conflict with the public policy. This position is prevalent in almost all the countries
including UK,9 USA,10 and India.11
6. This is so because under the New York Convention, there is a general pro – enforcement
bias.12 In Associate Builders v. DDA,13 the Supreme Court quoted and followed ONGC v.
Saw Pipes14 to explain that public policy under the Indian law refers to matters which
concern public good and public interest. Even an award in violation of a statutory
provision does not violate public policy.15
6
Salini Costrutorri S.p.A and Italstrade S.p.A v. Kingdom of Morocco, ICSID Case No. ARB/00/4, Decision on
Jurisdiction (23 July 200).
7
Deutsche Bank AG v. Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka, ICSID Case No. ARB/09/2, Award (31
October 2012) ¶303.
8
Toto Costruzioni Generali S.p.A. v. The Republic of Lebanon, ICSID Case No. ARB/07/12, Decision on
Jurisdiction (11 September 2009) ¶78.
9
RBRG Trading (UK) Ltd. v. Sinocore International Co. Ltd., [2018] EWCA Civ 838.
10
Parsons Whittemore Overseas Co. Inc. v. Societe Generale de l‟Industrie du Papier (RAKTA), 508 F.2d 969
(2d Cir. 1974).
11
Renusagar Power Co. Ltd. (India) v. General Electric Co 1994 Supp. (1) SCC 644; Ssangyong Engineering
and Construction Company Limited v. NHAI, (2019) 15 SCC 131.
12
Blackaby, Nigel. Redfern and Hunter on International Arbitration. Oxford; New York :Oxford University
Press, 2009
13
Associate Builders v. DDA, (2015) 3 SCC 49.
14
ONGC v. Saw Pipes, (2003) 5 SCC 705.
15
Id ¶ 31.
9. RESPONDENT should be held responsible “for violations of the BIT”. The fact that
CLAIMANT relies on the termination of the JV Agreement for the breach of the umbrella
clause does not mean that it brings before this Tribunal a purely contractual claim. The
JV Agreement‟s termination is simply the source of two different claims; a contract
claim and a treaty claim,20which remain “analytically distinct”, and the pursuance of the
one does not impede the investor from claiming its rights under the other.
10. The CLAIMANT‟S investment qualifies as an investment pursuant to the Treaty. To that
effect, the CLAIMANTS will put forward three following contentions, [B.1] Kushkan is an
investor under the meaning of the Nigen-Ketterdam BIT [B.2] Kushkan‟s investment
falls under the ambit of “investment” [B.3] The Joint Venture Agreement between
Kushkan and COEC is lawful.
16
Ssangyong Engineering and Construction Company Limited v. NHAI, (2019) 15 SCC 131.
17
Supra note at 13.
18
Supra note at 14.
19
Vijay Karia v. Prysmian Cavi E Sistemi SRL, 2020 SCC OnLine SC 177.
20
SGS Société Générale de Surveillance S.A. v. The Republic of Paraguay, ICSID Case No. ARB/07/29,
Decision on Jurisdiction (12 February 2010), ¶135.
15. A clear four-pronged test that arbitrators are to use to determine whether the two
companies had in fact made an investment has been introduced through Salini.
16. The test requires (1) a contribution of money or assets; (2) an investment shall have a
certain duration; (3) an element of risk; and (4) a contribution to the host state's
economy.28 The standard meaning of the term “asset” is property of all kinds, both in
tangible and intangible form.29
(i) Contribution of Money or Assets: An investment is a contribution. It may be
understood as any dedication of resources that has economic value, whether in the
form of financial obligations, services, technology, patents, or technical
21
K. Scott Gudgeon, United States Bilateral Investment Treaties: Comments on their Origin, Purposes, and
General Treatment Standards, 4 INT‟L TAX & BUS. L. 105, 117 (1986).
22
Austl.-Arg. BIT, art. 1(1)(c)
23
U.S.-Arm. BIT, art. I(1)(b)
24
The Treaty between the Government of the Russian Federation and the Government of the Italian Republic on
the Promotion and Protection of Investments
25
Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties Art 31.
26
Id, art 32.
27
Case record, ¶ 8 and 9.
28
Salini et al v. Morocco, ICSID Case No. ARB/00/4, Decision on Jurisdiction, 152 (Jul. 23, 2001), 42 I.L.M.
609 (2003).
29
Romak S.A. v. Republic of Uzbekistan, PCA Case No. AA 280, Award, ¶177 (Nov. 26, 2009).
30
Id.
31
Case record, ¶ 9.
32
Id, ¶ 10.
33
Petrobart Limited v. the Kyrgyz Republic, Arbitral Award at 72 (March 29, 2005).
34
Fedax N.V. v. the Republic of Venezuela, ICSID Case No. ARB/96/3.
35
Salini Construttori SpA and Italtrade SpA v. Kingdom of Morocco, ICSID Case No. ARB/00/4.
36
SGS Société Générale de Surveillance S.A. v. the Islamic Republic of Pakistan, ICSID Case No. ARB/01/13.
37
Case record, ¶ 10.
38
Victor Pey Casado v. Republic of Chile, Saba Fakes v. Republic of Turkey.
39
Salini Construttori SpA and Italtrade SpA v. Kingdom of Morocco, ICSID Case No. ARB/00/4.
[B.3] THE JOINT VENTURE AGREEMENT BETWEEN KUSHKAN AND COEC IS LAWFUL.
19. The RESPONDENT may wish to argue that, the Joint venture agreement between Kushkan
and COEC has been vitiated by fraud and corruption and thus the dispute becomes non-
arbitrable.
20. However, the UNCITRAL Model Law on International Commercial Arbitration
incorporates the doctrine of Separability under Article 16 (1).41 Hence if a party claims
that the main contract itself was induced by fraud, the doctrine of separability should
mean that in such circumstances the arbitration clause will not be affected, so a tribunal
will have jurisdiction to determine the dispute. 42
21. Additionally, the court in Astrazeneca UK Ltd v. Albemarle International Corporation43
held that in any case of vitiation of contract by fraud or corruption, a high standard of
proof is required to show that the agreement to arbitrate is itself invalid and affirmed that
the alleged duress was not sufficiently related to the arbitration clause to impeach it.
22. Mere allegations of fraud would not accord COEC the right to terminate and appropriate
the shares of Kushkan in Edoras. Therefore, CLAIMANT would like to maintain that the
44
Joint venture is lawful.
40
Harry G. Henn & John R. Alexander, Law of Corporations 396-97 (3rd ed. 1983).
41
UNCITRAL Model Law on International Commercial Arbitration, Art; 16(1).
42
Fiona Trust v. Privalov [2007] UKHL 40.
43
Astrazeneca UK Ltd v. Albemarle International Corporation [2010] EWHC 1028 (Comm).
44
CASE RECORD, ¶ 30.
24. Art. 5 of the treaty prescribe International Minimum Standard of Treatment (“MST”) for
aliens, which require host states to provide Full protection and Security (“FPS”) to
investors. Investment arbitral decisions generally regard FPS as a duty of due diligence.
The principle of due diligence obligation is referred as an obligation of vigilance.45
25. The host State must exercise reasonable care46 and take reasonable actions within its
power to prevent injury of the investor.47 Once injuries have already happened, the State
is expected to sanction the perpetrators.48 In the present case, [C.1.1] RESPONDENT failed
to take reasonable measures to protect the Oil Rigs [C.1.2] Failed to punish the
perpetrators.
[C.1.1] NIGEN FAILED TO TAKE REASONABLE MEASURES TO PROTECT THE OIL RIGS
26. The tribunal in AMT49 held that the obligation to ensure investors FPS is an obligation of
vigilance. Under this the host state shall take all measures within its power to avoid
injury when it is, or should be, aware that there is a risk of injury.50
27. If the risk is foreseeable and still the state fails to take measures that are proportional to
risk foreseeable the state is held liable for breach of due diligence standard. 51
Additionally, in the case of AAPL, the Sri Lankan Security Forces had destroyed the
investment during a counter-insurgency operation.52
28. The tribunal held that the RESPONDENt through said inaction and omission violated its
due diligence obligation which requires undertaking all possible measures that could be
45
Infinito Gold Ltd. v. Republic of Costa Rica, ICSID Case No. ARB/14/5, Award, Jun. 3, 2021 ¶ 627
46
Id
47
Noble Ventures v. Romania, ICSID Case No. ARB/01/11, Award, Oct. 12, 2005 ¶ 164
48
Oxus Gol v. The Republic of Uzbekistan, Ad hoc Arbitration UNCITRAL 1976, Final Award, Dec. 17, 2015,
¶ 355
49
AMT v. Zaire, ICSID Case No. ARB/93/1, Award, Feb. 21, 1997
50
Paushok v. Mongolia, Ad hoc Arbitration, UNCITRAL Arbitration Rules 1976, Award on Jurisdiction and
Liability, Apr. 28, 2011 ¶ 325
51
Toto Construzioni Generali S.p.A. v. Lebanon, ICSID Case No. ARB/07/12, Award, Jun. 7, 2012 ¶ 200
52
AAPL v. Sri Lanka, ICSID Case No. ARB/87/3, Award, Jun. 27, 1990, ¶ 41
31. The RESPONDENT has acted negligently in not concluding any of its investigations. The
RESPONDENT, until now, has not taken any step to restore the condition of plants to its
original state and has not punished the perpetrators of injury. In cases57 where a host state
fails to grant full protection and security, it is obliged to redress the injuries caused by
actions by its authorities by providing legal remedies to the investor. 58
32. Providing international investors with a swift and well-functioning judicial system59 is
part of the stable legal environment obligation underlying the FPS standard, but a major
backlog in Nigen courts and administration compromised CLAIMANT‟S investments and
share value.
53
Supra note at 8, ¶ 85(b)
54
Ampal, ¶ 245
55
OI European Group v. Venezuela, ICSID Case No. ARB/11/25, Award, Mar.10, 2015¶ 580,
56
Omar Moussly, “Same Concept Different Interpretation, The Full Protection and Security Standard in
Practice”; Wolters Kluwer, October 27, 2019
57
R. Dolzer & C. Schreuer, Principles of International Investment Law, (Oxford University Press, 2008)
58
Parkerings-Compagniet AS v. Republic of Lithuania, ICSID Case No. ARB/05/8 (Sept. 11, 2007), ¶ 355.
59
Nartnirun Junngam, “The Full Protection and Security Standard in International Investment Law: What and
Who is Investment Fully[?] Protected and Secured From?” American University Business Law Review, Volume
7 Issue 1, 2018.
D. THE PURPORTED ACTS OF COEC OR NIGEN QUALIFY AS A BREACH OF THE FAIR AND
EQUITABLE TREATMENT UNDER THE NIGEN-KETTERDAM BIT
35. The measures of the State have clearly violated the FET clause of the treaty. The
CLAIMANT submits that [D.1] CLAIMANT‟S legitimate expectation of stability has been
frustrated [D.2] Measures taken by the RESPONDENT are discriminatory in nature
36. It is widely accepted that the obligation to accord FET requires the host State to protect
the investor‟s legitimate expectations62 which is a „dominant element‟63 of this standard
and is regarded „central‟ 64 to its definition.
37. According to the tribunal in Duke Energy, certain requirements must be met for there to
be legitimate expectations that are protected by the FET obligation:65
a. Legitimate expectations may arise only from a State‟s specific representations, on
which the latter has relied. Statements made by government officials directly or
indirectly to an investor are capable of giving rise to such assurances.66
60
Frontier Petroleum Services Limited v. The Czech Republic,UNCITRAL, Final Award (12 November 2010)
61
Saluka v. Czech Republic, Ad hoc Arbitration, UNCITRAL 1976, Partial Award, Mar. 17, 2006¶ 448
62
Técnicas Medioambientales Tecmed, S.A. v. The United Mexican States, ICSID Case No. ARB (AF)/00/2,
Award (29 May 2003) ¶154.
63
Saluka Investments B.V. v. Czech Republic, UNCITRAL, Partial Award (17 Mar. 2006), ¶302.
64
El Paso Energy International Company v. The Argentine Republic, ICSID Case No. ARB/03/15, Award (31
Oct. 2011), ¶348.
65
Duke Energy Electroquil Partners & Electroquil S.A. v. Republic of Ecuador, ICSID Case No. ARB/04/19,
Award (12 Aug. 2008)., ¶340.
66
Metalclad Corporation v. The United Mexican States, ICSID Case No. ARB(AF)/97/1, Award (30 Aug.
2000), ¶89.
67
CASE RECORD, ¶ 9.
68
CMS Gas Transmission Company v. The Argentine Republic, ICSID Case No. ARB/01/8, Award (12 May
2005), ¶274.
69
Charanne and Construction Investments v. Spain, SCC Case No. V 062/2012, ¶357.
70
Eiser Infrastructure Limited and Energía Solar Luxembourg S.à r.l. v. Kingdom of Spain, ICSID Case No.
ARB/13/36, Final Award (4 May 2017), ¶382.
71
SICAR v. The Kingdom of Spain, SCC Case No. 2015/063, Final Award (15 Feb 2018), ¶694.
72
CASE RECORD, ART 5, ANNEXURE A.
73
K. Von Moltke, p.3; World Investment Report - UNCTAD, p.105.
74
Markert, L., & Freiburg, E. (2013). Moral Damages in International Investment Disputes – On the Search for
a Legal Basis and Guiding Principles, The Journal of World Investment & Trade, 14(1), 1-43., p.262.
75
Perkings-Compagniet v. Lithuania, Award, ¶368.
76
CASE RECORD ¶ 26.
77
Eastern Sugar BV v The Czech Republic Partial Award, SCC Case No. 088/2004, IIC 310 (2007).
51. In the present case, CLAIMANTS‟ contracts and contractual rights constitute an
“investment” susceptible to expropriation. Contractual rights are a type of property that
can be the subject of claims for indirect expropriations, even if these „rights‟ may not be
formally recognised under the host state law.828384
52. Award determines the rights and obligations arising out of an investment that is clearly
under the permissible boundaries of the Investment Treaty.85 In the White Industries
case86 it has been clearly indicated by the tribunal that foreign arbitral award is an
„investment‟ under the BIT and that the setting aside of such valid foreign awards could
constitute expropriation under the BIT. Rights under the award constitute part of white‟s
78
Bayindir Insaat Turizm Ticaret Ve Sanayi A.S. v. Islamic Republic of Pakistan, ICSID Case No. ARB/03/29,
Award (27 August 2009)¶442.
79
Id, ¶443.
80
Id, ¶444.
81
Id, ¶446.
82
R.F.C.C. v. Kingdom of Morocco , ICSID Case No. ARB/00/6, ¶ 61. (citing the Norwegian Shipowners
Claim for the proposition that international law recognises the possibility of expropriation of contractual rights),
ICSID Case No. ARB/05/07, Saipem S.p.A. v. People‟s Republic of Bangladesh.
83
Saipem S.p.A. v. People‟s Republic of Bangladesh. ICSID Case No. ARB/05/07.
84
Norway v United States, Award, (1922) I RIAA 307.
85
CHRISTOPHER DUGANL, Investor–State Arbitration (Oxford University Press 2008) p. 675-700.
86
ARTICLES ON RESPONSIBILITY OF STATES FOR INTERNATIONALLY WRONGFUL ACTS (2001), White Industries
Australia Limited v. Republic of India, UNCITRAL, Final Award (30 November 2011).
54. Indirect expropriation arises when the State's interference results in the loss of the
investment's reasonable economic utilization.909192 Even temporary93 and profound
interference by the State can constitute an expropriation, as the intensity of the
interference complements its duration.
55. In the instant case the termination of JV Agreement has led to termination of various
other sub-contacts of Edoras and therefore impacted the operations in the Oil Rigs.
Edoras has suffered loss amounting over USD 100,000,000. It has destroyed the value of
the CLAIMANTS‟ contractual rights, and that the decrease in value due to the lasting
damage to CLAIMANTS‟ business, for all intents and purposes, permanent.94
87
Id, ¶7.6.8.
88
Maria Davies, 'The Use of Arbitration in Loan Agreements in International Project Finance: Opening
Pandora‟s Box or an Unexpected Panacea?', (2015), 32, Journal of International Arbitration, Issue 2, pp. 143-
171.
89
Phillips Petroleum Co. Iran v. Iran et al., 21 IRAN-U.S. C.T.R. 79.
90
L. Yves Fortier , Stephen L. Drymer, Indirect Expropriation in the Law of International Investment: I Know It
When I See It, or Caveat Investor, ICSID Review - Foreign Investment Law Journal, Volume 19, Issue 2, Fall
2004, Pages 293–327.
91
August Reinisch, “Expropriation”, in Peter Muchlinski, Federico Ortino & Christoph Schreuer, ed., The
Oxford Handbook of International Investment Law p. 421-426 (Oxford University Press, 2008).
92
Hoffmann, Anne K., 'Indirect Expropriation', in August Reinisch (ed.), Standards of Investment Protection p.
421-426 (Oxford, 2008; online edn, Oxford Academic, 22 Mar. 2012).
93
S.D. Myers, Inc. v. Government of Canada, UNCITRAL, Partial Award (Merits) (13 November 2000). ¶283.
94
Inmaris Perestroika Sailing Maritime Services GmbH and others v. Ukraine, ICSID Case No. ARB/08/8,
Award (1 March 2012).
57. It is submitted before the tribunal that as a general rule, the mandatory or public law
nature, sanction does not as such prevent the arbitrability of the matters. 95 The scope of
arbitrability has constantly expanded, making it ever more probable that matters of
sanctions be subjected to arbitration.96 Therefore, the Tribunal is competent to exercise
its jurisdiction to decide on the issue of sanction.
58. In Air France v. Libyan Airlines,97 it was held that UN sanctions against Libya did not
hinder the arbitrability of the dispute and that the tribunal did not violate international
public policy by declaring itself competent to adjudicate the dispute. Therefore, SC
cannot challenge the award or hinder enforcement of award of the ground of Public
Policy.
59. In BP Exploration Co. v. Libya,98 the ad hoc arbitrator held that the taking of a foreign oil
company as an act of political retaliation did not qualify as a public purpose. Similarly,
the non-enforcement of award, non-enforcement of SCA are purely extraneous political
reasons99 and are arbitrary and discriminatory in character.
[E.3.2] ACTS OF THE NIGEN WERE NOT IN ACCORDANCE WITH DUE PROCESS OF LAW
60. There was a substantial and procedural denial of due process. The CLAIMANTs, under the
treaty has experienced a violation of their right to substantive due process as their
contract was unlawfully terminated without any reasonable justification and their
95
Sekolec, Jernej and Eliasson, Nils: Chapter 9: The UNCITRAL Model Law on Arbitration and the Swedish
Arbitration Act: A Comparison in Heuman, Lars and Jarvin, Sigvard (eds.) The Swedish Arbitration Act of 1999,
Five Years on: A Critical Review of Strengths and Weaknesses, p 156, JurisNet LLC, Huntington, 2006.
96
Burdeau, Geneviève: Les embargos multilatéraux et unilatéraux et leur incidence sur l‟arbitrage commercial
international, Revue de l'Arbitrage, Volume 2003, Issue 3, pp. 753–776, 2003.
97
Air France v. Libyan Airlines, Cour supèrieure du Quèbec R.J.Q. 717, J.Q. No. 410, [2000].
98
BP Exploration Co. v. Libya, Copenhagen, UNCITRAL AWARD (1971).
99
CASE RECORD ¶ 29.
61. Acts of the RESPONDENT were arbitrary and disproportionate, which places the
RESPONDENT under the obligation of full reparation. The buy-back of shares was a
measure for the investor to stop its operation in Nigen. The amount of buy-back does not
constitute compensation. The State‟s unlawful act consists of the failure to provide
prompt, adequate, and effective compensation as required. Thus, the failure to pay
compensation is a violation of a treaty standard as provided within Article 8 of the treaty.
62. The actions of the RESPONDENT were purposeful and clearly targeted the investor from
Kettardam. The buyback of the shares after the implication of sanctions was allowed,
whereas the Share Charge agreement was not even recognised. For the recognition of
any trade activity after imposition of actions required an approval of NOFSI.
63. The RESPONDENT'S failure to pursue its public purpose proportionately and observe due
process and non-discrimination constitutes a blatant violation of Article 8 of the treaty.102
Also, the CLAIMANT was forced to sell the shares due to incurring heavy costs. The
RESPONDENT'S failure to promptly provide just compensation further breaches Article 6
of the treaty.103 As a result, the measure in question constitutes an unlawful indirect
expropriation of the CLAIMANTS' investments.
100
CC/Devas (Mauritius) Ltd., Devas Employees Mauritius Private Limited, and Telcom Devas Mauritius
Limited v. Republic of India, PCA Case No. 2013-09, Award on Jurisdiction and Merits, )¶417 (25 July 2016).
101
Waguih Elie George Siag and Clorinda Vecchi v. Arab Republic of Egypt, ICSID Case No. ARB/05/15,
Award, ¶442 (1 June 2009).
102
CASE RECORD, art, 8, Annexure A.
103
Id, art. 6.
67. CLAIMANT submits that the exact expression used by Article 4 of the Nigen-Ketterdam
BIT is a “treatment”. This word is of utmost importance in the interpretation of the
applicable scope of the MFN clause..
68. In the absence of a technical definition crafted by the contracting parties, it should thus
be concluded that the intention of the contracting parties was to leave the expression
―treatment to its ordinary meaning.
69. The term “treatment” is “a broad term which refers to the legal regime that applies to
investments once they have been admitted by the host State.105106107108 Since a „dispute
resolution clause‟ is the clause of a contract that concerns the way, a dispute is handled
in order to reach its resolution through a certain procedure, it is therefore reasonable to
conclude that the ordinary meaning of the word „treatment‟ may embrace and include the
concept of a dispute resolution clause.109
104
Id, art. 5, Annexure B.
105
Rudolf Dolzer and Christoph Schreuer, PRINCIPLES OF INTERNATIONAL INVESTMENT LAW (2012),
¶58.
106
Daimler Financial Services AG v. Argentine Republic (ICSID Case No. ARB/05/1) ¶ 20.
107
Impregilo S.p.A. v. Argentine Republic (I)(ICSID Case No. ARB/07/17) ¶99.
108
RosInvest Co UK Ltd. v. The Russian Federation (SCC Case No. 079/2005)¶132.
109
Banifatemi, Y., The Emerging Jurisprudence on the Most-Favoured-Nation Treatment in Investment
Arbitration, in Andrea Bjorklund, A., Laird, I., and Ripinsky, S., (eds.), Investment Treaty Law: Current Issues
III, British Institute of International and Comparative Law, 2009.
70. The RESPONDENT has discriminated the CLAIMANTS against their own nationals. Also,
the non-enforcement of award has violated the Most-Favoured nation clause. Therefore,
the RESPONDENT submits that [F.2.1] Article 4 of the BIT110 incorporates Article 5 of the
Nigen-Volantis BIT [F.2.2] Non-recognition of the Share Charge Agreement was
discriminatory in nature
71. The RESPONDENT might argue that the BIT did not incorporate Article 5 of Nigen-
Volantis BIT as it fundamentally subverts the carefully negotiated BIT. Therefore
RESPONDENT submit that it is not seeking to incorporate Dispute Resolution provision
instead is availing itself the right to rely on more favourable substantive provision in the
third-party treaty.111
72. The CLAIMANT assets that this does not "subvert" negotiated balance of the BIT. Instead,
it achieves same the result which the parties intended by the incorporation of an MFN
clause.112 Dispute resolution and substance of the issue is part of the treatment of foreign
investors and investments and of the advantages accessible through a MFN clause.113
73. CLAIMANT asserts that Article 4 provides for express exceptions regarding the scope of
application of the MFN clause. None of these exceptions, that restrict the applicable
scope of the MFN clause, does refer to procedural rights, therefore there lies no question
to the incorporate of award enforcement in the treaty in hand.
74. Relying on the conclusion of the tribunal in Chevron - Texaco v Ecuador,114 evaluation
of effective means for the CLAIMANT to assert claims and enforce rights relies on an
objective international standard.115 The denial of enforcement of award without a
reasonable cause in a country which is a party to the New York Convention is an
unacceptable.
110
CASE RECORD, art. 4, Annexure A.
111
White Industries Australia Limited v. Republic of India, UNCITRAL, Final Award (30 November 2011).
112
Id.
113
Siemens A.G. v. The Argentine Republic, ICSID Case No. ARB/02/8, Decision on Jurisdiction (2004).
114
Chevron Corporation and Texaco Petroleum Company v. Republic of Ecuador, PCA Case No. 200923, Third
Interim Award on Jurisdiction and Admissibility, ¶¶ 242, 244, 250, 262, 263 (Feb. 27, 2012).
115
Emilio Agustin Maffezini v. The Kingdom of Spain, ICSID Case No. ARB/97/7, Decision on Objections to
Jurisdiction, 25 January 2000.
[F.3] THE ACTIONS OF THE STATE ARE IN VIOLATION TO ARTICLE 4 OF THE BIT.
78. CLAIMANT submits that through the reasoning of arbitrators in multiple arbitration, of the
use of an MFN clause to incorporate a dispute settlement clause in a treaty. It is
submitted that measure of the state in respect to the Nigen-Molov Sanctions goes against
the procedural and substantive part of the treaty and vis-à-vis the MFN Clause.
Therefore, it is conclude that in the instant case the SC has violated the MFN clause by
not adhering to clause 4,5 of article 5 of Nigen-Volantis BIT.
79. The RESPONDENT has raised concerns about the appointment of Dr. Casi KC as the
presiding arbitrator, citing his involvement in other arbitrations where a common third
party funder HYPL, was present. The RESPONDENT questions Dr. Casi‟s impartiality and
independence based on this association.
116
Parkerings-Compagniet AS v. Republic of Lithuania, ICSID Arbitration Case No. ARB/05/8, Award (11
September 2007).
117
Bayindir Insaat Turizm Ticaret Ve Sanayi A.S. v. Islamic Republic of Pakistan, ICSID Case No. ARB/03/29,
(12 August 2009).
118
UNCITRAL Rules, Art. 12.1.
119
Christopher P. Bogart, OVERVIEW OF ARBITRATION FINANCE, ICC Dossier No. 752E 50, Valentina Frignati,
“ETHICAL IMPLICATIONS OF THIRD-PARTY FUNDING IN INTERNATIONAL ARBITRATION” Oxford, 2016.
120
OLG Karlsruhe, Decision of 01 June 2018, 10 Sch 12/13.
[G.3] DR. CASI’S PARTICIPATION DOES NOT CREATES ISSUE OF CONFLICT OF INTEREST
88. According to IBA Guidelines, a potential conflict of interest should be evaluated based
on its actual circumstances. To determine if they are adequate to cast "reasonable doubts"
about the arbitrator's objectivity and independence, a "reasonable third party" must
evaluate them.
89. The English court held that „an arbitrator who is from the same chambers as counsel for
one of the parties did not give rise to justifiable doubts as to his impartiality or
independence.123
90. The earlier participation of the presiding arbitrator as a counsel where HYPL was a third-
party funder of companies he represented. Therefore, it is submitted that Dr. Casi‟s
appointment in the other arbitration with a common third party funder does not raise an
“issue conflict”, as such does not rise to “justifiable doubts” as to his impartiality and
independence. Hence the presiding arbitrator is fit for the tribunal. Thus, there lies no
grounds for the removal.
121
Suez v. The Argentina Republic, ICSID Case No. ARB/03/19, Decision on a Second Proposal for the
Disqualification of a Member of the Arbitral Tribunal (12 May 2008).
122
Vivendi v. Argentina. ICSID (Case No. ARB/97/3) Final Award on Jurisdiction(2007) ¶ 46.
123
Laker Airways v. Sabena, Belgian World Airlines, 10 N.C. J. INT'L L. 251 (1985).
In the light of all the submissions made, the CLAIMANT hereby respectfully requests the
tribunal that to FIND and DECLARE that:
Sd/