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United Kingdom Supreme Court |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Supreme Court >> Enka Insaat Ve Sanayi AS v OOO Insurance Company Chubb (Rev1) [2020] UKSC 38 (09 October 2020 URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSC/2020/38.html Cite as: [2021] 2 All ER 1, [2021] 2 All ER (Comm) 225, [2020] Bus LR 2242, 193 Con LR 87, [2020] 1 WLR 4117, [2020] 2 CLC 604, [2020] 2 Lloyd's Rep 449, [2020] UKSC 38, [2020] WLR 4117 |
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[2020] UKSC 38
On appeal from: [2020] EWCA Civ 574
JUDGMENT
Enka Insaat Ve Sanayi AS (Respondent) v OOO Insurance Company Chubb (Appellant)
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before
Lord Kerr Lord Sales Lord Hamblen Lord Leggatt Lord Burrows
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JUDGMENT GIVEN ON |
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9 October 2020 |
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Heard on 27 and 28 July 2020 |
Appellant |
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Respondent |
David Bailey QC |
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Robin Dicker QC |
Toby Landau QC |
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David Joseph QC |
Marcus Mander |
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Niranjan Venkatesan |
Clara Benn |
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(Instructed by Kennedys Law LLP (London)) |
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(Instructed by Shearman & Sterling LLP (London)) |
Lord HAmblen and Lord LEGGATT: (with whom Lord Kerr agrees)
I. Introduction
3. This is an issue which has long divided courts and commentators, both in this country and internationally. On one side there are those who say that the law that governs a contract should generally also govern an arbitration agreement which, though separable, forms part of that contract. On the other side there are those who say that the law of the chosen seat of the arbitration should also generally govern the arbitration agreement. There have been Court of Appeal decisions falling on either side of this divide: Sulamérica Cia Nacional de Seguros SA v Enesa Engenharia SA [2012] EWCA Civ 638; [2013] 1 WLR 102 and C v D [2007] EWCA Civ 1282; [2008] Bus LR 843.
4. In its judgment in the present case [2020] EWCA Civ 574, the Court of Appeal considered that “the time has come to seek to impose some order and clarity on this area of the law” (para 89) and held that, unless there has been an express choice of the law that is to govern the arbitration agreement, the general rule should be that the arbitration agreement is governed by the law of the seat, as a matter of implied choice, subject only to any particular features of the case demonstrating powerful reasons to the contrary (para 91).
II. Factual background
(i) The construction contract
9. The contract between Energoproekt and Enka dated 27 June 2012 (“the construction contract”) is a substantial document running to 97 pages, with around 400 pages of attachments. It was executed in parallel Russian and English versions (though it provides that the Russian language version has precedence).
10. The construction contract contains, in article 50, a dispute resolution clause in these terms:
“Resolution of disputes
50.1. The Parties undertake to make in good faith every reasonable effort to resolve any dispute or disagreement arising from or in connection with this Agreement (including disputes regarding validity of this agreement and the fact of its conclusion (hereinafter - ‘Dispute’) by means of negotiations between themselves. In the event of the failure to resolve any Dispute pursuant to this article within 10 (ten) days from the date that either Party sends a Notification to the opposite Party containing an indication of the given Dispute (the given period may be extended by mutual consent of the Parties) any Party may, by giving written notice, cause the matter to be referred to a meeting between the senior managements of the Contractor and Customer (in the case of the Contractor senior management shall be understood as a member of the executive board or above, in the case of Customer, senior management shall be understood as general directors of their respective companies). The parties may invite the End Customer to such Senior Management Meeting. Such meeting shall be held within fourteen (14) calendar days following the giving of a notice. If the matter is not resolved within twenty (20) calendar days after the date of the notice referring the matter to appropriate higher management or such later date as may be unanimously agreed upon, the Dispute shall be referred to international arbitration as follows:
• the Dispute shall be finally settled under the Rules of Arbitration of the International Chamber of Commerce,
• the Dispute shall be settled by three arbitrators appointed in accordance with these Rules,
• the arbitration shall be conducted in the English language, and
• the place of arbitration shall be London, England.
50.2. Unless otherwise explicitly stipulated in this Agreement, the existence of any Dispute shall not give the Contractor the right to suspend Work.
50.3. Not used.
50.4. Not used.
50.5. All other documentation such as financial documentation and cover documents for it must be presented in Russian.”
11. On 21 May 2014 Energoproekt transferred its rights and obligations under the construction contract to Unipro pursuant to an assignment agreement made between Energoproekt, Unipro and Enka. By clause 7.5 of that agreement, the parties agreed that disputes between Unipro and Enka were to be finally and exclusively resolved by arbitration in accordance with the provisions of article 50.1 of the construction contract.
(ii) The Russian proceedings
(iii) The English proceedings
(iv) The arbitration proceedings
(v) This appeal
III. The English conflict of laws rules
(i) The Rome I Regulation
(ii) The common law rules
(iii) Party choice
“The first stage, therefore, when any question arises between parties to a contract as to the proper law applicable to it, is to determine whether the parties intended by their contract to exercise any choice at all and, if they did, to determine what was the system of law which they selected. In determining this the English court applies the ordinary rules of English law relating to the construction of contracts.”
30. The exclusion of arbitration agreements from the scope of the Rome I Regulation by article 1(2)(e) does not prevent an arbitration clause from being taken into consideration for the purposes of article 3 in determining whether there has been a choice of the law applicable to other parts of the contract, as noted in Giuliano and Lagarde, Council Report on the Convention on the law applicable to contractual obligations (OJ EU No C 282-1) at p 12. By the same token, the fact that other parts of the contract are within the scope of the Rome I Regulation does not prevent them from being taken into consideration in determining in accordance with the English common law rules of construction whether the parties have agreed on a choice of law to govern the arbitration clause. Like any question of contractual interpretation, this is a unitary exercise which requires the court to construe the contract, including the arbitration clause, as a whole.
(iv) Law of the forum
32. The same approach was adopted in Whitworth Street Estates (Manchester) Ltd v James Miller & Partners Ltd [1970] AC 583, where the House of Lords held that subsequent conduct of the parties could not be looked at to construe a contract in order to decide whether it was intended to be governed by English (rather than Scottish) law. The exclusion of subsequent conduct as an aid to interpretation is a consequence of the objective principle of interpretation in English law, which searches not for what the parties subjectively thought or intended the effect of their contract to be but for what reasonable people in their position would be understood to have meant by the language used. Although in the Whitworth Street Estates case English law was one putative applicable law of the contract, there is no suggestion in the speeches that this was the basis for applying English principles of contractual interpretation.
33. In our view, it is both consistent with authority and sound in principle to apply English law as the law of the forum to ascertain whether the parties have agreed on the law which is to govern their contract (and, if not, what law governs it in the absence of agreement). To apply any other law for this purpose would introduce an additional layer of complexity into the conflict of laws analysis without any clear justification and could produce odd or inconsistent results. As the authors of Dicey, Morris & Collins on The Conflict of Laws, 15th ed (2012) observe, at para 32-036 , by reference to a case in which subsequent conduct was taken into account to construe a contract found to be governed by Chilean law because it was admissible under that law:
“But it would be very odd if when a question arose as to whether a contract was governed by English law or Chilean law, subsequent conduct would not be taken into account in determining whether a choice of English law could be inferred, but it could be taken into account in determining whether Chilean law applied. ”
(v) Express or implied choice
(vi) The default rule
“If, applying these rules [sc the ordinary rules of English law relating to the construction of contracts], the court reaches the conclusion that the parties did not intend to exercise any choice of proper law, or is unable to identify what their choice was, it becomes necessary for the court to proceed to the second stage, of determining itself what is the proper law applicable. In doing so, the court applies the English rule of the conflict of laws … that the proper law is that system of law with which the transaction has its closest and most real connection: Bonython v Commonwealth of Australia [1951] AC 201, 219.
My Lords, this is applied as a positive rule of English law. It is applied not because it is the choice of the parties themselves but because they never intended to exercise their liberty to make a choice or, if they did, they have failed to make their choice clear.”
(vii) Splitting the contract
“By their choice the parties can select the law applicable to the whole or to part only of the contract.”
“Even if different parts of a contract are said to be governed by different laws, it would be highly inconvenient and contrary to principle for such issues as whether the contract is discharged by frustration, or whether the innocent party may terminate or withhold performance on account of the other party’s breach, not to be governed by a single law.”
IV. Choice of law for the whole contract
(i) Significance of a governing law clause
“Since the arbitration clause is only one of many clauses in a contract, it might seem reasonable to assume that the law chosen by the parties to govern the contract will also govern the arbitration clause. If the parties expressly choose a particular law to govern their agreement, why should some other law - which the parties have not chosen - be applied to only one of the clauses in the agreement, simply because it happens to be the arbitration clause?”
“… even if there is no express contractual statement to that effect, a choice of law clause for the entire agreement is likely to be construed as extending to the arbitration clause. There are numerous decisions to this effect … However, that presumption may be ousted in appropriate circumstances …”
See also Dicey, Morris & Collins on The Conflicts of Laws, 15th ed (2012) at para 16-017:
“If there is an express choice of law to govern the contract as a whole, the arbitration agreement may also be governed by that law.”
(ii) Domestic case law
“Where the substantive contract contains an express choice of law, but the agreement to arbitrate contains no separate express choice of law, the latter agreement will normally be governed by the body of law expressly chosen to govern the substantive contract.”
46. It has not generally been considered to make any difference in this regard that the arbitration clause provides for arbitration to take place in a different country from the country whose law has been chosen to govern the contract. Examples of decisions in which a choice of law clause in the contract has been treated as applying to the arbitration agreement despite the seat of arbitration being in a different jurisdiction include: Cia Maritima Zorroza SA v Sesostris SAE (The Marques De Bolarque) [1984] 1 Lloyd's Rep 652, 653; Union of India v McDonnell Douglas Corpn [1993] 2 Lloyd's Rep 48, 49-50; Sumitomo Heavy Industries Ltd v Oil and Natural Gas Commission [1994] 1 Lloyd's Rep 45, 57; Deutz AG v General Electric Co (Thomas J, 14 April 2000) at p 17; Peterson Farms Inc v C&M Farming Ltd [2004] EWHC 121 (Comm); [2004] 1 Lloyd's Rep 603, paras 43-46; Leibinger v Stryker Trauma GmbH [2005] EWHC 690 (Comm), para 38; and Svenska Petroleum Exploration AB v Government of the Republic of Lithuania [2005] EWHC 2437 (Comm); [2006] 1 All ER (Comm) 731, paras 76-77.
48. In C v D [2007] EWCA Civ 1282; [2008] Bus LR 843, another case concerning a Bermuda form insurance policy, the Court of Appeal likewise expressed the view (obiter) that the arbitration agreement was governed by English law. In C v D, however, Longmore LJ (with whom the other members of the court agreed) reached this conclusion, not on the basis of implied choice, but on the basis that there was no choice of law for the arbitration agreement so that it was necessary to identify the law with which it was most closely connected. He considered this to be the law of the place where the parties had chosen to arbitrate rather than the law of the insurance contract (paras 25-26).
49. Many commentaries and authorities, including XL Insurance and C v D, were considered by the Court of Appeal in Sulamérica Cia Nacional de Seguros SA v Enesa Engenharia SA [2012] EWCA Civ 638; [2013] 1 WLR 102. In a judgment with which the other members of the court agreed, Moore-Bick LJ said (at para 11):
“It is common for parties to make an express choice of law to govern their contract, but unusual for them to make an express choice of the law to govern any arbitration agreement contained within it; and where they have not done so, the natural inference is that they intended the proper law chosen to govern the substantive contract also to govern the agreement to arbitrate.”
“In the absence of any indication to the contrary, an express choice of law governing the substantive contract is a strong indication of the parties’ intention in relation to the agreement to arbitrate. A search for an implied choice of proper law to govern the arbitration agreement is therefore likely (as the dicta in the earlier cases indicate) to lead to the conclusion that the parties intended the arbitration agreement to be governed by the same system of law as the substantive contract, unless there are other factors present which point to a different conclusion. These may include the terms of the arbitration agreement itself or the consequences for its effectiveness of choosing the proper law of the substantive contract …”
51. This approach was followed in Arsanovia Ltd v Cruz City 1 Mauritius Holdings [2012] EWHC 3702 (Comm); [2013] 2 All ER (Comm) 1. In that case a contract contained clauses providing that it was to be governed by the laws of India and that disputes were to be settled by arbitration in London. It was held that, as a matter of construction, the parties had chosen Indian law to govern the arbitration agreement.
52. Recently, in Kabab-Ji SAL (Lebanon) v Kout Food Group (Kuwait) [2020] EWCA Civ 6; [2020] 1 Lloyd's Rep 269 the Court of Appeal similarly construed a clause in a contract which stated “This Agreement shall be governed by and construed in accordance with the laws of England” as meaning that all the terms of the contract were governed by English law including an arbitration clause which provided for arbitration in France. This conclusion was reinforced by the fact that the contract included a clause which stated that “This Agreement consists of … the terms of agreement set forth herein below …”.
(iii) Considerations of principle
i) This approach provides a degree of certainty. The parties can be assured that an agreement as to the governing law will generally be an effective choice in relation to all of their contractual rights and obligations and to all of their disputes.
ii) It achieves consistency. The same system of law governs all the parties’ rights and obligations. It can be unsatisfactory for potentially closely related issues such as the identity of the contracting parties or the proper approach to the interpretation of their bargain to be governed by different systems of law, depending on whether it relates to the main contract or the arbitration agreement.
iii) It avoids complexities and uncertainties. As soon as the relationship between the parties is subject to two systems of law, problems can arise as to where and how to draw the boundaries between them. This is exemplified by the increasing prevalence of multi-tier dispute resolution clauses. If the arbitration agreement is governed by a different system of law from the main body of the contract, provisions that require negotiation and/or mediation and/or expert determination in advance of arbitration raise potentially difficult questions as to whether they are governed by the law applicable to the arbitration agreement or by the law generally applicable to the contract, and indeed as to whether those questions should be answered by applying the common law rules or the Rome I Regulation. Article 50.1 of the construction contract is an example of such a clause. Although we explain later how these difficulties may be addressed, if there is only one system of law then no such difficulties arise.
iv) It avoids artificiality. The principle that an arbitration agreement is separable from the contract containing it is an important part of arbitration law but it is a legal doctrine and one which is likely to be much better known to arbitration lawyers than to commercial parties. For them a contract is a contract; not a contract with an ancillary or collateral or interior arbitration agreement. They would therefore reasonably expect a choice of law to apply to the whole of that contract.
v) It ensures coherence. It is consistent with the treatment of other types of clauses whose validity is also insulated from challenges to the contract, such as choice of law or choice of court clauses. Such clauses are generally presumed to be governed by the law of the contract of which they form part: see Dicey, Morris & Collins on The Conflict of Laws, 15th ed (2012) at paras 12-103 and 12-109.
(iv) The international perspective
55. As to the international perspective, although there is no uniformity, there are many commentators on international arbitration who support such an approach, at least where there is an express choice of governing law for the contract. Examples to which we were referred include: Bantekas, “The Proper Law of the Arbitration Clause: A Challenge to the Prevailing Orthodoxy” (2010) 27 Journal of International Arbitration 1, 1-2; Born, International Commercial Arbitration, 2nd ed (2014), p 592; Grover, “Dilemma of the Proper Law of the Arbitration Agreement: An Approach Towards Unification of Applicable Laws” (2014) 32 Sing L Rev 227, 255; Choi, “Choice of Law Rules Applicable for International Arbitration Agreements” (2015) 11 Asian International Arbitration Journal 105, 108-109; Khatchadourian, “Fortifying the Arbitration Clause” in Ziadé (ed), Festschrift Ahmed Sadek El-Kosheri (2015), pp 53-56; and Miles and Goh, “A Principled Approach Towards the Law Governing Arbitration Agreements” in Kaplan and Moser (eds), Jurisdiction, Admissibility and Choice of Law in International Arbitration: Liber Amicorum Michael Pryles (2018) Chapter 24, p 393.
57. Singapore provides an instructive example. In FirstLink Investments Corpn Ltd v GT Payment Pte Ltd [2014] SGHCR 12 it was held that the law of the seat should generally apply to the arbitration agreement. In BCY v BCZ [2016] SGHC 249; [2016] 2 Lloyd's Rep 583 Steven Chong J disagreed and held that the approach in Sulamérica should be followed as it “is supported by the weight of authority and is, in any event, preferable as a matter of principle” (para 49). Having set out detailed reasons why that was so, he concluded that, as the arbitration agreement in that case was contained in a contract expressly governed by New York law, the presumption was that New York law governed the arbitration agreement and this presumption was not displaced by the choice of Singapore as the seat of arbitration.
58. BCY v BCZ has been approved by the Singapore Court of Appeal - see BNA v BNB [2019] SGCA 84; [2020] 1 Lloyd's Rep 55, para 44, where it was accepted by both parties as a correct statement of the law.
V. The approach of the Court of Appeal
(i) The Court of Appeal’s judgment
59. The Court of Appeal reached a contrary conclusion in the present case. Leaving aside cases in which, exceptionally, a choice of the law governing the arbitration agreement is specified in the arbitration agreement itself, Popplewell LJ (with whom Flaux and Males LJJ agreed) was prepared to accept that an express choice of the law applicable to the contract containing the arbitration agreement may sometimes, as a matter of construction, amount to an express choice of the law applicable to the arbitration agreement (para 90). But he considered that this conclusion would follow only in a minority of cases and that in all other cases there is a strong presumption that the parties have impliedly chosen the law of the seat of the arbitration to govern the arbitration agreement. This was said to be the general rule, “subject only to any particular features of the case demonstrating powerful reasons to the contrary” (para 91).
(ii) Separability
61. The Court of Appeal justified its approach on the ground that a choice of law to govern the contract “has little if anything to say about the [arbitration agreement] law choice because it is directed to a different and separate agreement” (para 92). This was said to follow from the doctrine that an arbitration agreement is separable from the rest of the contract. In our view, this puts the principle of separability of the arbitration agreement too high. For reasons given earlier, the requirement that an arbitration clause is to be treated as a distinct agreement for the purpose of determining its validity, existence and effectiveness makes it more amenable than other parts of a contract to the application of a different law. The rationale underlying the separability principle is also relevant, as we will mention later, in cases where applying the governing law of the contract to the arbitration clause would render the arbitration agreement invalid or ineffective. But it does not follow from the separability principle that an arbitration agreement is generally to be regarded as “a different and separate agreement” from the rest of the contract or that a choice of governing law for the contract should not generally be interpreted as applying to an arbitration clause.
62. Descriptions of an arbitration clause as, for example, “collateral to the main contract in which it is incorporated” (Paal Wilson & Co A/S v Partenreederei Hannah Blumenthal (The Hannah Blumenthal) [1983] 1 AC 854, 917, per Lord Diplock) or “a separate contract, ancillary to the main contract” (Bremer Vulkan Schiffbau und Maschinenfabrik v South India Shipping Corpn Ltd [1981] AC 909, 998, per Lord Scarman) need to be seen in their context as ways of expressing the doctrine that the discharge by frustration (or for other reasons) of the substantive obligations created by the contract will not discharge the parties’ agreement to arbitrate. The arbitration clause is nonetheless part of the bundle of rights and obligations recorded in the contractual document. So, for example, an assignment of the contract will include an arbitration clause without the need for any separate or additional assignment: see Schiffahrtsgesellschaft Detlev von Appen GmbH v Voest Alpine Intertrading GmbH (The Jay Bola) [1997] 2 Lloyd's Rep 279, 285; Shayler v Woolf [1946] Ch 320; and Cockett Marine Oil DMCC v ING Bank NV (The M/V Ziemia Ciesznska) [2019] EWHC 1533 (Comm); [2019] 2 Lloyd's Rep 541. As Colman J put it in construing the words “any clause of this Agreement” as including an arbitration clause in JSC Zestafoni G Nikoladze Ferroalloy Plant v Ronly Holdings Ltd [2004] EWHC 245 (Comm); [2004] 2 Lloyd's Rep 335, para 31:
“There is nothing in the intrinsic character of an arbitration agreement as having an attribute of separability which prevents it from being included in that phrase.”
63. Moore-Bick LJ summed up the position clearly when he said in the Sulamérica case at para 26:
“The concept of separability itself, however, simply reflects the parties’ presumed intention that their agreed procedure for resolving disputes should remain effective in circumstances that would render the substantive contract ineffective. Its purpose is to give legal effect to that intention, not to insulate the arbitration agreement from the substantive contract for all purposes.”
(iii) The overlap argument
(iv) Choice of curial law
67. On this appeal Chubb Russia disputed the initial premise that a choice of seat for an arbitration involves any choice of law at all, procedural or substantive. Counsel for Chubb Russia submitted that the application of the curial law of the seat is something that follows automatically from a choice of place of arbitration rather than being itself a matter of choice. They cited as an analogy a hypothetical case postulated by Redfern and Hunter: Law and Practice of International Commercial Arbitration , 6th ed (2015), para 3.63, of an English motorist who takes her car to France. Redfern and Hunter comment that:
“… it would be an odd use of language to say that this notional motorist had opted for ‘French traffic law’; rather, she has chosen to go to France - and the applicability of French law then follows automatically. It is not a matter of choice. ”
68. We agree that it would be inapt to describe the tourist in this example as having made a choice to be regulated by French traffic law. But as Mr Dicker QC for Enka submitted, it is difficult to conceive that a person’s decision to visit France might be informed by a desire to be governed by French traffic law. By contrast, the nature and scope of the jurisdiction exercised by the courts of a country over an arbitration which has its seat there is a highly material consideration in choosing a seat for the arbitration. That is reinforced by the fact that the seat of an arbitration is a legal concept rather than a physical one. A choice of place as the seat does not dictate that hearings must be held, or that any award must actually be issued, in that place. As the Court of Appeal observed (at para 46), it is perfectly possible to conduct an arbitration with an English seat at any convenient location, anywhere in the world. Furthermore, under section 53 of the Arbitration Act 1996, unless otherwise agreed by the parties, where the seat of an arbitration is in England and Wales, any award in the proceedings shall be treated as made there, regardless of where it was signed, despatched or delivered to any of the parties (see also article 31(3) of the UNCITRAL Model Law on International Commercial Arbitration adopted by the United Nations Commission on International Trade Law on 21 June 1985). The point of agreeing a seat is to agree that the law and courts of a particular country will exercise control over an arbitration which has its seat in that country to the extent provided for by that country’s law. A choice of seat can in these circumstances aptly be regarded as a choice of the curial law.
(v) Relationship between curial law and arbitration agreement law
70. In Carpatsky Petroleum Corpn v PJSC Ukrnafta [2020] EWHC 769 (Comm); [2020] Bus LR 1284, the claimant applied to enforce in England and Wales an arbitration award made in Sweden. Enforcement was resisted on the ground (among others) that there was no valid arbitration agreement in the contract between the parties. This argument depended on the assumption that the validity of the arbitration agreement was governed by the law of Ukraine. The contract provided for the “law of substance of Ukraine” to apply “on examination of disputes”. Butcher J held (at paras 67-71) that this was not a choice of Ukrainian law to govern the arbitration agreement and that, in the circumstances, the choice of Stockholm as the seat for any arbitration demonstrated an implied choice that the validity and interpretation of the arbitration agreement should be governed by Swedish law. His reasons were that: (1) it was reasonable to infer that the parties had deliberately chosen a neutral forum to resolve their disputes and hence “intended the law of that jurisdiction to determine issues as to the validity and ambit of that choice”; and (2) by choosing Sweden as the seat for the arbitration, the parties agreed to the application of the Swedish Arbitration Act, including section 48 which provides that, in the absence of agreement on a choice of law to govern an arbitration agreement with an international connection, the arbitration agreement shall be governed by the law of the country in which, by virtue of that agreement, the arbitration proceedings have taken place or will take place. It follows that, by providing for a Swedish seat, the parties were impliedly agreeing that Swedish law should govern the arbitration agreement.
“Where -
(a) the parties to an arbitration agreement agree that an arbitration under that agreement is to be seated in Scotland, but
(b) the arbitration agreement does not specify the law which is to govern it,
then, unless the parties otherwise agree, the arbitration agreement is to be governed by Scots law.”
(vi) Section 4(5) of the 1996 Act
74. Section 4(5) of the 1996 Act states:
“ The choice of a law other than the law of England and Wales or Northern Ireland as the applicable law in respect of a matter provided for by a non-mandatory provision of this Part is equivalent to an agreement making provision about that matter.
For this purpose an applicable law determined in accordance with the parties’ agreement, or which is objectively determined in the absence of any express or implied choice, shall be treated as chosen by the parties.”
“ (1) The provisions of this Part apply where the law of England and Wales or Northern Ireland is applicable, or the powers of the court are exercisable, in accordance with the rules of the conflict of laws.
(2) They apply, in particular -
(a) to matters relating to or governed by the arbitration agreement, where the applicable law is the law of England and Wales or Northern Ireland; and
(b) to matters governed by the law applicable to the arbitral proceedings, where the seat of the arbitration is in England and Wales or Northern Ireland.”
“… an arbitration may have a French seat, with French law governing the procedure, but English law governing the arbitration agreement. In such a situation, only those provisions of the Act which concern arbitration agreements should apply. It would be quite wrong to apply provisions of the Act which concern arbitral procedure, as this would be governed by French law.”
Plainly, this reasoning applies equally in reverse to an arbitration with an English seat and English law governing the procedure, but French law governing the arbitration agreement. In such a situation, only those provisions of the Act which concern arbitral procedure should apply and not those which concern the arbitration agreement, as this would be governed by French law.
“Many provisions concern both arbitration agreements and arbitral procedure, and there appeared to be a divergence of view with respect to many others.”
“If … a foreign law has been chosen to govern any particular aspect of the arbitration, such as the arbitral procedure or the arbitration agreement, or is otherwise applicable to any such aspect, this is catered for by section 4(5). Therefore, reference may be made to this Act in the first instance, and then back to another law with respect to a specific issue. Whilst a process of characterisation may still have to be done, the combination of section 2 and section 4(5) avoids the dangers that:
– a choice of English law with respect to one part of an arbitration will import other parts of the Act that concern other aspects of the arbitration;
– a choice of England as the seat of the arbitration will necessarily entail the imposition of every provision of the Act.”
(vii) Enka’s case on section 4(5)
83. Enka put forward three responses to this reasoning, none of which we have found persuasive.
86. As authority for this restrictive interpretation, Enka relied on a dictum of Lord Steyn in Lesotho Highlands Development Authority v Impregilo SpA [2005] UKHL 43; [2006] 1 AC 221. That case involved an attempted challenge under section 68 of the 1996 Act to a decision by an arbitral tribunal to award interest under section 49(3) on principal sums awarded. The challenge failed because the House of Lords held that substantial injustice had not been established, as required to invoke section 68. However, Lord Steyn, who gave the leading speech, went on to point out that the challenge had also faced other formidable difficulties. In particular, the power under section 49(3) to award interest was prima facie available: the only question was whether there had been an agreement to the contrary for the purpose of section 49(2). In that context Lord Steyn noted (at para 37) that the judge at first instance had appeared to take the view that the law of Lesotho, as the law applicable to the construction contract under which the claim arose, might be relevant - presumably on the basis that it constituted an agreement to the contrary. In relation to this, Lord Steyn remarked:
“Ignoring for the moment the fact that one does not know what the law of Lesotho is, this view comes up against the difficulty that only an agreement in writing as defined in the Act can qualify as an agreement to the contrary under section 49: section 5(1). … The law of Lesotho is not an agreement to the contrary in writing.”
87. Lord Steyn made no mention of section 4(5) of the Act: the point that he made was based on section 5(1), which states that an “agreement between the parties as to any matter is effective for the purposes of this Part only if in writing”. Nevertheless, in C v D, at para 19, Longmore LJ treated Lord Steyn’s dictum as supporting the view that section 4(5) requires a choice of law “with regard to the specific provision of the [1996] Act which the parties agree is not to apply”. This statement was in turn relied on by Burton J in National Iranian Oil Co v Crescent Petroleum Co International Ltd [2016] EWHC 510 (Comm); [2016] 2 Lloyd's Rep 146, paras 12-17, to conclude that a choice of Iranian law to govern an arbitration agreement was not sufficient to disapply section 7 of the 1996 Act, which codifies the principle of separability of the arbitration agreement, and that nothing less than an agreement expressly disapplying section 7 or the English law governing separability would have sufficed for that purpose.
89. We do not think it credible that Lord Steyn in the Lesotho case intended to endorse such an interpretation of section 4(5), and to do so without giving any reasons or even mentioning that provision of the Act at all. The likely reason why no reference was made to section 4(5) is that it was not relevant to the power to award interest. The Court of Appeal in the Lesotho case characterised the power to award interest under section 49(3) of the 1996 Act as discretionary and procedural - a characterisation which Lord Steyn seems to have endorsed when referring to the reasoning of the Court of Appeal in para 38 of his speech. The fact that section 49(3) was treated by both the Court of Appeal and the House of Lords in the Lesotho case as procedural in nature was later relied on by the Court of Appeal in Maher v Groupama Grand Est [2009] EWCA Civ 1191; [2010] 1 WLR 1564, para 38, to support a similar characterisation of the power of a court to award interest under section 35A of the Senior Courts Act 1981. Because section 49(3) is procedural, the choice of the law of Lesotho to govern substantive contractual rights was not in respect of a matter provided for by section 49(3) and therefore did not engage section 4(5). As it was not in doubt that the curial law governing the arbitration process was English law, to disapply section 49(3) would accordingly have required a specific agreement (in writing), as Lord Steyn observed. Whether or not Lesotho law contained any equivalent procedural power was in these circumstances not relevant. Even if it did, the law of Lesotho concerning that matter could not amount to an agreement to the contrary.
92. Of these provisions, only section 7 which codifies the principle of separability concerns the validity or scope of the arbitration agreement. Section 5, which states that Part I of the Act applies only where the arbitration agreement is in writing, is not concerned with the validity or scope of the arbitration agreement but with the circumstances in which the provisions of the Act will apply. If the requirement of writing is not met, Part I of the Act will not apply to the arbitration agreement but it will be regulated by, and will still be valid at, common law (see section 81). Section 30, which empowers the arbitral tribunal to rule on its own jurisdiction, is procedural. It does not deal with the parties’ substantive rights under the arbitration agreement but with the competence of the tribunal to determine the validity and scope of those rights. Section 58, which provides for the finality of an arbitral award, is also procedural in nature. (For that reason, the insurer’s argument in C v D that, as a result of section 4(5), section 58 was disapplied by a choice of New York law to govern the arbitration agreement was misconceived.) These and other procedural non-mandatory provisions will only be excluded in the unusual event that the parties have chosen a foreign procedural law for an English-seated arbitration: see Dubai Islamic Bank PJSC v Paymentech Merchant Services Inc [2001] 1 All ER (Comm) 514, para 31; C v D [2007] EWHC 1541 (Comm); [2007] 2 All ER (Comm) 557, paras 25-26 (Cooke J); Sterling v Rand [2019] EWHC 2560 (Ch); [2019] 2 Lloyd's Rep 577, para 58. As observed in the DAC Supplementary Report, para 7(ii) (quoted at para 77 above), in such a case it would be wrong to apply non-mandatory provisions of the Act which concern arbitral procedure, as this would be governed by foreign law.
93. We accept that characterising individual provisions of that Act as procedural or substantive can, as recognised by the DAC, be a difficult and complex exercise. But we are satisfied that giving section 4(5) its plain meaning does not lead to surprising or untoward consequences and is inconsistent with the contention that choosing English law as the curial law of an arbitration involves an implied choice of English law as the law applicable to the arbitration agreement.
VI. Avoiding invalidity
(i) The validation principle
95. It is a well-established principle of contractual interpretation in English law, which dates back at least to the time of Sir Edward Coke (see Coke upon Littleton (1628) 42a), that an interpretation which upholds the validity of a transaction is to be preferred to one which would render it invalid or ineffective. In the days when Latin was commonly used in the courts, it was expressed by the maxim “verba ita sunt intelligenda ut res magis valeat quam pereat” - translated by Staughton LJ in Lancashire County Council v Municipal Mutual Insurance Ltd [1997] QB 897, 910, as “the contract should be interpreted so that it is valid rather than ineffective”.
(ii) Hamlyn v Talisker
98. An early but authoritative instance of such reasoning is the decision of the House of Lords in Hamlyn & Co v Talisker Distillery [1894] AC 202. A contract between an English company and a Scottish company, to be performed in Scotland, contained the following provision:
“Should any dispute arise out of this contract, the same to be settled by arbitration by two members of the London Corn Exchange, or their umpire, in the usual way.”
It was common ground that this arbitration clause was valid according to English law but invalid according to the law of Scotland because the arbitrators were not named. The Court of Session held that the contract was governed by Scottish law as the law of the place of performance of the contract and that, in consequence, the arbitration clause was invalid. The House of Lords unanimously reversed that decision. As Lord Wilberforce subsequently noted in the Tunisienne case (at p 596), the only question decided by the House of Lords was whether the arbitration clause was governed by Scottish law or by English law. The members of the appellate committee were careful to limit their opinions to that question and to express no view on which law governed the other provisions of the contract.
“… the contract with reference to arbitration would have been absolutely null and void if it were to be governed by the law of Scotland. That cannot have been the intention of the parties; it is not reasonable to attribute that intention to them if the contract may be otherwise construed; …”
Lord Ashbourne made the same point, stating graphically (at p 215) that “the arbitration clause becomes mere waste paper if it is held that the parties were contracting on the basis of the application of the law of Scotland, which would at once refuse to acknowledge the full efficacy of a clause so framed.” He continued:
“It is more reasonable to hold that the parties contracted with the common intention of giving entire effect to every clause, rather than of mutilating or destroying one of the most important provisions.”
(iii) The decision in Sulamérica
103. The insured’s case was that the contract, including the arbitration agreement, was governed by Brazilian law and that under Brazilian law the arbitration agreement was not enforceable against them without their consent. As noted earlier, Moore-Bick LJ (with whom Hallett LJ and Lord Neuberger MR agreed) accepted that the choice of Brazilian law to govern the contract was a strong indication that the parties intended that system of law to govern the arbitration agreement. However, Moore-Bick LJ identified two factors pointing the other way. The first was the overlap argument which we have just discussed: that by choosing London as the seat of arbitration, the parties must have foreseen and intended that the provisions of the Arbitration Act 1996 should apply to any arbitration, including those provisions which are more substantive than procedural in nature (para 29). For the reasons already given, we do not think that this argument is sound, as it overlooks the fact that, if the arbitration agreement was governed by Brazilian law, the non-mandatory substantive provisions of the Act would be excluded by section 4(5). It was the second factor, however, which the Court of Appeal regarded as decisive. This was the possible existence of a rule of Brazilian law which would render the arbitration agreement enforceable only with the insured’s consent (para 30). Moore-Bick LJ reasoned that, given the terms of the mediation and arbitration clauses, the parties could not have intended to choose a system of law that “either would, or might well, have that effect” (para 31). As he also put it, Brazilian law could not have been intended to govern the arbitration agreement when “there is at least a serious risk that a choice of Brazilian law would significantly undermine that agreement”.
“an agreement to resolve disputes by arbitration in London, and therefore in accordance with English arbitral law, does not have a close juridical connection with the system of law governing the policy of insurance, whose purpose is unrelated to that of dispute resolution; rather, it has its closest and most real connection with the law of the place where the arbitration is to be held and which will exercise the supporting and supervisory jurisdiction necessary to ensure that the procedure is effective.”
On this basis he concluded that the arbitration agreement was governed by English law.
(iv) Commercial purpose of an arbitration clause
106. The principle that contracting parties could not reasonably have intended a significant clause in their contract, such as an arbitration clause, to be invalid is a form of purposive interpretation, which seeks to interpret the language of the contract, so far as possible, in a way which will give effect to - rather than defeat - an aim or purpose which the parties can be taken to have had in view. The strength of the inference that an interpretation of the contract would defeat an aim of the parties is, however, a matter of degree. An interpretation which would without doubt mean that an arbitration clause is void and of no legal effect at all gives rise to a very powerful inference that such a meaning could not rationally have been intended. That was the position in Hamlyn v Talisker, where it was common ground that, if the arbitration clause were governed by Scottish law, it would have been (in Lord Herschell’s words [1894] AC 202, 208) “absolutely null and void”. In the Sulamérica case the inference was weaker. There was a serious risk - but not a certainty - that, if Brazilian law applied to the arbitration clause, it would render the agreement to arbitrate enforceable only with the insured’s consent. That would not have meant that the arbitration clause was of no effect at all. As Moore-Bick LJ acknowledged, although most arbitration agreements permit either party to refer disputes to arbitration, some provide for arbitration only at the option of one or other party. He did not think it reasonable, however, to attribute to the parties in that case an intention to enter into “a one-sided arrangement of that kind” (para 30).
107. In Fiona Trust & Holding Corpn v Privalov [2007] UKHL 40; [2007] Bus LR 1719, the House of Lords affirmed the principle that “the construction of an arbitration clause should start from the assumption that the parties, as rational businessmen, are likely to have intended any dispute arising out of the relationship into which they have entered or purported to enter to be decided by the same tribunal” (see para 13, per Lord Hoffmann). Contrary to a submission made on behalf of Chubb Russia, this is not a parochial approach but one which, as the House of Lords noted in the Fiona Trust case, has been recognised by (amongst other foreign courts) the German Federal Supreme Court (Bundesgerichtshof), the Federal Court of Australia and the United States Supreme Court and, as stated by Lord Hope at para 31, “is now firmly embedded as part of the law of international commerce.” In his monumental work on International Commercial Arbitration, 2nd ed (2014), p 1403 Gary Born summarises the position as follows:
“In a substantial majority of all jurisdictions, national law provides that international arbitration agreements should be interpreted in light of a ‘pro-arbitration’ presumption. Derived from the policies of leading international arbitration conventions and national arbitration legislation, and from the parties’ likely objectives, this type of presumption provides that a valid arbitration clause should generally be interpreted expansively and, in cases of doubt, extended to encompass disputed claims. That is particularly true where an arbitration clause encompasses some of the parties’ disputes and the question is whether it also applies to related disputes, so that all such controversies can be resolved in a single proceeding (rather than in multiple proceedings in different forums).”
VII. Relevance of the arbitration seat to the main contract law
“I venture to think that in commercial matters, at the present time, this may give insufficient recognition to the international character of the City of London as a commercial centre - the reason, rather than any preference for English rules, for which arbitration in London is selected.”
114. There are still cases in which an arbitration clause providing for arbitration in London by, for example, English maritime arbitrators, or by London brokers, or by a local association or exchange, may in combination with other factors be regarded as conveying an implied choice of law. An example is Egon Oldendorff v Libera Corpn (No 2) [1996] 1 Lloyd's Rep 380, where an arbitration clause in a charterparty made between Japanese owners and German charterers provided for arbitration in London by arbitrators appointed by the London Maritime Arbitrators’ Association. Also relevant to Clarke J’s decision that the parties intended English law to govern the charterparty were: (1) the fact that it was made on a well-known standard form containing clauses with well-known meanings in English law; and (2) that having agreed a “neutral” forum, the parties intended that forum to apply a “neutral” law, namely English law and not German or Japanese law. In such cases that implied choice of law will equally apply to the arbitration agreement: see Habas Sinai Ve Tibbi Gazlar Istihsal v VSC Steel Co Ltd [2013] EWHC 4071 (Comm); [2014] 1 Lloyd's Rep 479, para 102.
115. Such a situation may be contrasted with one in which the arbitration clause, although it specifies a place of arbitration, does not provide for a method of identifying the arbitrators except through appointment by an international arbitral body such as the ICC. As Andrew Baker J observed in his judgment in this case (at para 62), the ICC is “a quintessentially and deliberately supranational institution”, with its own internal, and so again supranational, supervisory apparatus of the International Court of Arbitration and its Secretary General and Secretariat. In a case of this kind the parties could not reasonably assume that the selection of London as the seat of arbitration, even where it is a neutral forum, points ineluctably by necessary implication to a choice of English law to govern the contract so as to make the express designation of a governing law unnecessary.
VIII Applying the closest connection test
119. Even where the parties have not agreed what law is to govern their contract, it is reasonable to start from an assumption - for reasons given earlier - that all the terms of the contract, including an arbitration clause, are governed by the same system of law. Where, however, the parties have selected a place for the arbitration of disputes, there is authority for, as a general rule, regarding the law with which the arbitration agreement is most closely connected as the law of the seat of arbitration. As we have seen, this was the approach adopted by the Court of Appeal in the Sulamérica case (see para 104 above). It was also endorsed by the Court of Appeal in C v D (see para 48 above), albeit that in that case insufficient reason was given, in our opinion, for rejecting the inference that the law chosen to govern the insurance contract was intended to apply to the arbitration clause. Among commentators, this rule notably has the support of Dicey, Morris & Collins on The Conflict of Laws, 15th ed (2012), rule 64(1)(b) and para 16-016; see also Russell on Arbitration, 24th ed, (2015) at para 2-121.
(i) The place of performance
121. The starting point is that the seat of arbitration is the place where (legally, even if not physically) the arbitration agreement is to be performed. In identifying the system of law with which a contract (or relevant part of it) has its closest and most real connection, the place where the transaction is to be performed is the connecting factor to which the common law has long attached the greatest weight (since the place where the contract was concluded ceased to be seen as significant): see eg Dicey, Morris & Collins on The Conflict of Laws, 15th ed (2012), para 32-073. This is justified by the fact that states have an interest in regulating transactions taking place within their territory and by the consequent natural assumption that the law of the territory in which a transaction is taking place will govern it in the absence of a contrary indication. By agreeing to a seat of arbitration the parties submit themselves to the jurisdiction of the courts of that place and to its law and coercive powers for the purposes of deciding any issue relating to the validity or enforceability of their arbitration agreement. Thus, as we discuss later in this judgment (see Part XI below), the courts of the seat have jurisdiction to grant an injunction to restrain proceedings brought in breach of the agreement to arbitrate. The parties also by their choice of seat impliedly agree to bring any claim for a remedy relating to the existence or scope of the arbitrators’ jurisdiction (including any issue as to the validity or scope or the arbitration agreement), and any challenge to an arbitral award, in the courts of that place: see C v D [2007] EWHC 1541 (Comm); [2007] 2 All ER (Comm) 557, paras 29-34 (Cooke J); C v D [2007] EWCA Civ 1282; [2008] Bus LR 843, para 17 (CA); Minister of Finance (Inc) v International Petroleum Investment Co [2019] EWCA Civ 2080; [2020] Bus LR 45, paras 36-49; Dicey, Morris & Collins on The Conflict of Laws, 15th ed (2012), para 16-036. The seat of arbitration is in these circumstances the place to whose system of law the arbitration agreement is most closely attached.
123. We therefore agree with the view of Moore-Bick LJ in the Sulamérica case quoted at para 104 above and also with statement of Longmore LJ in C v D [2007] EWCA Civ 1282; [2008] Bus LR 843, para 26, that:
“an agreement to arbitrate will normally have a closer and more real connection with the place where the parties have chosen to arbitrate than with the place of the law of the underlying contract in cases where the parties have deliberately chosen to arbitrate in one place disputes which have arisen under a contract governed by the law of another place.”
(ii) Consistency with international law and legislative policy
126. The New York Convention, to which the United Kingdom became a party in 1975 and which more than 160 states have now signed, has been described as “the single most important pillar on which the edifice of international arbitration rests,” and as “perhaps … the most effective instance of international legislation in the entire history of commercial law”: see Redfern and Hunter: Law and Practice of International Commercial Arbitration, 6th ed (2015), para 2.11, quoting Wetter, “The present status of the International Court of Arbitration of the ICC: An appraisal” (1990) 1 Am Rev Intl Arb 91, p 93, and Mustill, “Arbitration: History and background” (1989) 6 J Intl Arb 43, p 49. The essential aim of the Convention was to establish a single uniform set of international legal standards for the recognition and enforcement of arbitration agreements and awards. Its success is reflected in the fact that, according to Born, International Commercial Arbitration, 2nd ed (2014), p 113, the New York Convention has been implemented through national legislation in virtually all contracting states.
“In the light of the pervasive reach of the New York Convention in modern times, this rule, although not itself prescribing a choice of law rule of general application, nevertheless provides a strong indication of one …”
128. Article V(1)(a) - enacted into English law by section 103(2)(b) of the Arbitration Act 1996 - has two limbs, which are intended to be treated as uniform international conflict of laws rules: see Dallah Real Estate and Tourism Holding Co v Ministry of Religious Affairs of the Government of Pakistan [2008] EWHC 1901 (Comm); [2009] 1 All ER (Comm) 505, para 78 (Aikens J); and [2010] UKSC 46; [2011] 1 AC 763, para 123 (Lord Collins). The first, and primary, rule is that the validity of the arbitration agreement is governed by “the law to which the parties [have] subjected it” - in other words the law chosen by the parties. The second, default rule, which applies where no choice has been indicated is that the applicable law is that of “the country where the award was made”. Where the parties have chosen the seat of arbitration, this will be (or be deemed to be) the law of the seat. In English law this is expressly provided by section 100(2)(b) of the 1996 Act.
“A systematic interpretation of the Convention, in principle, permits the application by analogy of the conflict rules of article V(1)(a) to the enforcement of the agreement. It would appear inconsistent at the time of the enforcement of the award to apply the Convention’s uniform conflict rules and at the time of the enforcement of the agreement to apply possibly different conflict rules of the forum. It could lead to the undesirable situation of the same arbitration agreement being held to be governed by two different laws: one law determined according to the conflict rules of the forum at the time of the enforcement of the agreement, and the other determined according to article V(1)(a) at the time of enforcement of the award.”
van den Berg, The New York Arbitration Convention of 1958 (1981), p 126-7; and see Born, International Commercial Arbitration, 2nd ed (2014), pp 494, 495-499; Lew & Mistelis, Comparative International Commercial Arbitration (2003), para 6-55; Schramm, Geisinger & Pinsolle, “Article II” in Kronke, Nacimiento et al (eds), Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards: A Global Commentary on the New York Convention (2010), p 55.
“the arbitration agreement was not valid under the law to which the parties subjected it or, failing any indication thereon, under the law of the country where the award was made;”
“It is fair to say that today, the conflict rule contained in article V(1)(a) New York Convention … has developed into a truly transnational conflict rule for the determination of the law governing the substantive validity of the arbitration agreement. This rule has been applied in numerous international arbitral awards, is favoured by international arbitral doctrine and has been accepted by domestic courts.”
See Berger, “Reexamining the Arbitration Agreement: Applicable Law - Consensus or Confusion?”, in Van den Berg (ed), (2006) ICCA Congress Series Vol 13, 301, pp 316-317. It is not desirable that, when a question about the enforceability of the same arbitration agreement arises in different national courts, different conflict rules should be applied to determine the governing law. This point is well made by Gary Born in his work on International Commercial Arbitration, 2nd ed (2014), p 498:
“The international arbitral process aspires towards a maximally uniform approach by national courts presented with disputes about the substantive validity of a particular international arbitration agreement. A lack of uniformity on this issue would result in some courts referring parties to arbitration, and others refusing to do so, under the same arbitration agreement; that makes no sense and results in unnecessary litigation, forum shopping and uncertainty. Rather, insofar as possible, it is much more desirable for all national courts to reach the same conclusion as to the validity (or invalidity) of a particular arbitration agreement.”
Exactly the same points apply to the approach taken by national courts to the scope of an international arbitration agreement.
“On balance, the present section favors ensuring symmetry between pre-arbitration and post-award standards for determining the validity of an arbitration agreement. There is no reason in principle why a court should answer that question differently depending on the stage of the proceedings, and doing so would inject unnecessary uncertainty and complexity into the analysis.”
(iii) Giving effect to commercial purpose
(iv) Legal certainty
(v) Conclusion on the default rule
IX The law applicable to the arbitration agreement in article 50.1
(i) No choice of law
“Law of the Russian Federation, including legislation of the Russian Federation, all regulatory legal acts of the State Authority Federal Bodies, State Authorities of the constituent entities of the Russian Federation, legislation of the constituent entities of the Russian Federation, regulatory legal acts by Local Authorities and any other applicable regulatory legal acts.”
There are numerous references throughout the body of the contract to the “Applicable Law”, as well as other references to the law or laws of the Russian Federation. Counsel for Chubb Russia submitted that, read as a whole, the language of the construction contract makes it clear that the parties were contracting by reference to Russian law and chose Russian law as the law applicable to their agreement.
151. As evidence of this practice, the Court of Appeal cited a leading text on the widely used standard forms of international construction contract issued by the International Federation of Consulting Engineers (“FIDIC”): see Baker Mellors Chalmers and Lavers on FIDIC Contracts: Law and Practice, 5th ed (2009), paras 2.126, 2.140 and 2.145. Counsel for Chubb Russia pointed out that the contract in this case was not made on a FIDIC standard form and, unlike contracts made on FIDIC forms, does not contain a governing law clause. They observed that the technique employed in drafting FIDIC contracts is to select a governing law and then to apply a different law (usually the local law) expressly to certain provisions in such a way that the contractor will be obliged to comply with that law. That was not done here, where the only law specified was the “Applicable Law”.
“The Contractor shall ensure performance of the Work in accordance with:
a) The requirements of this Agreement (including references to the non-mandatory rules of Applicable Law but to the extent the provisions of the Agreement are not at variance with mandatory rules of Applicable Law);
b) Applicable Law (including the Mandatory Technical Rules constituting a part of such Applicable Law);
c) An Implied Covenant of Good Faith and Fair Dealing.”
The definition in Attachment 17 of the phrase “Implied Covenant of Good Faith and Fair Dealing” imports standards applied by “ experienced international contractor organisations” engaged in similar projects. As well as such standards, the construction contract and its attachments set out many specific requirements for the work which do not form part of the “Applicable Law”.
(ii) Closest connection
(iii) The law applicable to the main contract
159. Although it would be a mistake to interpret the Rome I Regulation through the prism of the common law, there does not appear to be any substantial difference (save possibly in relation to the admissibility of subsequent conduct) between the approach of the common law to determining whether there has been an express or implied choice of law and the approach to be followed in deciding whether a choice has been made expressly or “clearly demonstrated” for the purpose of article 3 of the Rome I Regulation. Thus, in Lawlor v Sandvik Mining and Construction Mobile Crushers and Screens Ltd [2013] EWCA Civ 365; [2013] 2 Lloyd's Rep 98, para 33, the Court of Appeal held that the test of whether a choice has been “clearly demonstrated” is objective and is equivalent to Lord Diplock’s formulation of the common law test, requiring the court to be satisfied that the only reasonable conclusion to be drawn from the circumstances is that the parties should be taken to have intended the putative law to apply.
(iv) The dispute resolution clause
X Conclusions on applicable law
i) Where a contract contains an agreement to resolve disputes arising from it by arbitration, the law applicable to the arbitration agreement may not be the same as the law applicable to the other parts of the contract and is to be determined by applying English common law rules for resolving conflicts of laws rather than the provisions of the Rome I Regulation.
ii) According to these rules, the law applicable to the arbitration agreement will be (a) the law chosen by the parties to govern it or (b) in the absence of such a choice, the system of law with which the arbitration agreement is most closely connected.
iii) Whether the parties have agreed on a choice of law to govern the arbitration agreement is ascertained by construing the arbitration agreement and the contract containing it, as a whole, applying the rules of contractual interpretation of English law as the law of the forum.
iv) Where the law applicable to the arbitration agreement is not specified, a choice of governing law for the contract will generally apply to an arbitration agreement which forms part of the contract.
v) The choice of a different country as the seat of the arbitration is not, without more, sufficient to negate an inference that a choice of law to govern the contract was intended to apply to the arbitration agreement.
vi) Additional factors which may, however, negate such an inference and may in some cases imply that the arbitration agreement was intended to be governed by the law of the seat are: (a) any provision of the law of the seat which indicates that, where an arbitration is subject to that law, the arbitration agreement will also be treated as governed by that country’s law; or (b) the existence of a serious risk that, if governed by the same law as the main contract, the arbitration agreement would be ineffective. Either factor may be reinforced by circumstances indicating that the seat was deliberately chosen as a neutral forum for the arbitration.
vii) Where there is no express choice of law to govern the contract, a clause providing for arbitration in a particular place will not by itself justify an inference that the contract (or the arbitration agreement) is intended to be governed by the law of that place.
viii) In the absence of any choice of law to govern the arbitration agreement, the arbitration agreement is governed by the law with which it is most closely connected. Where the parties have chosen a seat of arbitration, this will generally be the law of the seat, even if this differs from the law applicable to the parties’ substantive contractual obligations.
ix) The fact that the contract requires the parties to attempt to resolve a dispute through good faith negotiation, mediation or any other procedure before referring it to arbitration will not generally provide a reason to displace the law of the seat of arbitration as the law applicable to the arbitration agreement by default in the absence of a choice of law to govern it.
XI The anti-suit injunction
173. If, as we have held, the arbitration agreement is governed by English law, Chubb Russia does not dispute that it was legitimate for the Court of Appeal to exercise its discretion whether to grant an anti-suit injunction afresh and does not contend that it erred in so doing. Its challenge to the order made by the Court of Appeal rests on the assumption that the arbitration agreement is governed by Russian law. Chubb Russia contends that the English courts ought in these circumstances to defer to the decision of the Russian courts on whether their dispute must be referred to arbitration or may be resolved by litigation in the Russian courts. On Chubb Russia’s case the English court’s approach to the grant of anti-suit injunctions should differ according to whether the arbitration agreement is governed by English law or a foreign law. As we have held that the arbitration agreement is governed by English and not Russian law, it is not necessary to address this further ground of appeal. Nevertheless, given that it has been fully argued and the importance of the issues raised, we shall briefly address it.
174. As already noted, by choosing a seat of arbitration the parties are choosing to submit themselves to the supervisory and supporting jurisdiction of the courts of that seat over the arbitration. A well established and well recognised feature of the supervisory and supporting jurisdiction of the English courts is the grant of injunctive relief to restrain a party from breaching its obligations under the arbitration agreement by bringing claims which fall within that agreement in court proceedings rather than, as agreed, in arbitration. A promise to arbitrate is also a promise not to litigate.
175. As explained by Lord Hoffmann in West Tankers Inc v RAS Riunione Adriatica di Sicurtà SpA (The Front Comor) [2007] UKHL 4; [2007] 1 Lloyd's Rep 391, at paras 20-22:
“20. Of course arbitration cannot be self-sustaining. It needs the support of the courts … Different national systems give support in different ways and an important aspect of the autonomy of the parties is the right to choose the governing law and seat of the arbitration according to what they consider will best serve their interests.
21. The Courts of the United Kingdom have for many years exercised the jurisdiction to restrain foreign court proceedings as Colman J did in this case: see Pena Copper Mines Ltd v Rio Tinto Co Ltd (1911) 105 LT 846. It is generally regarded as an important and valuable weapon in the hands of a court exercising supervisory jurisdiction over the arbitration. It promotes legal certainty and reduces the possibility of conflict between the arbitration award and the judgment of a national court. … it saves a party to an arbitration agreement from having to keep a watchful eye upon parallel court proceedings in another jurisdiction, trying to steer a course between so much involvement as will amount to a submission to the jurisdiction … and so little as to lead to a default judgment. That is just the kind of thing that the parties meant to avoid by having an arbitration agreement.
22. Whether the parties should submit themselves to such a jurisdiction by choosing this country as the seat of their arbitration is, in my opinion, entirely a matter for them. The courts are there to serve the business community rather than the other way round. No one is obliged to choose London. The existence of the jurisdiction to restrain proceedings in breach of an arbitration agreement clearly does not deter parties to commercial agreements. On the contrary, it may be regarded as one of the advantages which the chosen seat of arbitration has to offer. ...”
176. In the same case Lord Mance stated at paras 31-32:
“31. The purpose of arbitration (enshrined in most modern arbitration legislation) is that disputes should be resolved by a consensual mechanism outside any court structure, subject to no more than limited supervision by the courts of the place of arbitration. Experience as a commercial judge shows that, once a dispute has arisen within the scope of an arbitration clause, it is not uncommon for persons bound by the clause to seek to avoid its application. Anti-suit injunctions issued by the courts of the place of arbitration represent a carefully developed - and, I would emphasise, carefully applied - tool which has proved a highly efficient means to give speedy effect to clearly applicable arbitration agreements.
32. It is in practice no or little comfort or use for a person entitled to the benefit of a London arbitration clause to be told that (where a binding arbitration clause is being - however clearly - disregarded) the only remedy is to become engaged in the foreign litigation pursued in disregard of the clause. Engagement in the foreign litigation is precisely what the person pursuing such litigation wishes to draw the other party into, but is precisely what the latter party aimed and bargained to avoid.”
177. In granting an anti-suit injunction the English courts are seeking to uphold and enforce the parties’ contractual bargain as set out in the arbitration agreement. In principle it should make no difference whether that agreement is governed by English law or by a foreign law. In both cases the enquiry is whether there has been a breach of the arbitration agreement and whether it is just and convenient to restrain that breach by the grant of an anti-suit injunction. The detail of the enquiry may differ, but its nature is the same.
178. Chubb Russia contends that as a matter of discretion the considerations to be taken into account are different where the arbitration agreement is governed by foreign law. It submits that issues of scope and breach of the arbitration agreement are generally best left to the foreign court which has the requisite expertise in the applicable foreign law.
179. The judge’s view was that different considerations arise where the arbitration agreement is governed by foreign law by reason of the doctrine of forum conveniens. We agree with the Court of Appeal that forum conveniens, which is a matter that goes to the court’s jurisdiction, is not relevant. By agreeing to arbitrate in London the parties were agreeing to submit to the supervisory and supporting jurisdiction of the English courts, including its jurisdiction to grant anti-suit injunctions.
180. Chubb Russia’s principal argument is that considerations of comity nevertheless make it appropriate to defer to the foreign court as a matter of discretion. Comity, however, has little if any role to play where anti-suit injunctive relief is sought on the grounds of breach of contract. As Millett LJ stated in Aggeliki Charis Cia Maritima SA v Pagnan SpA (The Angelic Grace) [1995] 1 Lloyd's Rep 87, 96:
“… in my judgment there is no good reason for diffidence in granting an injunction to restrain foreign proceedings on the clear and simple ground that the defendant has promised not to bring them.
…
The courts in countries … party to … the New York Convention, are accustomed to the concept that they may be under a duty to decline jurisdiction in a particular case because of the existence of an … arbitration clause. I cannot accept the proposition that any court would be offended by the grant of an injunction to restrain a party from invoking a jurisdiction which he had promised not to invoke and which it was its own duty to decline.”
181. Although The Angelic Grace concerned an arbitration agreement governed by English law, that was not material to the reasoning of the Court of Appeal. The rationale for the court’s approach was the fact of the promise made, not the law by which it was governed. That accords with principle.
182. Nor does article II(3) of the New York Convention make any difference. As noted earlier, under this article a court of a Convention state is required to refer the parties to arbitration when it is seized of a matter which the parties have agreed to arbitrate (unless the arbitration agreement is null and void, inoperative or incapable of being performed). The New York Convention is concerned with recognition and enforcement of arbitration agreements and awards, not jurisdiction - see, for example, Shashoua v Sharma [2009] EWHC 957 (Comm); [2009] 2 All ER (Comm) 477, paras 36-38. If a court is seized of jurisdiction under its own law or rules, article II(3) obliges it to exercise that jurisdiction to enforce arbitration agreements. It does not purport to nor does it confer any primacy over the jurisdiction of the courts of the seat.
183. The grant of an anti-suit injunction is always a matter of discretion. There may be circumstances in which it would be appropriate to await a decision of a foreign court. If, for example, the scope of the arbitration agreement was about to be determined by the highest court in the country of the governing law in unrelated proceedings, then it might be sensible for the English court to await that decision. Where, however, the issue arises in proceedings brought in alleged breach of the arbitration agreement, deference to the foreign court should generally give way to the importance of upholding the parties’ bargain and restraining a party to an arbitration agreement from doing something it has promised not to do.
184. We therefore agree with the Court of Appeal that the principles governing the grant of an anti-suit injunction in support of an arbitration agreement with an English seat do not differ according to whether the arbitration agreement is governed by English law or foreign law. Forum conveniens considerations are irrelevant and comity has little if any role to play. The court’s concern will be to uphold the parties’ bargain, absent strong reason to the contrary, and the court’s readiness to do so is itself an important reason for choosing an English seat of arbitration.
185. It follows that if the agreement to arbitrate disputes contained in article 50.1 of the construction contract had been governed by Russian law, it would have been necessary for the English court to determine whether under the law of Russia the agreement is valid and the claim which Chubb Russia is seeking to pursue in Russia falls within its scope. If those questions were answered in the affirmative, it would in any event have been appropriate to grant an anti-suit injunction.
XII Overall conclusion
186. Although our approach to the determination of the law applicable to the arbitration agreement differs from that taken by the Court of Appeal, we have similarly concluded that the arbitration agreement in this case is governed by English law. It is common ground that in these circumstances the arbitration agreement is valid, the dispute between the parties falls within it and that the injunction granted by the Court of Appeal to restrain Chubb Russia from proceeding against Enka in Russia was properly granted. It follows that we would dismiss the appeal.
LORD BURROWS: (dissenting) (with whom Lord Sales agrees)
1. Introduction
189. At first instance, Andrew Baker J declined to reach a decision on the proper law of the arbitration agreement but dismissed Enka’s claim for an anti-suit injunction on the ground of forum non conveniens: [2019] EWHC 3568 (Comm). Subsequently Enka’s claim in Russia to dismiss the Russian proceedings, as being in breach of the arbitration agreement, failed although Chubb Russia’s claim on the merits against Enka also failed. Both Enka and Chubb Russia are appealing that decision to the Russian appeal court (and the appeal is set for late October 2020). Meanwhile the Court of Appeal here (Flaux, Males and Popplewell LJJ) ([2020] EWCA Civ 574) allowed Enka’s appeal against Andrew Baker J’s decision. It held that the proper law of the arbitration agreement was English and granted Enka an anti-suit injunction to stop any Russian appeal going ahead as being in breach of the arbitration agreement.
“Resolution of disputes
50.1. The Parties undertake to make in good faith every reasonable effort to resolve any dispute or disagreement arising from or in connection with this Agreement (including disputes regarding validity of this agreement and the fact of its conclusion (hereinafter - ‘Dispute’) by means of negotiations between themselves. In the event of the failure to resolve any Dispute pursuant to this article within 10 (ten) days from the date that either Party sends a Notification to the opposite Party containing an indication of the given Dispute (the given period may be extended by mutual consent of the Parties) any Party may, by giving written notice, cause the matter to be referred to a meeting between the senior managements of the Contractor and Customer (in the case of the Contractor senior management shall be understood as a member of the executive board or above, in the case of Customer, senior management shall be understood as general directors of their respective companies). The parties may invite the End Customer to such Senior Management Meeting. Such meeting shall be held within fourteen (14) calendar days following the giving of a notice. If the matter is not resolved within twenty (20) calendar days after the date of the notice referring the matter to appropriate higher management or such later date as may be unanimously agreed upon, the Dispute shall be referred to international arbitration as follows:
• the Dispute shall be finally settled under the Rules of Arbitration of the International Chamber of Commerce,
• the Dispute shall be settled by three arbitrators appointed in accordance with these Rules,
• the arbitration shall be conducted in the English language, and
• the place of arbitration shall be London, England.
50.2. Unless otherwise explicitly stipulated in this Agreement, the existence of any Dispute shall not give the Contractor the right to suspend Work.
50.3. Not used.
50.4. Not used.
50.5. All other documentation such as financial documentation and cover documents for it must be presented in Russian.”
2. Clear or undisputed points of law
(i) The seat of the arbitration is England as set out in article 50.1.
(ii) The proper (or “applicable”) law of the main construction contract, which is determined by applying the Rome I Regulation (EC) No 593/2008 (laying down the EU and therefore English conflict of law rules to determine the proper law for contractual obligations), is Russian law. But there is a dispute as to how that conclusion is reached. The relevant provisions of the Rome I Regulation are as follows:
“Article 3 Freedom of choice
1. A contract shall be governed by the law chosen by the parties. The choice shall be made expressly or clearly demonstrated by the terms of the contract or the circumstances of the case. By their choice the parties can select the law applicable to the whole or to part only of the contract.
…
Article 4 Applicable law in the absence of choice
1. To the extent that the law applicable to the contract has not been chosen in accordance with article 3 …, the law governing the contract shall be determined as follows:
…
(b) a contract for the provision of services shall be governed by the law of the country where the service provider has his habitual residence; …
2. Where the contract is not covered by paragraph 1 or where the elements of the contract would be covered by more than one of points (a) to (h) of paragraph 1, the contract shall be governed by the law of the country where the party required to effect the characteristic performance of the contract has his habitual residence.
3. Where it is clear from all the circumstances of the case that the contract is manifestly more closely connected with a country other than that indicated in paragraphs 1 or 2, the law of that other country shall apply.
4. Where the law applicable cannot be determined pursuant to paragraphs 1 or 2, the contract shall be governed by the law of the country with which it is most closely connected.”
David Bailey QC, for Chubb Russia, submitted that the proper law of the main contract is Russian because, applying article 3(1) of Rome I, the choice of Russian law has been made expressly or clearly demonstrated. Robin Dicker QC, for Enka, denied that there has been an express or implied (ie clearly demonstrated) choice of Russian law. Mr Dicker accepted that Russian law is the proper law by reason of article 4 of Rome I but he did not pinpoint why that was so (but because Enka, as the service-provider, is Turkish this must presumably be because Russia is the country with which the contract is manifestly more closely connected than Turkey).
(iii) Although there is no bar to having different proper laws applying to different clauses of the same contract (the so-called concept of dépeçage), the general position taken at common law (not least on grounds of practical convenience) is that a contract has a single proper law. See, for example, Kahler v Midland Bank [1950] AC 24, 42 (per Lord MacDermott); Libyan Arab Foreign Bank v Bankers Trust Co [1989] QB 728, 747 (per Staughton J); Dicey, Morris & Collins, The Conflict of Laws, 15th ed (2012), para 32-026. It is worth stressing that the arbitration agreement here is contained in the main contract. We are not concerned with a free-standing arbitration agreement (see para 230 below).
(iv) The Rome I Regulation does not apply (directly) to an arbitration agreement because of an exclusion from the Regulation of “arbitration agreements and agreements on the choice of court” in article 1(2)(e) of the Regulation. The proper law of the arbitration agreement must therefore (in an English court) be determined by applying English common law conflict of laws rules. They require a court to look for (applying English law) an express choice, an implied choice or, if neither of those applies, the system of law with which the arbitration agreement has its closest and most real connection: Bonython v Commonwealth of Australia [1951] AC 201, 219; Sulamérica Cia Nacional de Seguros SA v Enesa Engenharia SA [2012] EWCA Civ 638; [2013] 1 WLR 102, paras 9 and 25. The first two of those stages are both concerned with ascertaining the parties’ objective intentions. One can regard the exercise as being one of interpretation of the main contract and the arbitration agreement. There is no express choice of law clause in the arbitration agreement in this case, ie there is no mention of choice of law in article 50.1 of the contract.
(v) Mr Bailey at one stage in oral argument appeared to concede that, if the proper law of the arbitration agreement was not Russian by reason of an express or implied choice, it must be English because, as the seat of the arbitration was England, one could not decide that the arbitration agreement had its closest and most real connection to Russia. But he later withdrew that concession. I consider that he was correct to do so (I return to this in para 256 below).
(vi) What is commonly referred to as the curial law is, according to Mustill and Boyd, Commercial Arbitration, 2nd ed (1989), pp 60-62, 64-68, the law dealing with “the manner in which the parties and the arbitrator are required to conduct the reference of a particular dispute” (p 60) and includes “the procedural powers and duties of the arbitrator” (p 62). The curial law is (almost) invariably the law of the seat of the arbitration. As the law of the seat is England, the curial law here is English. Inextricably linked to this is what may be referred to as the curial or supervisory jurisdiction of the courts. This is concerned with the courts’ jurisdiction to support and enforce the arbitration. It includes, for example, the power to remove or replace an arbitrator, to enforce or set aside an arbitral award, and to grant injunctions to support the arbitration including anti-suit injunctions. Like the curial law, the curial or supervisory jurisdiction of the courts is (almost) invariably determined by the seat of the arbitration. Here, therefore, it is not in doubt that the English courts have curial or supervisory jurisdiction in relation to the arbitration and this includes the jurisdiction to grant an anti-suit injunction in this case to restrain the Russian proceedings. In summary, as Popplewell LJ expressed it in the Court of Appeal at para 46, “The significance of the choice of a seat is … a legal one as to the curial law and the curial court.”
(vii) If the proper law of the arbitration agreement is determined to be English, the anti-suit injunction ordered by the Court of Appeal is appropriate. This was conceded by Mr Bailey. The dispute as to whether an anti-suit injunction should be ordered therefore arises only if the proper law of the arbitration agreement is determined to be Russian.
3. A preliminary important point: the dispute concerns the interpretation (or scope) of the arbitration agreement not its validity
195. Andrew Baker J recognised this in his judgment at paras 11-12 (and also at para 88). He said:
“11. … [I]t is common ground that there exists between Enka and Chubb Russia a valid and binding arbitration agreement. That is so even though Chubb Russia is suing in Moscow, and is therefore sued here, as subrogated insurer of Enka’s original contractual counterparty. Whether Russian law or English law governs that question, it is common ground that such an insurer is bound by its insured’s applicable arbitration agreement. The dispute between the parties, then, again as it was in The Angelic Grace, is whether the claim being pursued in the target proceedings is a claim in tort that falls outside the scope of the agreement to arbitrate.
12. The detail is more complex than it was in The Angelic Grace, however, because in that case there was no dispute but that the claim as brought in Italy was a claim in tort, and it was common ground that the question whether it fell within the scope of the arbitration agreement was governed by English law. Here … the law applicable to the question of the scope of the arbitration agreement is disputed; and it is also contentious between the parties whether the claim as brought under Russian law in the Moscow Claim is a claim in tort, or, more strictly, whether it is viable as such. Furthermore, it is effectively common ground that if the question of the scope of the arbitration agreement is governed by English law, then that claim, however it is to be characterised under Russian law, is within that scope. The defendants’ argument that the claim, if rightly characterised as a claim in tort, falls outwith the scope of the arbitration agreement, only arises at all if they are right that scope is a matter of Russian law.”
“So it is article 965 of the Russian Federation Civil Code that establishes the right of the claimant to file against the persons liable for the losses, regardless of what served as the grounds for their occurrence. Therefore, the arbitration clause to which Enka refers does not encompass this dispute and does not extend to it, as the participants are not Enka alone, but also the other ten co-defendants who did not enter into an arbitration clause, and the subject of the dispute is the general obligation of all 11 co-defendants to indemnify the losses caused. On the basis of the above, the arbitral clause set out in point 50.1 of the contract is not applicable and because of this the motion declared by defendant 11 that the claim should be left on file should not be granted.” (Emphasis added)
197. However, Mr Dicker has now submitted that there is also an issue about the validity of the arbitration agreement under Russian law that does not arise under English law. He referred to a Russian decision on 8 February 2018 (in an unrelated matter) on enforcement of an arbitral award under this type of arbitration agreement. The decision was that the arbitration agreement was too uncertain to be enforceable under Russian law apparently because of uncertainty about whether there should have been a reference in the arbitration agreement to the International Court of Arbitration. It was submitted by Mr Bailey in Chubb Russia’s written case (at para 22) that “there is no question of the arbitration agreement being invalid under Russian law”; and, as we have seen in the last paragraph, such an argument about invalidity played no part in the reasoning of the Russian court in the 6 May 2020 decision. In any event, our attention was drawn to a note on the website of Debevoise & Plimpton LLP, dated 7 January 2019, indicating that the February 2018 decision in Russia is inconsistent with the usual approach of the Russian Supreme Court and is not a binding authority. Although Mr Dicker submitted that, in the light of that case, there is “a serious risk” (to use the language in Sulamérica Cia Nacional de Seguros SA v Enesa Engenharia SA [2012] EWCA Civ 638; [2013] 1 WLR 102, para 31: see below para 217) that the arbitration agreement would be struck down as invalid under Russian law, that is not a submission that I can accept without having been provided with proper evidence as to the Russian law on the point. One can accept that there may be a triable issue as to whether there is a serious risk of invalidity in this case by reason of that 2018 case. However, we must decide the issue before us as to the proper law of the arbitration agreement on the evidence presented and on the matters pleaded (which do not include this invalidity point). In any event, the arbitration agreement in question in this case was entered into in 2012 and it would seem that, for the purpose of determining the proper law of the arbitration agreement, we must assess the parties’ intentions and all other relevant factors as at that point in time unaffected by subsequent legal developments in 2018.
198. Why is it an important point that the dispute concerns the interpretation or scope of the arbitration agreement not its validity? There are two linked reasons. First, it is a general principle within the English conflict of laws that, as between two possible proper laws, the courts should favour the proper law that would uphold the validity of an agreement rather than one that would invalidate it (see, for example, In re Missouri Steamship Co (1889) 42 Ch D 321, 341; South African Breweries Ltd v King [1899] 2 Ch 173, 181; Coast Lines Ltd v Hudig and Veder Chartering NV [1972] 2 QB 34, 44 (per Lord Denning MR), 48 (per Megaw LJ); Chitty on Contracts, 33rd ed (2018), para 30-12). Mr Bailey referred to this (in reliance on the work of Gary Born, International Commercial Arbitration, 2nd ed (2014), pp 542-549, and Robert Merkin and Louis Flannery, The Arbitration Act 1996, 6th ed (2019), para 46.10.5) as “the validation principle”. It rests on the rational assumption that parties would prefer to have an agreement upheld than not. But if it is correct that there is no dispute about the validity of the arbitration agreement in this case, the validation principle is not a reason here for favouring English law over Russian law as the proper law of the arbitration agreement.
199. Secondly, Mr Dicker submitted that, even if the dispute goes to the interpretation of the arbitration agreement and not its validity, the rational assumption is that parties would prefer to have all their disputes referred to arbitration rather than just some ie that “rational businessmen are likely to have intended” (using Lord Hoffmann’s words in Fiona Trust & Holding Corpn v Privalov [2007] UKHL 40; [2007] Bus LR 1719, para 13) that a wider rather than a narrower interpretation of disputes which should be arbitrated was intended. However, there is an important difference between, on the one hand, upholding as valid an undisputed agreement which the parties have reached and, on the other hand, determining the correct interpretation or scope of the agreement where the very question at issue is what is it that the parties have agreed. Without empirical evidence about what rational businessmen, one Russian and one Turkish, concluding a contract for work to be carried out in Russia, would be likely to have intended, I am reluctant to place weight on the idea that these parties would have intended a wider rather than a narrower interpretation of their arbitration agreement. The rational assumption is that the parties intended their agreement to be interpreted in such a way that matches what they agreed. Rationally they do not want to be held to have agreed something which is outside their agreement. And one cannot say that, just because English law may adopt a wider rather than a narrower approach to interpretation of an arbitration agreement than Russian law, that will ensure the correct interpretation of the arbitration agreement. I therefore agree with Mr Bailey’s written submission on this point where he said:
“[T]here is no suggestion of invalidity in this case, so as to engage the ‘validation principle’. The argument is simply that English law should be taken to apply because it construes AAs [ie arbitration agreements] more liberally. That point only has to be articulated to reveal its parochialism. It is impossible to say that just because Russian law takes a narrower view of AAs than English law does … that the parties must have intended English law to apply. That is results-based reasoning that ignores the fact that there are legitimate reasons for adopting a narrower approach (such as, in this very case, that a broad interpretation of AAs can lead to an undesirable fragmentation of disputes and proceedings where many different parties are involved).”
4. Why is the proper law of the main contract Russian?
“Law of the Russian Federation, including legislation of the Russian Federation, all regulatory legal acts of the State Authority Federal Bodies, State Authorities of the constituent entities of the Russian Federation, legislation of the constituent entities of the Russian Federation, regulatory legal acts by Local Authorities and any other applicable regulatory legal acts.”
Although this was not a classic choice of law clause of the type “This Agreement is governed by Russian law” Mr Bailey submitted that it had the same effect. I am not persuaded by that. The applicable law article (Attachment 17) does not say “This Agreement is governed by the Applicable law”. Rather article 1 of the contract provides that “The terms used in this Agreement shall have the definitions set forth in Attachment No 17 to this Agreement”. Admittedly, the term “Applicable Law” is used in a large number of specific provisions. But Mr Dicker submitted that one is here talking about an incorporation by reference of relevant legislative provisions and that that is how the phrase “Applicable law” is used in international construction contracts (and he here referred us to a major practitioner work on standard contracts issued by the International Federation of Consulting Engineers (“FIDIC”): Baker Mellors Chalmers and Lavers on FIDIC Contracts, Law and Practice at paras 2.126, 2.140, 2.145). Mr Dicker took as a typical article in the main contract, article 4.1(b) which provides that Enka shall ensure performance of the work in accordance with the Applicable Law. This ensures that, incorporated into the contract, are local laws and regulations, such as those governing planning, health and safety, labour laws, taxes and customs. Admittedly the main contract was not a FIDIC contract. And it may be thought odd to incorporate, where specified, all the relevant law of the Russian Federation (as the first phrase of Attachment 17 requires) including presumably the Russian law of contract in the Russian Civil Code, if all one is concerned with are particular mandatory regulations. My view is that, although there is some ambiguity about the role of the “Applicable Law” definition, Mr Dicker is correct that Attachment 17 does not constitute an express choice of law clause.
“The choice of law by the parties will often be express but the Convention recognizes the possibility that the court may, in the light of all the facts, find that the parties have made a real choice of law although this is not expressly stated in the contract. For example ... references in a contract to specific articles of the French Civil Code may leave the court in no doubt that the parties have deliberately chosen French law, although there is no expressly stated choice of law.” (OJ C282/17)
207. Although there may be marginal differences as between article 3.1 of the Rome I Regulation and the first two stages (express or implied choice) of the common law test for the proper law, they are very closely aligned: see Lawlor v Sandvik Mining and Construction Mobile Crushers and Screens Ltd [2013] EWCA Civ 365; [2013] 2 Lloyd's Rep 98. In my view, English common law, which I here refer to by analogy, would in this case regard there as having been an implied choice of Russian law. Even though there was no express term to that effect, the correct objective interpretation of the contract is that Russian law has been chosen by the parties.
5. The case law on the proper law of the arbitration agreement
209. In the Court of Appeal in this case, Popplewell LJ said, at para 89,
“In my view the time has come to seek to impose some order and clarity on this area of the law, in particular as to the relative significance to be attached to the main contract law on the one hand, and the curial law of the arbitration agreement on the other, in seeking to determine the AA law. The current state of the authorities does no credit to English commercial law which seeks to serve the business community by providing certainty.”
As this passage suggests, the English cases on this question, which appear to have been proliferating in recent years, do not speak with one voice. Certainly in seeking to provide the clarity which Popplewell LJ was rightly seeking, one cannot simply examine the relevant cases and hope to find in them a definitive answer to our question. With reasoning and decisions going both ways, the major purpose of looking at past cases is rather to put the task facing us in context and to ensure that all relevant considerations have been borne in mind. But ultimately, and without any authority binding this court, the way forward rests on a re-examination of principle. It also follows that no attempt is here being made to cover all relevant cases. Rather I shall focus on the most important cases to which we were referred by counsel.
210. The earliest case we were referred to was the House of Lords decision in Hamlyn & Co v Talisker Distillery [1894] AC 202. This concerned a contract between an English and Scots firm, made in London but to be performed in Scotland, with an arbitration clause for arbitration by “two members of the London Corn Exchange, or their umpire, in the usual way”. It was held that the interpretation of the arbitration clause was governed by English law (ie in modern terminology, the proper law of the arbitration agreement was English). But in determining the respective weights of the proper law of the main contract and the proper law of the seat of the arbitration, the case does not take one very far for two reasons. First, the proper law of the main contract was not clarified and indeed it seemed to be assumed that the proper law of the arbitration agreement would also be the proper law of the main contract. In the words of Lord Herschell LC, at p 209: “I see no difficulty whatever in construing the language used as an indication that the contract, or that term of it [ie the arbitration agreement], was to be governed and regulated by the law of England.” Secondly, it was regarded as an important consideration that the arbitration clause was invalid in Scotland - because the arbitrators were not named - but valid in England. It was for this reason that Mr Bailey submitted that this case was an example of the application of the “validation principle”.
“My Lords, it is possible for parties to a contract to choose one system of law as the proper law of their contract and a different system of law as the curial law. Although they may want their mutual rights and obligations under the contract to be ascertained by reference to the system of law of a country with which the transaction has some close and real connection, they may nonetheless consider that the arbitral procedure adopted in some other country, or the high reputation and commercial expertise of arbitrators available there, make the curial law of that country preferable to the curial law of the country whose system of law they have chosen as the proper law.
It is not now open to question that if parties to a commercial contract have agreed expressly upon the system of law of one country as the proper law of their contract and have selected a different curial law by providing expressly that disputes under the contract shall be submitted to arbitration in another country, the arbitrators must apply as the proper law of the contract that system of law upon which the parties have expressly agreed.
But the cases which have given rise to difficulty are those where the parties have made a choice of curial law by a clause of their contract expressly agreeing to arbitration in a particular country but have made no express provision as to the proper law applicable to the contract.”
“Where the laws diverge at all, one will find in most instances that the law governing the continuous agreement [sc the arbitration agreement] is the same as the substantive law of the contract in which it is embodied …”
And at p 456:
“In the ordinary way, this [sc the proper law of the arbitration agreement] would be likely to follow the law of the substantive contract.”
These statements offer support to the proper law of the arbitration agreement being the same law as the main contract rather than being the law of the seat. This is consistent with the approach favoured in Mustill and Boyd, Commercial Arbitration, 2nd ed (1989), at p 63:
“The starting point is to determine the proper law of the contract in which the arbitration is embodied. As a general rule the arbitration agreement will be governed by the same law, since it is part of the substance of the underlying contract.”
However, in the Black Clawson case itself, the force of Mustill J’s support for the “main contract” approach is somewhat diminished because he went on to treat the parties’ choice of Zurich as the place of arbitration as indicating an intention that the law governing the arbitration agreement should be the law of Zurich.
“It is by now firmly established that more than one national system of law may bear upon an international arbitration. Thus, there is the proper law which regulates the substantive rights and duties of the parties to the contract from which the dispute has arisen. Exceptionally, this may differ from the national law governing the interpretation of the agreement to submit the dispute to arbitration. Less exceptionally it may also differ from the national law which the parties have expressly or by implication selected to govern the relationship between themselves and the arbitrator in the conduct of the arbitration: the ‘curial law’ of the arbitration, as it is often called.” (Emphasis added)
215. The primary importance of C v D [2007] EWCA Civ 1282; [2008] Bus LR 843 is obiter dicta of Longmore LJ supporting the “seat” approach. The case dealt with an insurance contract governed by New York law with an English arbitration clause (ie an English seat). The question was which law, New York or English, governed challenges to the arbitral award. It was held that English law applied to determine that question. That seems straightforward because that question was one of curial law and curial jurisdiction and the seat of arbitration (here England) almost invariably determines that law. The proper law of the arbitration agreement and the proper law of main contract were irrelevant in this case. However, Longmore LJ went on, in obiter dicta, to look at the proper law of the arbitration agreement and said this, at para 22:
“The question then arises whether, if there is no express law of the arbitration agreement, the law with which that agreement has its closest and most real connection is the law of the underlying contract or the law of the seat of arbitration. It seems to me that if (contrary to what I have said above) this is a relevant question, the answer is more likely to be the law of the seat of arbitration than the law of the underlying contract.”
“The material validity, scope and interpretation of an arbitration agreement are governed by its applicable law, namely:
(a) the law expressly or impliedly chosen by the parties; or,
(b) in the absence of such choice, the law which is most closely connected with the arbitration agreement, which will in general be the law of the seat of the arbitration.”
217. We then come to what can probably be regarded as the leading case: Sulamérica Cia Nacional de Seguros SA v Enesa Engenharia SA [2012] EWCA Civ 638; [2013] 1 WLR 102. Moore-Bick LJ’s leading judgment (with which Hallett LJ and Lord Neuberger MR agreed) was cited by both Mr Bailey and Mr Dicker in support of their submissions. Claims were brought by Brazilian companies under two insurance policies covering construction work in Brazil. The insurers denied liability on the basis of an exclusion clause and material non-disclosure. There was an express choice of Brazilian law as the governing law in the insurance contracts and an exclusive jurisdiction clause in favour of Brazilian courts. However, the arbitration clause specified England as the seat. In the insurers’ application for an anti-suit injunction, the central question was what was the proper law of the arbitration agreement. Under Brazilian law, there was a “serious risk” (per Moore-Bick LJ at para 31) that the insured was not bound by the arbitration clause as the insured may not have specifically consented to its enforcement. The Court of Appeal held that English law was the proper law of the arbitration agreement. But it is not easy to determine whether Moore-Bick LJ’s judgment supports the “main contract” or “seat” approach.
“… where the arbitration agreement forms part of a substantive contract an express choice of proper law to govern that contract is an important factor to be taken into account. … In the absence of any indication to the contrary, an express choice of law governing the substantive contract is a strong indication of the parties’ intention in relation to the agreement to arbitrate. A search for an implied choice of proper law to govern the arbitration agreement is therefore likely … to lead to the conclusion that the parties intended the arbitration agreement to be governed by the same system of law as the substantive contract, unless there are other factors present which point to a different conclusion. These may include the terms of the arbitration agreement itself or the consequences for its effectiveness of choosing the proper law of the substantive contract.”
“One then has to consider with what system of law the agreement has the closest and most real connection. Although [counsel for the appellant] submitted that the agreement has a close and real connection with the law of Brazil, being the law governing the substantive contract in which the arbitration agreement itself is embedded, I think his argument fails adequately to distinguish between the substantive contract and the system of law by which it is governed. No doubt the arbitration agreement has a close and real connection with the contract of which it forms part, but its nature and purpose are very different. In my view an agreement to resolve disputes by arbitration in London, and therefore in accordance with English arbitral law, does not have a close juridical connection with the system of law governing the policy of insurance, whose purpose is unrelated to that of dispute resolution; rather, it has its closest and most real connection with the law of the place where the arbitration is to be held and which will exercise the supporting and supervisory jurisdiction necessary to ensure that the procedure is effective. Its closest and most real connection is with English law. I therefore agree with the judge that the arbitration agreement is governed by English law.”
220. Subsequent to Sulamérica, there have been two significant first instance decisions. In Arsanovia Ltd v Cruz City 1 Mauritius Holdings [2012] EWHC 3702 (Comm); [2013] 2 All ER (Comm) 1, Andrew Smith J was faced with an express choice of Indian law in the main contract and an arbitration agreement with a London seat. Distinguishing Sulamérica, because there were no indications conflicting with the express choice of law, he held that the proper law of the arbitration agreement was Indian law.
221. Then we come to the valiant attempt by Hamblen J (as he then was) in Habas Sinai Ve Tibbi Gazlar Istihsal Endustrisi AS v VSC Steel Co Ltd [2013] EWHC 4071 (Comm); [2014] 1 Lloyd's Rep 479, to set out, as clearly as possible, the relevant principles to be derived from the cases in this tangled area. In relation to the question of the proper law of the arbitration agreement it was assumed that there was no choice of law in the main contract but that it was governed by Turkish law as the law with which it was most closely connected. The parties had agreed (as found by Hamblen J) a London arbitration clause. It was held that the proper law of the arbitration agreement was English. At para 101, Hamblen J said:
“101. The leading authority is the recent Court of Appeal decision in Sul América Cia Nacional de Seguros SA v Enesa Engenharia SA [2012] 1 Lloyd's Rep 671. Moore-Bick LJ (with whom Hallett LJ and Lord Neuberger MR agreed), summarised the test for determining the law applicable to arbitration agreements at paras 26-32. The Court of Appeal’s decision was considered but distinguished by Andrew Smith J in Arsanovia Ltd v Cruz City 1 Mauritius Holdings [2013] 1 Lloyd's Rep 235. The guidance provided by these authorities may be summarised as follows:
(1) Even if an arbitration agreement forms part of a matrix contract (as is commonly the case), its proper law may not be the same as that of the matrix contract.
(2) The proper law is to be determined by undertaking a three-stage enquiry into: (i) express choice; (ii) implied choice; and (iii) the system of law with which the arbitration agreement has the closest and most real connection.
(3) Where the matrix contract does not contain an express governing law clause, the significance of the choice of seat of the arbitration is likely to be ‘overwhelming’. That is because the system of law of the country seat will usually be that with which the arbitration agreement has its closest and most real connection.
(4) Where the matrix contract contains an express choice of law, this is a strong indication or pointer in relation to the parties’ intention as to the governing law of the agreement to arbitrate, in the absence of any indication to the contrary.
(5) The choice of a different country for the seat of the arbitration is a factor pointing the other way. However, it may not in itself be sufficient to displace the indication of choice implicit in the express choice of law to govern the matrix contract.
(6) Where there are sufficient factors pointing the other way to negate the implied choice derived from the express choice of law in the matrix contract the arbitration agreement will be governed by the law with which it has the closest and most real connection. That is likely to be the law of the country of seat, being the place where the arbitration is to be held and which will exercise the supporting and supervisory jurisdiction necessary to ensure that the procedure is effective.
102. In relation to point (3), I would add that the terms of the arbitration clause may themselves connote an implied choice of law. It is recognised that they may operate as an implied choice of law for the matrix contract itself - see, for example, Cie Tunisienne de Navigation SA v Cie d’Armement Maritime SA [1971] AC 572, Lord Wilberforce at p 596 and Lord Diplock at pp 604-605; … In such cases they must surely equally operate as an implied choice of law for the arbitration agreement.
103. The present case is one where there is no express choice of law in the matrix contract. In such a case the Sul América decision is clear authority that the applicable law will be that of the country of seat. This was acknowledged by Habas who reserved the right to challenge the decision should this case go further.”
224. I interject at this point that there was a careful analysis of these issues by Steven Chong J (as he then was) in BCY v BCZ [2016] SGHC 249; [2016] 2 Lloyd's Rep 583 in the High Court of Singapore. In a judgment which favoured the “main contract” approach, he said at para 65:
“where the arbitration agreement is part of the main contract, I would hold, adopting Sul América, that the governing law of the main contract is a strong indicator of the governing law of the arbitration agreement unless there are indications to the contrary. The choice of a seat different from the law of the governing contract would not in itself be sufficient to displace that starting point.”
“I would therefore summarise the principles applicable to determining the proper law of an arbitration agreement, what I have called the AA law, when found in an agreement governed by a different system of law, as follows:
(1) The AA law is to be determined by applying the three stage test required by English common law conflict of laws rules, namely (i) is there an express choice of law? (ii) if not, is there an implied choice of law? (iii) if not, with what system of law does the arbitration agreement have its closest and most real connection?
(2) Where there is an express choice of law in the main contract it may amount to an express choice of the AA law. Whether it does so will be a matter of construction of the whole contract, including the arbitration agreement …
(3) In all other cases there is a strong presumption that the parties have impliedly chosen the curial law as the AA law. This is the general rule, but may yield to another system of law governing the arbitration agreement where there are powerful countervailing factors in the relationship between the parties or the circumstances of the case.”
6. What is the proper law of the arbitration agreement?
(1) The proper law of the arbitration agreement is Russian law by reason of an implied choice
(i) There is no express choice of law clause in the arbitration agreement here ie there is no mention of choice of law in article 50.1 of the main construction contract.
(ii) The seat of the arbitration, as laid down in the arbitration agreement, is England.
(iii) The proper law of the main construction contract, as we have established at paras 200-208 above, is Russian law by reason of the implied choice of the parties.
(2) Reasons why, absent an express choice of law in the arbitration agreement, there is a presumption (or general rule) that the proper law of the main contract is also the proper law of the arbitration agreement
(i) Dépeçage is the exception not the rule
(ii) The rationale of the separability doctrine
“Separability of arbitration agreement
Unless otherwise agreed by the parties, an arbitration agreement which forms or was intended to form part of another agreement (whether or not in writing) shall not be regarded as invalid, non-existent or ineffective because that other agreement is invalid, or did not come into existence or has become ineffective, and it shall for that purpose be treated as a distinct agreement.” (Emphasis added)
“If the agreement to arbitrate is a term of a larger contract, the law which governs the contract as a whole will generally determine the scope of the terms of that contract. For even though the arbitration agreement is for some important purposes notionally severable from the substantive contract, those purposes do not include the need for its governing law to be separate or different from that of the substantive contract in which the arbitration agreement is contained. It would be perverse to deduce from the principle of severability a rule that the law governing the agreement to arbitrate should be identified without reference to the substantive contract in which the parties included it as a term. The autonomy of the arbitration agreement is one thing; its hermetic isolation would be quite another. To put the point yet another way: the agreement to arbitrate is severable, but that does not mean it is separate. Prior to any severance it will have been governed by the law which governs the contract; after severance, it must remain governed by the same law, for otherwise ‘it’ is not being severed; something else is instead being created.
The result is that if the law which governs the substantive contract is identified by the Rome I Regulation, that law is very likely to govern the agreement to arbitrate, and will therefore also be used by the court to determine the validity, meaning and scope of the arbitration agreement. The fact that the Rome I Regulation makes no claim to identify the applicable law for arbitration agreements does not prevent the common law rules of private international law applying their own solution to the question, which is that the agreement to arbitrate is generally governed by the law of the contract of which it is a term if it is a term of a substantive contract.” (footnotes omitted)
(iii) Dividing the arbitration agreement from the rest of the contract may be problematic
238. Another problematic example arises because of different possible approaches to a “no oral modification” clause. Such a clause is effective to prevent subsequent oral variations of a contract in English law (as laid down in MWB Business Exchange Centres Ltd v Rock Advertising Ltd [2018] UKSC 24; [2019] AC 119). Let us assume, as appears to be the case, that the contrary position is taken under New York law. Let us then assume that there is a contract containing a no oral modification clause and an arbitration agreement. The main contract is governed by New York law but London is the seat of the arbitration. If one applies different proper laws to the main contract and to the arbitration agreement, that would appear to produce the odd result that a subsequent oral variation, which might affect the arbitration agreement, would be effective in relation to the main contract but would be ineffective in relation to the arbitration agreement. Again there would be no such problem if the proper law that applied to the main contract applied also to the arbitration agreement.
(iv) In past cases excessive weight has been given to the seat of arbitration
241. As Adrian Briggs has written in Private International Law in English Courts (2014), para 14.41:
“[T]he identification of the seat is a reliable indicator of the law which was intended or expected by the parties to apply to the proceedings before the arbitral tribunal, to their support, supervision, and control, but it is not a statement of the law which will govern the initial validity and scope of the agreement to arbitrate. The parties may say that they wish to have arbitration in London, and it may well be true that they expect the Arbitration Act 1996 to provide the template for the procedure which will be followed once the arbitration is underway. But it does not follow, or does not need to follow, that the validity of the contract by means of which that agreement was or [was] not made must also be understood to be governed by English law, for that is another question entirely.”
243. And as Popplewell LJ said in the Court of Appeal in this case, at para 72:
“I doubt that [that submission] would now be accorded significant weight in the context of most international arbitration in England, in which English arbitrators are often asked to decide questions under a foreign governing law and are regarded as equipped to do so. A fortiori it is inapplicable to a case such as the present involving arbitration under the ICC Rules which commonly involves appointment of foreign arbitrators from different legal traditions and disciplines notwithstanding that the seat of the arbitration is in London.”
(v) In past cases insufficient weight has traditionally been given to the implied choice of the parties
(vi) The curial law and curial jurisdiction can be separated out from the proper law of the arbitration agreement
(i) Almost all the provisions of the Arbitration Act 1996 being referred to as substantive not procedural are non-mandatory. And in relation to such non-mandatory provisions, section 4(5) of the 1996 Act lays down (as one would expect in any event) that a foreign proper law for the arbitration agreement means that the non-mandatory provisions of the 1996 Act do not apply. This provision was not relied on by Chubb Russia in the Court of Appeal and was not mentioned in the Court of Appeal’s judgment. Section 4 reads as follows:
“Mandatory and non-mandatory provisions
(1) The mandatory provisions of this Part are listed in Schedule 1 and have effect notwithstanding any agreement to the contrary.
(2) The other provisions of this Part (the ‘non-mandatory provisions’) allow the parties to make their own arrangements by agreement but provide rules which apply in the absence of such agreement.
(3) The parties may make such arrangements by agreeing to the application of institutional rules or providing any other means by which a matter may be decided.
…
(5) The choice of a law other than the law of England and Wales or Northern Ireland as the applicable law in respect of a matter provided for by a non-mandatory provision of this Part is equivalent to an agreement making provision about that matter. For this purpose an applicable law determined in accordance with the parties’ agreement, or which is objectively determined in the absence of any express or implied choice, shall be treated as chosen by the parties.”
As the Supplemental Report of the Department’s Advisory Committee on Arbitration Law (DAC) said, at para 12, section 4(5) “avoids the dangers that … a choice of England as the seat of the arbitration will necessarily entail the imposition of every provision of the Act”.
(ii) The remaining provisions of the 1996 Act relied on by Mr Dicker (sections 12-13 and 66-68) appear to be procedural not substantive (they are concerned with extending time limits for beginning arbitration proceedings, limitation periods, and the enforcement and setting aside of an award). But even if one regards them as substantive (see Popplewell LJ at para 96) it is clear that, in themselves, they cannot be regarded as having any bearing on the proper law of the arbitration agreement.
(vii) Section 103(2)(b) of the Arbitration Act 1996 (codifying article V(1)(a) of the 1958 New York Convention) is neutral
“103. Refusal of recognition or enforcement.
(1) Recognition or enforcement of a New York Convention award shall not be refused except in the following cases.
(2) Recognition or enforcement of the award may be refused if the person against whom it is invoked proves -
(a) that a party to the arbitration agreement was (under the law applicable to him) under some incapacity;
(b) that the arbitration agreement was not valid under the law to which the parties subjected it or, failing any indication thereon, under the law of the country where the award was made; …”
This statutory provision therefore deals with the refusal of recognition or enforcement of a non-domestic arbitral award (ie an award made in a territory outside the UK in a state which is a party to the New York Convention: Arbitration Act 1996 section 100(1)) where an arbitration agreement is invalid under the law to which the parties subjected it or, failing any indication thereon, under the law of the seat. True it is that that constitutes legislative acceptance of the relevance of the law of the seat. But this provision is only directly concerned with the enforcement or recognition of arbitral awards. It is not directly concerned with the validity of an arbitration agreement prior to any question as to its enforcement or recognition although Mr Dicker submitted (relying on Albert van den Berg, The New York Convention of 1958 (1981), pp 126-128) that what is relevant at the end should also be relevant at the start. Mr Bailey’s response was that, even if one were to regard this provision as having relevance at the pre-enforcement stage, the provision tended to support his case because the relevance of the law of the seat is only at the default level: where the parties have chosen the proper law of the arbitration agreement, including impliedly, the law of the seat does not apply. In other words, his submission was that this statutory provision was simply irrelevant where there has been an implied choice (as on the facts of this case). I agree with that. However, it is important to add that the statutory provision is irrelevant to this case for a wider reason: as I have made clear at paras 194-199 above, this case is concerned with the interpretation of an arbitration agreement and not with its validity. It should also be stressed that the award in this case, because the seat is England, would be a domestic award to which section 103(2)(b) does not apply.
“Although international harmonisation of choice-of-law rules on the basis of the rules enshrined in article V(1)(a) of the New York Convention is superficially attractive, it is not wholly unproblematical. If a national court may, in the exercise of discretion, order enforcement of an award notwithstanding the fact that the underlying arbitration clause is invalid according to the law specified by article V(l)(a), it is legitimate to question whether it would be logical or sensible to treat the choice-of-law rules endorsed by article V(l)(a), as interpreted by van den Berg, as being automatically applicable in contexts other than the enforcement of arbitral awards, contexts in which the element of discretion is absent.”
(viii) The analogy to an exclusive jurisdiction clause
“[A]s a matter of common law, normally a jurisdiction agreement (like arbitration agreements, which are also excluded by article 1(2)(e) from the application of the Rome I Regulation) is governed by the law applicable to the contract of which it forms a part. Accordingly, and as a matter of the common law principles of the conflict of laws, the law which governs the contract will also generally govern the jurisdiction agreement. This means … that this law governs the construction and interpretation of the agreement …”
(ix) Conclusion
(3) The proper law of the arbitration agreement is Russian law even if there has been no implied choice
(4) Stating the common law on the proper law of an arbitration agreement
(i) The proper law of the arbitration agreement is to be determined by applying the three stage common law test. Is there an express choice of law? If not, is there an implied choice of law? If not, with what system of law does the arbitration agreement have its closest and most real connection?
(ii) Where there is an express proper law clause in the arbitration agreement (which is rare) that will be determinative.
(iii) Where there is no such clause, there is a presumption or general rule that the proper law of the main contract is also the proper law of the arbitration agreement. That presumption or general rule can assist the enquiry at any of the three stages of the common law approach. (It is most appropriate to use the language of a presumption where one is considering the parties’ choice at the first two stages of the enquiry - ie it is a presumption of the parties’ intentions - and to use the language of a general rule where one is considering the third stage of the closest and most real connection.)
(iv) That presumption may most obviously be rebutted, or there is an exception to that general rule, where the standard “validation principle” (of the English conflict of laws) applies ie where the law of the seat (or another relevant jurisdiction) would treat the arbitration agreement as valid whereas the proper law of the main contract would treat the arbitration agreement as invalid (or, as in the Sulamérica case, not binding on one of the parties). In very rare cases that presumption would also be rebutted where it is clear that the parties have chosen the law of the seat as the proper law of the arbitration agreement even though there is no express proper law clause in the arbitration agreement.
7. Concluding remarks on the proper law of an arbitration agreement
8. The anti-suit injunction
9. Conclusion
LORD SALES:
263. I agree with the judgment of Lord Burrows. In relation to determining the proper law of an arbitration agreement contained in a main contract my view is that the “main contract” approach should be preferred to the “seat” approach. I add a short judgment of my own to explain my position in relation to the points on which there is a difference of view within the court and to indicate the areas where I am in agreement with the judgment of Lord Hamblen and Lord Leggatt.
264. The court is taking this opportunity to clarify the position regarding the approach to determining the proper law of an arbitration agreement which is a provision within a main contract. The main contract may or may not contain a provision stating the proper law of the contract. Where the main contract contains such a provision, it is not usual for the parties also to include a distinct term to state the proper law of the arbitration agreement embedded in the main contract.
265. According to English conflict of laws rules, the proper law of the main contract will usually be determined by application of the Rome I Regulation, but that does not apply in relation to the arbitration agreement. In relation to the arbitration agreement, the proper law is determined by reference to the conflict of laws rules of the common law: the proper law is that chosen by the parties (i) expressly or (ii) by implication, according to the terms of any agreement between them, and (iii) in the absence of such choice is the law of the jurisdiction with which the arbitration agreement has the closest and most real connection.
Choice of the parties
266. Where the main contract includes a provision stating the proper law of that contract, I agree with Lord Hamblen and Lord Leggatt that the ordinary effect of the provision is that this indicates that the parties have chosen the same proper law for the arbitration agreement.
267. I further agree with Lord Hamblen and Lord Leggatt that for these purposes there is not necessarily a sharp division between an express choice of law and an implied choice of law. The point can be illustrated by the decision in Sulamérica Cia Nacional de Seguros SA v Enesa Engenharia SA [2012] EWCA Civ 638; [2013] 1 WLR 102 (“Sulamérica”). That case concerned an arbitration agreement contained in a main contract which included a term stating that the proper law of the contract was Brazilian. In his judgment, Moore-Bick LJ assumed that what was in issue was whether the parties had thereby made an implied choice of law in relation to the arbitration agreement, and held that by virtue of the application of the validation principle the choice of law term could not be interpreted as having that effect: paras 25-26 and 31. However, one might analyse the effect of the proper law provision in the main contract by asking whether on the true construction of its express terms the statement that the proper law of the contract was Brazilian law extended to cover the arbitration agreement which was part of that contract. Again, application of the validation principle would indicate that in the particular circumstances of the case the parties did not intend that statement to extend so far.
268. Stages (i) and (ii) of the common law rule are aligned with the test in article 3(1) of the Rome I Regulation. The first main point of difference between the judgment of Lord Burrows and the judgment of Lord Hamblen and Lord Leggatt is whether in the circumstances of the present case the parties impliedly chose Russian law as the law governing the main contract, including the arbitration agreement. On that question, I agree with Lord Burrows that they did. Although the parties did not include an express choice of law statement in the main contract, they included many references in the main contract to make it clear that they intended that Russian law should govern their relationship. In the circumstances of the case, and given the nature of the task to be performed by Enka, it would have been bizarre for them to assume that any other law was to apply. The guidance in the report by Giuliano and Lagarde on the Rome Convention which later became the Rome I Regulation (para 203 above) is strong support for this view. Unlike in Sulamérica, there was no good countervailing reason to indicate that the parties intended that the choice of law they had made for their contract should not extend to the arbitration agreement which was part of it.
269. Where the parties to a main contract include an arbitration agreement as part of that contract, then in general terms there are strong grounds to infer that they intend their choice of the law to govern that contract to cover the arbitration agreement as well, as Lord Hamblen and Lord Leggatt point out: para 53 above. There is a presumption that in ordinary circumstances a contract has a single proper law since otherwise “a serious element of uncertainty” would be introduced into mercantile agreements: Jacobs, Marcus & Co v Credit Lyonnais (1884) 12 QBD 589, 602-603 per Bowen LJ; see also Kahler v Midland Bank [1950] AC 24, 42 (Lord MacDermott). A contract contains a unified package of rights and obligations, created in the same set of circumstances, so the usual and natural inference is that the parties intend, on an objective basis, that the same proper law should apply in relation to it. An arbitration agreement contained in the main contract imposes an obligation to take disputes to arbitration in certain circumstances, as part of the package of rights and obligations created by and set out in the main contract. In usual circumstances, I can see no good reason to infer that the parties to the main contract intended the interpretation of the obligation to arbitrate to be governed by any different system of law than the system of law which governs the interpretation of all the other obligations in their contract.
270. Applying the same system of law to govern the construction of the whole of the contract the parties have made ensures simplicity and coherence in its interpretation. It avoids the uncertainty associated with subjecting different parts of the contract to interpretation according to different systems of law. Any national system of law may be expected to have internal coherence, which will not be the case when two national systems of law are set side by side or are overlaid. Each will have an internal logic and in dealing with particular matters which is at variance from the internal logic of the other. Each may have different solutions to practical problems which are coherent within that system, but are opposed to the solutions given by the other system according to what is coherent within that other system. The presumption that a contract has a single proper law thus reflects the usual expectations of the parties to a contract, since it is a reasonable inference that they prefer certainty, coherence and simplicity in working out the practical implications of their agreement.
271. In my view, these points underlie the observation by Lord Mustill in Channel Tunnel Group Ltd v Balfour Beatty Construction Ltd [1993] AC 334, 357-358, that it would be exceptional for the proper law of the arbitration agreement to be different from the proper law of the main contract. Lord Mustill’s opinion in this area carries great weight. He also pointed out that it is less unusual for the curial law in relation to an arbitration to be different from the proper law of the main contract (and the proper law of an arbitration agreement contained in the main contract). The explanation for this is that the curial law follows the choice of seat. When the parties choose a particular seat, their reasons for doing so include the relationship stipulated by the law of the jurisdiction of the seat as to the grounds on which the courts of that jurisdiction may interfere with the arbitral process or its outcome and the extent to which those courts may take action positively to support the arbitral process and uphold the agreement to arbitrate, including by the grant of injunctive relief. These reasons apply whatever the proper law of the main contract or the arbitration agreement may be. Hence I do not consider that ordinarily the choice of the seat provides any sound basis to infer what the parties intended or might have expected the proper law of the main contract or the arbitration agreement to be.
272. Two comments may be made about this. First, many decades ago it was understood that when the parties stipulated that the seat for their arbitration would be in a particular jurisdiction their intention was that the arbitrators would be local lawyers chosen for their expertise in the law of that jurisdiction, so that the inference could be drawn that the parties intended that they would apply that law in determining issues in dispute, including as to the proper interpretation of the arbitration agreement and the main contract. But changes in the way international arbitration was conducted meant that such an inference was already suspect by 1970, as Lord Wilberforce explained in Cie Tunisienne de Navigation SA v Cie d’Armement Maritime SA [1971] AC 572, 596. Under modern conditions of international arbitration, in which arbitrators may be drawn from different jurisdictions and are regularly expected to receive evidence about and to apply foreign law, it is now no longer a plausible inference.
273. Secondly, parties may sometimes choose arbitration for resolution of their disputes with a seat in a neutral jurisdiction because one or other of them does not have complete trust in the impartiality of the courts of the state of the other. But a preference for a neutral seat does not support any inference as to the parties’ intentions as to the law which the arbitrators should apply when interpreting the main contract or the arbitration agreement. Arbitrators can be expected to apply any relevant law, of whichever legal system is appropriate, in an impartial way and the courts of the neutral jurisdiction will be impartial in applying the curial law. If an inference is sought to be drawn as to the proper law of the main contract or the arbitration agreement, something more is required: an indication that the parties wished the law to be applied to govern the interpretation of their contract to be neutral in the sense that it is not aligned with the home jurisdiction of either of them. Exceptionally, the circumstances may support such an inference: see eg Egon Oldendorff v Libera Corpn [1995] 2 Lloyd's Law Rep 64, 69 and see para 114 above. However, the circumstances of the present case show that no such inference can be drawn here. The parties have stipulated that Enka’s obligations under the main contract should incorporate norms of Russian law. Accordingly, it is my view that Lord Hamblen and Lord Leggatt overstate the significance of the choice of the seat in this case. The choice of curial law associated with the choice of the seat is directed to a different subject-matter (regulation of the relationship between the courts of place of the seat and the arbitral process) than the rules directed to determining the proper law of a contract for the purpose of interpreting it, so it is not appropriate to use the former as a basis for establishing what the latter should be.
274. The inference that the parties who made the contract in the present case intended that the interpretation of the whole of it should be governed by Russian law is especially strong, since the arbitration agreement is contained in a complex main contract with many interacting parts which have to live together in a coherent relationship. In particular, the parties’ intention, judged objectively, is that the obligation to arbitrate set out in the arbitration agreement contained in article 50.1 of the main contract should be interpreted in a way which makes it coherent with the other obligations in the same provision to seek to negotiate in good faith to find a resolution for disputes. I can see no reason why the interpretation of the latter set of obligations is not governed by Russian law, like all the other obligations in the main contract. The obligation to arbitrate in article 50.1 is likewise just another obligation set out in the main contract and it is so closely related to the other dispute resolution obligations in the main contract that the obvious inference is that the parties intended the interpretation of the whole of the provision to be governed by the same law, ie Russian law.
275. The separability principle which exists in relation to an arbitration agreement contained within a main contract does not alter this analysis. That principle has limited significance. As reflected in section 7 of the Arbitration Act 1996, it allows for the survival of an arbitration agreement contained in a main contract if the validity, existence or effectiveness of the main contract is called in question, so that the arbitrators can rule on such matters. This tells one nothing about the legal system which the parties intended or might reasonably have expected to govern the interpretation of the arbitration agreement as part of the main contract.
276. By contrast, the validation principle, as illustrated by Hamlyn & Co v Talisker Distillery [1894] AC 202 and Sulamérica, does allow one to draw an inference as to the system of law which the parties intended should govern the interpretation of the arbitration agreement. The principle can provide a basis for distinguishing the proper law of the arbitration agreement from that of the main contract or, where the proper law of the main contract is uncertain, it may provide a basis for an inference also to be drawn that the proper law of the main contract is intended to follow the choice of proper law for the arbitration agreement (in Hamlyn v Talisker Lord Herschell LC referred to this possibility at p 209).
277. In my view, the validation principle is an aspect of the general objective approach to determining the intention of the parties to a contract ut res magis valeat quam pereat (so that the main object of the agreement is upheld and not destroyed). Where the main contract contains an arbitration agreement, it will be clear that the parties intend that the obligation to arbitrate as set out in the arbitration agreement should be valid and effective. The parties are presumed to know the state of the law at the time they contract. If it appears that according to the law which governs the main contract the arbitration agreement would be invalid, then it can be inferred that the parties intended that a different law should govern the arbitration agreement in order to uphold its validity and effect. The same is true if it appears that according to the law which governs the main contract the arbitration agreement would be subject to a serious risk of being found to be invalid or that its binding force would be destroyed (as in Sulamérica), since the inference is that the parties would choose certainty rather than uncertainty in upholding the effectiveness of this part of their contract. Usually, since the legal system which governs the main contract is ruled out by this reasoning, the obvious conclusion is that the parties intended the law of the jurisdiction of the seat which they have stipulated to apply instead. The terms of the arbitration agreement, set against the background of the state of the law in the two candidate jurisdictions, show that the parties intended the law of the jurisdiction of the seat to apply in this sort of case. This reasoning does not apply where what is in issue is the choice of the proper law to determine the scope of the arbitration agreement rather than whether it would be invalid or would not impose a binding obligation to go to arbitration if one system of law were applied rather than another.
278. In Sulamérica, Moore-Bick LJ rightly held that the validation principle applied so as to negative any choice of Brazilian law as the proper law of the arbitration agreement. He seems to have drawn the conclusion that this meant that the parties had formed no intention regarding what was to be the proper law of the arbitration agreement (see para 31) and so proceeded to analyse the position by reference to the common law default rule at stage (iii), in order to conclude that English rather than Brazilian law governed the arbitration agreement contained in the main contract. However, in my opinion, following the reasoning above, the better view is that the validation principle showed that the parties intended that English law should govern the arbitration agreement. This conclusion should have been reached at stage (i)/stage (ii) of the common law analysis.
279. In the present case, subject to one argument introduced by Enka for the first time on the appeal to this court (see para 197 above), the validation principle has no application. Up to the hearing in this court, it has been common ground that under Russian law the arbitration agreement in article 50.1 is valid and binding in its effect; the issue that has divided the parties is the effect that application of Russian law would have regarding the interpretation of its scope. As to Enka’s new argument that the validation principle does in fact apply, I agree with Lord Burrows that if our view regarding the proper law of the arbitration agreement had prevailed the case should have been remitted to the Commercial Court and that it would have been for that court to consider whether the new argument could be introduced and, if it were, then to rule upon it alongside the other issue of Russian law which is in dispute between the parties, namely whether the interpretation of article 50.1 according to Russian law would be narrower or the same as that given by English law.
280. The second main area of disagreement appearing from the judgment of Lord Burrows and the judgment of Lord Hamblen and Lord Leggatt relates to the operation of the common law default rule at stage (iii), if the parties have made no choice at stage (i) or stage (ii). On the analysis of Lord Burrows, with which I agree, the parties to the main contract impliedly intended that the interpretation of the AA in that contract should be governed by Russian law, at stage (ii). If that were right, stage (iii) would not be reached. However, the majority do not agree about this. On their analysis it is necessary to consider the position on the footing that the parties have made no choice at stage (i) or stage (ii).
The default rule
281. In the early formulation of the common law rule by Dicey in 1896 (para 36 above), the difference between stage (i)/stage (ii) and stage (iii) was described as one between what the parties (actually) intended and what they “may fairly be presumed to have intended”. Obviously, imputed choice is something different from actual choice. Later, the common law default rule at stage (iii) was formulated in terms of the system of law with which the contract has its closest and most real connection. But this does not mark a radical change. Rather, focusing on the closest and most real connection serves the same underlying policy, which is to seek to reflect the likely expectations of the parties as businesspeople, by producing an outcome which is reasonable and coherent in its own terms and does not place excessive emphasis on the boundary between stage (ii) and stage (iii). If, on analysis, the parties have not made a choice of proper law themselves - perhaps because they did not think about it or they chose to leave matters unclear in the interests of arriving at an agreement without having to argue about it and in the hope that a dispute might never arise which required a determination of the issue - the policy of the common law, as expressed in the default rule at stage (iii), is to produce the answer which it is plausible to think businesspeople in the position of the parties, acting reasonably, would have been likely to have chosen for themselves if they had to confront the issue.
282. Many of the factors relevant to an argument that an implied choice of proper law can be identified at stage (ii) will also be relevant to the alternative argument based on the default rule at stage (iii). In broad terms, businesspeople would expect them to be likely to produce similar outcomes. That has certainly been the judicial approach until fairly recently, as illustrated by the decision of the House of Lords in Amin Rasheed Shipping Corpn v Kuwait Insurance Co [1984] AC 50. In that case, the majority of the Appellate Committee determined the proper law of the contract by reference to stage (ii), while Lord Wilberforce reached the same conclusion by reference to the test at stage (iii), for closely similar reasons. Similarly, in the Cie Tunisienne case all members of the Appellate Committee arrived at the same conclusion regarding the proper law of the contract, but they did so by different routes; some found that the parties had made a choice, others that the default rule in stage (iii) applied. In the leading authorities referred to in the Cie Tunisienne case, Bonython v Commonwealth of Australia [1951] AC 201, and In re United Railways of Havana and Regla Warehouses Ltd [1961] AC 1007, the test applied to determine the proper law of the contract was that stated by Lord Simonds in Bonython, at p 219: “the system of law by reference to which the contract was made or that with which the transaction has its closest and most real connexion”, which elides the question of party choice and the default rule, and deliberately so. The close alignment of the approach under stage (ii) and that under stage (iii) was traced by Toulson LJ in Lawlor v Sandvik Mining and Construction Mobile Crushers and Screens Ltd [2013] 2 Lloyd's Law Rep 98, paras 20-27.
283. Since the boundary between stage (ii) and stage (iii) is by no means crystal clear and there is scope for eminent judges to reach different views about which stage of the common law analysis supplies the answer in any given case, it would risk the appearance of arbitrariness to adopt a default rule at stage (iii) which was radically at variance in the results it produced by comparison with stage (i) and stage (ii). Further, if the common law adopted a radically divergent default rule, so that significant differences in outcome turned on this, that would be an incentive for parties to litigate the question of whether a case was to be analysed as falling within stage (i)/ stage (ii) or within stage (iii). This would be contrary to the interest of businesspeople to avoid expensive litigation to resolve disputes, so far as possible. If the parties appreciate that all roads lead to Rome, so to speak, the need for litigation to decide which road should be taken is avoided.
284. This analysis prompts a further comment on Sulamérica. Having held (contrary to my view at para 278 above) that the application of the validation principle meant that the parties had made no choice as to the proper law of the arbitration agreement within the main contract, Moore-Bick LJ proceeded to apply the default rule at stage (iii) (para 32). However, in doing so he took the view that the arbitration agreement had its closest and most real connection with the law of the place of the seat (England); and this despite the fact that, subject to the application of the validation principle, he thought that at stage (ii) the parties impliedly intended that the proper law of the main contract (Brazilian law) would also apply to the arbitration agreement (paras 26-27). I think it is evident that Moore-Bick LJ’s analysis at both stage (ii) and stage (iii) was rightly designed to give effect to the validation principle and to uphold the effective binding force of the arbitration agreement in that case in line with the parties’ intention. But unfortunately in doing so he proposed a solution which, if taken at face value and generalised, would give rise to the kind of radical divergence of outcome between stage (i)/stage (ii) and stage (iii) which the common law default rule in fact seeks to avoid, and which does not reflect the previous authorities referred to above.
285. The court in Sulamérica did not need to take the step of saying that the arbitration agreement had its closest and most real connection with the law of the place of the seat in order to produce the appropriate result, which was to uphold the binding effect of the arbitration agreement in line with the parties’ intention by application of the validation principle: see para 278 above. One might also say that the validation principle is capable of operating at stage (iii) as well as at stage (i)/stage (ii), as an aspect of the common law default rule, as an expression of the policy of the common law to uphold the validity and binding effect of an arbitration agreement which the parties have chosen to enter into. But again, that would mean that the law of the place of the seat (England) was applicable as the proper law of the arbitration agreement as the only remaining candidate once Brazilian law had been eliminated as a candidate by application of the validation principle. At the end of this process of analysis, it could be said that the arbitration agreement had its closest and most real connection with the law of the place of the seat; but that is only in the very limited sense that this was the only system of law with which the arbitration agreement could be said to have any connection, if the validation principle was to be given effect. However, the way in which Moore-Bick LJ explains his reasoning at para 32 makes it sound as though the general starting point, if the analysis at stage (i)/stage (ii) does not give a result, is always that the arbitration agreement contained in the main contract has as its proper law the law of the place of the seat rather than generally following the proper law of the main contract. In my respectful opinion, that approach is erroneous and contrary to principle and authority.
286. In my view, the powerful points which Lord Hamblen and Lord Leggatt make at para 53 of their judgment regarding the expectations of businesspeople to the effect that their contractual arrangements should have internal coherence (so that if the parties have chosen the proper law of the main contract they would ordinarily expect the same proper law to apply in relation to an arbitration agreement contained within it) also apply in relation to the operation of the default rule at stage (iii) where the circumstances mean that it is clear what the proper law of the main contract is, even when that is not as a result of the exercise of choice within the meaning of article 3(1) of the Rome I Regulation. The main contract carries with it the legal system which governs its interpretation and application. Accordingly, the need for and expectation that there will be coherence between the main contract and the arbitration agreement contained within it means that the arbitration agreement has its closest and most real connection with the legal system which constitutes the proper law of the main contract in which it is contained.
287. By contrast, it is my opinion that the argument for a connection between the arbitration agreement and the law of the place of the seat is much weaker. The parties obtain the benefits of the curial law of the place of the seat in any event, whatever the proper law of the arbitration agreement: see para 271 above. Therefore the choice of seat does not point to any particular connection with the arbitration agreement in terms of providing guidance as to its proper law. To the extent that the courts of the place of the seat exercise a supervisory function in relation to the arbitration, for example to ensure that the arbitrators act within the scope of the arbitration agreement according to its true construction, they can readily do that by reference to evidence about any foreign law which is identified as the proper law of the arbitration agreement.
288. In the present case, Enka disputes that there has been a choice of proper law within article 3(1) of the Rome I Regulation for the main contract but accepts that article 4, as the default rule set out in the Regulation, has the effect that the proper law of the main contract is Russian. This concession must be based on an acceptance that it is clear from all the circumstances that the main contract is manifestly more connected with Russia than with any other country (including the country where Enka is habitually resident, Turkey): see article 4(3). The assessment under article 4(3) involves inquiring into the country with which the contract taken as a whole has its closest connection. Where, in this case, following this path of analysis, the main contract taken as a whole manifestly has its closest connection with Russia so that Russian law is taken to be its proper law, it seems to me that the reasoning above indicates that the arbitration agreement contained in the main contract similarly has its closest and most real connection with Russian law. There is no good reason to conclude that the law of the seat is more closely connected or provides a better guide for the purposes of application of a rule designed to identify the law which is to govern the interpretation of the arbitration agreement.
289. In their judgment, in relation to stage (iii) of the common law rule Lord Hamblen and Lord Leggatt rely on article V(1)(a) of the New York Convention and section 103(2)(b) of the Arbitration Act 1996 in support of their view that at that stage the arbitration agreement in the main contract has its closest and most real connection with the law of the seat (England) rather than with the law which governs the main contract. In my opinion, this is to give those provisions excessive weight in analysing the application of the common law rule. As I have sought to show, the policy of the common law as reflected in the default rule at stage (iii) is to align that rule with the likely result the parties would have wished to achieve to produce reasonable coherence across their whole contractual relationship. Application of article V(1)(a) would defeat that policy, because it would produce a radical divergence between the effect of stage (i)/stage (ii) and stage (iii) of the common law rule.
290. Another way of putting this is to say that the points made by Lord Hamblen and Lord Leggatt at para 53 of their judgment do not drop out of the analysis for the purposes of the common law at stage (iii), but continue to have validity and force at that stage as well. By contrast, when one is applying article V(1)(a) those points do drop out of the picture and have no force, precisely because the New York Convention legislates for a rule which excludes them from being relevant.
291. Moreover, article V(1)(a) does not provide a good guide as to the application of the common law rule. Article V(1)(a) sets out a default rule within the scheme of the Convention which is different from the default rule under the common law and which, if applied, would undermine the validation principle when it is applied by the common law as an aspect of stage (iii) (see para 285 above). The provision states that, in the absence of a choice by the parties, recognition of an arbitral award may be refused if the arbitration agreement “is not valid … under the law of the country where the award was made”. That seems to say that recognition may be refused if the arbitration agreement is invalid according to the law of the place of the seat; but under the common law in such a case the validation principle would apply and the court would identify another system of law as the proper law of the arbitration agreement in order to uphold and give effect to the arbitration agreement. Article V(1)(a) thus sets out what can fairly be described as a very simple and inflexible default rule for the purposes of the Convention regime which is different from the more flexible and nuanced common law default rule of “closest and most real connection” and should not be taken to displace that rule. Within the Convention regime, the rationale for the choice of a simple test is not difficult to understand. It is a clear rule by reference to which it is reasonably easy to judge whether the actions of states party to the Convention comply with it or not. By contrast, the common law default rule has been established for a very long period of time, well before international policy arguably came to crystallise in line with article V(1)(a) of the New York Convention, and it reflects different policy objectives, as set out above. So far as choice of proper law for an arbitration agreement is concerned (as distinct from regulation of the recognition of foreign arbitral awards, which is governed by section 103(2)(b) of the 1996 Act), article V(1)(a) of the New York Convention is part of an unincorporated treaty and it is unclear by what process of legal reasoning it could be taken to have displaced the well established common law default rule. None of the leading common law authorities give any weight to article V(1)(a) in the formulation or application of the common law rule.
292. For present purposes, it is not necessary to determine the position where it is not article 4(3) but one of the other more mechanical rules in article 4 which determines the proper law of the main contract. It suffices to say that I think there is force in the argument that the analysis above tends to indicate that also in that sort of case the proper law of the main contract will usually provide the best indication of the proper law of an arbitration agreement contained within it, at stage (iii) of the common law rule. Again, the points made by Lord Hamblen and Lord Leggatt at para 53 of their judgment should not drop out of the picture here. This approach would reflect how the parties are likely to have approached matters themselves, by starting with their agreement on the substantive aspects of the main contract and then adding the arbitration agreement into that framework, with the general intention and expectation that the main contract and the arbitration agreement would form a coherent whole. It would also have the merit of making the analysis in any case as simple and clear as possible. One would start by identifying the proper law of the main contract according to the choice of the parties pursuant to article 3 of the Rome I Regulation and, in default of any choice, by reference to the rules in article 4 of the Regulation, and then the presumption would be that the proper law of the arbitration agreement is the same.
The anti-suit injunction
293. Finally, if the interpretation of article 50.1 were governed by Russian law, as Lord Burrows and I think it is, and a Russian court is about to pronounce on the interpretation of that provision according to Russian law in the parallel proceedings between the parties in Russia, the question arises whether this makes it inappropriate for the English court to issue an anti-suit injunction in favour of Enka, whether on grounds of forum non conveniens, comity or otherwise. On that issue, I agree with section IX of the judgment of Lord Hamblen and Lord Leggatt, which is in line with Lord Burrows’ judgment. The English court, as the court of the place of the seat of the arbitration chosen by the parties, has a particular responsibility to ensure that the arbitration agreement is upheld and applied in accordance with its terms. On the basis of expert evidence of foreign law adduced in the usual way, the English court could determine the meaning of article 50.1 according to Russian law. If article 50.1, so construed, imposes an obligation on Chubb Russia to proceed by way of arbitration rather than by litigation, the English court could and should enforce that obligation by way of an anti-suit injunction.