Charles Edwards, Barrister and TECBAR reviews the case of Honeywell International Middle East Ltd v Meydan Group Llc [2014] EWHC 1344 (TCC), where the High Court enforced a Dubai Arbitration Award in the sum of approximately £12.6 Million made by a tribunal in an international arbitration under the rules of the Dubai International Arbitration Centre (“DIAC”). This judgment provides useful guidance on the approach to section 103 of the Arbitration Act 1996 by the English Court.
The Claimant in the proceedings was Honeywell International Middle East (“Honeywell”). The Defendant was Meydan Group Llc (“Meydan”). The parties executed a contract for the supply, installation, testing and commissioning of an ELV System at Meydan Racecourse (“the Contract”). The Contract between the parties at Clause 20.6 included the following in relation to Arbitration:
“Unless settled amicably, any dispute shall be settled by international arbitration.
Unless otherwise agreed by both Parties:
- The dispute shall be finally settled under the Rules of Commercial Conciliation and Arbitration 1994 of the Dubai International Centre
- the dispute shall be settled by three arbitrators appointed in accordance with these Rules,
- the arbitration shall be conducted in the language for communication defined in Sub-Clause 1.4 [Law and Language], and
- the venue of the arbitration shall be Dubai”
- that a party to the arbitration agreement was (under the law applicable to him) under some incapacity;
- 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;
- that he was not given proper notice of the appointment of the arbitrator or of the arbitration proceedings or was otherwise unable to present his case;
- that the award deals with a difference not contemplated by or not falling within the submission to arbitration or contains decisions on matters beyond the scope of the submission to arbitration or contains decisions on matters beyond the scope of the submission to arbitration (but see subsection (4));
- that the composition of the arbitral tribunal or the arbitral procedure was not in accordance with the agreement of the parties or, failing such agreement, with the law of the country in which the arbitration took place;
- that the award has not yet become binding on the parties, or has been set aside or suspended by a competent authority of the country in which, or under the law of which, it was made.
- The award was not valid under UAE law because it resulted from a contract procured by bribery.
- The award was not valid because the Defendant was deprived of the opportunity to nominate an arbitrator and as a result recognition and enforcement should be refused under sections 103(2)(a), (b), (c) and (e) of the Act.
- The award dealt with a difference not contemplated by or not falling within the terms of the submission to the arbitration and therefore the Tribunal wrongly considered and awarded relief in relation to new claims subsequent to the Request for Arbitration under section 103(2)(d) of the Act.
- The Court should refuse enforcement of the Award under section 103(2)(f) of the Act, as there are proceedings before the Court of Appeal at the seat of the Arbitration relating to the ratification of the Award and an order for execution of the Award had been suspended because of the continuing proceedings before the Court of Appeal at the seat of the Arbitration and therefore the Award was not binding.
- The Award had been made in respect of matters which are not capable of settlement by arbitration under the applicable law (section 103(3) of the Act).
- In accordance with section 103(3) of the Act, the enforcement of the Award would be contrary to the public policy of the United Kingdom as the state in which recognition and enforcement of the Award was sought because the Award relates to a Contract procured by bribery.
- The effect of the Award combined with a previous interim Award causes it substantial injustice and therefore it would be contrary to public policy to enforce it.
- In accordance with section 103(1) of the Act, the Court must order enforcement the Award unless the grounds set out in section 103(2) of the Act are made out.
- In applying the principles relevant to summary judgment and striking out, the Court needed to assess what is put before it, in particular where a party has not raised a matter which could have been raised before the arbitral tribunal or they have taken inconsistent positions to those they now urge upon the Court, the Court should not lightly accede to a submission that the matter needs to be determined at a trial where the underlying reason is often to cause further delay and costs in the hope that something may turn either to strengthen an existing ground or to establish a new ground.
- The Defendant did not have a real prospect of successfully contending that the arbitration agreement was not valid so as to amount to a ground for refusing recognition or enforcement of the award under section 103(2)(b).
- Incapacity under section 103(2)(a) of the Act refers to the parties’ legal capacity to enter into the arbitration agreement and not the difficulties that a party may have had in appointing legal representatives and therefore the difficulties regarding the Defendant’s financial arrangements and its ability to fund legal advice are not matters that go to the issue of whether the Defendant was under an incapacity. The Court formed the view that the Defendant’s point had no real prospect of success in establishing that recognition or enforcement of the award should be refused under section 103(2)(a) of the Act or because the arbitration agreement was not valid under section 103(2)(b) of the Act or that the Defendant was not given proper notice of the appointment of the arbitrator of the proceedings under section 103(2)(c) or that composition of the arbitral tribunal or procedure was not in accordance with the agreement of the parties under section 103(2)(e).
- There was no real prospect of the Defendant succeeding in its contention that recognition of the award should be refused under section 103(2)(c) or (d) of the Act on the basis that the Defendant was not given proper notice of the arbitration proceedings or was unable to present its case or that the award dealt with a difference not contemplated by or not falling within the terms of the submission to arbitration or that it contained decisions on matters beyond the scope of the submission to arbitration.
- There was no real prospect of the Defendant succeeding in its contention that recognition of the award should be refused under section 103(2)(f).
- There was no real prospect of the Defendant successfully establishing that recognition of the award should be refused under section 103(3) on the basis that the Award was in respect of matters which are not arbitrable or on the basis of matters not raised in the arbitration or the individual allegations themselves.
- In respect of the Defendant’s contention that the Award should not be recognised or enforced either as a matter of public policy under section 103(3) of the Act or on a separate ground of material non-disclosure, the Court was of the view that the Defendant had not established grounds on which it had any real prospect of success that the Court should set aside the Order.
Charles Edwin Edwards MSt(Cantab) MSc(Lond) FCInstCES Barrister
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