Royal Courts of Justice, Rolls Building
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL
Before :
MR JUSTICE FOXTON
Between :
THE CZECH REPUBLIC |
Claimant/ Applicant |
- and - |
|
(1) DIAG HUMAN SE (2) MR JOSEF STAVA |
Defendants/ Respondents |
Graham Dunning KC, Lucas Bastin KC, Peter Webster, Richard Hoyle and Katherine Ratcliffe (instructed by Arnold & Porter Kaye Scholer (UK) LLP) for the Claimant
Lord Verdirame KC, Philip Riches KC, Kate Parlett, Jonathan Ketcheson, Sam Goodman and Isabelle Winstanley (instructed by Mishcon de Reya LLP) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 17-21, 24, 25, 28 June and 2 July 2024
Further written submissions: 11 July 2024
Draft Judgment Circulated: 31 July 2024
Approved Judgment
This judgment was handed down at 10.30am on 09 August 2024 by circulation to the parties or their representatives by e-mail and by release to the National Archives.
.............................
MR JUSTICE FOXTON
The Honourable Mr Justice Foxton:
INTRODUCTION
This is the second substantive judgment in a challenge brought by the Czech Republic to an award dated 18 May 2022 (“the Award”), made by a tribunal (“the Tribunal”) appointed under the Agreement between the Czech and Slovak Federal Republic and the Swiss Confederation on the Promotion and Reciprocal Protection of Investments of 5 October 1990 (“the BIT”). The Award was rendered in an arbitration commenced by Diag Human SE and Mr Stava (“the Arbitral Claimants”) against the Czech Republic (“the BIT Arbitration”).
I handed down judgment addressing aspects of the Czech Republic’s challenge on 8 March 2024 ([2024] EWHC 503 (Comm)) (“the March Judgment”) in which I determined most of the issues raised by the Czech Republic’s challenge under s.68 of the Arbitration Act 1996 (“the 1996 Act”), the extent to which challenges brought by the Czech Republic were barred by s.73(1) of the 1996 Act and whether all of the issues raised by the Czech Republic under s.67 of the 1996 Act were properly classified as jurisdictional for the purposes of that section.
This judgment addresses:
The surviving s.67 challenges on their merits:
The “No Investment” objection.
The “Ratione Temporis”objection.
The objection that Diag Human is not a protected investor (“the No Investor” objection).
In the context of that third issue, the Arbitral Claimants’ application to amend to advance an argument of issue estoppel.
A residual issue in relation to one of the s.68 challenges which I left open in the March Judgment.
I do not intend to repeat the summary of the background of this case, the history of the arbitral proceedings or the terms of the Award which appear in the March Judgment.
RELEVANT PRINCIPLES: S.67
It is well established that in resolving the s.67 challenges, I must determine the question of whether the Tribunal had substantive jurisdiction de novo. Any influence of the Award in this context must derive from the cogency of its reasoning, rather than the fact of the determination.
In reaching my conclusions, I am not confined to the evidence before the Tribunal nor – provided that the points raised remain within the permissible bounds of s.73(1) of the 1996 Act – by the particular arguments deployed in support of a jurisdictional objection before the Tribunal. Inevitably, with such a narrow front left in play, the resources of time and thought poured into the surviving jurisdiction challenges far exceed the attention given to these matters in the BIT Arbitration, when there were so many other issues to address. The evidence adduced at the s.67 hearing is, as with other hearings, subject to the ultimate control of the court: Central Trading & Exports Ltd v Fioralba Shipping Co (The Kalisti) [2014] EWHC 2397 (Comm), [2015] 1 All ER (Comm) 580,[14]-[33]. However, the circumstances in which the court can refuse to admit new evidence on a s.67 application, and in particular how far the prior conduct of the arbitration bears on that issue, remains obscure.
THE EVIDENCE
Oral evidence
The Czech Republic
The Czech Republic adduced oral evidence from two witnesses.
The first was Mr Jensen. Mr Jensen was a company lawyer at Novo Industries from 1986 and, following a 1989 merger with Nordisk Gentofte, with Novo Nordisk until January 2012. He made it clear that he was not involved in Novo Nordisk’s business nor how Mr Klaus Eldrup-Jørgensen (head of the blood plasma unit) ran that business. I accept that Mr Jensen was doing his best to assist the court. However, he had almost no involvement in the key events in 1990-1992, and his principal involvement came in 2004, when he was responsible for Novo Nordisk’s official interactions with a Czech Parliamentary Commission established to investigate the claim brought by Conneco against the Czech state. In that context, he was essentially dependent on the recollection of those ex-employees he spoke to, and those few documents to which Novo Nordisk still had access following the sale of the blood plasma business and the transfer of its archive in 1995. Even in relation to events in 2004, Mr Jensen’s recollection, some 20 years, on was clearly inaccurate in certain respects. For example, while he was adamant that he only attended one meeting with the Commission, an all-day meeting on a Sunday, the contemporaneous documents show that he attended two, both on Mondays: one on 31 May 2004 and another 28 June 2004. I have concluded that the contemporary documents and the inherent probabilities provide a better guide as to Conneco’s interactions with Novo Nordisk. I consider that material in some detail in Annex 2.
The Czech Republic’s second factual witness was Dr Petr Turek, a physician who specialised in haematology. He worked at the Institute of Haematology and Blood Transfusion in Prague between 1980 and 2005 and was a consultant to the Czech Ministry of Health. He explained why the committee established by the Ministry of Health (of which he was a member) did not select Conneco in the 1991 tender. I am satisfied that Dr Turek was doing his best to assist the court, albeit the events he was describing took place over 30 years ago. His evidence was of very limited relevance to the matters which remain in issue.
The Arbitral Claimants
The Arbitral Claimants’ principal witness was Mr Josef Stava. He is 74 years old. Mr Stava founded both Conneco and its Swiss parent company, and is currently chair of Diag SE’s board of directors. He was clearly the moving spirit in establishing its business. Mr Stava is the only person involved in Conneco’s business who gave evidence in the BIT Arbitration and to the court. Perhaps for that reason, his arbitration statements went into a level of detail about that business which I doubt Mr Stava was familiar with contemporaneously, still less 30 years on. The reality is that Mr Stava was simply not in a position to speak to most of that detail, although, unfortunately, that did not prevent him from attempting to do so. Further, the more rigorous checking and testing of his evidence occasioned by the court process exposed a number of significant inaccuracies. At best, this revealed an unhealthy level of wishful thinking on Mr Stava’s part, and a wholesale failure to take the care necessary to ensure that his evidence was as accurate as it could be. The overall effect was to cause me to approach Mr Stava’s evidence with considerable caution.
The need for that caution was reinforced by an event which happened in the course of Mr Stava’s cross-examination. At each break in his evidence, Mr Stava was warned that he must not communicate with anyone about this case until his evidence had been completed. It was clear, however, that at the end of Day 3, Mr Stava was becoming frustrated at what he described as difficulties with his memory. He asked one of his counsel team (in open court, and hence on the transcript) if it was possible to finish his evidence then, so that he could talk to his legal team. Entirely properly, he was told that this was not possible, and the court reiterated that warning.
Most regrettably, Mr Stava ignored that warning and the court’s instruction. He contacted his Czech lawyer, Dr Kalvoda, to ask for a copy of a document from the Commercial Arbitration, and which he had previously sent to this London legal team in the days before he gave evidence. He was sent a further copy of the document, together with a covering email in Czech which contained commentary. Mr Stava asked his daughter Dagmar Stave to obtain a translation of the email, and then sent that translation along with the original email from Dr Kalvoda (but without any attachments) to his legal team early the following morning, suggesting certain questions relating to the material and one further topic which he could be asked in re-examination. His daughter Dagmar Stava was copied into that communication, and she also arranged for a hardcopy of the document to be printed and given to Mr Stava. The Arbitral Claimants’ legal team informed the court at the start of the hearing that morning that there had been an overnight development which might impact on Mr Stava’s continuing evidence, on which they wanted the opportunity to take instructions. I can now see that what was being sought was an opportunity to take instructions to provide the overnight communications to the court, albeit this was not clear to me at the time. The evidence proceeded, but it soon became apparent that Mr Stava was relying on a particular document (which he was holding in his hand) and questioning about the provenance of that document initiated a process which revealed the information set out in this paragraph. Dealing with these events occasioned a significant disruption to the trial and added considerably to the burdens on both legal teams, but most particularly on the Czech Republic’s legal team.
I should note the following facts:
Mr Stava made no attempt to hide the document in the witness box.
He had sent the original document in question to his legal team before giving evidence (but not Dr Kalvoda’s commentary which was produced overnight while Mr Stava was giving evidence).
Mr Stava was clearly seeking to influence the content of his re-examination on two topics.
I accept that Mr Stava refused to talk about the case with his Czech lawyer or his daughter Dagmar because of the court’s instruction, as is apparent from contemporaneous messages produced to the court.
However, I am at loss to understand how Mr Stava can have understood he was not permitted to discuss his evidence until his time in the witness box was over, and yet believed he could, in effect, seek to prepare the content of his re-examination.
When first asked when his daughter had first given him this document, Mr Stava replied, “two weeks ago, three weeks ago” and “not overnight”. That was likely to have been broadly accurate so far as the document originally sent to his London legal team on Sunday 16 and Monday 17 June is concerned, but not the email produced by Dr Kalvoda on 19 June 2024.
Mr Stava’s counsel did not seek re-examine Mr Stava.
I have little doubt that the long and frequently bitter legal battle which Mr Stava has fought with the Czech Republic has been a frustrating and draining experience. However, that does not excuse what I am satisfied was a clear act of non-compliance with the court’s instruction. The issue of what other consequences may flow from these events is for another occasion. I am concerned with their impact on the trial. I am satisfied that Mr Stava’s non-compliance provides a further reason to approach his evidence with caution, not least because it suggests that his dispute with the Czech Republic may have consumed him to a sufficient degree to override his better judgment. The net effect is that I have felt unable to rely on Mr Stava’s evidence save to the extent that it accords with the documentary record or the inherent probabilities.
The Arbitral Claimants called three other factual witnesses: Mr Stava’s three daughters, Ms Dagmar Stava, Ms Nicole Stava and Ms Silvia Stava. Ms Dagmar Stava gave evidence as to her perceptions of her father’s control of the Koruna Trust and Diag SE, and to the effect that in so far as she had rights of control over decisions, she would exercise them in accordance with her father’s wishes (Ms Nicole Stava and Ms Silvia Stava giving evidence to the same effect on that last issue). Ms Dagmar Stava was unwise in responding to her father’s request to be provided with documents during his cross-examination without checking matters with the English lawyers. I accept, however, that she was not involved in any attempt to influence the scope of her father’s re-examination and was essentially responding in an administrative way to what her father had asked her to do. A contemporaneous message shows her telling her father not to call anyone while in the course of giving evidence, which is to her credit.
The evidence as to how Mr Stava’s daughters would have responded if their consent had been required for some course of conduct to be pursued was wholly hypothetical in nature, and the factual position is better gauged by reference to the inherent probabilities rather than their assertions now in evidence served in support of their father’s case in this long running and bitter dispute. I accept that all three daughters felt a strong sense of loyalty to their father and would naturally be disposed to defer to him in matters of business. However, it is not difficult to envisage unhappy circumstances in which those loyalties might be tested to destruction (for example in the aftermath of a family row or following the introduction of a significant new element into the family dynamic).
In addition, the Arbitral Claimants adduced hearsay evidence from Colonel Miloš Bohonĕk MD, Ph D. From January 1991 to May 1995, Colonel Bohonĕk was Chief Doctor of the Transfusion and Plasmapheresis Centre of Hospital Mĕlník (“Hospital Mĕlník”), in which capacity he worked with Conneco and Mr Stava. His statement described the parlous state of Czech hospitals following the fall of the Communist state system, and in particular the deficiency in plasma derivatives. He referred to the arrangement which Hospital Mĕlník concluded with Conneco, and his understanding that there were similar arrangements between Conneco and Hospital Uherské Hradištĕ (“Hospital Hradištĕ”) and Hospital Frýdek Místek (“Hospital Místek”). He recollected about 30 centres or blood banks having entered into agreements of this kind with Conneco in the early 1990s. He stated that the Co-operation Agreement between Hospital Mĕlník and Conneco worked well and was mutually beneficial. Finally, he stated that he was surprised to receive the Bojar Letter, but for which he was “confident that the mutually beneficial relationship between Hospital Mĕlník and Conneco likely would have lasted for several more years.”
There is a dispute about the weight to be accorded to that evidence, which it is convenient to address now. I accept that the Czech Republic has not had an opportunity to test the evidence at this hearing which must affect the weight which I can accord to it. However, the effect of that factor is reduced by the fact that the Czech Republic had the opportunity to cross-examine Colonel Bohonĕk on the same evidence four years ago and chose not to do so. Nor am I persuaded that I should draw the inference that Colonel Bohonĕk is not willing to give evidence because he does not believe his evidence will withstand cross-examination. Colonel Bohonĕk has written to the Arbitral Claimants’ solicitors stating that he is applying for the post of Director of the Central Military Hospital Prague, and as a high-ranking professional soldier and civil servant, he believes it would not be appropriate for him to give evidence against the Czech Republic in public proceedings. I see no reason not to accept the broad terms of that evidence at face value. However, I feel able to place less weight on the detail of Colonel Bohonĕk’s evidence – for example the specific numbers given – because there is no explanation of how Colonel Bohonĕk knew of or arrived at those figures.
Absent witnesses
The Czech Republic has asked the court to draw an adverse inference from the Arbitral Claimants’ failure to call certain witnesses. In Efobi v Royal Mail Group Ltd [2021] UKSC 33, [41], Lord Leggatt stated:
“The question whether an adverse inference may be drawn from the absence of a witness is sometimes treated as a matter governed by legal criteria, for which the decision of the Court of Appeal in Wisniewski v Central Manchester Health Authority [1998] PIQR P324 is often cited as authority. Without intending to disparage the sensible statements made in that case, I think there is a risk of making overly legal and technical what really is or ought to be just a matter of ordinary rationality. So far as possible, tribunals should be free to draw, or to decline to draw, inferences from the facts of the case before them using their common sense without the need to consult law books when doing so. Whether any positive significance should be attached to the fact that a person has not given evidence depends entirely on the context and particular circumstances. Relevant considerations will naturally include such matters as whether the witness was available to give evidence, what relevant evidence it is reasonable to expect that the witness would have been able to give, what other relevant evidence there was bearing on the point(s) on which the witness could potentially have given relevant evidence, and the significance of those points in the context of the case as a whole. All these matters are inter-related and how these and any other relevant considerations should be assessed cannot be encapsulated in a set of legal rules.”
The first individual whose absence is said to give rise to a positive inference against the Arbitral Claimants is Dr Rabanser, Mr Stava’s and the family’s personal Liechtenstein lawyer and a principal of the corporate trustee of the Koruna Trust. The absence of evidence from Dr Rabanser deprives the Arbitral Claimants of corroborative evidence for Mr Stava’s evidence as to the practical operation of the Koruna Trust. I am also satisfied that I can infer that, had he been called to give evidence, Dr Rabanser would not have supported any suggestion that he had reached a private agreement or understanding with Mr Stava to follow his instructions, to the extent this was not permitted by Liechtenstein law.
In addition, the Czech Republic invites me to draw an adverse inference from the absence of evidence from staff employed by Conneco who were “involved in the business the Defendants say was being conducted in the Czech Republic in the early 1990s”, with specific reference to Dr Gnädinger. Given the period of time which has since elapsed, I am not persuaded that I should attach positive significance to the lack of evidence from Dr Gnädinger. However, the fact remains that Mr Stava is the only live witness who has given evidence about the status and extent of Conneco’s business.
Expert evidence
The court heard evidence from two experts in Liechtenstein law: Mr Nicholas Reithner for the Czech Republic and Dr Christian Batliner for the Arbitral Claimants. Both experts were knowledgeable, fair and sought at all times to assist the court by their evidence. For that reason, the matters in issue between them were very limited.
The Documentary Record
The Czech Republic made a number of criticisms of the Arbitral Claimants’ disclosure. Against a background in which orders for disclosure had been made in the BIT Arbitration, applications were made in these proceedings for targeted categories of disclosure, and two orders were made by me on 28 March 2023 and 21 March 2024.
The disclosure order made on 28 March 2023 required disclosure of documents evidencing whether the Lawbook Transaction was performed, and whether there was any transfer of shares. The Arbitral Claimants’ response to that order was tardy, and I have previously criticised the effort which was applied in complying with the order. However, a disclosure statement of 15 January 2024 describes the search process undertaken, which was supervised by a solicitor save for the search by Dr Rabanser, a qualified Liechtenstein lawyer, of his own files. These searches produced three new documents (i.e. documents not disclosed in the BIT Arbitration), one of which was withheld from inspection on the basis of a claim to privilege which has not been challenged. I am unable to conclude that there has been any deliberate non-compliance with that order.
The disclosure order made on 21 March 2024 required production of documents evidencing the existence of creditors of the Koruna Trust, and documents sufficient to evidence any instructions given by Mr Stava to Dr Rabanser in respect of the Koruna Trust, in each case limited to particular periods of time. The response to the first request was a statement that there were no creditors (rather than a search of documents). As to the second, a disclosure statement of 22 April 2024 described the searches made using keywords, the review of the returned documents by a solicitor, and the fact that there were no responsive documents.
In explaining the relative paucity of documents, the Arbitral Claimants rely on what Mr Stava alleges was a raid on Conneco’s offices in 1993 in which documents were taken by the Czech police. I am satisfied that that there was some form of criminal investigation by the Czechoslovak (“CSFR”) authorities into Conneco from March 1991, and some form of investigation into what the Czech Republic contended in the Commercial Arbitration was a different complaint in which Conneco featured. In the Interim Award in the Commercial Arbitration in 1997, the Commercial Arbitration tribunal referred to the criminal file number allocated to the investigation: CVS:MVV 65/91. At a later stage of the Commercial Arbitration, issues about the alleged insufficiency of contemporaneous documents came into sharper focus after Ernst & Young had produced a report on damages. On 19 September 2006, the Commercial Arbitration tribunal ordered the Czech Republic to produce the “commercial records and correspondence of Conneco, Novo Nordisk and Diag Human submitted and not returned from the closed investigation file of the Czech Police in 1993 and 1994” (referred to in the Final Award, [139]). The context in which those records were submitted is not clear. I am unable to conclude that the use of the word “submitted” is necessarily inconsistent with the police requiring documents to be handed over at Conneco’s premises after an unscheduled visit, but equally the Commercial Arbitration awards contain no reference to a “raid”.
It is not clear from the materials available to me how the Czech Republic responded to Conneco’s request for that order – and in particular, whether it denied that documents had been taken by legal compulsion, or that they had not been returned. The Final Award ([140]) records the Czech Republic expressing reservations about the Commercial Arbitration tribunal’s order but stating that it had nonetheless sought to comply with it to the greatest extent possible. Mr Bastin KC was not able to ascertain what the Czech Republic’s position had been in the Commercial Arbitration on the issue of whether documents had been obtained by the Czech police by legal compulsion and not returned.
At paragraph 190 of the Final Award, the Commercial Arbitration tribunal recorded Conneco’s submission that “the evidence of the plaintiff had been affected during the dispute by the unlawful practices by the defendant. Indications of this included the release of transaction and customs documentation of the plaintiff to the Police of the Czech Republic under the pretext of the criminal proceedings in 1993-1995 and the fact that after the postponement of the case they were not returned. The plaintiff said it had managed to obtain the documents and material unlawfully [retained] by the defendant and is now presenting the evidence from them. The commercial activity of the claimant prior to the relevant time is now shown in detail”. Once again, the position the Czech Republic took in response is unclear. While I accept that Conneco was submitting to the Commercial Arbitration tribunal that, in effect, its case was supported by comprehensive contemporaneous documentation and that any deficiency had been made good, I would have expected Conneco’s lawyers to put the best face on matters, and do not regard that submission as inconsistent with a state of affairs in which some relevant documents had been taken and not returned or replaced.
In an affidavit filed on Diag SE’s behalf in proceedings brought in the Commercial Court to enforce the Final Award in the Commercial Arbitration, sworn in November 2011, Mr Balboa referred to the fact that “all the business documentation and custom forms which the police confiscated as part of this [criminal] investigation were retained by the police and subsequently declared to be ‘lost’ causing considerable disruption and difficulties for Diag”. The Czech Republic’s response to that assertion is not apparent from the materials filed for this hearing.
The Arbitral Claimants raised the suggestion that relevant documents had been seized by the Czech police from Conneco’s offices and not returned in the BIT Arbitration. In its Counter-Memorial, the Czech Republic described the suggestion as implausible, but the only evidence adduced was from a Mr Petr Horacek (a former police officer, and a lawyer employed by the Czech Republic until 2015) who was not involved in any investigations of Mr Stava and Conneco. His evidence was that, had such a raid taken place and documents been seized, a protocol would have been issued recording what had been taken and Mr Stava would have been permitted to ask for the material back. In its submissions in the disclosure phase, the Czech Republic’s position in the BIT Arbitration was that no such raid took place, but no further evidence was adduced.
In correspondence in the BIT Arbitration, the lawyers from the Czech Republic stated that the file relating to one of the Czech police investigations had been destroyed in 2002. A police file in relation to a later and different police investigation was said to have been destroyed in 2018. In relation to the alleged seizure of documents in 1993, the letter denied that there had been a seizure but said that no protocol of seized documents had been found by the Czech police when asked to search.
The Tribunal was not persuaded that the existence of such a raid and/or removal of documents had been established, pointing to the absence of contemporaneous emails of complaint (Award, [383]).
I accept that documents are likely to have been taken from Conneco in the exercise of police powers. That appears probable against a background of at least one and possibly two ongoing criminal investigations, one directed to Conneco and the other involving it. This was not a complaint made for the first time in the BIT arbitration, and there is no evidence before me, at least, of the Czech Republic denying that documents had been taken in the course of the Commercial Arbitration. Nor do I feel able to place the weight which Mr Bastin KC asks me to place on Conneco’s understandable forensic assertion in the Commercial Arbitration that it had made any alleged documentary deficiency good. However, I do not feel able to make a positive conclusion as to what documents were taken and not returned or found elsewhere. I am not persuaded that Mr Stava would know the position in that level of detail.
PRINCIPLES OF TREATY INTERPRETATION
It was common ground that in resolving the issues which arise as to the interpretation of the BIT, I should apply the “general rule of interpretation” in Article 31 of the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties (“VCLT”):
A treaty shall be interpreted in good faith in accordance with the ordinary meaning to be given to the terms of the treaty in their context and in the light of its object and purpose.
The context for the purpose of the interpretation of the treaty shall comprise, in addition to the text, including its Preamble and annexes: (a) any agreement relating to the treaty which was made between all the parties in connection with the conclusion of the treaty; (b) any instrument which was made by one or more parties in connection with the conclusion of the treaty and accepted by the other parties as an instrument related to the treaty.
There shall be taken into account, together with the context: (a) any subsequent agreements between the parties regarding the interpretation of the treaty or the application of its provisions; (b) any subsequent practice in the application of the treaty which establishes the agreement of the parties regarding its interpretation; (c) any relevant rules of international law applicable in the relations between the parties.
A special meaning shall be given to a term if it is established that the parties so intended.”
For the purposes of Article 31(2), the “context” includes the title and preamble of the Treaty. It has been noted that “contextually, the title may be the obvious starting point for identifying the ambit of a treaty or a section or provision in it”, although “titles are often too general to provide precise guidance” (Gardiner Treaty Interpretation 2nd (2015), [4.2.2]). Context can also include “any structure or scheme underlying a provision or the treaty as a whole” (ibid, [4.2.3]).
Article 32 of the VCLT, “Supplementary means of interpretation”, provides:
“Recourse may be had to supplementary means of interpretation, including the preparatory work of the treaty and the circumstances of its conclusion, in order to confirm the meaning resulting from the application of Article 31, or to determine the meaning when the interpretation according to Article 31: (a) leaves the meaning ambiguous or obscure; or (b) leads to a result which is manifestly absurd or unreasonable.”
In MSC Mediterranean Shipping Co SA v Stolt Tank Containers BV [2023] EWCA Civ 1007, [61], the Court of Appeal summarised the court’s interpretative task when faced with an international law treaty as follows:
“Thus the court’s task, as set out in article 31 of the Vienna Convention, is to ascertain the ordinary meaning of the terms used in their context and in the light of the Convention’s object and purpose, with recourse to supplementary means of interpretation either to confirm the meaning thus ascertained or, in the strictly limited cases identified in art 32(a) and (b), to determine the meaning.”
Finally, I was referred to an important passage in the Supreme Court’s decision in Moohan v Lord Advocate [2014] UKSC 67, [64] when discussing Article 31 of the VCLT:
“It would be wrong to read article 31 as reflecting something like the so-called ‘golden rule’ of statutory interpretation where one starts with the ordinary meaning of the words and then moves to other considerations only if the ordinary meaning would give rise to absurdity. That is not international law. The International Law Commission made clear in its commentary to the draft treaty, at p 219, that, in accordance with the established international law which these provisions of VCLT codified, such a sequential mode of interpretation was not contemplated:
‘The commission, by heading the article ‘General rule of interpretation’ in the singular and by underlining the connection between paras 1 and 2 and again between para 3 and the two previous paragraphs, intended to indicate that the application of the means of interpretation in the article would be a single combined operation.’”
THE “NO INVESTMENT” OBJECTION
Some preliminary observations
When the Czech Republic’s “No Investment” objection is unpacked, it can be seen to involve the cumulative effect of three different contentions:
First, that there was no (or no sufficient) contribution by the investor.
Second, that an investment must involve the assumption of investment risk, and that commercial or sovereign risk of the kind which arise in commercial trading, is not sufficient.
Third, however analysed or characterised, the matters relied upon to constitute the protected investment are simply too insubstantial in their content, value and duration to meet the threshold for constituting a protected investment under the BIT.
The characterisation of the issue of whether there was an investment as jurisdictional has long been accepted by investment treaty arbitral tribunals (for the purposes of ascertaining their own jurisdiction), and this issue has also been classified as jurisdictional in English first instance court decisions (for the purposes of determining whether ss.67 or 103(2) of the 1996 Act are engaged): Gold Reserve Inc v. Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela [2016] EWHC 153 (Comm); PAO Tatneft v. Ukraine [2018] EWHC 1797 (Comm) and The Republic of Korea v. Dayyani and Others [2019] EWHC 3580 (Comm). It has also been accepted as a matter going to an arbitral tribunal’s jurisdiction by the Singapore Court of Appeal in Swissbourgh Diamond Mines (Pty) Ltd v Kingdom of Lesotho [2018] SGCA 81, [93].
This aspect of the jurisdictional challenges available in investment treaty arbitration merits further consideration. Jurisdictional challenges in commercial arbitration will generally offer a binary outcome – either there was an arbitration agreement, or there was not; either the dispute fell within it, or it did not; either the tribunal has been properly constituted, or it has not. It is certainly possible for issues to arise which may challenge the jurisdiction of the tribunal (and, hence, any award on the merits) only to some extent: for example if the tribunal makes a compendious award of damages by reference to two disputes, one of which is found by the court to fall within the arbitration agreement, and one which does not. A jurisdictional challenge in a commercial arbitration can sometimes involve detailed consideration of issues of fact – whether negotiations culminated in a concluded contract, whether a particular individual had authority to commit one party and so forth. But this is relatively rare, and, even when it does arise, it is generally possible to demarcate the jurisdictional and merits disputes in relatively clear terms.
In commercial arbitration, arguments that the jurisdiction of the tribunal can, in the alternative, be supported on a different basis to that found by the arbitral tribunal are almost unknown, which may explain why there is no provision in the s.67 context for the service of a respondent’s notice of the kind provided for in s.69 appeals (PD62 para. 12.6(2)).
However, these issues arise in much more acute form in investment treaty arbitration. As the arguments in this case show, determining whether there is a protected investment can involve a granular evidential analysis of a kind which a supervisory court would not ordinarily expect to be confronted with. Further, in finding that there is a protected investment, the tribunal will usually face a range of arguments as to what did, and did not, constitute a contribution; what assets were or were not owned or controlled by the investor and when they came into existence. While in some cases, they may involve a relatively simple task – was a factory acquired or established? – in others, the tribunal’s identification of the protected investment will be the culmination of a series of findings about particular items (shares, contracts, intellectual property rights, know-how, goodwill etc). To the extent that the tribunal concludes that it has jurisdiction, its findings on breach and relief will often reflect the particular investment it has found to exist.
When some but not all of the tribunal’s component findings on the issue of whether there was a protected investment are challenged under s.67 of the 1996 Act, what is to happen? Would the success of a challenge to a single component finding be sufficient to establish lack of jurisdiction for the award that was made, requiring the matter to go back to the arbitral tribunal? And equally, what of an investor? It can re-argue its case if it failed to establish a protected investment before the arbitral tribunal under s.67, but what is to happen if it succeeded, but not in respect of every component of its case? In particular if (as here) it is said that an “other investments” case has been argued before the court responsively, in the face of the state’s “no investment” challenge, then to the extent the investor succeeds on its alternative case, it might be said that the scope of the investment found by the court on the s.67 application is not that which was the subject of the breach and relief findings by the tribunal.
Whatever the position may be at the margins I am satisfied that the court should approach this issue by considering the substance of the investment established before the court. If that is the same as the substance of the investment found by the arbitral tribunal, then there can be no scope for setting aside the award or remitting it to the arbitral tribunal.
Finally, there is the issue of what is to happen when only some of the components of the investment found by the arbitral tribunal are challenged, or open to challenge (because they are not in dispute, or a challenge is precluded by s.73(1) of the 1996 Act). That issue arises in this case, where the Czech Republic’s “no investment case” was advanced on a wider front in court than before the Tribunal, and I held that aspects of it were not open. The Arbitral Claimants contend that the very fact that one component of the investment which the tribunal held had been established is not open to challenge is sufficient to preclude a s.67 “No Investment” challenge. That submission was only made after the s.73(1) hearing, so that this issue only became apparent after developments in the case had led to the decision to split what the court had previously ordered should be a single hearing. I cannot accept this submission in its full width. If, for example, the tribunal found that the investor had established two different factories at two separate points in time in the host state and awarded relief accordingly, I do not accept that if the Czech Republic had only challenged the investment to the extent of one of those factories, it would not be able to renew that challenge under s.67. There would be two distinct jurisdictional challenges in such a case, and relief awarded in relation to the challenged investment could not be said to be “in respect of” the unchallenged investment. By contrast, I can see that the position will be different where those matters not challenged or open to challenge are sufficient to establish the substance of the investment found by the arbitral tribunal and on the basis of which it awarded relief. Quite where, between those two situations, the line would fall to be drawn is, fortunately, not an issue which has to be resolved in this case.
I also reject the Arbitral Claimants’ contention that it is no longer open to the Czech Republic to advance the “No Investment” Objection because the issue of whether a successful attack on only a subset of the Tribunal’s investment finding might itself provide a basis for attacking the Award was a matter for the hearing which resulted in the March Judgment and any appeal from that decision. The Arbitral Claimants point to the Czech Republic’s ground of challenge in paragraph 3 of its Amended Particulars of Claim: “if the Court holds that the Tribunal was right that there was a protected investment, the Tribunal’s findings of quantum … are not with respect to that investment and accordingly should be set aside and/or declared to be of no effect”. However, that ground was directed to a different point – if the Tribunal’s findings as to the existence of investment were correct, whether there was a sufficient nexus between that investment and the damages awarded. There was no suggestion at that hearing that if no challenge could be brought to one of the components of the Tribunal’s investment finding, that was sufficient to take the entirety of the “No Investment” challenge off the table.
At this point, it may be helpful to summarise the Tribunal’s findings on the investment issue and their current status:
The Tribunal noted the investment was said to comprise “assets, movable and immovable property, shares, claims and rights to performance, know-how and goodwill and rights under law, contract or administrative decisions” (Award, [382]).
The Tribunal sought to identify “the reality of Conneco’s business in Czechoslovakia, and to Claimants’ investment in Conneco” (Ibid, [384]).
The Tribunal found that were co-operation agreements which represented “claims and rights to any performance having an economic value” (Ibid, [387]-[388]). This finding is open to challenge on the s.67 application.
The Tribunal found Conneco had “a business contribution agreement with Novo Nordisk” (Ibid, [389]). This finding is also open to challenge.
The Tribunal found that Mr Stava had shares in Conneco, which itself had contractual rights (Ibid, [391]). That finding is not open to challenge independently of the findings in (iii) and (iv).
The Tribunal found that Conneco had contributed “know-how and goodwill” (Ibid, [392]). This finding is not open to challenge.
The Tribunal found that the Commercial Arbitration agreement constituted an investment (Ibid, [393]). This finding is open to challenge.
The test for establishing an investment under the BIT: the available legal materials
The arguments on whether there is any, and if so what, inherent meaning to the word “investment” in the BIT beyond establishing the existence of an asset was advanced by reference to three sources:
Most importantly, the terms of the BIT.
Awards of investment treaty arbitration tribunals (“ITA Awards”).
Decisions of supervisory or enforcement courts.
I consider these materials in turn, offering some preliminary observations as I do so, before reaching my conclusion in the light of all the material.
The provisions of the BIT
Article 1 of the BIT contains the following definitions:
“For the purpose of this Agreement:
The term “investor” refers with regard to either Contracting Party to
natural persons who are nationals of that Contracting Party in accordance with its laws;
legal entities, including companies, corporations, business associations and other organizations, which are constituted or otherwise duly organized under the law of that Contracting party and have their seat, together with real economic activities, in the territory of that same Contracting Party;
legal entities established under the law of any country which are, directly or indirectly, controlled by nationals of that Contracting Party or by legal entities having their seat, together with real economic activities, in the territory of that Contracting Party.
The term “investments” shall include every kind of assets and particularly:
movable and immovable property as well as any other rights in rem such as servitudes, mortgages, liens, pledges;
shares, parts or any other kinds of participation in companies;
claims and rights to any performance having an economic value;
copyrights, industrial property rights (such as patents, utility models, industrial designs or models, trade or service marks, trade names, indications of origin), know-how and goodwill;
concessions under public law, including concessions to search for, extract or exploit natural resources as well as all other rights given by law, by contract or by decision of the authority in accordance with the law.
The term “returns” means the amounts yielded by an investment and in particular though not exclusively includes profit, interest, capital gains, dividends, royalties and fees.”
It is the Czech Republic’s case that the word “investment” in the BIT has an inherent meaning which requires more than simply the investor owning or controlling an asset in the territory of the Czech Republic. It is not suggested that each of the factors in [39] above must be present for an investment to be established. That would, at least, involve a “bright line” analysis of the kind amenable to a jurisdictional enquiry. Rather, it is suggested that in determining whether there has been an investment, the court should consider the extent to which the factors in [39] above are satisfied, it being possible for the absence of one factor in an appropriate case to be outweighed by sufficiently strong presence of some or all of the others. That is a very evaluative exercise, and the prospect of it being undertaken de novo by the supervisory court, and (transnational issue-estoppel apart) by enforcement courts, is not an attractive one (cf. Butcher J’s observations in PAO Tatneft v Ukraine [2018] 1 WLR 5947, [101]).
The three factors which the Czech Republic contends are relevant to ascertaining the existence of an investment do not appear expressly on the face of the BIT. To that extent, the avowedly (but not exclusively) textual approach to interpretation of the VCLT does not immediately lend itself to this submission. However, Mr Bastin KC pointed to a number of indicia in the BIT which he said supported his argument that these factors formed part of the inherent meaning of the word “investment”.
First, there are statements as to the purpose of the Treaty in the Preamble, with its references to the parties desiring to “create and maintain favourable conditions for investments by investors of one party in the territory of the other Contracting Party”.
Second, there are a series of provisions in the BIT which refer to the “making” of investments. Prominent among these is Article 2(1) of the BIT which provides:
“The present Agreement shall apply to investments in the territory of one Contracting State by investors of the other Contracting State, if the investments have been made later than 1st January 1950 in accordance with the laws and regulations of the former Contracting Party.”
Mr Bastin KC also referred to various other provisions which he said showed an investment was more than an asset. I will not list all of them, but the following examples are representative: Article 3 (“investments by investors”; “admitted an investment on its territory”); Article 4 (“investments made … by investors”; “investments of the investors of the other Contracting Party”; “investments made within its territory” etc); Article 5 (“investments have been made”); and paragraph (1) of the Protocol (referring to “the territory of which the investment has been or is to be made”).
The use of the words “invest” and “investment” in investment treaties can address two concepts: both what the investor puts in (or contributes), and the assets within the host territory which are the manifestation or fruit of that contribution. Mr Justice Butcher in Republic of Korea v Dayyani [2019] EWHC 3580 (Comm), [45] drew a distinction between “property and assets put in by the investor” and “assets or property into which resources are put”, although it is clear that, on an appropriate treaty wording, the concept of assets put in “by the investor” can extend to property or assets in the host state acquired by the investor from a third party who made an investment: PAO Tatneft v Ukraine [2018] 1 WLR 5947, [64]-[67].
A similar distinction – in this context formulated by reference to the use of the word “investment” in BITs and the ICSID Convention – can be found in ITA jurisprudence. InMalicorp v Arab Republic of Egypt ICSID Case No ARB/08/18, Award of 7 February 2011 (Tercier, Baptista, Tschanz), it was noted at [108] that the BIT definition (an asset-based definition in the conventional form) “does not so much stress the contributions made by the party acting, asthe rights and assets that such contributions have generated for it”, in contrast to Article 25 of the ICSID Convention (albeit noting at [110] that “these two aspects are in realitycomplementary”):
“[t]he notion of investment must be understood from theperspective of the objectives sought by the Agreement and the ICSID Convention.They are there to ‘promote’ investments, that is to say, to create the conditions thatwill encourage foreign nationals to make contributions and provide services in the hostcountry, but also, and to that end, to ‘protect’ the fruits of such contributions andservices … The two aspects are thus complementary. Theremust be ‘active’ economic contributions, as is confirmed by the etymology of theword ‘invest,’ but such contributions must ‘passively’ have generated the economicassets the instruments are designed to protect … Both aspects are reflected in the two underlying texts, but in a complementary manner.Clearly Article 1(a) of the Agreement emphasises the fruits and assets resulting from the investment, which must be protected, whereas the definitions generally used inrelation to Article 25 of the ICSID Convention lay stress on the contributions that havecreated such fruits and assets. It can be inferred from this that assets cannot be protected unless they result from contributions, and contributions will not be protectedunless they have actually produced the assets of which the investor claims to havebeen deprived.”
To like effect, see Orascom TMT Investments Sarl v People’s Democratic Republic of Algeria ICSID Case No ARB/12/35, Final Award of 31 May 2017 (Kaufmann-Kohler, van den Berg, Stern), [371].
These two senses of the word “invest” can be seen not simply when contrasting BITs and the ICSID Convention, but also within the terms of a BIT, and this can give rise to a degree of linguistic tension in the interpretation of BITs (as the Malicorp tribunal acknowledged). Focussing on the BIT in issue:
The definition in Article 1(2) of the BIT includes items which are more naturally read as examples of the asset-focussed definition – for example “immovable property” (which cannot meaningfully be contributed by the investor into the host state) and “concessions under public law” (points made by Mr Justice Butcher in Tatneft at [65]). Article 6, which addresses “measures of expropriation, nationalization or any measure having the same nature or the same effect against investments of investors of the other Contracting Party”, is also using the term investments in its asset-focussed sense.
Article 2(1) uses the term investment in a sense which is more consistent with a focus on the investor’s contribution.
Other Articles (for example Article 5) use the word “investment” in both senses.
I accept that the provisions of the BIT (with expressions such as “investment in”, “investments made”, “promote investments” etc) and its preamble (with its reference to creating and maintaining “favourable conditions for investments by investors of one Contracting Party in the territory of the other Contracting Party”) provide support for the argument that the concept of an investment within that treaty is not established by the existence of an asset alone. I am conscious when doing so that arguments based on the use of the verb “invest” or “invested” have not appealed to some ITA tribunals who have concluded that these words are linguistic necessities to link the defined concepts of “invest” and “investor”, and are not intended to have significant legal content in their own right: e.g. Saluka Investments BV v Czech Republic (Watts, Fortier, Behrens) Award of 17 March 2006, [211]; Mytilineos Holdings SA v State Union of Serbia & Montenegro and Republic of Serbia (Reinisch, Koussitis, Mitrovic), Partial Award on Jurisdiction of 8 September 2006, [129]-[131]. However, that linguistic necessity may itself be informative as to the inherent meaning of the concept of “investment”.
There are two further provisions in the BIT on which Mr Bastin KC relied in support of his inherent meaning contention, neither of which I found particularly persuasive.
First, in reliance on Article 1(3) of the BIT and its definition of “returns”, he argues that an investment must be something inherently capable of generating returns. It is possible to find BIT provisions which define the concept of investment in this way: for example, Article 1 of the UK-Bolivia BIT defines “investment” as “every kind of asset which is capable of producing returns ….”. However, Article 1(3) does not form part of the definition of “investment” in this BIT, but defines the word “return” for the purpose of the free transfer of payments right conferred by Article 5. In my view, treating Article 1(3) as part of the definition of “investment” (which is the real effect of Mr Bastin KC’s argument) would fail to respect the structure and clear text of the BIT.
Second, he points to the fact that Article 9(3) of the BIT provides that:
“In the event of both Contracting Party having become members of the Convention of Washington of March 18, 1965 on the Settlement of Investment Disputes between States and Nationals of other States, disputes under this article may, upon request of the investor, as an alternative to the procedure mentioned in paragraph 2 of this article, be submitted to the International Center for Settlement of Investment Disputes”.
Article 25 of the ICSID Convention defines the jurisdiction of the Centre as extending to “any legal dispute arising directly out of an investment between a Contracting State …. and a national of another Contracting State”, and there is a body of decisions which have defined the word “investment” in Article 25 in a particular way (applying the so-called Salini factors, first formulated in Salini Construction SpA v Kingdom of Morocco ICSID Case No ARB/00/4, Decision on Jurisdiction of 23 July 2001 (Briner, Fadlallah, Cremades) – although, as always in the investment treaty world, there is also a body of divergent opinion). Mr Bastin KC argues that the parties must have contemplated some similar definition applying to the BIT, given that they contemplated that a dispute under the BIT could be determined in ICSID arbitration.
Approached without regard to any authority, I found this submission unpersuasive:
Mr Bastin KC was not prepared to embrace its logical conclusion – that the word “investment” has the same meaning in the BIT and Article 25 – but something rather more nuanced (that the BIT interpretation would be informed by the word’s Article 25 meaning). However, inherent in that submission is the fact that the consequence which Mr Bastin KC says should be avoided – the Article 25 option not being available for all investor claims under the BIT– applies on his construction of the BIT, as well as on the construction he criticises.
The BIT has its own definition of “Investment” and “Investor”. The latter differs from the definition of “national of another State” in Article 25 of the ICSID Convention, reflecting the fact that these are separate (if overlapping) legal orders. I cannot see why that should not also be the case for the meaning of the word “investment”.
Article 9(3) of the BIT describes reference of a dispute to arbitration under the ICSID Convention as an “alternative to the procedure mentioned in paragraph 2 of this article”. There is nothing to suggest that the ICSID Convention is to influence the substantive content of the BIT.
The BIT was signed on 5 October 1990. The ICSID 1992 Annual Report records that the CSFR only signed the ICSID Convention on 13 May 1991. The meaning of “Investment” in the BIT must be fixed at the date it was signed.
It is right to note that an argument on the lines advanced by Mr Bastin KC has appealed to some ITA tribunals: e.g. Romak SA v The Republic of Uzbekistan PCA Case No AA 280, Award of 26 November 2009 (Mantilla-Serrano, Molfessis, Rubins), [193]-[195]; Alps Finance and Trade AG v Slovakia UNCITRAL arbitration, Award of 5 March 2011 (Crivellaro, Klein, Stuber), [239]; and Air Canada v Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela ICSID Case No ARB(AF)/17/1, Award of 13 September 2021 (Tercier, Poncet, Villanua), [293]. These awards offer two reasons in support of this conclusion – that it cannot have been expected that the substantive protection available to the investor would depend on which dispute resolution option was offered; and that the contrary conclusion would deprive the ICSID dispute resolution option of effet utile. I have not found either persuasive:
The different definitions of nationality in many BITs and the ICSID Convention inevitably mean that different substantive protection is offered by the two regimes. If the treaties took effect at different points in time, that would also involve different substantive protection.
The ICSID dispute resolution option will be available for claims able to pass through the “double keyholes” of investment and nationality and cannot realistically be regarded as lacking effet utile given its application in those circumstances.
Further, a significant number of ITA Awards recognise that arbitrating a BIT claim using the ICSID dispute resolution option requires the claimant to establish an investment under both regimes (sometimes referred to as a “double-barrelled” or “double-keyhole” test): e.g. Salini Construttori SpA v Kingdom of Morocco ICSID Case No ARB/004, Decision on Jurisdiction of 23 July 2001 (Briner, Fadlallah, Cremades), [41]; Ceskoslovenska Obchodni Banka as v The Slovak Republic ICSID Case No ARB/97/4, Decision on Jurisdiction of 24 May 1999 (Buergenthal, Bernadini, Bucher), [68]; Mytilineos Holdings SA v State Union of Serbia & Montenegro and Republic of Serbia, Partial Award on Jurisdiction of 8 September 2006 (Reinisch, Koussoulis, Mitrovic), [114], [117]; Global Trading Resource Corp and Globex International Inc v Ukraine ISCISD Case No ARB/09/11, Award of 1 December 2010 (Berman, Gaillard, Thomas), [43]; and Malicorp v Arab Republic of Egypt ICSID Case No ARB/08/18, Award of 7 February 2011 (Tercier, Baptista, Tschanz), [107]. Professor Stephan Schill et al (eds), Schreuer’s Commentary on the ICSID Convention 3rd (2022), [186] suggest that “this approach is followed by most arbitral tribunals”.
ITA Awards
I was referred to in excess of 30 ITA Awards on this issue (it being made clear that the awards I was shown were far from a complete set of the available material). Both sides accept that there is a division of approach within the ITA jurisprudence, with each approach having a sufficient number of adherents that it cannot be marginalised as an outlier view. I have not sought to summarise this material or show its chronological progression – this is not a systematised body of jurisprudence of a kind which lends itself to a treatment of that kind. Rather, I have sought to identify some of the key themes underpinning the conclusions reached, to explore the ambit of the factors identified as relevant and to identify some difficult cases which reveal the tensions in both approaches.
The two approaches
First, there are a number of ITA Awards which suggest that a BIT definition that investment “means any asset, including” or similar language allows no room for introducing any requirement beyond the investor’s ownership or control of an asset – a fortiori, an asset of one of the listed kinds – for treaty protection to be available. I was referred to a number of awards to this effect, including Saluka Investments BV v Czech Republic, Award of 17 March 2006 (Watts, Fortier, Behrens), [211]: Mytilineos Holdings SA v State Union of Serbia & Montenegro and Republic of Serbia), Partial Award on Jurisdiction of 8 September 2006 (Reinisch, Koussoulis, Mitrovic), [117], [129], [135]; Casinos Austria International GmbH and Casinos Austria Aktiengesellschaft v Argentine Republic ICSID Case No ARB/14/32, Decision on Jurisdiction of 29 June 2018 (van Houtte, Schill, Torres Bernardez), [178]-[179]; Littop Enterprises v Ukraine SCC Arbitration Case No V2015.092, Final Award of 4 February 2021 (Lew, Fortier, Oreamuno), [330], [339] (a case under the Energy Charter Treaty – “the ECT”); and Michael Anthony Lee-Chin v Dominican Republic ICSID Case No UNCT/18/3, Final Award of 6 October 2023 (Fernandez Arroyo, Leathley, Kohen), [140], [156]. The reasoning in these cases is essentially textually driven.
Second, there is a substantial body of ITA Awards which suggest that the ordinary meaning of the word “investment” in this context embraces at least three criteria – a contribution to the host state, which is of some duration and which exposes the investor to investment or operational risk, as opposed to “ordinary commercial risk” or sovereign risk. A fourth factor – “contribution to the economic development of the State of the investment” – is sometimes suggested: see e.g. Salini Construttori SpA v Kingdom of Morocco ICSID Case No ARB/004, Decision on Jurisdiction of 23 July 2001 (Briner, Fadlallah, Cremades), [52]. However, that additional requirement has not found favour with most tribunals who embrace the “objective meaning” approach (Kriebaum, Schreuer and Dolzer, Principles of International Investment Law 3rd (2022), pp.92, 95), and it is generally accepted that it is not necessary to show some positive net effect on the host economy, but at best some form of reasonable expectation of such an effect as a consequence of the investment.
This interpretation of the concept of “investment” can be traced back to at least the “state v state” ITA Award in Italy v Cuba, Interim Award of 15 March 2005 (Derains, Tanzi, Bravo), [81]. A particularly influential ITA Award is Romak SA v The Republic of Uzbekistan PCA Case No AA 280, Award of 26 November 2009 (Mantilla-Serrano, Molfessis, Rubins), [177], [181], [207]. Other “inherent meaning” ITA Awards I was referred to included:
Saba Fakes v Republic of Turkey ICSID Case No ARB/07/20, Award of 14 July 2010 (Gaillard, Levy, van Houtte), [110], [122].
Nova Scotia Power v Venezuela ICSID Case No ARB(AF) 11/1, Award of 30 April 2014 (van Houtte, Williams, Vinuesa), [72], [84].
KT Asia Investment Group BV v Republic of Kazakhstan ISCSID Case No ARB/09/08, Award of 17 October 2013 (Kaufmann-Kohler, Glick, Thomas), [164]-[166], [170].
Rasia v Armenia ICSID Case No ARB/18/28, Award of 20 January 2023 (Kalicki, Beechey, Thomas), [372]-[376].
The reasoning in these cases moves beyond a strict focus on the text of the definition of “investment”, with the following considerations being prominent:
The desire to draw a distinction between “investment” and “trade”, in cases in which a claimant seeks relief under a BIT by reference to a contract for the supply of goods and services. I return to this issue below.
A more teleological concern with the purpose of investment treaties, as stated in their preambles.
The influence of the interpretation adopted by ITA tribunals of the word “Investment” in Article 25(1) of the ICSID Convention, as evidence of the ordinary meaning of the term.
Some ITA Awards have sought to reconcile the two approaches by suggesting that establishing the existence of an asset of an identified kind is sufficient to raise a presumption that there is an investment, capable of being rebutted in unusual circumstances (e.g. Komaksavia Airport Invest Ltd v Republic of Moldova SCC Case No 2020/074, Final Award of 3 August 2022 (Kalicki, Sands, Stern), [146]-[148]). However, the reference to non-exhaustive types of asset is intended to illustrate the width of the concept of asset, not to raise a presumption that requirements of contribution, duration and risk have been satisfied in the case of listed examples but not otherwise. Further, a presumption which operates when one of the illustrated types of asset is established, but not some other kind of asset, would not be principled.
Contractual rights
Given the assets relied upon in this case, there are two particular types of assets – contractual rights and shares – which merit further discussion.
As I have mentioned, appeals to an “inherent” meaning of the word “investment” have been particularly prominent when the claim has been brought by reference to a contract for the supply of goods and services. The concepts of contribution, duration and risk serve to remove from the protection of a treaty cases such as the example given in Komaksavia Airport Invest Ltd v Republic of Moldova, [149]-[150] of someone in state A ordering a product over the internet from state B, with the price moving one way and the product the other, which the tribunal suggested could not credibly be described as an investment in either direction. An investment treaty claim in relation to a performance guarantee provided by the seller to the buyer of mining equipment was rejected on this basis in Joy Mining Machinery Ltd v Arab Republic of Egypt ICSID Case No ARB/03/11, Award on Jurisdiction of 6 August 2004 (Orrego Vicuna, Craig, Weeramantry). A claim relating to purchase and sale contracts concluded by US poultry interests failed for the same reason in Global Trading Resource Corp and Globex International Inc v Ukraine ICSID Case No ARB/09/11, Award of 1 December 2010 (Berman, Gaillard, Thomas), [55]. The tribunal in Alps Finance and Trade AG v Slovakia Award of 5 March 2011 (Crivellaro, Klein, Stuber) rejected the contention that what it described as a “mere one-off sale contract” amounted to an investment ([245]). The tribunal in Ipek v Turkey ICSID Case No ARB/18/19, Award of 8 December 2022 (McLachlan, Fortier, Levy), [292]-[293] distinguished between “purely contractual rights, which do not constitute an investment, and contractual rights constituting an ‘asset’”.
However, a more complex package of contracts, including a co-operation agreement intended to culminate in the claimant taking an equity stake in a local company was held to constitute an investment in Mytilineos Holdings SA v State Union of Serbia & Montenegro and Republic of Serbia, Partial Award on Jurisdiction of 8 September 2006 (Reinisch, Koussoulis, Mitrovic), [120]-[125], the tribunal concluding at [124]:
“Taken together the Agreements not only provided for sales, services and loans transactions between two commercial partners but they also provided for the establishment of a long-term business relationship which included the provision of credit, spare parts and machinery to the local partner of Mytilineos in Serbia and Montenegro, RTB-BOR, for the purpose of modernizing the latter’s production facility. The planned modernization would have entailed a significant contribution to Serbia and Montenegro’s development. During the intended seven-year duration of all of the Agreements Claimant expected various returns and profits. This engagement, which was made with a view to eventual equity participation after privatization, was substantial in monetary terms and also not without risks.”
Similarly in GEA Group Aktiengesellshaft v Ukraine ICSID Case No ARB/08/16, Award of 31 March 2011 (van den Berg, Landau, Stern), a package of contracts which involved the supply by the claimants of naptha for conversion and the return of finished product was held to constitute an investment, on the basis that it “conveyed the right for GEA, through KCH, to exercise an economic activity in Ukraine at the relevant time” and was “more than just goods against a tolling fee – it established a relationship of ‘common interest’ whereby KCH (and, ultimately GEA) would, among other things, assist with delivery of logistics and pay for Ukrainian domestic freight, resolve customs issues, and supply the Oriana plant with necessary materials” ([149]). The fact that the identification of the alleged investment as a sale contract only takes the analysis so far is well-captured by an observation made by Professor Jan Paulsson in Pantechniki SA Contractors & Engineers v Republic of Albania ICSID Case No ARB/07/21, Award of 30 July 2009, [44]:
“It may be objected that some types of economic transactions simply cannot be called ‘investments’ no matter what a BIT may say … The typical argument given is that of a ‘pure’ sales contract. There is force in the argument. Yet it may quickly lose transaction in the reality of economic life. It is admittedly hard to accept that the free-on-board sale of a single tractor in country A could be considered an investment in country B. But what if there are many contractors and payments are substantially deferred to allow cash-poor buyers time to generate income? Or what if the first tractor is a prototype developed at great expense for the specifications of country B on the evident premise of amortisation?”
Shares
Shares in a company incorporated under the laws of the host state appear in most lists of assets in definitions of what constitutes an investment in BITs. There are ITA Awards which treat ownership of shares as sufficient of itself to establish an investment, without the need for further enquiry: e.g. RosInvest Co UK Ltd v The Russian Federation SCC Case No 079/2005, Award of 12 September 2010 (Bockstiegel, Berman, Steyn), [382] (a case in which shares had been purchased by the claimants from an existing owner, albeit that did not expressly form part of the tribunal’s analysis).
The issue of what happens when the claimant purchases the shares from their current owner who is not a national of the host state was expressly considered in Orascom TMT Investments Sarl v People’s Democratic Republic of Algeria ICSID Case No ARB/12/35, Award of 31 May 2017 (Kaufmann-Kohler, van den Berg, Stern), [382] in which the tribunal rejected the argument that there was no investment where shares in a host-state company were purchased from another foreign investor:
“The tribunal cannot follow this argument, which is not supported by the text of the BIT. What is required is that the ‘investment’ be located in the territory of Algeria …. [A]s observed by the tribunal in Gold Reserve, requiring a flow of funds directly into the host state would preclude a foreign investor from purchasing an existing investment from another foreign investor, because the purchase price would necessarily be paid to the original seller of the investment”.
In KT Asia Investment Group BV v Republic of Kazakhstan ICSID Case No ARB/09/08, Award of 17 October 2013 (Kaufmann-Kohler, Glick, Thomas), the tribunal appeared to contemplate at [194] that a subsequent owner might only be able to rely upon a transferor’s “original contribution” where the shares were transferred in the context of an intra-group corporate restructuring. However, in that case the claimant was found to have made no payment itself, the share transfer being agreed at a notable undervalue, and the price not having been paid in any event ([206]).
That alternative analysis of KT Asia raises the further issue – must the purchaser of an existing foreign investment show that the investment was acquired for a contribution, and must the contribution come from its own funds? The ITA Awards show conflicting approaches:
In Quiborax v Bolivia ICSID Case No ARB/06/2, Decision on Jurisdiction of 27 September 2012 (Kaufman-Kohler, Lalonde, Stern), the tribunal held that the purchase of an existing investment met the requirement for a contribution (noting at [229] that “regardless of where payment is made, this qualifies as a contribution of money because the object of the payment and raison d’etre of the transactions – the mining concessions – were located in Bolivia”). However, consistent with KT Asia, they rejected the argument that the recipient of a gift of shares had made an investment ([232]-[233]).
That was also the conclusion of the tribunal in Komaksavia Airport Invest Ltd v Republic of Moldova SCC Case No 2020/074, Final Award of 3 August 2022 (Kalicki, Sands, Stern), the tribunal finding that the presumption of an investment which they held arose from the ownership of shares was rebutted (in a case which did not involve a corporate restructuring) because no payment had been made for the shares ([148], [151], [154], [163] and [167]).
Guaracachi America Inc and Rurelec Plc v Plurinational State of Bolivia PCA Case No 2011-17, Award of 31 January 2014 (Judice, Conthe, Vinuesa) appears to reject the contention that there is any requirement that a shareholder must have paid for its shares for there to be an investment ([350]-[351]).
In Saluka Investments BV v Czech Republic, UNCITRAL arbitration, Partial Award of 17 March 2006 (Watts, Fortier, Behrens), [210], the argument that the claimant had to show that it had paid for the shares with its own funds was rejected by the tribunal but on the basis that the concept of an investment did not, as a matter of objective meaning, require a contribution at all ([211]).
In OI European Group BV v Venezuela ICSID Case No ARB/11/25, Award of 10 March 2015 (Fernandez-Armesto, Orrego Vicuna, Mourre), shares acquired in a corporate restructuring were held to constitute an investment. At [228] the tribunal held that:
“corporate assets [a shareholding in a local company] also include, by their very nature, investments for purposes of Article 25(1) of the Convention. The ICSID Convention was enacted precisely to promote and protect these types of investments. The Preamble of the Convention invokes, as the first justification for the Treaty, the need for “international cooperation for economic development.” The creation of a local company by a foreign investor is precisely the most direct and immediate way to favor economic development in the receiving State. The foreign investor contributes money, goods or industry, creates an organization in the destination country, generates employment, pays taxes, introduces goods or services to the local market-all of which are wealth-creating activities.”
At [230]-[231], they continued:
“The scope and characteristics of the objective and inherent concept of investment are open to debate, and whether certain uncommon assets are part of this or not: it is legitimate to ask whether a mere sales agreement, or the acquisition of a corporate obligation, or simply owning an apartment for weekend use meet the objective and inherent requirements in order to be considered an investment.
The same question cannot be posed with regard to corporate assets located in the destination country, and especially if the foreign investor manages the company. The acquisition and holding of this type of asset represents the quintessential investment, and, by nature, complies with the objective and inherent requirements of an investment. Consequently, there is nothing preventing two States that are negotiating a BIT and want to define the scope of protection from including them in the assets protected. If they do so, as have the Bolivarian Republic and the Netherlands, they cannot be deemed in any way to be distorting the concept of investment or violating Article 25(1) of the Convention.”
Finally, in Littop Enterprises v Ukraine SCC Arbitration Case No V2015/092, Final Award of 4 February 2021 (Lew, Fortier, Oreamuno), in a case arising under the ECT, the tribunal rejected the contention that a shareholder had to pay for the shares before they would constitute an investment for treaty-protection purposes ([339]).
In simplified terms, the acquisition of shares in an operating company involves the commitment of capital to the company’s operations, the recovery of which is subject to the risks of those operations. An exiting investor will realise its initial commitment, and cease to be exposed to those risks, with the capital thereafter being provided, and the operational risks born, by the incoming shareholder. Viewed in those terms, it is easy to understand why a number of ITA tribunals have been willing to treat the purchase of a shareholding in a host-country company from another foreign investor as the making of an investment. Cases in which shares are acquired without payment may raise more complex issues. However, it is not obviously clear why the application of an investment treaty should depend on whether the claimant was given the shares, or given funds which it then used to purchase shares, because in each case an asset of value is a source of the company’s capital and exposed to its risks. Further, to the extent that profits are generated which would be capable of being distributed to shareholders but are retained in the business, or the shares are not fully paid, the owner of shares may be said to have made a contribution to the company’s capital regardless of the amount paid for the shares.
The application of the objective meaning criteria
Those ITA Awards which support the application of a tripartite test of contribution, duration and risk when considering the objective meaning of the word “investment” offer the following further guidance as to the application of that test.
First, it is necessary to consider the operation said to give rise to the investment globally, or as a whole, rather than considering its individual elements in isolation: Joy Mining Machinery Ltd v Arab Republic of Egypt ICSID Case No ARB/03/11, Award on Jurisdiction of 6 August 2004 (Orrego Vicuna, Craig, Weeramantry), [54]; Mytilineos Holdings SA v State Union of Serbia & Montenegro and Republic of Serbia, Partial Award on Jurisdiction of 8 September 2006 (Reinisch, Koussoulis, Mitrovic), [120], [125]. Kriebaum, Schreuer and Dolzer, Principles of International Investment Law 3rd (2022), p.99 refer to this approach as the concept of “the unity of an investment”, noting:
“Many investments are complex operations. They may consist of preparatory studies, licences, government permits, financing arrangements, real estate transactions, various contractual arrangements and a variety of other legal dispositions. Each of these elements has its own legal existence but in economic terms they are united to serve a common purpose. Typically, investment tribunals have treated the various assets and activities that make-up an investment as a unity. In most cases they have not dissected investments into their individual legal components but have treated them as an integral whole.”
Mr Bastin KC argued against this conclusion, referring to a passage in Teneris and Talta Trading e Marketing Sociedade Unipessoal Lda v Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela ICSID Case No ARB/11/26, Award of 29 January 2016 (Beechey, Kessler, Landau), [291], in which the tribunal held that the offtake contract in issue in that case was a contract for sale and delivery, and not an investment even if a holistic approach was adopted to the issue of whether there had been an investment. However, at [284]-[285] the tribunal expressly acknowledged the “combined effect” test of whether an investment had been established. I can see that there may be some activities – for example an internet order to pay money in exchange for goods – which may be so inherently lacking in the qualities of an investment that their character will not change merely because they are considered in a wider context. But generally, I am persuaded by the view that the issue of whether there is an investment should be looked at holistically rather than by considering different components of an integrated activity in isolation, at least where the claim relates to that holistic investment.
Second, the three factors are interdependent, and can counterbalance each other to some degree, rather than constituting three separate requirement which fall to be assessed and established independently: Salini Construttori SpA v Kingdom of Morocco ICSID Case No ARB/004, Decision on Jurisdiction of 23 July 2001 (Briner, Fadlallah, Cremades), [52]; Nova Scotia Power v Venezuela (II) ICSID Case No ARB(AF) 11/1, Award of 30 April 2014 (van Houtte, Williams, Vinuesa), [84]; Doutremepuich v Republic of Mauritius PCA Case No 2018-37, Award on Jurisdiction of 23 August 2019 (Scherer, Caprasse, Paulsson), [120].
Third, so far as any requirement of contribution is concerned:
A contribution is not limited to a financial contribution but extends to “any dedication of resources that has economic value, whether in the form of financial obligations, services, technology, patents or technical assistance … [A] ‘contribution’ can be made in cash, kind or labor”: Romak SA v The Republic of Uzbekistan PCA Case No AA 280, Award of 26 November 2009 (Mantilla-Serrano, Molfessis, Rubins), [214] and see also Deutsche Bank AG v Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka ICSID Case No ARB/09/02, Award of 31 October 2012 (Hanotiau, Williams, Khan), [297].
There is no minimum value threshold for a contribution (Ursula Kriebaum, Christoph Schreuer and Rudolf Dolzer, Principles of International Investment Law 3rd (2022), page 82). As noted in Doutremepuich v Republic of Mauritius PCA Case No 2018-37, Award on Jurisdiction of 23 August 2019 (Scherer, Caprasse, Paulsson), [125]-[126], “a contribution of EUR 1 seems insufficient to qualify as an investment” but “on the other, a fixed numerical threshold seems arbitrary. The Tribunal agrees with the Claimants that a numerical threshold could exclude smaller investors from protection under the Treaty. Therefore, in the view of the Tribunal, the reality of the contribution is to be assessed taking into account the totality of the circumstances and the elements of the economic goal pursued”. To like effect, see Pantechniki SA Contractors & Engineers v Republic of Albania ICSID Case No ARB/07/21, Award of 30 July 2009, [45] (“The monetary magnitude of investments cannot be accepted as a general restriction.”)
So far as the issue of duration is concerned:
It is possible to find ITA Awards referring to a period of 2-5 years: for example Salini Construttori SpA v Kingdom of Morocco ICSID Case No ARB/004, Decision on Jurisdiction of 23 July 2001 (Briner, Fadlallah, Cremades), [54]. Salini attributes that figure to doctrine (academic writing), although it has been suggested that the academic commentary relied upon was misquoted, referring to a typical rather than minimum period (Schreuer’s Commentary on the ICSID Convention 3rd (2022), footnote 376 quoting Professor Emmanuel Gaillard, “Identify or Define? Reflections on the Evolution of the Concept of Investment in ICSID Practice” in Christina Binder and others (eds), International Investment Law for the 21 st Century: Essays in Honour of Christoph Schreuer (2009) 403, 404-405). In any event, I accept that the better view is that there is “no fixed minimum duration requirement” (Doutremepuich v Republic of Mauritius PCA Case No 2018-37, Award on Jurisdiction of 23 August 2019 (Scherer, Caprasse, Paulsson), [143]). The concept of duration is flexible, and one tribunal suggested that it can extend from a couple of months to many years (Deutsche Bank AG v Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka ICSID Case No ARB/09/02, Award of 31 October 2012 (Hanotiau, Williams, Khan), [303]).
In considering the duration of an investment, “tribunals regularly point out that the element of duration referred not merely to the actual period of the core activity, but also to the time taken for tender, work interruption, renegotiation, extension maintenance and a contractor’s guarantee” (Schreuer’s Commentary on the ICSID Convention 3rd (2022), [250]).
Where the duration of the investment is affected by the matters alleged to constitute a breach of the BIT, it is the intended duration which matters (ibid, [304]; Malicorp v Arab Republic of Egypt ICSID Case No ARB/08/18, Award of 7 February 2011 (Tercer, Baptista, Tschanz), [111]; KT Asia Investment Group BV v Republic of Kazakhstan ISCSID Case No ARB/09/08, Award of 17 October 2013 (Kaufmann-Kohler, Glick, Thomas), [209]).
One of the principal roles of any requirement of duration is to distinguish investments from “one-off” sales contracts involving an exchange (Schreuer’s Commentary on the ICSID Convention 3rd (2022), [248]).
The concept of risk as applied in the ITA Awards is somewhat opaque, and attempts to formulate a satisfactory distinction between the “right” and “wrong” kinds of risk have been said not to “withstand closer scrutiny” (Markus Petsche, Investment Claims (2023), [4.36]). The distinction appears to be intended to differentiate the risks of investment (sometime referred to as “operational risk”) from the risk of counterparty non-performance inherent in any commercial transaction (Romak SA v The Republic of Uzbekistan PCA Case No AA 280, Award of 26 November 2009 (Mantilla-Serrano, Molfessis, Rubins), [229]-[230]). Some tribunals also distinguish operational risk from sovereign risk (e.g. the risk that a particular activity may be adversely affected by executive or legislative action, which arise both in trade contracts and in investments properly so-called: Postova Banka as v Greece ICSID Case No ARB/13/8, Award of 9 April 2015 (Zuleta, Stern, Townsend), [368]).
Decisions of supervisory or enforcement courts
In Gold ReserveInc v. Venezuela [2016] EWHC 153 (Comm), the BIT defined a Canadian “investor” as a national of Canada who “makes the investment in the territory of Venezuela”. Venezuela argued that the claimant had not made an investment because it had, without any active contribution of capital or resources to the economy of Venezuela, acquired the indirect ownership of shares in a local company that held two mining concessions – as a result of a merger and share swap between its previous parent company and a subsidiary. At [32], Teare J noted that the term “investment” could have two possible meanings in ordinary language: “Investment can mean the contribution of resources, usually capital, to acquire an asset, as in ‘he made an investment of US$1m in acquiring a painting by Monet’. But an investment can also mean the asset which is acquired by the act of investing, as in ‘he exhibited his investment (the painting by Monet) at his stately home’.” The court found that the “expressed definition of ‘investment’ in the BIT used investment in this latter sense of asset”, and that “the ordinary meaning of ‘making’ an investment includes the exchange of resources, usually capital resources, in return for an interest in the asset” ([35]), or expending money on something it already owned ([37]), which Teare J contrasted with acquisition by inheritance ([35]). He concluded that “mere passive ownership of an asset is insufficient”, and that some action on the “investor’s” part was required ([37]). There was no finding on whether acquisition for value of an existing investment from another foreign investor would suffice, there being no evidence that the claimant had made any contribution for the shareholding which formed the basis of its claim, and the court being able to rest its conclusion on the $300m the claimant had subsequently invested into the assets acquired.
In PAO Tatneft v. Ukraine [2018] EWHC 1797 (Comm), [2018] 1 WLR 5947, [56]-[57], the issue arose as to whether the acquisition for value of a shareholding in an enterprise in the host state from another foreign investor amounted to an investment for the purposes of Article 1(1) of the Russia-Ukraine BIT. Butcher J answered that question in the affirmative. However, the basis of the court’s decision was not that the provision of value in the acquisition was enough, but that the language of the treaty did not require anything more than the ownership of the asset. Butcher J held that references in the BIT to assets “that are invested by an investor … in the territory of Ukraine”, to “making” investments or investments “made” within the territory of Ukraine were intended to provide “a link between the specification of the types of assets which are comprised within the definition of ‘investment’ and the person who owns or is otherwise interested in those assets”([68] and [70]-[71]). At [78]-[79], he distinguished Gold Reserve on the basis that that case was concerned with the meaning of “investor” and not directly with the meaning of “investment”, and because the terms of the BITs in the respective cases were “materially different”. I do not find those points of distinction wholly persuasive.
Finally, in The Republic of Korea v. Dayyani and Others [2019] EWHC 3580 (Comm), [2020] Bus LR 884, Butcher J was once again concerned with a BIT that similarly defined “investment” as “every kind of property or asset, and in particular, though not exclusively, including the following, invested by the investors of one Contracting Party in the territory of the other…”. He rejected the argument that, in order to constitute an investment under the BIT, the Salini criteria of contribution, operational risk and duration had to be satisfied ([58]-[61]), stating that he did not find the ITA Award in Romak SA v Republic of Uzbekistan PCA Case No AA280, Award of 26 November 2009persuasive.
Conclusions
I accept that, even outside the confines of Article 25 of the ICSID Conventions (where the absence of any definition of the word “investment” allows greater scope for ascribing an inherent meaning to the term), there will be cases in which a claimant under a BIT defining “investment” as “any asset” is required to do more than simply point to ownership or control of an asset to establish the existence of a protected investment. This much is necessary, if for no other reason than to address the hypotheticals often raised in this debate of the Paris Metro ticket, the weekend holiday let, the hiring of a car at an airport etc, and also to address the “pure” sale contract where the claimant sells goods into the territory or send a payment there for goods it has received. The concepts of contribution, duration and risk are of assistance in rationalising an intuitive sense that these instances of dealing with the host state do not amount to investing in it. Discussing the attempts to define the concept of investment in Article 25 of the ICSID Convention, Schreuer’s Commentary on the ICSID Convention 3rd (2022) [275] suggests that its “purpose … is to filter out disputes arising out of activities or transactions that the Centre was not thought to address, in particular non-economic activities and commercial activities that do not involve investment specific risks”. The BIT ITA Awards which ascribe an inherent meaning to the word “investment” are often engaged in the same exercise. That was also the conclusion of the tribunal in Philip Morris Brands SARL v Uruguay ICSID Case No ARB/10/7, Award of 8 July 2016 (Bernardini, Born, Crawford), [206], when noting that the Salini criteria “may assist in identifying or excluding in extreme cases the presence of an investment.”
Outside of these examples, the extent of any additional requirement beyond ownership or control of the asset is far less clear. In particular:
It is clear that more complex contracts for the sale of goods or provision of services, or for the loan of funds, can amount to investments: [76]-[77] above.
To the extent that there is a requirement for a contribution from the claimant, it can be satisfied by buying an existing investment from another foreign investor, not only because that involves a positive act on behalf of the investor in relation to the investment, but because the effect of such a transaction is that it will be the purchaser’s, rather than the seller’s, capital which is at risk in the venture going forward.
Even when the claimant has inherited or been given the asset, the decision to retain rather than realise it will have the result that foreign-owned capital is at risk in the host state. The line between someone who inherits funds and buys an asset in the host state, and someone who inherits the asset, seems an arbitrary one. These difficulties may explain the inconsistent ITA decisions on this issue, but even within the ICSID Convention, Schreuer’s Commentary on the ICSID Convention 3rd (2022), p.380 notes that:
“Overall, arbitral jurisprudence … confirms that an investment, in the sense of Art 25(1) of the Convention, can be based on different modes of acquisition, including assignment, purchase or donation. Where these transactions take place and whether they involve the injection of additional funds into the host State is irrelevant”.
It is not necessary in this case to try and map the full limits of any inherent meaning of the word investment, and I doubt the utility of seeking to do so given the essentially impressionistic nature of the issue. For reasons which I set out below, when regard is had to what the Tribunal described as the realities of Conneco’s business, I am satisfied that the Arbitral Claimants had made an investment in the CSFR which satisfied the three-limb test for which Mr Bastin KC contends.
The position on the facts
The establishment and operation of Conneco
Conneco was founded by, inter alia, Diag Human AG which originally held 49% of its shares. However, on 22 August 1990 one shareholder withdrew, as a result of which Diag Human AG had deposited 79% of its total share capital in the sum of CSK 2,370,000 (Articles of Association approved on 22 August 1990), later increased to CSK 2,400,000. The share capital was paid up (General Meeting Minutes of 14 May 1991 and 10 January 1992).
Conneco obtained various permits from the CSFR for the purposes of its activities:
On 15 March 1990, Conneco was entered in the Companies Register on the basis of a permit issued by the Ministry of Interior and the Environment.
On 28 April 1990, Conneco received a permit for foreign trade from the Federal Ministry of Foreign Trade.
On 3 October 1990, Conneco was licensed to manufacture medicines and medical supplies in contractually leased manufacturing facilities at Leciva sp, Farmakon sp and Zdravotnicke zasobovani sp.
On 19 December 1990, Conneco was informed that it was entitled to manufacture certain products.
On 6 August 1991, the Ministry of Health issued Conneco with a certificate for distribution activities in the fields of medicine and medical supplies.
On 30 October 1991 the Prague Customs office approved Conneco exporting blood plasma to Novo Nordisk in Denmark and reimporting Factor VIII.
I find that Conneco employed and trained employees, and acquired and refurbished premises in Prosek, all as part of or for the purpose of its business. Equipment acquired by Conneco included a walk-in refrigerator (as is apparent from its 1992 Budget of Expenditure). The Prosek premises were acquired for CSK 8 million by a contract dated 8 May 1991. Invoices and delivery notes indicate that Conneco operated from the Prosek premises. Prosek functioned as a distribution warehouse which was inspected by the State Institute for Drug Control on 6 August 1991 and found to “meet all the requirements for distribution of pharmaceuticals in accordance with the regulation No 284.90 Coll ‘On correct product, practice, quality management of human medicine and preparation of medical and packaging technology’”. On 27 August 1991, the Ministry of Health granted a certificate for distribution activities for the Prosek warehouse which “meets the requirements of Decree of the Ministry of Health No 284/1990.”
Correspondence refers to Conneco participating in training sessions with CSFR hospital staff (e.g. the letter from Conneco to University Hospital of 30 November 1990). The Czech Republic acknowledged in the BIT Arbitration that Conneco had been certified to train Czech Medical staff (Request for Bifurcation, para. 57). That is all consistent with the Tribunal’s (unchallengeable) finding that the Arbitral Claimants invested know-how and goodwill in the CSFR.
The formation of Conneco and the measures taken to put it in a place to conduct business are important when considering the issue of whether the Arbitral Claimants made an investment in the CSFR. This was not, as the Czech Republic’s submissions assumed, a case involving cross-border sales activity, capable of engaging the issues outlined at [75] and [92]-[93] above. Rather a functioning enterprise was established within the CSFR, which acquired physical infrastructure, employed staff and obtained legal and regulatory permits, to undertake business activities there.
The business model which Conneco sought to put into effect involved supplying hospital equipment to CSFR medical or pharmaceutical entities, in return for fresh frozen plasma (“FFP”) blood plasma, which would be sent to Novo Nordisk for processing, with fractionated products being re-imported to the Czech Republic.
The Co-operation Agreements
I have set out my analysis of the evidence relating to Co-operation Agreements in Annex 1. In short, I am satisfied that four Co-operation Agreements were concluded, and that there were dealings with other health institutions in which equipment was exchanged for promises of FFP. I also accept Mr Stava’s evidence that the nature of the contractual arrangements incentivised the Czech health institutions to maintain the arrangements in existence, as the only means of (i) being able to acquire the equipment they needed and (ii) being able to pay for that equipment when they had no funds. Dr Bojar’s evidence in the BIT Arbitration was that the CSFR lacked the technology to process blood plasma and create blood derivatives and he confirmed Colonel Bohonĕk’s evidence that Czech hospitals “had limited financial resources, especially for the acquisition of modern equipment (e.g. for blood collection and blood processing)”. There is a letter from Dr Boris Bubenik of Hospital Frýdek Místek on 31 August 2003 to similar effect.
In those circumstances, I am satisfied that Conneco had created a business model and network which it had legitimate expectations would continue over a number of years and had established the necessary infrastructure to implement that model. It had also effected a significant amount of up-front supplies which equipped some Czech health institutions to participate in that business model, but also incentivised them to work with Conneco on a medium-term basis.
The Novo Nordisk Agreement
I have addressed this issue in detail in Annex 2. The effect of my conclusions is as follows:
I am not persuaded that a written co-operation agreement was signed by Conneco and Novo Nordisk.
The effect of the parties’ exchanges is that Conneco on the one hand and Novo Nordisk on the other were willing to operate an ongoing business relationship for the supply and fractionation of FFP from the CSFR by reference to draft terms of agreement.
The parties’ dealings involved a legally binding and continuing co-operation agreement for the supply and fractionation of FFP from the Czech Republic and the return of fractionated plasma to the Czech Republic, not simply a series of ad hoc arrangements
The Czech Republic has raised a further issue as to whether this co-operation agreement between Conneco and Novo Nordisk was an asset in the territory of the Czech Republic.
Is this objection open to the Czech Republic?
As I explained at [89] of the March Judgment, in the BIT Arbitration, the Arbitral Claimants never clearly alleged that the Novo Nordisk agreement was an investment in its own right, and “the first occasion on which this agreement is specifically and unequivocally identified as an investment for jurisdiction purposes” was in the Award. In those circumstances, I found that, if necessary, the Czech Republic had acted with reasonable diligence by taking the point that there was no such agreement in its s.67 application ([89(vii)]).
The point initially taken in the Arbitration Claim Form served on 15 June 2022 was that “there was no investment of, or made by, Arbitration Claimant Diag Human SE in … the Czech Republic” (Details of Claim paragraph 2(a)) and that the “business co-operation agreement with Novo Nordisk” was not a “protected investment” (paragraph 2(b)). That was, perhaps, ambiguous as to whether the complaint was that there was no such agreement, or it was not an investment in the Czech Republic, or both. The Particulars of Claim served on 1 December 2023 repeated the assertions in paragraphs 2(a) and (b) of the Details of Claim. However, the Points of Reply served on 8 January 2024 unequivocally took a territorial point, as I explain below.
The hearing which culminated in the March Judgment was conducted on this point by considering whether a s.73(1) objection could be raised to the argument that there was no Novo Nordisk co-operation agreement. The question of whether the territorial objection was also open did not receive separate consideration. However, when asking the Arbitral Claimants to identify where they said that they had advanced a claim that the Novo Nordisk co-operation agreement constituted an investment, I addressed both the existence and territorial issues raised in the Czech Republic’s pleading as a whole. In finding that the Novo Nordisk agreement objection was open to the Czech Republic, I also referred to the territorial issue in [89] of the March Judgment, stating:
“I asked the Claimants to identify where in the arbitral record they had identified a contract with Novo Nordisk not simply as a relevant fact, but as an investment said to have been made in the Czech Republic. An aspirational list of alleged references, including headings, sub-headings, footnotes and witness evidence followed. I am confident that the irony of the stylistic resemblance between this list, and the Czech Republic’s much-criticised list of references where they say that jurisdictional objects were taken, was not lost on those who prepared it. I have diligently followed those references up. The existence of a commercial relationship with Novo Nordisk and its importance to the Claimants’ business enterprises generally (including in the Czech Republic) were asserted, as was the contention that the Czech Republic’s breaches had wiped that relationship out. However, I have been unable to find a particularly clear assertion that any cooperation agreement was itself an investment for jurisdictional purposes. This may well be because the relationship was central to the means by which the Claimants were intending to carry out the Czech business, rather than an investment in Czechoslovakia in its own right, but that is an issue for another day.”
The Order made after the March Judgment described the issue open to the Czech Republic as an objection “so far as it concerns the existence and extent of the Novo Nordisk co-operation agreement, as identified in paragraph 89 of the Judgment”. As will be apparent, that paragraph acknowledges a territorial aspect of the objection.
Against that background, I am satisfied that it is open to the Czech Republic to take a territorial objection now, but the limits of that objection are those issues fairly put in play for this hearing in its Reply. That alleged:
“The Treaty applies to ‘investments in the territory of one Contracting Party by investors of the other Contracting Party.’ It is denied that there is any ‘collaboration agreement’ which was an investment in Czech territory.”
The relevant test
The limits imposed by a requirement that an investment be made “in a territory” of a Contracting State are discussed in Schreuer’s Commentary on the ICSID Convention 3rd (2022). The commentary reviews cases where the sole investment relied upon is the acquisition of a financial instrument issued by the state, noting that in those cases a number of ITA Awards had held that benefit to the host state was enough to satisfy the territorial nexus ([419]-[426]).
The issue has also been debated in cross-border contract cases which are also discussed in Schreuer, including a number involving pre-shipment inspection services provided by SGS. I was referred to two of these cases.
The first was SGS Société Générale de Surveillance SA v Republic of the Philippines ICSID Case No ARB/02/6, Decision of the Tribunal on Objections to Jurisdiction of 29 January 2004 (El-Kosheri, Crawford, Crivellaro). The BIT in issue extended protection to “investments in the territory of the one Contracting Party”. SGS had been retained to provide pre-shipment inspections of exports to be made to the Philippines, for which purpose SGS had also established a Manila liaison office. At [101], the tribunal rejected the attempt to subdivide the services which SGS was providing under its contract, the focal point of which was the provision in the Philippines of a reliable inspection certificate, which would enable goods to be exported to the Philippines and customs duties collected there. The tribunal also referred to the organisational role of the Manila office which was “a substantial office employing a significant number of people”. At [103], it concluded that “these elements taken together are sufficient to qualify the service as one provided in the Philippines”, and at [112] it noted that “there was no distinct or separate investment made elsewhere than in the territory of the Philippines, but a single integrated process of inspection arranged through the Manila Liaison Office, itself unquestionably an investment ‘in the territory of’ the Philippines”.
The second was SGS Société Générale de Surveillance SA v Paraguay ICSID Case No ARB/07/29, Decision on Jurisdiction of 12 February 2010 (Alexandrov, Donovan, Mexia). This was another case in which the BIT extended protection to “investments in the territory” of the host state. The services provided were similar to those which had been considered in the Philippines award. At [113], the tribunal said that an approach which rested “on a parsing of SGS’s investments and activities under the Contract is not sustainable”, and that it was not appropriate to attribute the BIT claim only to the activities abroad. The tribunal relied on the indivisibility of the claimant’s investment ([115]). At [117], the tribunal noted that the same analysis had been adopted on very similar facts in SGS Société Générale de Surveillance SA S v Pakistan ICSID Case No ARB/01/13, Decision of the Tribunal on Objections to Jurisdiction of 6 August 2003 (Feliciano, Faures, Thomas) and in BIVAC v Paraguay ICSID Case No ARB/07/08, Decision of the Tribunal on Objections to Jurisdiction of 29 May 2009 (Knieper, Fortier, Sands).
Having reviewed those authorities, the commentary concludes at [436]:
“Where the document providing the basis of consent refers to investments made in the territory of the State, a certain degree of flexibility will be appropriate. Not all investment activities are physically located in in the host State. This is particularly true for financial instruments and many other contractual arrangements.”
The commentary continues:
“In cases involving financial or other contractual obligations, the locus of the investment can often be determined by the reference to the debtor or the beneficiary and its location. In this way financial instruments issued by States, as well as other contractual arrangements made by the State, have their situs in that State independently of the governing law, the choice of forum, or the place of performance”.
It will be apparent from these cases that, in considering whether any requirement of territoriality is met, it is necessary to consider the investment in its entirety, and not to take some part of an integrated whole and consider it in isolation. That approach, which I regard as intuitively correct, is supported by other ITA awards to which I was referred:
Inmaris Perestroika Sailing Maritime Services GmbH v Ukraine ICSID Case No ARB/08/08, Decision on Jurisdiction of 8 March 2010 (Alexandrov, Cremades, Rubins) concerned a group of claimant companies engaged in a project to market and operate a sail training ship in Ukraine, and which engaged in a number of operations to raise finance for the vessel’s restoration. The issue was whether the claimants’ investment was undertaken in the territory of Ukraine, some payments having been made in Germany. At [123], the tribunal stated that this issue should not be approached in an unduly narrow and formalistic way. At [125], the tribunal analysed “the investment as a whole”, noting “it is not necessary to parse the territorial nexus of each and every component of the Claimants’ investment; it is the investment as a whole that has the nexus”.
Hydro Srl v Republic of Albania ICSID Case No ARB/15/28, Award of 24 April 2019 (Pryles, Glick, Poncet). After referring to the various SGS and the BIVAC decisions, the tribunal identified the issue before it as to whether the activities within and outside the host state – in that case undertaken by two different companies within the same group – were to be treated as “an integrated whole” ([575]) or “inextricably linked” ([576]). The tribunal emphasised the need to have regard to “the practical reality of the Claimants’ investments” ([578]).
Approached from that perspective, I am satisfied that the co-operation agreement which I have found to exist between Conneco and Novo Nordisk was an integral part of the business established by the Arbitral Claimants in the Czech Republic. The raison d’etre of the agreement with Novo Nordisk was to enable Conneco to fractionate the FFP collected in the Czech Republic and deliver the fractionated blood products produced using that FFP to health institutions in the Czech Republic. For that purpose, Conneco was capitalised, acquired premises, established collection and storage facilities and concluded Co-operation Agreements with certain Czech health institutions, all within the Czech Republic. For that reason alone, the Czech Republic’s suggestion that the Novo Nordisk co-operation agreement does not meet the territoriality requirement of the BIT must fail.
In support of its contrary argument, the Czech Republic relied on the decision in Swissbourgh v Lesotho [2018] SGCA 81. In that case, the Singapore Court of Appeal emphasised the need for a “territorial link with the host state” ([99]), continuing:
“What this requires is that the alleged investment must be made or located within the territory of the host state and, if and to the extent it is conceived of as comprising a bundle of rights, these rights must exist and be enforceable under the domestic laws of the host State”.
Swissbourgh was not a case in which it was open to the claimant to present its claim as one based on an integrated investment with elements inside and outside of the host state. That is because the disputes concerning the lease agreements which it had entered into over mines in Lesotho had arisen before the relevant Investment Protocol relied upon came into force. The only claim open to the claimant concerned the decision of the member states of the Southern African Development Community (“SADC”), including Lesotho, to terminate the ability of the SADC tribunal to hear investor-state disputes, and the failure to provide an alternative means of dispute resolution, which were said to give rise to admissible claims under the Protocol. The “investment” in question, therefore, was said to be Swissbourgh’s right to bring an investor-state claim against Lesotho before the SADC tribunal and the claim it had brought before access to the SADC tribunal was closed off or “shuttered” by the SADC states.
The Singapore Court of Appeal noted that States cannot purport to protect rights or property located outside their borders ([102]), and that the existence of rights or property was a matter of domestic law and not international law ([103]). They held that the rights constituting an investment cannot be held “on the international law plane, unless that right is within the State’s sole control or the State has expressly undertaken to guarantee that right” ([137]). I note, by contrast, that the Singapore Court of Appeal was of the view that the right to arbitrate under a BIT against a particular state would pass the relevant territorial nexus because it was “a right that lies within the enforcement jurisdiction of the host state and can be guaranteed by that State acting unilaterally”. This is so even though the law governing that right would not be the law of the host State, but international law.
Even if the Novo Nordisk co-operation agreement had, contrary to my determination, fallen to be considered in isolation, I would still not have accepted that it did not satisfy the required territorial link. I do not regard Swissbourgh as holding that only contractual rights whose applicable law is that of the host state are capable of being an investment in that State. That would be inconsistent with its observations on a BIT arbitration offering and with a number of ITA awards (see Schreuer, [437]). In any event, no argument by reference to applicable law was raised by the Czech Republic until after the oral hearing, and I am not willing to allow argument on this point to surface at such a late stage. Nor is any argument open that if there was an agreement with Novo Nordisk creating rights which were enforceable under its applicable law (whatever that might be), those rights would not be capable of being enforced in the Czech Republic. The Czech Republic took its stand on the absence of any agreement and issues of governing law or non-recognition were not pleaded or advanced in oral argument.
Adopting the flexible approach referred to in Schreuer, [436] the Novo Nordisk co-operation agreement was an agreement involving a Czech party, to export Czech FFP collected by that Czech party, for fractionation in Denmark, with return of the fractionated products to the Czech Republic for supply by that Czech party to Czech healthcare institutions. That amply meets the requirement for a territorial link with the Czech Republic, even if viewed in isolation.
Finally, even if I had been persuaded that the Novo Nordisk co-operation agreement could not be considered as part of the Arbitral Claimants’ investment in the Czech Republic (or even that, however established the business relationship may have been, it was not a contract), I would still not have set aside the Award on that basis. As I observed in [89(i)] of the March Judgment, even if not an investment in itself, “it was central to the means by which the Claimants were intending to carry out the Czech business.” The termination of the Novo-Nordisk-Conneco relationship by the Bojar Letter was the mechanism by which the Czech business which benefited from that relationship in respect of a business which was established and operating in the Czech Republic was found to have suffered loss. It was the loss of that business – not any intrinsic value in the Novo Nordisk co-operation agreement as an asset – which the tribunal valued and compensated by means which I have held cannot be impugned in this court. Any complaints about those conclusions are matters of merits, not jurisdiction.
Section 67 provides the court with a discretion as to whether to award relief, and the court can refuse to grant relief if satisfied that the matters giving rise to the s.67 challenge would not have effected the outcome of the arbitration (Integral Petroleum SA v Melars Group Ltd [2015] EWHC 1893 (Comm), [26]; [2016] EWCA Civ 108, [26]-[28]). If, contrary to the conclusion I have reached, the Novo Nordisk co-operation agreement was not an investment, I would in any event have refused relief. On the basis of the reasoning of the Tribunal, I am satisfied that there would have been no difference in the amount of the award had the Tribunal proceeded on the basis that the Novo Nordisk co-operation agreement was not in itself an investment.
Contribution, duration and risk revisited
On the basis of these factual findings, I am amply satisfied that the Arbitral Claimants have established an “investment” for the purposes of the BIT. Looked at globally:
Conneco was established and capitalised.
Conneco acquired and equipped premises for the purpose of its business operations, employed staff, deployed knowhow and goodwill.
Conneco entered into agreements for the acquisition of FFP in return for medical equipment and fractionated blood prospects (with a reasonable expectation that they would have a medium-term existence) with four health institutions and had more fluid dealings on the same business model with others.
It established a relationship of co-operation with Novo Nordisk to enable it to process the FFP collected and provide it with fractionated blood products which it could return to the Czech health institutions with which it was dealing.
This state of affairs – not least in the significant presence the Conneco business established in the Czech Republic to enable it to conclude and perform its contracts – is very far removed indeed from a cross-border sale contract of the kind which has tested the limits of the concept of an investment in ITA jurisprudence:
It involved contribution in the form of share capital, the acquisition and equipping of premises, the deployment of know-how and goodwill, and significant up-front commitments to equip the Czech health institutions.
Conneco was incorporated and capitalised in 1990, its building was acquired in 1991, and the Co-operation Agreements concluded in 1991 and 1992, and, but for the Bojar Letter, were likely to run for a number of years. Any requirement of a minimum duration was satisfied.
The investment exposed the Arbitral Claimants to significantly more than the risk of its contractual counterparties not performing – the effort involved in implementing its business model in the Czech Republic ran the risk of Czech health institutions not participating in the venture or doing so in sufficient numbers to cover the upfront costs; changing legislative or regulatory environments in the Czech Republic increasing its cost base, or making it impossible to operate that model; rival suppliers entering the Czech market and undercutting its operations or technological advances (e.g. in relation to synthetic blood products) rendering its business model redundant.
Nor can I accept that the investment I have found can be described as lacking sufficient substance to merit protection under the BIT. While there is no minimal value which an investment must have to constitute a protected investment (see [87(ii)] above), the investment established on the evidence cannot conceivably be described as “minimal”, still less “de minimis”.
Even if I had been persuaded to apply some of the more marginal criteria seen in ITA Awards when seeking to ascertain if there has been an investment – the prospect of regularity of profit, and a contribution to the development of the host state – it is clear that the business established through Conneco was intended to generate profits over time through a period of continuous trading, and to do so by taking advantage of the economic opportunity presented by the desire of Czech health institutions for medical equipment and fractionated blood products.
Finally, I should address Mr Bastin KC’s submission that, at the time of entering into those Co-operation Agreements which subsisted at the time of the Bojar Letter, Conneco had no reasonable expectation of those agreements having any significant duration because of its failure in the two tender processes and the letters sent by Dr Bojar to Czech health institutions warning them off contracting with Conneco in 1991. I understand this argument to be essentially directed to the issue of duration. I am unable to accept it as a matter of law or fact.
So far as its validity as a matter of law is concerned, it seeks to take the 1992 Co-operation Agreements Conneco entered into with Polyclinic Uherské Hradištĕ and Frýdek-Místek(which I accept replaced the earlier Co-operation Agreements with those entities) and with Hospital Polyclinic Mĕlník (which may well have done so, although unlike the other contracts, it does not expressly say so) and examine them in isolation. However, they formed part of the overall investment which had begun in 1990, and continued relationships with those institutions which had resulted in contracts the year before. It would, in my assessment, be entirely artificial to treat the 1992 Co-operation Agreements as reflecting a new investment, whose duration fell to be tested on the date they were concluded. The suggestion that the Arbitral Claimants had a qualifying investment up to January 1992, but not thereafter, is equally unrealistic.
In any event, I am not persuaded on the facts that Conneco was or ought reasonably to have been aware that the three Co-operation Agreements entered into in January 1992 were “doomed from the start”. This issue overlaps with the objection ratione temporis which I address below. However, my conclusions at [155]-163] provide my answer to this part of the Czech Republic’s case on the facts.
Is this the investment established on the s.67 application the same investment found by the Tribunal?
I am satisfied that the investment I have found to exist is substantially that found by the Tribunal. The Tribunal sought to identify “the reality of Conneco’s business in Czechoslovakia”, and the “Claimants’ investment in Conneco” (Award, [384]), adopting the holistic approach which I have concluded is appropriate when seeking to identify the Arbitral Claimants’ investment. Within that framework, the Tribunal found an investment comprising the following:
The Co-operation Agreements I have relied upon, and also referred to the other documents showing Conneco’s business to which I have referred in Annex 1 (Award, [387] and footnote 317).
The “business cooperation agreement with Novo Nordisk, which was central to Conneco’s operations in the Czech Republic and to its business model” (Award, [389]). I do not accept that this involved a finding that there had been a signed agreement, or of the existence of a contract on particular terms. In any event, the suggestion that a difference in emphasis of that kind would be sufficient to undermine the foundation of the Award and require this dispute to be arbitrated once again is wholly unrealistic.
The shares in Conneco (Award, [391]) and know-how and goodwill (Award, [392]), both of which underpin the investment I have found to exist.
Finally, as I have noted at [124] above, s.67 provides the court with a discretion as to whether to award relief, and the court can refuse to grant relief if satisfied that the matters giving rise to the s.67 challenge would not have effected the outcome of the arbitration. If, contrary to the conclusion I have reached, the investment I have found to be established differs to any meaningful extent from that found by the Tribunal, I would in any event have refused relief. On the basis of the reasoning of the Tribunal, I am satisfied that there would have been no difference in the amount of the award had the Tribunal proceeded on the basis of my conclusions.
The Arbitration Agreement
The Tribunal also found that the Arbitration Agreement constituted part of the Arbitral Claimants’ investment (Award, [393]). I have dealt with this issue comparatively briefly. At the hearing, the Czech Republic had submitted that the issue of what the effect of a successful challenge to the Tribunal’s finding in relation to the Arbitration Agreement would be on the Award should be left until after judgment. The Arbitral Claimants did not expressly challenge that suggestion. In those circumstances, it may be necessary to hear further argument on this issue.
There is ITA jurisprudence addressing the issue of whether an arbitral award can constitute an investment. A majority of ITA awards have been willing to treat an arbitral award arising from a protected investment as representing the continuation of that investment, and crystallising the rights which arise from the original investment (see e.g. Saipem SpA v Bangladesh ICSID ARB/05/07, Decision on Jurisdiction of 21 March 2007 (Kaufmann-Kohler, Schreyer, Otton), [110], [127]; Frontier PS v Czech Republic UNCITRAL arbitration, Award of 12 November 2010 (Williams, Alvarez, Schreuer), [231]).
The tribunal in GEA Group Aktiengesellshaft v Ukraine ICSID Case No ARB/08/16, Award of 31 March 2011 (van den Berg, Landau, Stern) reached a contrary view ([158]-[162]), stating that it was not sufficient that an award arose out of investment because the two were analytically distinct. However, I am satisfied that this decision represents a minority view: see Schreuer’s Commentary on the ICSID Convention, 3rd (2022), p.49; White Industries Australia v India UNCITRAL arbitration, Final Award of 30 November 2011 (Rowley, Brower and Lau), [7.6.3], [7.6.8] and 7.6.10]; Gavazzi v Romania ICSID Case No ARB/12/25, Decision on Jurisdiction, Admissibility and Liability of 21 April 2015 (van Houtte, Veeder, Rubino-Sammartano), [120]; Anglia Auto Accessories Ltd v Czech Republic SCC arbitration, Final Award of 10 March 2017 (Banifatemi, Reinisch, Sands), [151].
Consistent with that majority view, it has been held that if the arbitration award arises in relation to a transaction which is not an investment, the crystallisation of the parties’ rights by an award will not create an investment where none otherwise existed (Romak SA v Uzbekistan PCA Case No AA 280, Award of 26 November 2009 (Mantilla-Serrano, Rubins, Molfessis), [212]).
There is rather less in the way of ITA jurisprudence addressing the issue of whether an arbitration agreement can constitute an investment. The issue was left open in Saipem SpA v Bangladesh ICSID ARB/05/07, Decision on Jurisdiction of 21 March 2007 (Kaufmann-Kohler, Schreuer, Otton), [128] and in Anglia Auto Accessories Ltd v Czech Republic FSCC arbitration, Final Award of 10 March 2017 (Banifatemi, Reinisch, Sands), [154]. However, in ATA Construction v Jordan ICSID Case No ARB/08/02, Award of 18 May 2010 (Fortier, El-Kosheri, Reisman), [116]-[117] the tribunal held that a right to arbitration was a “distinct ‘investment’”.
Finally, the Singapore Court of Appeal in Swissbourgh v Lesotho [2018] SGCA 81 reviewed the ITA jurisprudence on this topic. The Court noted at [163]-[164] that “a part-heard arbitration claim …. could …. in principle be considered a stand-alone investment in it’s own right” or “a continuation or transformation of the original investment”, approaches which the Singapore Court of Appeal was prepared to accept “in principle” ([171]).
The issue of whether an arbitration agreement can constitute a “distinct investment”, if that means that it may satisfy the concept of an investment independently of any underlying investment to which it is linked, is controversial. However, I am satisfied that an arbitration agreement can be a crucial step in the continuity of investment between the original investment and any final arbitration award, and in an appropriate case can be regarded as a continuation of that investment, at least in conjunction with the claims to be arbitrated (see by analogy Chevron Corporation and Texaco Petroleum Company v The Republic of Ecuador UNCITRAL PCA Case No 348 77, Interim Award of 1 December 2008 (Bockstiegel, Brower, van den Berg), [180]) which treated legal claims relating to the liquidation of an original protected investment as part of that investment).
In this case, a bespoke arbitration agreement was entered into after Conneco had commenced court proceedings in respect of the effect of the Bojar Letter on what I have found to be a protected investment. It was entered into to address a particular dispute. It provided for arbitration in the Czech Republic under the provisions of Czech arbitration legislation. While the Czech Republic sought to suggest that the fact that this was a post-dispute arbitration agreement (rather than a general agreement to arbitrate future disputes forming part of a contract which was itself an investment) made it a less compelling candidate to constitute part of an investment, I am satisfied that the contrary is the case: the specific link between this agreement and the investment is clear from the circumstances in which it came into existence, its narrow scope and the fact that it was intended to provide a means for assessing compensation for the interference with what I have found to be a protected investment. The arbitration agreement also contained an express undertaking on the part of the Czech Republic to comply with any award. As the Singapore Court of Appeal noted in Swissbourgh v Lesotho [2018] SGCA 81, [128] when approving the submissions of the amici curiae, “a right associated with an investment need not be in existence at the time the investment was originally made in order for the right to be protected under the investment treaty, given that the ‘protection afforded by investment treaties is not static, it is dynamic’ ….”
Accordingly, I am satisfied that, in the circumstances of this case, the agreement to arbitrate the dispute concerning compensation payable for the loss caused by the Bojar Letter to Diag SE’s business (which I have found to constitute a protected investment) with the specific covenant on the part of the Czech Republic to comply with any award can properly be regarded as a continuation of that investment. It follows that I agree with the Tribunal’s decision on this issue as well.
Additional Assets
In these circumstances, it is not necessary for me to address the additional assets relied upon by the Arbitral Claimants to establish the making of an investment. However, there is one issue which I should address. Mr Bastin KC submitted that where an arbitral tribunal does not find it necessary to rule on some of the assets which the claimant advances in a BIT arbitration as “investments”, the claimant can only rely on those investments in answer to the state’s s.67 challenge if the claimant brings its own s.67 challenge.
I would not have accepted that submission in this case, where the Arbitral Claimants were seeking, in broad terms, to establish the same general or overall investment as that for which they contended before the Tribunal and which the Tribunal upheld. I can see that there could be more complex cases in which an arbitral claimant identified two different investments before the tribunal which were said to lead to the same loss (e.g. an original investment and a subsequent lawsuit said to constitute the continuation of that investment), and the tribunal only ruled on one of them. Even in this case, if the arbitral claimant was not seeking different relief to that awarded by the tribunal, I am not persuaded that it would have to issue its own s.67 application to be able to raise the alternative route to the same destination before the court (although it would need to give fair notice of the point). Part 62 of the CPR only makes provision for the service of a formal document for an arbitrating party who, in response to a challenge by the other party, seeks to uphold the award before the court by alternative reasoning to that relied upon by the tribunal: in applications under s.69 of the 1996 Act (PD62 12.6(2)). There is no equivalent requirement for a party who seeks to resist a s.68 challenge on the basis that the tribunal would have reached the same result anyway (cf. RAV BahamasLtd v Therapy Beach Club Inc [2021] UKPC 8, [2021] AC 907, [36]).
Overall conclusion on the No Investment Challenge
For the reasons I have set out, I reject the Czech Republic’s No Investment Challenge to the Award.
I conclude on this issue merely by observing that there has always been a stark disconnect between the manner in which the Czech Republic treated Conneco’s business in the course of the underlying events, and the “No Investment” argument in the BIT Arbitration and before me. Whether in the sending of the Bojar Letter, or the subsequent meetings in 1992, or in entering into the agreement to the Commercial Arbitration, or in its conduct of that arbitration, the Czech Republic has always treated Conneco’s business as a significant state of affairs, which merited a significant (and at times excessive) state response. That provides some corroboration for my conclusion that the investment manifest in that business did not lack the substance necessary to constitute a protected investment under the BIT.
THE “ RATIONE TEMPORIS” OBJECTION
The nature of the challenge
The Czech Republic argues that the Tribunal did not have jurisdiction to determine a dispute which was in existence before the BIT came into force on 7 August 1991. In the March Judgment, I upheld the Czech Republic’s submission that the objection they sought to raise was jurisdictional in nature: [157]. Before me, I did not understand the Arbitral Claimants to contend that if the dispute had arisen before the BIT came into force, this would not have deprived the Tribunal of jurisdiction (just as they had not challenged the Tribunal’s decision to the same effect). I am satisfied that that reflects the correct characterisation of the issue. The offer to arbitrate investment disputes contained in Article 9 of the BIT is to be interpreted in accordance with the principle of non-retrospectivity in Article 28 of the VCLT. That conclusion accords with the views expressed in a significant number of ITA Awards referred to in paragraph 102 of the Czech Republic’s skeleton argument, which it is not necessary to set out here.
The issue which arises on this challenge is whether the Arbitral Claimants’ claims relating to the sending of the Bojar Letter on 9 March 1992 was in reality the continuation of an existing dispute between the Arbitral Claimants and the Czech Republic, which began when Diag SE was notified that it had not succeeded in the first tender on 4 October 1990.
The applicable principles
Both sides were content to adopt the definition of what constitutes a dispute applied in Empresas Lucchetti SA v Peru ICSID Case ARB/3/04, Award of 7 February 2005 (Buergenthal, Cremades, Paulsson), [48]: “a disagreement on a point of law or fact, a conflict of legal views or of interests between two persons” or “a situation in which two sides hold clearly opposite views concerning the question of the performance or non-performance of a legal obligation”.
In that case, the claimant sought to build a plant in a Peruvian municipality, its project being negatively affected by a series of administrative measures in 1997 and 1998 taken by the municipal authorities. It was common ground that this constituted a dispute. The claimant succeeded in a court challenge which ordered the municipality to provide the permit it had previously annulled, which the municipality did in notably grudging terms. However, in 2001, the municipality revoked the permits, in an order which recited the history of the matter, including the 1997 measures and the resultant litigation, suggesting in their decisions that the favourable court judgments had been obtained by corruption. The issue was whether this was a new dispute. In concluding (I would respectfully suggest, not surprisingly) that it was not, the tribunal considered “whether and to what extent the subject matter or facts that were the real cause of the disputes differ from or are identical to the other” ([50]). The dispute was the municipality’s desire to prevent the construction and operation of a factory which (both in 1997 and 2001) it regarded as contravening its environmental policies.
Other ITA Awards have referred to difficulties in applying the Lucchetti test, preferring the so-called “triple identity” test first espoused in this context in Railway Development Corporation v Guatemala ICSID Case No ARB/07/23, Second Decision on Objections to Jurisdiction of 10 May 2018 (Sureda, Eizenstat, Crawford), [131]: whether there was “identify of the parties, object and cause of action”. That was the view of the tribunal in Agility Public Warehousing Company KSC v Iraq ICSID Case No ARB/17/7, Decision on Jurisdiction of 9 July 2010 (Bull, Beechey, Murphy) [178]-[181].
A number of ITA Awards addressing this issue were considered by Kannan Ramesh J in Kingdom of Lesotho v Swissbourgh Diamond Mines (Pty) Limited [2017] SGHC 195, [121]- [168] (the issue was not considered on appeal). Kannan Ramesh J also criticised the test formulated in Lucchetti ([130]), suggesting that “the cause-of-action approach is a better way of ascertaining the real dispute than the subject-matter approach.” Based on his review of the ITA Awards, the Judge summarised the principles he derived from the ITA Awards at [171]-[176]:
One consideration is whether the two disputes involve the same factual or legal disagreement, i.e. the same conflict of legal or factual views or claims, one indicator being whether the second dispute can be resolved without simultaneously determining the first dispute.
A second consideration is whether the two disputes have the same “real cause”, which includes whether the facts and considerations that gave rise to the earlier dispute continue to be central to the later dispute, or whether the disputes have the same origin or source.
A third consideration is whether the two disputes target or centre on the same conduct. One indicator of this is whether the acts of wrongdoing were committed by the same entity.
The motivations underlying the two sets of acts were not particularly helpful.
It is not sufficient that the acts which are the subject of the claim breach treaty obligations for them to constitute a post-treaty dispute.
I have had regard to these various formulations, but I have ultimately been guided by the principle in issue: is the tribunal, in substance, being asked to take jurisdiction over a dispute which came into existence before the treaty came into force? While the identity of the claimant or the cause of action may be of some assistance in answering that question, they cannot be determinative (not least because that would open the way for inventive lawyering to circumvent the non-retroactivity principle).
Mr Bastin KC invited me to test the issue by considering what would happen if there had been a pre-arbitration process in respect of the first set of facts, and the second set of facts had then occurred, and ask whether a second pre-arbitration process would be required. One might also raise a similar issue of whether a claim in relation to the second set of facts could be brought into a pending arbitration commenced by reference to the first. However, I do not think these analogies – in which considerations of procedural economy and expeditious dispute resolution are paramount – assist on the issue of the non-retrospective application of the BIT.
The position on the facts
I have concluded that the answer to this question is relatively clear, and it is the answer the Tribunal gave.
I accept that the complaint relating to the 1990 tender was a dispute which pre-existed the coming into force of the BIT. Mr Stava raised this dispute with Dr Bojar on 4 October 1990, which I accept reflects knowledge on Mr Stava’s part that Conneco would not be declared the winner of the tender. In any event, a complaint about the 1990 tender process was made by Conneco to the Ministry of Health on 9 July 1991.
On 20 February 1991, Dr Bojar wrote to selected Czech hospitals requesting and insisting that they stop negotiations with foreign partners. I have seen no evidence that this directive was communicated to Conneco prior to 7 August 1991, still less that Conneco had made any complaint about it:
It is clear hospitals did continue to negotiate with Conneco after this date: see Annex 1, [1]-[4], [6]-[9] and [11]-[14].
While the director of Kolin Hospital appears to have interrupted negotiations with Conneco, it is clear from his letter of 8 May 1991 that this was the exception.
On 15 April 1991, Conneco was invited to participate in the 1991 tender.
I can find no record of Conneco complaining about such an instruction, even though it does not appear to have been backward in notifying its unhappiness to the Ministry of Health about the tender processes, nor was it raised in meetings with Novo Nordisk on 14 May and 14 August 1991.
On 25 June 1991, the 1991 Selection Committee decided not to accept Conneco’s or Novo Nordisk’s proposals and recommended that three other companies move to the next round. I accept that Conneco was aware that it had not reached the second round by 9 July 1991 when it wrote complaining about this fact. Any dispute in relation to the second tender had crystallised at this point. The thrust of Conneco’s complaint was that the pricing comparison in the 1991 tender had not been performed appropriately. It is no answer that the tender had not yet been awarded: a party who fails to make it through the group stage cannot treat its non-appearance in the final as a separate dispute.
On 15 July 1991, Dr Turek sent a memorandum to Dr Bojar reporting on the outcome of the review of the tenders undertaken by the evaluation committee formed by the Ministry of Health. Dr Turek recommended that, with the launch of the new venture with the successful tenderers, it was necessary “to prohibit negotiations with processors other than the recommended ones” and that changes should be made in the competency of the Ministry of Health to permit this. Dr Turek confirmed that this was a recommendation to the Ministry of Health. There is no evidence as to when the recommendation was accepted.
In the period after 9 July 1991 (still less before 7 August 1991, when the BIT came into effect), there is nothing to indicate that Conneco perceived any threat to its existing business in the Czech Republic, although aware it had not won the tender, nor is there any evidence that it was aware of the recommendation made by Dr Turek’s committee on 15 July 1991 (still less that it had been accepted by the Ministry of Health, even assuming that was in fact the case). The contemporaneous documents establish the following:
On 5 August 1991, Conneco’s distribution warehouse was inspected and approved by the Ministry of Health.
On 12 August 1991, Dr Turek sent a memorandum to district authorities and subordinates of the Ministry of Health informing them that the Ministry of Health had authorised co-operation with Immuno Wien AG “in the construction of instrument plasma centres” and, in what was described as a “pilot project”, with Instituto Grifols Barcelona “in the processing of human plasma abroad”, the contractual arrangement being “subject to approval” by the Ministry of Health. There is nothing to indicate that this memorandum was sent to Conneco (although the BIT had already come into force in any event).
Conneco entered into amendments to or replacements of its existing co-operation agreements: see Annex 1.
The meeting with Novo Nordisk on 14 August 1991 referred to the lack of success in the 1991 tender but did not suggest that Conneco and Novo Nordisk’s existing business in the Czech Republic was in peril. Instead, there was reference to a new Czech opportunity with a facility in Brno, and to sharing a stand at a Prague convention. The minutes stated that 3,000 litres of plasma sourced in the Czech Republic were still expected to be delivered in 1991.
On 15 October 1991, the Ministry of Health authorised Conneco to distribute pharmaceuticals, referring to its storage premises at the Institute of Haematology and Blood Transfusion with Dr Vorlova.
On 30 October 1991, the Prague Customs Office gave Conneco export and import permits to send FFP to Novo Nordisk, and to re-import fractionated blood products.
The Czech Republic invited me to resolve this issue in the following way: “if one approaches this chronologically and asks how things looked shortly after the Bojar Letter was sent and whether the parties’ relationship was markedly different or simply a changed version?” The answer to that question is that the former is emphatically the case. The wholesale (and dramatic) changes which the Bojar Letter brought about are summarised in Annex 2. The contrast between the conduct of Conneco and Novo Nordisk after that date, and the position prior to 7 August 1991, is stark. The effect of the Bojar Letter was completely to cut-off the foundation of Conneco’s business in the Czech Republic and represented a dramatic departure from what had gone before, and a new dispute.
The terms of the Commercial Arbitration Agreement – stating “the parties have agreed that the dispute between them in respect of compensation for the loss allegedly caused in connection with [the Bojar Letter] should be arbitrated” – also confirms the fact that this represented a new and significant issue between the parties.
Reverting to the factors identified in the case law by way of further explanation of that conclusion, the Bojar Letter dispute:
had a different subject-matter to any disputes concerning the 1990 and 1991 tenders;
had a different “real cause”, and rested on essentially different facts (the sending of the Bojar Letter);
was capable of being resolved independently of any disputes regarding the 1990 and 1991 tenders (as is evident from the terms of the Commercial Arbitration Agreement and the fact the Award did determine it independently of any claims relating to the 1990 and 1991 tenders, over which the Tribunal held that they had no jurisdiction); and
targeted different conduct to any dispute about the 1990 and 1991 tenders.
For these reasons, the Czech Republic’s ratione temporae challenge is dismissed.
THE QUALIFYING INVESTOR OBJECTION
That brings me, finally, to what has long been the most important and most difficult issue in this arbitration challenge: did the placing of the shares in Diag SE in the Koruna Trust in June 2011 have the effect that it ceased to be a Swiss company for the purposes of the BIT, and therefore ineligible to accept the standing offer to arbitrate investment disputes contained in Article 9 of the BIT when the Request for Arbitration was served? That issue ultimately turns on the construction of Article 1(1)(c) of the BIT.
How the issue arises
The issue arises as follows:
Article 1(1) of the BIT defines the term “investor”, the standing offer to arbitrate in Article 9 of the BIT providing “the dispute shall upon the request of the investor be submitted to an arbitral tribunal”.
There are three categories of investor.
First, under Article 1(1)(a), “natural persons who are nationals of that Contracting Party in accordance with its laws”.
Second, under Article 1(1)(b), “legal entities” – which it is common ground means legal persons – “which are constituted or otherwise duly organized under the law of that Contracting Party and have their seat, together with real economic activities in the territory of that same Contracting Party”. This, therefore, imposes a three-limb test: (i) constitution or organisation under the law of that Contracting Party; (ii) a seat in that Contracting Party; and (iii) “real” (although not necessarily its predominant) economic activities in the territory of that Contracting Party.
Third, legal entities established under the “law of any country” (which could, therefore, include those established under the law of one Contracting Party where the second or third limbs of Article 1(1)(b) were not satisfied, or under the law of the host state) “which are, directly or indirectly, controlled by nationals of that Contracting Party” (i.e. a natural person within Article 1(1)(a)) “or by legal entities having their seat, together with real economic activities, in the territory of that Contracting Party” (i.e. who satisfy the second and third limbs of Article 1(1)(b)).
The Czech Republic contends that Diag SE does not fall within Article 1(1). It is common ground that it could only do so if it fell within Article 1(1)(c). The Czech Republic is not able to challenge the Tribunal’s conclusion that it did so up to June 2011 but contends that it ceased to do so at that point because its shares were transferred into a Liechtenstein discretionary trust called the Koruna Trust, the trustee of which is a legal person with its seat and real economic activity in Liechtenstein. I have held that the ambit of that challenge which is open before the court is limited to the period from the setting up of the Koruna Trust to the end of 2011.
My factual findings
For the purposes of this issue, I held that the scope of the objection open to the Czech Republic related to the effect of events occurring in the time period of the objection taken before the Tribunal, which related to the transfer of the shares in Diag SE into the Koruna Trust in June 2011 up to the end of the pledge arrangements put in place as an element of the Lawbook Transaction at the end of 2011. To the extent that some fresh event was relied upon after that date as altering the position – i.e. an argument to the effect that even if Diag SE was still controlled by Mr Stava in a relevant sense at the end of 2011, this was no longer the case thereafter – I held that this would not constitute the same “ground for objection” as that taken before the Tribunal. For that reason, the arguments before me and the factual findings made relate to the position as at the end of December 2011.
When I gave permission to appeal on the Stava June 2011 Objection, I noted the risk that, if my decision was overturned, a factual enquiry would be required in relation to Mr Stava’s legal rights concerning and factual control over Diag SE which the court would be considering as part of the Czech Republic’s nationality challenge to Diag SE’s claims. I made it clear that the court would expect the factual findings (including for this purpose findings of Liechtenstein law) made at this hearing to be binding on both the Czech Republic and Mr Stava in that eventuality. In the event, the parties were able to agree undertakings as follows:
“The Court recorded in para 6.a of its Order of 11 April 2024 (sealed 9 May 2024): ‘Permission to appeal is granted in respect of: (a) The Claimant’s First Ground of Appeal subject to the Claimant’s undertaking that, if the appeal succeeds, it will be bound by the fact findings made in the “post-June 2011” challenge to the award in favour of the First Defendant; …’. The Parties hereby confirm they both provide this undertaking, i.e., to be bound by the fact findings made at the Second Hearing (which for the avoidance of doubt covers facts relating to both ownership and control).”
I have set out my findings of fact, which include, for this purpose, my findings of Liechtenstein law, in Annex 3. My conclusions are as follows:
Mr Stava made an investment in Diag SE and through Diag SE in the Czech Republic, for the reasons set out in my reasoning on the “No Investment” challenge.
No investment was made by the Koruna Trust or the Trustee.
The Lawbook Transaction was not a genuine transaction but an attempt to create apparent distance between Mr Stava and Diag SE following indications from high levels within the Czech Government that this would be helpful to any attempt to resolve the dispute by negotiation.
Mr Stava’s legal decision-making powers as chairman of Diag SE, holder of the bearer shares in Diag SE and as Protector of the Koruna Trust:
were not, in the first two instances, held in his own right; and
in each case, were not exercisable solely by reference to his own interests, but only in what Mr Stava believed to be the best interest of Diag SE / the Koruna Trust (as appropriate).
That was also true of the Trustee’s powers.
There was no realistic possibility of a conflict of interest between Mr Stava’s own interests and those of the Koruna Trust in relation to the conduct of Diag SE’s only business, its attempt to enforce the Commercial Arbitration Award. In relation to that matter, the Trustee was entitled to and did leave the enforcement efforts to Mr Stava (who also funded them).
There was no realistic possibility of the Trustee or any other member of the Class of Beneficiaries disagreeing with or seeking to challenge any decision taken by Mr Stava in the conduct of Diag SE’s business.
The Trustee of the Koruna Trust had the legal right to sell the shares in Diag SE, where the Trustee formed the good faith view that such a sale was in the business interests of the Koruna Trust and was a prudent business judgement, but it is virtually inconceivable that it would have followed such a course if Mr Stava opposed it. Had the Trustee been intent on pursuing such a sale in defiance of Mr Stava’s wishes, I am satisfied that Mr Stava’s daughters would have supported him in removing the Trustee in the exercise of his powers as Protector and/or appointing himself as Trustee together with a Liechtenstein-domiciled trustee, and that Mr Stava would have been able to act so as to prevent a sale which he opposed consistent with his duties as Protector.
Mr Stava had a legal power to prevent the Trustee adding or removing members of the Class of Beneficiaries, to be exercised in what he believed to be the best interests of the Koruna Trust.
As the Settlor and a member of the Class of Beneficiaries, Mr Stava would have had significant influence over any decisions by the Trustee to add or exclude members of the Class of Beneficiaries or to make a distribution. However, he had no legal right to require the Trustee to act in certain way, and the Trustee would not have automatically followed Mr Stava’s wishes but would have had regard to all relevant circumstances.
In the circumstances prevailing in January 2012, Mr Stava’s three daughters would have supported his wishes as to the eligibility of Beneficiaries or the distribution of assets from the Koruna Trust (albeit they were under no legal obligation to do so), and in those circumstances it is virtually certain that the Trustee would have formed the perfectly proper professional judgement that it should act in the manner supported by the Stava family. Had the Trustee refused to do so, there is a high likelihood that Mr Stava’s daughters would have supported him if he had decided to remove the Trustee and/or appoint himself as trustee together with a Liechtenstein-domiciled trustee (although they were under no legal obligation to provide such support).
It is not fanciful to suppose that there could be circumstances in which there would be a disagreement within the Class of Beneficiaries as to how assets should be distributed from the Koruna Trust. In that eventuality, it is not possible to determine how the Trustee would have acted or whether the Trustee could have been removed. It would all depend on the circumstances.
The effect of these factual findings is that if Article 1(1)(c) of the BIT requires control of a legal entity to arise from legal rights, or to derive to some extent from a proprietary interest in that legal entity (which I shall refer to by the shorthand “de jure control”), then Mr Stava did not have it. If, however, de facto control might in some circumstances be sufficient, then further analysis is required.
The text of the BIT
By way of a reminder, Article 1(1) provides:
The term “investor” refers with regard to either Contracting Party to
natural persons who are nationals of that Contracting Party in accordance with its laws;
legal entities, including companies, corporations, business associations and other organizations, which are constituted or otherwise duly organized under the law of that Contracting party and have their seat, together with real economic activities, in the territory of that same Contracting Party;
legal entities established under the law of any country which are, directly or indirectly, controlled by nationals of that Contracting Party or by legal entities having their seat, together with real economic activities, in the territory of that Contracting Party.”
The text of the BIT offers relatively little guidance as to what the concept of “control” involves:
Mr Dunning KC laid particular emphasis on the use of the word “controlled” (there being a debate I am pleased not to have to resolve as to whether, grammatically, this was a past participle or the present tense passive voice). I accept that this is of some assistance in requiring an actual state of control, rather than an ability to bring one about (a distinction which has been discussed in the English courts in the context of Russian sanctions), but it does not assist on the issue of de jure or de facto control. However, the force of that point is, to some extent, attenuated by the fact that Article 1(1)(c) contemplates that the requirement of control can be satisfied by a group of individuals who satisfy Article 1(1)(a) or a group of legal persons who satisfy Article 1(1)(b) without requiring any form of binding agreement between the members of the group to act as a block. Further, the Protocol to the BIT, on which Mr Dunning KC also relied, refers simply to “proof of control”.
The Czech Republic also pointed to the relatively narrow definition in Article 1(1)(b) – which looked not simply at the place of incorporation, but required “real economic activities”, suggesting that this told against a broad concept of control in Article 1(1)(c). However, the fact that the BIT did not treat the mere act of registration of “letter box” companies as sufficient does not assist on the interpretation of control. Both de jure and de facto control by its nationals can be said to represent a significant connection with a Contracting State. The terms of Article 1(1)(b) do not assist in identifying which of those is correct.
Finally, the Protocol to the BIT provides:
An investor according to Article 1, paragraph 1, letter (c) may be required to submit proof of such control in order to be recognized by the Contracting Party in the territory of which the investment has been or is to be made as an investor of the other Contracting Party.
Investors referred to in Article 1, paragraph (1), letter (c) may not raise a claim based on Article 6 of this Agreement [if] compensation has been paid pursuant to a similar provision in another Investment Protection Agreement concluded by the Contracting Party in the territory of which the investment has been paid”.
The Czech Republic suggested that the reference to “proof” in Protocol (1) supported its case that control via legal rights or involving an ownership interest was required. However, de facto as well as de jure control can be “proved”, and I regard the reference as neutral. Protocol (2) appears to provide, inter alia, for a situation where a company incorporated in State X may have a claim under an investment treaty between State X and the Czech Republic, and also a claim under the BIT by virtue of Article 1(1)(c) control. However, it does not assist on the meaning of the concept of control.
I accept (as many ITA Awards have concluded) that the concept of control can, as a matter of its ordinary meaning in general usage and in the legal lexicon, embrace both de facto and de jure control. All will depend on the context in which it is used.
ITA Awards and doctrine on the issue of the control of legal entities in investor-state dispute settlement
I was referred to a number of ITA Awards and passages from commentary addressing the meaning of “control” in investment treaties and the ICSID Convention. In considering that material, it is important to distinguish between the different contexts in which the issue of control of a corporate entity can arise in investor state dispute settlement.
Nationality issues
The present context involves determining the nationality of a corporation, for the purposes of determining whether it has protected nationality:
If it has protected nationality, the claimant is able to accept the standing offer to arbitrate contained in the BIT. If it does not have protected nationality, it will be unable to do so, and the BIT arbitral tribunal will lack jurisdiction for the purposes of s.30 of the 1996 Act (see the March Judgment, [148]-[153]).
The claims by the corporate entity as an investor will succeed as to 100% of its interest in the protected investment if it has the requisite nationality and fail as to 100% if it does not. If, for example, the corporate entity meets the nationality requirement because 51% of its shares are held by a Swiss national and that majority gives control, it will be Swiss and can sue for 100% (not 51%) of its loss under the Switzerland-Czech Republic BIT. If, however, 51% of its shares are held by a British national, and 49% by a Swiss national, and that majority shareholding is sufficient to give the British national control, it will not have Swiss nationality, and it will not be able to recover at all under the Switzerland-CSFR BIT.
Issues of corporate control can also arise when determining whether a claimant has protected nationality in the following contexts:
First, so-called “denial of benefits” clauses, for example that which appears in Article 17(1) of the ECT which provides that each Contracting Party reserves the right to deny the advantage of one part of the Treaty to “a legal entity if citizens or nationals of a third state own or control such entity and if that entity has no substantial business activities in the Area of the Contracting Party in which it is organised”.
Second, the definition of “National of another Contracting State” in Article 25(2)(b) the ICSID Convention which provides:
“any juridical person which had the nationality of the Contracting State party to the dispute on [the relevant] date and which, because of foreign control, the parties have agreed should be treated as a national of another Contracting State for the purposes of this Convention”.
The effect of this provision is that there are circumstances in which a legal entity established under the laws of the home state could bring a claim against the host state because it had been agreed it should be treated as a national of foreign state because of foreign control.
Once again, the effect of these provisions is that the corporate entity seeking to bring the claim will either be within or without the protection of the relevant treaty, rather than enjoying protection to the extent only of the relevant foreign control.
I was referred to a number of ITA Awards which had addressed the issue of control in these or related contexts.
Vacuum Salt Products Limited v Governor of the Republic of Ghana ICSID Case No ARB/92/1, Award of 16 February 1994 (Jennings, Brower, Hossain) had to address Article 25(2)(b) of the ICSID Convention. The claimant company was incorporated under the laws of Ghana, and in order to invoke the ICSID Convention for the purpose of its claim against the Republic of Ghana, the claimant had to bring itself within Article 25(2)(b). A Greek national, Mr Panagiotopulos, held 20% of the shares in the claimant, with the other 80% held by Ghanian entities. At [43]-[44], the tribunal held:
“The Tribunal notes, and itself confirms, that ‘foreign control’ within the meaning of the second clause of Article 25(2) (b) does not require, or imply, any particular percentage of share ownership. Each case arising under that clause must be viewed in its own particular context, on the basis of all of the facts and circumstances. There is no ‘formula.’ It stands to reason, of course, that 100 percent foreign ownership almost certainly would result in foreign control, by whatever standard, and that a total absence of foreign shareholding would virtually preclude the existence of such control. How much is ‘enough,’ however, cannot be determined abstractly. Thus, in the course of the drafting of the Convention, it was said variously that ‘interests sufficiently important to be able to block major changes in the company’ could amount to a ‘controlling interest’ (Convention History, Vol. II, 447); that ‘control could in fact be acquired by persons holding only 25 percent of’ a company’s capital (id., 447-48); and even that ‘51% of the shares might not be controlling’ while for some purposes ‘15% was sufficient’ (id., 538). As Amerasinghe has said, ‘the concept of ‘control’ is broad and flexible.... [T]he question is... whether the nationality chosen represents an exercise of a reasonable amount of control to warrant its choice on the basis of a reasonable criterion.’
Nonetheless, it must be true that the smaller is the percentage of voting shares held by the asserted source of foreign control, the more one must look to other elements bearing on that issue. As one authority has said, ‘a tribunal... may regard any criterion based on management, voting rights, shareholding or any other reasonable theory as being reasonable for the purpose.’ … It is on this basis that Claimant has strongly advanced, and Respondent has sharply contested, arguments as to control based on the role Mr. Panagiotopulos personally played in Vacuum Salt on 22 January 1988.”
The tribunal considered the evidence intended to suggest that Mr Panagiotopulos had control over Vacuum Salt, concluding in the following terms at [53]:
“It is significant that nowhere does there appear to be any evidence that Mr Panagiotopulos either acted or was materially influential in a truly managerial rather than technical or supervisory vein. At all times he was subject to the direction of the Managing Director … Nowhere in these proceedings is it suggested that Mr Panagiotopulos, as holder of 20 percent of Vacuum Salt’s shares, either through an alliance with other shareholders, through securing a significant power of decision or managerial influence, or otherwise, was in a position to steer, through either positive or negative action, the fortunes of Vacuum Salt … In the end, the entire proceedings, even viewed in the light most favourable to Claimant, are instinct with the sense that Mr Panagiotopulos, for all his admitted talents, was not in any sense ‘in charge’”.
Mr Dunning KC understandably placed reliance on the tribunal’s observation that “a total absence of foreign shareholding would virtually preclude the existence of such control.” However, I did not understand the tribunal to find that some shareholding was a legal pre-requisite to a finding of foreign control. It is difficult to see why the presence of a 1%, 2% or 5% shareholding which was not in itself a means of control should be determinative if the control was effected by other means. The overall effect of the decision is that the question of foreign control is a flexible one, to be determined in the light of all facts and circumstances, with material influence in a managerial rather than technical or supervisory way, and being “in charge”, being relevant factors.
In Plama Consortium Limited v Bulgaria ICSID Case No ARB/03/24, Award of 8 February 2005 (Salans, van den Berg, Veeder), when discussing the denial of benefits provision in Article 17 of the ECT, the tribunal stated at [170] that “control includes control in fact, including an ability to exercise substantial influence over the legal entity’s management and the selection of members of its board of directors or any other management body” (noting that that appeared to be common ground).
In Aguas del Tunari SA v Republic of Bolivia ICSD Case No ARB/02/3, Decision on Respondents Objections to Jurisdiction of 21 October 2005 (Caron, Alberro-Semerena, Alvarez), the issue of control arose in a very similar context to the present – whether a legal person which was not constituted under the laws of the Netherlands nonetheless constituted a Dutch national for the purpose of the Netherlands-Bolivia BIT because it was “controlled directly or indirectly by nationals of that Contracting Party …”. It is important to note the context in which the issue of “control” arose. A Dutch company owned 100% of another Dutch company, which owned 55% of a Liechtenstein company which owned 55% of the claimant. The claimant argued that this was sufficient to establish its Dutch nationality (it did not need to, and did not, argue that a certain level of shareholding was not simply sufficient, but also necessary). Bolivia argued that in addition to de jure control, it was also necessary to establish de facto control, and its case was that the two Dutch companies were mere shells, with actual control of the Bolivian corporate claimant being exercised further up the corporate chain by US companies. The majority of the tribunal accepted that the ordinary and legal meanings of the word “control” embraced both de jure and de facto control ([227, [231], [233]), although they did suggest at [242]:
“Given the context of defining the scope of eligible claimants, the word ‘controlled’ is not intended to act as an alternative to ownership since control without an ownership interest would define a group of entities not necessarily possessing an interest which could be the subject of a claim. In this sense, ‘controlled’ indicates a quality of the ownership interest.”
I have found this observation puzzling, because it seems to presuppose the foreign nationals with control will be the claimants, and their interest in the claimant corporation the investment which would be the subject of the claim. My understanding is that it is the locally incorporated legal entity which will be the claimant (if endowed with Dutch nationality for the purposes of the BIT through foreign control) and that it will be its assets which form the basis of the claim.
The majority of the tribunal did, however, make a forensically powerful point against a requirement of factual control, which I accept is equally applicable to an alternative free-standing test of de facto control: that it was “sufficiently vague as to be unmanageable” ([246]). That said, the majority were clearly prepared to contemplate a wide variety of forms of legal control, referring at [264] to “the percentage of shares held, legal rights conveyed in instruments or agreements such as the articles of incorporation or shareholders’ agreements, or a combination of these”. In addition, they did not purport to define the concept exhaustively (“the tribunal observes that it is not charged with determining all forms which control may take”: [264]) and they appeared to accept that issues of factual control might be relevant in cases in which the alleged foreign controller had a minority shareholding ([288]).
In Yukos Universal Limited (Isle of Man) v The Russian Federation PCA Case No 2005-04/AA227, Interim Award on Jurisdiction and Admissibility of 30 November 2009 (Fortier, Poncet, Schwebel), the issue which arose was whether the “denial of benefit” provision in Article 17 of the ECT was engaged when the shares in the claimant company were held in Guernsey discretionary trusts, with most of the trusts having a Protector who was required to consent to important decisions. While it was not necessary to decide the issue to resolve the dispute, the suggestion by the Russian Federation that, in effect, the tribunal should “look behind” the trusteeship to those beneficially interested in the trusts was rejected, the tribunal holding at [517] that the trusts were “valid and effective as a matter of Guernsey trust law, and vest ownership and control to the Trustees within the framework of the trust instruments.” It is fair to say that the tribunal regarded the legal position under Guernsey trust law as effectively determinative of this question. However, this may have reflected the case management decision at [509] to defer the issue of whether the former shareholders “may have retained control over the shares transferred into trust as part of a structure they may have established or used at various points for fraudulent or criminal purposes”, addressing only “certain issues which arise within the more narrow framework” of Guernsey trust law ([510]-[511]).
In Bernhard von Pezold & Others v Zimbabwe ICSID Case No ARB/10/14, Award of 28 July 2015 (Fortier, Williams, Hwang), issues of control arose both to establish the Swiss nationality of locally incorporated companies for the purpose of Article 1(1)(c) of the Switzerland-Zimbabwe BIT and the availability of the ICSID Convention through the application of Article 25(2)(b). Article 1(1)(c) of the relevant BIT gave legal entities established under the law of the host state the nationality of the other state if they were “effectively controlled” by natural or legal persons who satisfied the terms of Article 1(1)(a) or (b). The chains of ownership of the locally incorporated companies were very complex, with members of the von Pezold family (comprising Rudiger who was German, Elisabeth, the Adult Children and Adam, who were Swiss and German) collectively having:
100% direct or indirect stakes in “the Forrester Companies” and Northern Tobacco (Private) Limited which appears to have been held via a trust of which Rudiger and Elisabeth were beneficiaries;
86.49% indirect stakes in the Border Companies (held by the von Pezolds collectively except Adam);
50% of the Makandi Companies save for Rusitu Valley of which 44.4% was owned by Rudiger and Elisabeth.
The Article 25(2)(b) issue in relation to the Border Companies was dealt with by the tribunal very briefly, and, on the facts, its conclusion is not surprising, and to that extent is compatible with the cases of both the Czech Republic and the Arbitral Claimants. However, the terms in which the tribunal resolved the issue was not to point to legal rights, but to the actual control exercised specifically by Elisabeth: “the evidence clearly demonstrates that Elisabeth exercises overall control of the Border Companies and that Rudiger, the Adult Children Claimants and Adam abide by Elisabeth’s exercise of ultimate control over those companies” ([215]). This appears to base the finding of control on Elisabeth’s de facto control. The tribunal found that the BIT nationality provision was satisfied by the Border Companies because they were “effectively controlled by Swiss nationals, and, in particular, by Elisabeth”, with “day-to-day management” by Heinrich, one of the Adult Children ([226]). Once again, the tribunal’s focus appeared to be the factual exercise of control. There is no focus on the word “effectively”, and I do not regard that word of itself as a strong pointer to one means of control rather than another – it is difficult to see how “ineffective control” could be control at all.
Having established jurisdiction ratione personae, the tribunal turned at [317] to what was described as “one last issue … to whom these investments belonged.” The issue of control here arises for a different purpose and in a different context, and I address this part of the von Pezold award at [204] below.
Guardian Fiduciary Trust Ltd v Macedonia ICSID Case No ARB/12/31, Award of 22 September 2015 (Heiskanen, Bucher, Stern) was another case concerned with a similar nationality provision in Article I(b)(III) of the Netherlands-Macedonia BIT. The claimant was a New Zealand company, owned by another New Zealand company CCT. Legal title in the shares in CCT was held by IN Asset Management, a New Zealand company owned by a Dutch Stiftung. However, IN Asset Management held its shares in CCT on trust for CCG, a Marshall Islands company. The tribunal observed that the issue of whether it was the Stiftung or CCG which had control of the claimant was not solely a question of New Zealand law but turned on the evidence ([134]). There was no evidence of actual control of the claimant being exercised by In Asset Management, whereas there was evidence of actual control being exercised by CCG ([137]). Accordingly, the claimant did not fall within Article 1(b)(III) of the BIT.
In United Utilities (Tallinn) BV v Estonia ICSID Case No ARB/14/24, Award of 21 June 2019 (Drymer, Stern, Williams), the issue of control arose in the same contexts: in the Netherlands-Estonia BIT, for the purpose of clothing a legal person constituted under the laws of a non-contracting state with protected nationality where it was “controlled, directly or indirectly by” natural or legal persons who satisfied the BIT’s nationality requirements in Articles 1(1)(a) and (b), and under Article 25(2)(b) of the ICSID Convention. In both contexts, the tribunal stated at [366] that “control is a flexible concept, which can only be determined on a case-by-case basis in the light of particular facts.” At [371], the tribunal cited with approval a passage from Professor Schreuer’s commentary on the concept in the ICSID Convention stating that “foreign control is a complex question requiring the examination of several factors such as equity participation, voting rights and management. In order to obtain a reliable picture, all these aspects must be looked at in conjunction”. The tribunal identified various factors – majority shareholdings, blocking shareholdings, voting rights, contractual arrangements and “the particular nature of the influence exercised by the foreign person over the domestic entity.”
In addition, two ITA Awards considering the effect of Article 1117 of the North American Free Trade Agreement (“NAFTA”) can usefully be considered in this context, because they raise the essentially similar issue of whether claims of a corporate claimant incorporated in the host state can nonetheless be advanced as investment treaty claims by a national of another signatory state because the foreign national “owns or controls directly or indirectly” the local legal entity.
The first is International Thunderbird Gaming Corporation v United Mexican States NAFTA Award 26 January 2006 (van den Berg, Portal Ariosa, Walde). The claimant (a US company) sought to bring claims in respect of a number of locally incorporated entities in which it had minority shareholdings. The tribunal rejected the contention that Article 1117 required “a showing of legal control” ([106]), noting that as a matter of ordinary meaning, control can be exercised in various manners, and concluding that “a showing of effective or ‘de facto’ control is … sufficient for the purposes of Article 1117 of the NAFTA”. There is a rather curious statement that “de facto control must be established beyond reasonable doubt”, which does not seem to rest on any principled underpinning and may be no more than a reference to the need for a cogent evidential base for the assertion. De facto control was found because the claimant “had the ability to exercise a significant influence on the decision-making of [one local company] and was, through its actions, officers, resources and expertise, the consistent driving force behind EDM’s business endeavour in Mexico”. It suggested at [108] that “control can also be achieved by the power to effectively decide and implement the key decisions of the business activity of an enterprise, and, under certain circumstances, control can be achieved by the existence of one or more factors such as technology, access to supplies, access to markets, access to capital, know how and authoritative reputation”.
The second is B.Mex LLC v United Mexican States ICSID Case No ARB(AF)/16, Partial Award of 19 July 2019 (Verhoosel, Born, Vinuesa). Once again, at [205], the tribunal held that “‘control’ can mean both the legal capacity to control and de facto control” ([205], [210], [234]), suggesting control could be established where “the investor does not own a number of shares sufficient to confer the legal capacity to control but is otherwise able to exercise de facto control” At [212], the tribunal stated that “there is no specific manner or form that ‘control’ must take”. In respect of a company called E-Games, control was found through a combination of a “blocking” shareholding, the exercise of significant influence on decision making, being exposed to the economic consequences of the decisions and involvement in the capitalisation and operation of the business. With respect to a further company, Operadora Pesa, the claimants had no shares in it. The claim in respect of that company was dismissed under Article 1101 of NAFTA, which limited its application to measures which relate to “investments of investors”. It was common ground that the claimants had not made an investment in that company ([245]). That ground of objection does not arise here, not least because I have rejected the Czech Republic’s “no investment” challenge.
So far as academic commentary on this issue is concerned, I was referred to Michael Schmid’s chapter in Professor Chester Brown’s edited volume, Commentaries on Selected Model Investment Treaties (2013), p.665 which refers to the extension of protection to investments of subsidiaries of the investor in Swiss BITs, and, when explaining why the extension should cover both owned subsidiaries as well as controlled subsidiaries, states “the control of a company requires at least a relative majority of shares”. I do not believe Professor Brown was seeking in this comment to address the complex issue of de facto and de jure concepts of control. He also notes (although I have not relied upon this as I am not persuaded it is admissible under the VCLT) that provisions of this kind reflect Switzerland’s “underlying policy stance for the purposes of investment protection … that it should not matter how an investor structures the investment as long as the investment he controls is located in the territory of the other BIT partner company.”
Schreuer’s Commentary on the ICSID Convention 3rd (2022), discussing Article 25(2)(b) of the ICSID Convention states at [324]:
“As stressed by the Tribunal in United Utilities v Estonia in the context of Art.25(2)(b), ‘control is a flexible concept, which can only be determined case by case in the light of particular facts.’ While it can be grounded on formal, legal control through ownership, it can also derive from other factors such as operational management and expertise.”
At [325], they note the same approach had been adopted when applying Article 1117 of NAFTA. After surveying ITA Awards in this context, and those addressing control in the following section, they state at [330]:
“Overall, the case law on these various provisions dealing with the concept of control demonstrates that arbitral tribunals have shown a high degree of flexibility. In order to determine control, they have, in addition to formal ownership, looked at criteria such as powers of management and operation of the investment, as well as expertise. What matters to establish control are not formal parameters, like the existence or amount of ownership, but the actual ability to direct the action of the controlled investment.”
The link between the investor and the asset giving rise to the claim
Issues of control of a corporation can also arise when determining whether the requisite link has been established between a protected national, and the investment said to give rise to the claim (i.e. as a means of identifying whether the claimant has a protected interest or standing to complain of a particular breach of the treaty).
Sometimes, the terms of the BIT will make it clear that an economic interest deriving from control of the investment, as well as one arising from ownership, will suffice. Thus, the USA Model BIT (2004) defined investment as “every asset that an investor owns or controls, directly or indirectly” and the NAFTA provides that “an investment of an investor of a Party” is “an investment owned or controlled directly or indirectly by an investor of such a Party”. Article 1(6) of the ECT defined an investment as “every kind of asset owned or controlled directly or indirectly by an Investor ….”
The Czech Republic relied on Professor Zachary Douglas’ commentary on these provisions in The International Law of Investment Claims (2009), where he argues both that, even where there is no express requirement that the investor control the investment in issue, such a requirement is implicit ([555]-[556]), and that the link between the investor and the asset must be a legal right of control stating:
“The question is then how to define ‘control’ for the purposes of satisfying the requisite nexus between the claimant and the investment. In giving effect to the ordinary meaning of the word ‘control’ or the implicit requirement that mirrors it, reference must be had to general principles of property law and company law ...”
At [558] he continues:
“This discussion of the relationship between an individual or legal entity (the claimant) and its investment (property or assets) reveals that the question of control is a question of law. It would be meaningless for a claimant to assert that it is the de facto owner of the land that constitutes its investment or has some other form of de facto control in respect thereof. Either the claimant has a power to control that property that is recognised by the lex situs or it does not”.
At [560], Professor Douglas KC suggests that the words “controlled directly or indirectly” in this context do not correspond to the distinction between de jure and de facto control, with indirect ownership or control meaning cases where a claimant does not have direct ownership or control over the assets comprising the investment, but instead exercise such ownership or control indirectly by having direct ownership or control of the legal entity that does have direct ownership or control of the assets.
Before turning to the ITA Awards to which I was referred with reference to this aspect of control, it is important to note that the relevance of “control” in this context is different to its relevance in the nationality context. One obvious difference between the two contexts can be seen in the summary of the rules which Professor Douglas KC placed at the start of chapter 7 of The International Law of Investment Claims.
Rule 31, addressing nationality, provides “the claimant must have had the relevant nationality at the time of the alleged breach of the obligation forming part of its claim and continuously thereafter until the time the arbitral proceedings are commenced”.
Rule 32, addressing the link between the investor and the investment, provides:
“The claimant must have had control over the investment in the host contracting state party at the time of the alleged breach of the obligation forming the basis of its claim. There is no requirement of continuous control over the investment until the time that arbitration proceedings are commenced or thereafter”.
In the March Judgment, I held that issues of control addressing the subject of Douglas Rule 30 (does the claimant have protected nationality?) were jurisdictional for the purposes of s.30 of the 1996 Act, whereas at least part of those addressing the subject of Douglas Rule 31 (had the claimant with protected nationality disposed of the investment prior to one of the alleged breaches?) was not. As noted at [256]-[259] below, I have concluded that the same distinction provides the answer to the Arbitral Claimants’ issue estoppel case.
When the investor’s link to the asset is established by control, issues will arise not only as to the existence of the necessary link (the issue discussed by Professor Douglas KC) but also its extent, in particular when determining the extent of any compensable loss – for example, if the investor had minority (or no) ownership of the asset which gives rise to the claim, how is compensation to be assessed? Does control give the investor 100% of the value of the asset, in which case what of a co-investor without control? The ITA Awards I have been referred to do not address this issue.
I can see that considerations of this kind might be said to favour a requirement of control by legal rights as the link between the investor and the asset: legal rights are more readily susceptible to valuation than “de facto” control, not least because they are generally easier to sell. However, even in this context I should record that that has not been the approach in many of the ITA Awards I have been referred to and I am conscious that Professor Douglas KC’s views on this issue are controversial. For present purposes I would simply note that (i) the same issues do not arise in the nationality context, when the issue of control determines the nationality of the claimant, not the existence and extent of the protected investment; and (ii) in the latter context, the argument that the issue of control is jurisdictional becomes even less appealing.
In Bernhard von Pezold & Others v Zimbabwe. ICSID Case No ARB/10/14, Award of 28 July 2015 (Fortier, Williams, Hwang), having satisfied itself that it had jurisdiction ratione personae for the purposes of both the BIT and the ICSID Convention, the tribunal went on to consider in the ratione materiae context “one final issue for discussion: namely to whom these investments belong” ([317]). By way of scene-setting:
Very often when foreign investors acquire shares in a locally registered company (as they are frequently required to do), the investment which is the subject of their claim for relief is the shareholding. As the matter is put by Professor Schreuer in “Shareholder Protection in International Investment Law” in Dupuy and others, Common Values in International Law: Essays in Honour of Christian Tomuschat (2006), p.606, “the local company is not endowed with investor status but the participation therein is seen as the investment”.
On that basis, the valuation of an investor’s claim would have regard to the size of its shareholding (direct or indirect), which would no doubt be influenced by whether or not it gave control of the entity because that would be relevant to valuation, but as a merits issue.
However, that approach might have involved different compensatory relief for each von Pezold claimant by reference to their particular indirect shareholding and would have cut across the principal relief they sought of restoration of the expropriated farms to the local companies ([317]) – “control” here effectively providing the link between the protected investors, and the particular assets in respect of which they sought relief. In deciding that such control was established, the tribunal relied on the various shareholdings I have referred to at [188] above, and the “factual control” of Heinrich over the Makandi joint venture under a management agreement, which was held to give “de facto” control. In this context the tribunal cited Thunderbird Gaming (where the “control” issue arose in a different legal context) for the proposition that “control of a company may be factual or effective (‘de facto’) as well as legal” ([324]).
As far as it is possible to tell, the tribunal awarded the von Pezolds’ collectively damages by reference to 100% of the Makandi joint venture companies, despite their 50% (or 44.5% in one case) equity interest ([755]). Quite what happens to the Hoegh family’s 50% interest is not clear. Those difficulties notwithstanding, Von Pezold has been treated in Mera Investment Fund Limited v Serbia ICSID Case No ARB/17/2, Decision on Jurisdiction of 30 November 2018 (von Segesser, Cremades, Fortier), [130]-[131] as reflecting a principle that “where a company is controlled, legally or factually, by a certain shareholder or group of shareholders, the latter may be entitled to a direct claim in respect of the assets of the former” such that “where a shareholder controls the company that owns the assets in issue, tribunals may consider those underlying assets to be the investments of the shareholder.”
In Blue Bank International & Trust (Barbados) Ltd v Venezuela ICSID Case No ARB/12/20, Award of 26 April 2017 (Soderlund, Bermann, Malintoppi), a claim was brought by a Barbados company which managed trust assets under the Barbados-Venezuela BIT. Blue Bank managed the Qatar Trust, which had a Venezuelan settlor. The assets of the trust included two BVI companies which were indirect shareholders in two Venezuelan companies. It was accepted that Blue Bank satisfied the nationality requirement ([157]) but it was objected that it was not an investor because the Qatar Trust, rather that Blue Bank, owned the investment. The tribunal concluded that Blue Bank’s legal title did not answer the issue. It “cannot be considered as having committed any assets in its own right, as having incurred any risk, or as sharing the loss or profit resulting from an investment”, its reward coming in the form of fees. The arguments by reference to Barbados trust law were dismissed on the basis that “in actual fact and law, Blue Bank is not an owner in any relevant sense of the word” ([168]).
Italba Corporation v Oriental Republic of Uruguay ICSID Case ARB/16/9, Award of 22 March 2019 (Oreamuno, Beechey, Douglas) involved a claim under the US-Uruguary BIT, which defined an investment as “every asset that an investor owns or controls directly or indirectly”. The claimant, a US company, claimed to own a Uruguay company called Trigosul, but its claim to ownership was not established on the evidence because there had been no valid share transfer. It advanced an alternative claim that it controlled Trigosul. The tribunal found that this involved “factual situations that must be evaluated on a case-by-case basis” ([254]). The claim failed on the facts, there being no evidence that Italba took business decisions for Trigosul, ([259]), provided it with capital or funding for its operations ([261]-[262]) or controlled it generally ([263]). There was no discussion of the concept of control in principle ([264]).
In Agarwal v Uruguay PCA Case No 2018-04, Award of 6 August 2020 (Rigo Sureda, Johnson, Mayer), the claimants were three UK nationals who brought a claim under the UK-Bolivia BIT in relation to an investment in a Uruguay company, Minera Aratiri. On 1 April 2008, a discretionary trust had been established, which was the ultimate holder of the companies involved in the relevant investment. The trust had a trustee, a protector, the three claimants were in the class of beneficiaries, and the trustees could add additional persons to that class or, with the approval of the protector, exclude a current member. The discretionary trust was converted into a fixed interest trust on 1 August 2016. Against this background, Uruguay took two related jurisdictional or standing objections, although neither were ratione personae objections:
The first was the absence of a legal relationship between the claimants and the investment at the time of breach, given their status as mere members of a class of discretionary beneficiaries.
The second was that by the time the discretionary trust was converted to a fixed interest trust, the dispute had already arisen.
Uruguay succeeded on both points before the tribunal. The tribunal held that the BIT definition of an investment as “any kind of property” required “a possessory link” between the asset and the investor ([180]). It held that the rights of the claimants as discretionary beneficiaries did not constitute property under the BIT, the claimants merely having an expectancy of benefit if the trustee exercised its discretion in a certain way, and “a hope is not an asset” ([224]). As a result, the claimants lacked standing until the trust was converted into a fixed interest trust ([229]). By that date, the dispute had already arisen, which the tribunal held gave rise to a valid jurisdictional objection ratione temporis. The award was successfully challenged before the Paris Cour d’Appel (which included Judge Fabienne Schaller, President of the International Commercial Chamber of the Court) in a judgment of 21 February 2023. First, the Cour d’Appel rejected the argument that there was no jurisdiction because the dispute had arisen before the trust became a fixed trust ([70]-[71]), albeit that might provide a defence on the merits ([73]). Second, they rejected any requirement for a claimant to “actively make” an investment ([81]). Third, they rejected the contention that the BIT imposed a jurisdictional requirement that the claimant have protected nationality at the date of the alleged breach ([84]).
MAKAE Europe v Saudi Arabia ICSID Case No ARB/17/42, Award of 30 August 2021 (Crook, Hafez, van Houtte) was a claim under the BIT, entered into between France and Saudi Arabia, in which “investment” was defined as “property owned or controlled” by the investor. The claimant advanced its case solely on the basis of control ([66]). It was common ground between the parties that de facto control would be sufficient ([117]) and the tribunal agreed ([118]). The tribunal rejected the contention that “de facto control requires a claimant to demonstrate some ownership or other form of economic interest in an investment” ([132]).
Finally in this context, Gramercy Funds Management LLC v Peru UNCITRAL Final Award of 6 December 2022 (Fernandez-Armesto, Drymer, Stern) concerned a claim under Article 10.28 of the US-Peru Free Trade Agreement which stated, “investment means every asset that an investor owns or controls directly or indirectly.” The tribunal derived the meaning of the word “control” as used in that treaty from other usages of the word in the same instrument ([626]) which it said referred to control over a corporation, and held that “control can only be exercised with regard to a corporation in which the investor already had an ownership interest” ([629]). The reasoning which led to that conclusion, and the extent to which it depended on other provisions in the FTA, is difficult to discern. However, the tribunal’s discussion of “ownership” in contrast to “administration” is of interest:
Owners, however known, “are those who contribute the funds required for the corporation’s development, stand to benefit or suffer from the entity’s activities, and receive the remaining funds upon the corporation’s liquidation” ([633]).
The administrators manage “the affairs of the corporation”, are the corporation’s servants authorized to “adopt decisions on the corporation’s behalf and in its interest”, are normally remunerated and can be dismissed ([634]).
What ultimately separates owners and administrators/officers is business risk ([634]).
The tribunal concluded that “control” for the purpose of Article 10.28 “can only be exercised at the level of its owners” ([635]). This was essentially a “functional” definition of “control”, the reference to “ownership” reflecting the need for the controlling party to be carrying the business risk of the controlled enterprise.
So far as commentary is concerned, I have already referred to the views of Professor Douglas KC at [198]. Schreuer’s Commentary on the ICSID Convention 3rd (2022) discussed the definition of investment in Article 25 of the ICSID Convention as “every kind of asset, owned or controlled directly or indirectly”. At [322], the commentary states that “while control is often the consequence of sole or majority ownership of an investment, ownership is not the only determining factor for control. The ordinary meaning of the word encompasses other factors, such as special voting rights and powers of operation and management, often conferred through contractual arrangements.”
Conclusion
The attempt to draw these rather disparate strands together can no longer be postponed.
I accept that limiting Article 1(1)(c) to control exercised through legal rights would offer a simpler solution (cf. [186]). I also accept that it might be said that it would be rather unappealing if Mr Stava, having transferred the shares in Diag SE out of his ownership to achieve some legal or fiscal consequence, could when it suited him take the position that those shares were really “his”. That instinctive reaction is put in characteristically clear terms by the late Edmund King QC in his March 2018 lecture, “Is the Pugachev Ruling the End of Offshore Trusts and Should it Be?” He noted at [22]:
“These trusts are very hard to defend, because, as the Court of Appeal pointed out, what they are trying to do is to enable people to have control over assets that they don’t control. You only have to state the goal to see the problem: it’s not one that can be drafted out of.”
At [50]-[52], he continued:
“In part it’s because of the inherent confusion in these trusts: the settlor has given something away; but doesn’t think s/he has. The recipient of the gift has been led to believe it’s his or hers; but it often isn’t fully, and there is a hidden bungee cord that can pull it back when the family have a row. Relationship counsellors spend a lot of time talking about the importance of having clear communication of expectations. Discretionary trusts do precisely the opposite: they blur the lines.
Advisors should say clearly: you have a choice. You can give your fortune away, or you can see it taxed. But you can’t do both.
It is a nonsense, really, to think that some people, who’ve devoted their lives to building up a fortune, often by controlling everything they can and at some expense to their personal lives, actually want to give their fortune away to an accountant they’ve never met on an island they don’t visit unless they have to, for the accountant to decide on a broad discretion where it should go.”
However, it is important in this respect to note that the context in which the “control” issue arises in Article 1(1)(c) is rather different. The claims of Diag SE remain the assets of Diag SE, any recoveries available for its creditors and shareholders. The issue which arises is the rather different one of whether Diag SE should benefit from the protections afforded by the Swiss-Czech Republic BIT because of control by a Swiss national. That is a context in which I have been persuaded that the word “control” in Article 1(1)(c) carries both of its ordinary meanings of legal and de facto control, such that, on appropriate facts, Article 1(1)(c) will be engaged where the control of the legal entity by nationals of a Contracting State falling within Article 1(1)(a) and/or (b) can be established by means other than the exercise of control through legal rights.
That is a conclusion which has been derived from the combined effect of a number of factors:
The ordinary meaning of the word “control” embraces control in fact as well as control through the exercise of legal rights.
That conclusion is also supported by the majority of the ITA jurisprudence I have summarised and by Schreuer. By contrast, I am not persuaded Professor Douglas KC and Mr Schmid are addressing the particular issue before me.
On an issue such as whether control exists for the purposes of establishing a protected nationality, it is in my view unlikely that the form of control was to be determinative to the exclusion of substance. That interpretation would also accord with the purpose of the BIT as recorded in its Preamble. Intensifying “economic cooperation” and creating favourable conditions for and promoting foreign investment are naturally concerned with a substantive or real state of affairs rather than a purely formal analysis and are more conducive to an interpretation of Article 1(1)(c) which reflected the realities of control of the investor and the economic source of the investment, rather than one exclusively concerned with legal rights. Such an approach is also less prone to treaty abuse (see [216(vi) below]).
Article 1(1) itself evinces a preference for substance over form in Article 1(1)(b), with its requirement of “real economic activity.”
That preference for having regard to substance rather than form also appears to have influenced ITA tribunals. As Odysseas G Repousis noted in his article “The Use of Trusts in Investment Arbitration” (2018) 34 Arbitration International 261, 286:
“Trusts test the somewhat laggard abilities of investment treaties to entertain the complexity of modern-day investment practices. At the same time the findings of the tribunals in such cases as [Saba] Fakes, EMELEC, Guardian Fiduciary and Blue Bank reveal that the relevant enquiry is one of substance and not form.”
The somewhat improbable consequences which would follow in this case from an exclusive focus on control through the exercise of legal rights are discussed further at [216(vi)] below.
There are particular difficulties in confining the question of control purely to control through the exercise of legal rights, because control will often arise through a combination of the particular facts and the availability of legal rights. Once, however, it is accepted that there is some scope for regard to be had to matters going beyond the exercise of legal rights, it becomes impossible to hold the interpretative line that control in Article 1(1)(c) means only control through the exercise of legal rights. And if the enquiry is not to be conducted solely by reference to legal rights, then there is an element of artificiality in treating the presence of, for example, some shareholding as necessary to establish Article 1(1)(c) control if the existence of that shareholding is not the instrumentality through which actual control is exercised.
In this case, I am satisfied that Mr Stava had de facto control of Diag SE of a kind which satisfied Article 1(1)(c):
Mr Stava was materially (and indeed determinatively) influential in the conduct of Diag SE’s business from the date it was settled into the Koruna Trust until the end of 2011 (which is the chronological limit of this review). Mr Stava, and only Mr Stava, had the relevant knowledge in relation to Diag SE’s claims.
The Trustee was necessarily and properly dependent on Mr Stava to conduct Diag SE’s business and was not in a position to direct him in this regard.
In the conduct of Diag SE’s business, it was undoubtedly Mr Stava who was “in charge” and the “driving force” behind Diag SE’s pursuit of its claims.
It was Mr Stava, not the Trustee nor the Koruna Trust, who was the source of any value in Diag SE, both in terms of establishing its business and funding its attempts to enforce the Commercial Arbitration Awards from May 2011. The success or failure of Diag SE in its business in the period under review would have inured to the benefit or detriment of Mr Stava or members of his family who, because of Mr Stava’s choice when settling the Koruna Trust, were members of the Class of Beneficiaries. In these significant respects, Mr Stava had the economic attributes of “ownership” as discussed in the case law, and the national character of the capital at risk through Diag SE was essentially Swiss.
The Trustee committed no assets to Diag SE, ran no risk in relation to its business and was not exposed to any loss. It was renumerated in the form of professional fees which on the evidence were paid by Mr Stava. In short, its role was essentially “managerial”, and in no meaningful sense could it be said that the national character of the capital at risk through Diag SE was that of the Trustee’s state of incorporation, Liechtenstein.
The effect of the matters in (i) to (v) above is as follows:
While Mr Stava held the legal rights of control on behalf of others (see Annex 3, [61(iv)]), there was no realistic possibility of any conflict of interest between Mr Stava’s interests and those of the Koruna Trust in the conduct of Diag SE’s business (see Annex 3, [61(v)-(vii)]).
Mr Stava had, therefore, the same scope for decision-making in fact in relation to the conduct of Diag SE’s business after June 2011, as he had when he was the owner of Diag SE.
It was Mr Stava, rather than the Trustee, who for practical purposes held the economic attributes of “ownership” for the reason set out in (iv) and (v).
For these reasons, the position of Mr Stava in this case cannot be equated with that of a conventional director or manager of a company or an agent acting on behalf of a principal where I accept de facto control for Article 1(1)(c) purposes would be difficult to establish. The closest analogue to a conventional company director in this case is not Mr Stava. It is the Trustee.
The identification of the Trustee as the controller of Diag SE for Article 1(1)(c) purposes would appear to have the improbable consequence that a change in the nationality of a professional service provider would change the nationality of Diag SE and its investment treaty options (with the potential to enhance investment treaty protection or to forfeit it, even though the economic substratum of the investment was unchanged).
Recognising that this was an unattractive and improbable outcome, Mr Dunning KC suggested that it was not necessarily the case that a legal entity would have an Article 1(1)(c) controller. That represented something of a departure from the overall trend of the Czech Republic’s submissions that it was the Trustee who had Article 1(1)(c) control of Diag SE. It also entails that consideration of who holds the legal right of control is not determinative for Article 1(1)(c) purposes. However, if that concession has to be made, then it provides strong support for the view that Article 1(1)(c) requires consideration of the realities of factual control.
Finally, while I have found that Mr Stava’s influence over any distribution of the fruits of any investment in Diag SE, while significant, fell short of practical control, I do not regard that conclusion as telling against a finding that Mr Stava exercised control over Diag SE for Article 1(1)(c) purposes. Those with a majority ownership in or control of a legal entity may find their ability to distribute the proceeds of its activities curtailed for any number of reasons – contractual commitments, legal obligations arising from the interest of creditors, the presence of minority preference shares etc. To allow Mr Stava’s inability to control (rather than simply significantly influence) which of the members of the Stava family would get to enjoy the benefits of any recoveries by Diag SE if and when its arduous pursuit of its claims against the Czech Republic had a successful culmination to determine the issue of control altogether would be to allow the tail to wag the dog.
Finally, I have been asked by the Czech Republic to address an argument which, on my findings, I do not believe arises:
Issue 3 considered by the Liechtenstein trust law experts was “would Mr Stava be free to contend that in reality the trust was operated other than in accordance with the trust deed or applicable law, or that the existence of the trust can be disregarded for his benefit?”
Unsurprisingly, the answer from both experts was “no”, and the Czech Republic submitted that a similar conclusion followed under international law.
In the event, no case was advanced by the Arbitral Claimants that “in reality the trust was operated other than in accordance with the trust deed or applicable law”, nor that Mr Stava should be permitted to disregard the existence of the trust, and I have made no such findings. Nor have I found that Mr Stava and Dr Rabanser acted or agreed to act “in a manner inconsistent with the legal instrument that was deliberately chosen to regulate Mr Stava’s relationship with D1 and contrary to the governing law of that instrument” (an argument which the Czech Republic also contended was precluded by the same legal principles).
My findings of fact have been made on the basis that the principles of Liechtenstein law and the terms of the Trust Deed apply and cannot be ignored; and that there was no agreement by Dr Rabanser to act inconsistently with the terms of the Trust Deed nor did he do so.
My conclusion, nonetheless, was that the cumulative effect of my findings is that at the relevant time Mr Stava had sufficient de facto control of Diag SE for Diag SE to constitute a Swiss investor for the purposes of Article 1(1)(c) of the BIT. In reaching that conclusion, I have sought to give full effect to the relevant principles of Liechtenstein law and the terms of the Trust Deed, and the need for the Koruna Trust, the Trustee and Mr Stava to act in accordance with their requirements.
ISSUE ESTOPPEL
That is sufficient to reject the challenge to Diag SE’s status as a protected investor. However, in case my construction of Article 1(1)(c) of the BIT does not represent the final word on the subject, I should deal with the Arbitral Claimants’ application to amend its Points of Defence to contend that the Czech Republic was precluded from denying Mr Stava’s control of Diag SE for the purposes of establishing whether Article 1(1)(c) applied by the Tribunal’s finding (which I found is not open to challenge under s.67 of the 1996 Act) that Mr Stava had standing to bring a claim for breaches of the BIT in relation to his investment in Diag SE after May 2011. That preclusion was said to arise either by reason of the doctrine of issue estoppel or because it would be an abuse of process to permit the Czech Republic to advance the argument.
As it played out, it became apparent that the preclusion argument had a number of possible implications for other arguments in the challenges.
The application for permission to amend was opposed, both because it was said that the amendment should be refused as a matter of discretion, and because the point was said not to be arguable. I am satisfied that it is appropriate to grant permission to amend, but that the preclusion argument fails because the issue determined by the Tribunal vis-à-vis Mr Stava is not the same issue as that which arises before me in relation to the s.67 challenge to the Award in favour of Diag SE.
Taking the application for permission to amend first, I was referred to the well-known summary of the applicable principles in Quah Su-Ling v Goldman Sachs [2015] EWHC 759 (Comm), [38]. As to these:
The proposed amendment was put forward on 2 May 2024, six weeks prior to this hearing, and the Czech Republic was able to and did plead back to it in its Amended Reply (without prejudice to its contention that permission to amend should not be granted).
While I accept that 2 May 2024 was late in the history of the Czech Republic’s ss.67 and 68 challenges, this issue really only came into focus in the light of my conclusion in the March Judgment that the Stava June 2011 Objection was not open, but the Diag SE June 2011 Objection was. That judgment was provided to the parties in draft on 27 February 2024. It stated at [154]:
“I note that my conclusion that the effect of the June 2011 events raises issues which are not jurisdictional so far as Mr Stava is concerned (with the result that they cannot be re-opened before me) but raises an argument which is jurisdictional in character for Diag SE (because it would affect its nationality at what might be a relevant point) might itself raise further issues as to the effect of the former findings on this jurisdictional challenge to the latter’s claim. These are matters for the next hearing.”
The consequentials hearing took place on 11 April 2024. At that hearing, the Arbitral Claimants sought permission to appeal my finding that the Diag SE June 2011 Objection was open to the Czech Republic, on the basis that (in effect) the Tribunal had only allowed the Czech Republic to raise the June 2011 “control” issue in relation to Mr Stava (i.e. the Stava June 2011 Objection) not in relation to Diag SE. That application was opposed by the Czech Republic.
I refused permission to appeal. It was only at that point that the need to address the interrelationship between the two findings became fixed and the amendment was advanced within a reasonable period thereafter.
Accordingly, I accept that a reasonable explanation has been offered for the timing of the amendment. It is not “very late” when viewed against the circumstances which brought it into focus. Nor has the amendment imperilled the hearing date.
It was not suggested that the amendment occasioned any prejudice in terms of the evidence required. The Czech Republic was given sufficient time to prepare and make comprehensive submissions on the point and took full and effective advantage of that opportunity. While I accept that an amendment some six weeks before a heavy hearing is never welcome, the Czech Republic had the benefit of a large legal team (including two leading counsel and three junior counsel), and I am satisfied that it faced no enduring difficulties in addressing the issue.
While Mr Dunning KC made some criticisms of the form of the amendment, I am satisfied its effect was clear enough and that the Czech Republic was put at no disadvantage in meeting it.
While the bifurcation of the s.67 hearing into two phases may have made the identification of the point more likely, it did not create the point, which would have been available to be taken at a single hearing.
I am also satisfied, for the reasons set out below, that the plea meets the threshold of arguability, albeit I have not ultimately been persuaded by it.
I therefore turn to the argument on its merits.
The Arbitral Claimants relied on the four-fold test for issue estoppel summarised by Clarke LJ in Good Challenger Navegante SA v Metalexportimport SA (The Good Challenger) [2003] EWCA Civ 1668, [50]:
There must be a judgment of a tribunal of competent jurisdiction.
That judgment must be final and conclusive.
There must be identity of parties (which would include the “privies” of such parties: PJSC National Bank Trust & Or v Mints & Ors [2022] EWHC 871 (Comm), [13]).
The issue decided in the prior determination must be the same as that arising in the English proceedings.
To these must be added the fact that even where these four conditions are satisfied, the doctrine of issue estoppel will not apply if “special circumstances” are established, an exception which has generally been invoked when new evidence not discoverable by due diligence becomes available but is not limited to such circumstances (Spencer Bower & Handley on Res Judicata 6th, [8.31]-[8.32]).
Mr Dunning KC took two preliminary objections, the first of which is that s.67 of the 1996 Act gives a de novo right to challenge a jurisdictional determination by an arbitral tribunal, and that the application of the doctrine of issue estoppel based on a determination in an arbitral award would be fundamentally inconsistent with that right. The first three elements in that argument are not controversial. I accept:
that the vice which issue estoppel seeks to address is an attempt to re-litigate an issue already determined in prior litigation (Gol Linhas Aereas SA (formerly VRG Linhas Aereas SA) v Matlinpatterson Global Opportunities Partners (Cayman) II LP [2022] UKPC 21, [33]-[34]);
that the right of challenge to arbitral determinations of jurisdiction afforded by s.67 reflects an important public policy (Minister of Finance (Inc) 1 MDB v International Petroleum Investment Company [2019] EWCA Civ 2080, [38]-[40], [45]) and one which cannot be contracted out of (s.4 of the 1996 Act); and
a s.67 challenge involves a full and de novo hearing, not a review of the arbitral tribunal’s decision (Dallah Real Estate & Tourism Holding Co v Pakistan [2011] 1 AC 863, [26]).
I accept that those provide unanswerable reasons why, to the extent that an arbitral award is subject to a timely and outstanding jurisdictional challenge in the law of the seat, it cannot have preclusive effect in the hearing of that challenge. However, the requisite element of finality would also be absent in those circumstances. That says nothing about those parts of an arbitral award which are not subject to a timely and outstanding jurisdictional challenge, and I am satisfied that there is no principle of law which prevents such a determination from giving rise to an issue estoppel in a s.67 challenge, even when it forms part of the award which is subject to the s.67 challenge (albeit not the part of the award which is the subject of that challenge).
There can be no dispute that a decision in an arbitration between A and B which is not challenged can give rise to an issue estoppel in a subsequent arbitration or court proceedings between A and B (AEGIS Ltd v European Reinsurance Co of Zurich [2003] 1 WLR 1041). The same result must follow where the relevant prior determination appears in an award which has been subject to a jurisdictional challenge in part, but the determination relied upon is not in the challenged part of the award. Does it make any difference if the determination of an issue in an unchallenged part of the award is relied upon not in a subsequent arbitration or hearing, but in a s.67 challenge to a different part of the same award? I can see no reason of principle why it should, and that instinctive reaction is supported by authority.
In Emirates Trading Agency LLC v Sociedade de Fomento Industrial Private Ltd [2015] EWHC 1452 (Comm), the arbitral tribunal had delivered an award on jurisdiction, to which there had been no challenge, and then went on to deliver an award on the merits, which was the subject of a s.67 challenge. Popplewell J held that the unchallenged jurisdiction award gave rise to an issue estoppel in relation to the challenge before him. At [29] he recorded and rejected a submission that “a decision of a tribunal as to its own jurisdiction could never give rise to an issue estoppel” advanced by reference to Dallah, stating:
“That case is not authority for any such proposition, which would be contrary to the principles reflected in Fidelitas and to the whole scheme of speedy finality provided for in the Act in cases where the parties have invited the tribunal to determine jurisdiction. Dallah was a case in which the English court was considering an application by Dallah to enforce an award made under the auspices of the ICC in Paris under Part III of the Act, which gives effect to the New York Convention. The Government of Pakistan resisted an enforcement order on the grounds that it was not party to the arbitration agreement so that the tribunal lacked jurisdiction. Dallah’s contention that the Government was precluded from advancing the argument because it had failed to challenge the tribunal’s ruling as to its own jurisdiction in the French courts with supervisory jurisdiction was rejected. The decision was that where a party seeks to enforce a foreign award under s.103 of the Act, a person who denies being party to the arbitration agreement has no obligation to participate in the foreign arbitration or take steps in the country of the seat of what he maintains is an invalid arbitration leading to an invalid award against him, and can resist enforcement by denying the validity of the award, irrespective of the tribunal’s decision that it has jurisdiction: see per Lord Mance at paragraphs [23] and [30]. In this case SFI is not seeking enforcement, let alone enforcement of a foreign award under s.103 of the Act. If it were to seek enforcement in the UAE or elsewhere, the status of the Final Award would be a matter for the foreign court applying its own conflicts rules. ETA is seeking to mount a challenge to the validity of the award under s.67 of the Act before the English court exercising its supervisory jurisdiction as the curial court. There is nothing in the decision or reasoning in Dallah which suggests that on such an application the principles of issue estoppel do not apply.”
In Port de Djibouti v DP World Djibouti FZCO [2023] EWHC 1189 (Comm), three claims were advanced in a London-seated arbitration: the JVA termination claim, the Share Transfer claim and the Breaches claim. A s.67 challenge was brought in relation to the arbitral tribunal’s determination of all three challenges, it being said that there was no jurisdiction because the arbitral claimant (“PDSA”) had ceased to be a shareholder in the joint venture company at a certain point. Henshaw J held that the tribunal had jurisdiction over the Share Transfer claim, in the course of which determination the arbitral tribunal had found on the merits that PDSA’s shareholder status was maintained. In relation to the Breaches claim, one of the grounds on which the jurisdictional challenge was rejected was because of an issue estoppel arising from the Share Transfer claim. Against that background, Henshaw J considered the issue of whether the determination of the shareholder issue in the Share Transfer claim gave rise to an issue estoppel for the purposes of the jurisdictional challenge to the Breaches claim.
Henshaw J referred to two authorities which supported the conclusion that an issue estoppel arose. The first was Westland Helicopters Ltd v Al Hejailan [2004] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 523 in which there had been no challenge to an arbitrator’s decision to resolve the dispute by reference to a notional annual retainer, but there had been a challenge to the arbitrator’s jurisdiction to award interest by reference to a principal sum quantified by reference to that notional annual retainer. At [34] Colman J stated:
“It is not open to Westland to deploy as a basis for their case that the arbitrator had no jurisdiction to award interest the submission that there was no jurisdiction to award the capital sum by reference to which such interest was awarded. This is because there is an issue estoppel in respect of the award as to the capital sum.”
At [37], he continued:
“Where issues A and B have been determined by an arbitrator who has issued an interim award and the losing party wishes to use a procedure under the 1996 Act for challenging the arbitrator’s conclusion on issue B but not on issue A, it is not open to him to challenge the conclusion on issue B by arguing that the arbitrator should have reached a different conclusion on issue A”.
The second decision was C v D1 [2015] EWHC 2126 (Comm), in which the claimant sought to challenge an arbitral tribunal’s conclusion that it had jurisdiction under the arbitration clause in a contract (the SPA) to determine claims arising from alleged breaches by the claimant of an earlier contract (the PSC). The tribunal decided that clause 26 of the SPA did confer jurisdiction to decide claims arising from alleged breaches of the PSC, and on the merits that clause 11.1 of the SPA required the claimant to indemnify the defendant in respect of certain claims, including those in relation to the PSC. The claimant contended that it could challenge the second issue to the extent relevant to its s.67 challenge to the first issue, arguing that the effect of s.67 of the 1996 had the effect that “no relevant issue is or can be res judicata or the subject of an issue estoppel” ([81]-[82]), Carr J rejected that submission ([83]), noting that the findings on the second issue were not susceptible to a jurisdictional challenge, with the result that the determination of the issues within the second issue were final and binding on the parties.
At [98]-[99], Henshaw J concluded:
“The situation in the present case is not completely analogous to that in Westland Helicopters or C v D1. In both of those cases, the finding by which the claimant was held to be bound (even in the context of a jurisdiction challenge) was a pure merits finding to which no jurisdiction objection had been taken at all. In the present case, the arbitrator’s conclusion that PDSA remained a Shareholder (a) is the subject of a jurisdiction challenge, at least before this court, and (b) was regarded by the arbitrator as a jurisdictional finding in relation to the Breaches Claims.
However, I do not see why the underlying principle should not equally apply here. If an arbitrator has made a finding on a substantive issue between the parties, it is difficult to see why its binding effect in the context of a jurisdiction challenge to some other part of the arbitrator’s award should depend on whether (a) no jurisdiction objection has ever been made to the finding on the substantive issue or (b) there has been a challenge but the court has concluded that the arbitrator had jurisdiction. Either way, the arbitrator has made a finding on an issue between the parties that the arbitrator had jurisdiction to determine. In principle one would expect that finding to be binding for all purposes, following the logic of the two cases discussed above, even if the finding also has relevance to a jurisdiction issue (regarding some other part of the case) which prima facie would ultimately be for the court to determine.”
I agree with the conclusions expressed in these four cases, which to my mind provide a complete answer to this preliminary objection. I also agree with Henshaw J that the application of the doctrine of issue estoppel in a s.67 challenge cannot turn on the procedural happenstance of whether the same tribunal delivers more than one partial award in a single reference, or determines all of the issues in the same award.
The Czech Republic’s second preliminary objection is that the legal system which governs the question of issue estoppel in this case is not English law but international law, or at least that the Court should “take into account the approach taken by international law to the question of issue estoppel”. This argument was developed relatively lightly on both sides, and I was not persuaded by it:
This was a final award of an arbitral tribunal sitting with a seat in England and Wales to which s.58 of the 1996 Act applies: the Award is “final and binding both on the parties and any persons claiming through or under them” save to the extent that it can be challenged under Part I of the 1996 Act. The Supreme Court in Enka Insaat ve Sanayi AS v OO “Insurance Company Chubb” [2020] UKSC 38, [92] held that s.58 was procedural in nature, and its application was not dependent on the applicable law of the arbitration agreement.
Even if the issue of the finality of the Award had been a matter of international law (which I do not accept), the doctrine of issue estoppel falls to be applied as a doctrine of the English court to give effect to an important issue of English public policy. I addressed a similar issue in PJSC National Bank Trust v Mints [2022] EWHC 871 (Comm), [23], where I stated:
“That analysis assumes that the preclusive effect of a prior determination in a subsequent dispute is a legal incident of rights arising from the original determination, rather than the result of a rule of law applicable by the second tribunal as to the legal effect of that original determination. However, the doctrine of issue estoppel appears to me to depend on a rule of law of the ‘receiving’ tribunal rather than the rights adjudicated on by the ‘transmitting’ tribunal:
The traditional justifications of issue estoppel offered by English authorities identify it as a substantive rule of law which gives effect to a general rule of public policy that there should be finality in litigation (e.g., Diplock LJ Mills v Cooper [1967] 2 QB 459, 469, and Lord Wilberforce in The Ampthill Peerage [1977] AC 547, 569).
While the position under foreign law will be relevant to whether the foreign judgment meets the English law requirement of finality, the doctrine of estoppel is part of the law of the forum, not a legal attribute of the foreign judgment (see Carl Zeiss Stiftung v Rayner & Keeler Ltd (No 2) [1967] 1 AC 835, 919).
When a foreign arbitration award or judgment is relied upon to establish an issue estoppel in English court proceedings, it is English law which determines, for example, whether the estoppel extends to collateral matters or whether the special circumstances exception is engaged. More pertinently, in the present context, the issue of whether a foreign judgment binds privies of the parties in English proceedings is a matter for English law. At least it was so treated in cases such as Carl Zeiss at pp.928-929, 936-937 and 945-946, and Seven Arts Entertainment Ltd v Content Media Corp plc [2013] EWHC 588 (Ch). The position is not, as Mr Rabinowitz submitted to me, that when looking at foreign judgments or awards, ‘one has to look at the foreign law and see … how, under that foreign law, it deals with which parties are to be bound and why’.”
The materials which Mr Dunning KC relied upon to establish “the approach taken by international law to the question of issue estoppel” were to the effect that international law recognised no binding system of precedent (which appears to me to raise a different issue) and cases in which it has been suggested that it is only the provisions of the dispositif which can have preclusive effect as a matter of international law, and not the reasons for them. These comprised:
A decision in Delimitation of the Continental Shelf (UK v France) 18 UNRIAA 271 by a special arbitration panel appointed under a bespoke arbitration agreement between the two states.
An ICSID award in AMCO v Republic of Indonesia ICSID Case No ARB/18/1, Decision on Jurisdiction in Resubmitted Proceedings of 10 May 1988 (Higgins, Magid, Lalonde), in which an issue arose as to the preclusive effect of a decision on the merits which had been successfully challenged before an ad hoc review committee and annulled save for certain findings which the review committee said “remained res judicata for the purposes of the present proceedings.” The parties disagreed as to the effect of these words. The tribunal noted of the position in 1988 that “it is by no means clear that the basic trend in international law is to accept reasoning, preliminary or incidental determinations as part of what constitutes res judicata” ([32]) and that “authors have not been able to show a clear trend towards acceptance of reasons as res judicata” ([38]).
There was also reference to a chapter written by Professor Chester Brown in A Zimmermann et al (eds), The Statute of the International Court of Justice: A Commentary 2nd (2019), on Article 59 of the ICJ statute which provides that “the decision of the Court has no binding force except between the parties and in respect of that particular case”. At [41]-[42] Professor Brown stated, “in principle, only the operative part (also known as the dispositif) or a judgment or other decision [of the ICJ] is binding”, referring to the fact that a vote is taken in relation to the operative part. However, he also quoted the ICJ judgment in the Bosnian Genocide case distinguishing between “issues which have been decided with the force of res judicata, or which are necessarily entailed in the decision of those issues” and “any peripheral or subsidiary matters”.
In response, the Arbitral Claimants referred to a number of investment treaty awards which have applied a concept of issue estoppel extending beyond the dispositif: Apotex Holdings v USA ICSID Case No ARB(AF)/12/1 Award of 25 August 2014 (Veeder, Rowley, Crook), [7.18]; Grynberg v Grenada ICSID Case No ARB/10/6, Award of 10 December 2010 (Rowley, Nottingham, Tercier), [7.64]; and Ampal v Egypt ICSID Case No ARB/12/11, Decision on Liability and Heads of Loss of 21 February 2017 (Fortier, McLachlan, Orrego Vicuna), [258]-[274].
I am not persuaded that the Czech Republic’s submissions take account of the extent to which the ITA regime has moved disputes under particular international law treaties into the procedural framework of municipal law, particularly where the arbitration takes place under an ordinary private arbitral process rather than the ICSID Convention. However, in view of the decision I have reached that English law governs the issue which arises before me, I do not need to determine the extent to which any principles of issue estoppel as applied by ITA tribunals differ from those arising under English law.
Is the Award (to the extent not subject to a s.67 challenge) the final and conclusive determination of a tribunal of competent jurisdiction?
The effect of my conclusions in this and the March Judgment rejecting all of the available jurisdictional challenges to the Award in favour of Mr Stava is that there is a final determination of a tribunal of competent jurisdiction.
The only point made by the Czech Republic to dispute that conclusion is that I have given permission to appeal on one of the jurisdiction challenges I rejected which was raised in relation to Mr Stava. It is common ground that if that appeal succeeds, the plea of issue estoppel will fall away. However, the mere fact that the March Judgment is subject to an appeal does not deprive it of its final and binding quality for the purposes of the doctrine of issue estoppel: Spencer Bower and Handley: Res Judicata 6th [5.19] and AD Atelier International BV v Manès [2020] EWHC 1014 (Comm), [2020] QB 971, [48].
Are Mr Stava and Diag SE privies?
Self-evidently, a finding on an issue as between Mr Stava and the Czech Republic in the BIT Arbitration does not involve the same parties as the issue now before me between Diag SE and the Czech Republic. However, the doctrine of issue estoppel under English law extends not only to the parties to the original determination, but their privies. The test of what constitutes privity for this purpose has been the subject of controversy. It is an issue which I had cause to consider at some length in PJSC National Bank Trust v Mints [2022] EWHC 871 (Comm). In circumstances in which there was no real argument on the scope of the concept at this hearing, I hope I will be forgiven for adopting the conclusions I reached in that case for the reasons I gave in section C2 of that judgment:
The test of privity at first instance is that set out by Megarry VC in Gleeson v Wippell & Co Ltd [1977] 1 WLR 510, 515 that “having due regard to the subject matter of the dispute, there must be a sufficient degree of identification between the two to make it just to hold that the decision to which one was party should be binding in proceedings to which the other is part.”
The starting point is that “before a person is to be bound by a judgment of a court, fairness requires that he should be joined as party in the proceedings, and so have the procedural protections that carries with it.”
The test of identification is sometimes approached by asking if the party sought to be bound can be said “in reality” to be the party to the original proceedings.
Particular caution is required when it is alleged that a director, shareholder or another group company is privy to a decision against a company, because it risks undermining the distinct legal personality of a company as against that of its shareholders and directors. Nonetheless, there are cases which, on their particular facts, have found privity between a company and a controlling director/shareholder.
Particular caution is required in finding that a non-party is bound by the terms of an award as a privy.
Mr Dunning KC argued that Diag SE could not be a privy of Mr Stava’s in relation to the determination in arbitral proceedings to which Diag SE was itself a party. I accept that, ordinarily, issues of privity are unlikely to arise in this context, because issues will be usually decided as between all parties to the proceedings. However, that may not be the case if the tribunal only finds it necessary to decide an issue as between two of the parties to a case without referring to a third. In such circumstances, I cannot see why the putative “privy” should fall outside the scope of the principle merely because they were a party to the case. If anything, the fact of that participation and the ability to influence the content of the determination would appear to make this a stronger case for privity. In the present case, the premise on which the issue estoppel plea is being approached is that the Tribunal’s findings in relation to the alleged privy are not binding or determinative because it did not have jurisdiction over the issue. To treat the alleged privy’s participation in such a hearing as precluding the operation of the privity principle is particularly unpersuasive.
In this case, I am satisfied that Diag SE was Mr Stava’s privy in relation to the findings in the Award:
Mr Stava and Diag SE were co-claimants running a common legal case based on common submissions and evidence through a common legal team.
Mr Stava was funding both his and Diag SE’s claims.
Mr Stava had control of the conduct of his own and Diag SE’s case.
Mr Stava had factual control over Diag SE on the basis set out at in Annex 3.
The Czech Republic was able to advance responses to the claims advanced by both Mr Stava and Diag SE and did so.
Did the Tribunal decide the same issue as between the Czech Republic and Mr Stava as arises between the Czech Republic and Diag SE?
Did the Tribunal decide that Mr Stava continued to control Diag SE after June 2011?
There has been a degree of position-changing on this issue, but the “law of the case” (and my finding as to the position in the BIT Arbitration) is as follows.
First, the Czech Republic relied upon the events forming part of the Lawbook Transaction as an answer to the claims of both Mr Stava and Diag SE. In its Rejoinder:
at [422] it contended “neither Mr Stava and Diag SE has standing to find the 2008 Award enforceable”;
at [428], after referring to the transfer of the shares in Diag SE into the Koruna Trust, the Czech Republic submitted that “Mr Stava would not have standing to request a finding that the 2008 Award is enforceable” and “because Mr Stava apparently sold Diag Human SE, even Diag Human SE itself does not have standing as a protected ‘investor’ … because Diag Human SE’s standing in this arbitration is completely dependent upon the Swiss nationality of Mr Stava”;
at [473], that Mr Stava “cannot assert any claim herein in respect of events that occurred after June 2011” and at [474] that the Lawbook Transaction “also has implications for Diag Human SE, which is incorporated in Liechtenstein, and only could qualify as an ‘investor’ under the BIT by virtue of Mr Stava’s Swiss nationality” which it lost in June 2011;
at [475] that “claimants are barred from advancing any claims in respect of conduct … after 1 June 2011” (emphasis added).
Second, the Arbitral Claimants responded to both contentions which they characterised as a single objection affecting both Mr Stava and Diag SE. For example, Section E of the Rejoinder on Jurisdiction was headed “the Claimants are both investors within the meaning of the BIT”, and referred to the Czech Republic’s objection that “neither of the Claimants can bring a claim in respect of conduct which occurred after June 2011” (at [74]). In their First Post-Hearing Brief, the Arbitral Claimants once again addressed the submission under the heading “the Claimants are investors protected by the BIT” ([254]).
Third, in its first PHB, the Czech Republic maintained the objection to the claims of both Mr Stava and Diag SE. At page 60, it alleged that in June 2011 “both Claimants lost any status as qualifying investors”.
Fourth, the Tribunal referred to and determined both objections not (as the Arbitral Claimants and the Czech Republic have at various times alleged) only the objection concerning Diag SE:
Objection No 5 identified by the Tribunal was that “Claimants cannot be deemed ‘investors’ of other Contracting Party” (emphasis added); at [258] the Tribunal referred to the argument that the June 2011 events prevented Mr Stava from asserting any claim in respect of events after June 2011 and at [259] to the submission that Diag SE lost Swiss nationality at the same time. It is clear from [260] (identifying a separate submission advanced by the Czech Republic but which the Tribunal said had not been pursued) that the Tribunal understood that both these objections were still being pursued.
In summarising the Arbitral Claimants’ response, there was no suggestion that the Tribunal understood that a timing objection was being taken by the Arbitral Claimants in relation to the June 2011 events so far as Diag SE is concerned but not Mr Stava. The Tribunal referred to the Czech Republic’s new objection at [310], quoting from the Rejoinder on Jurisdiction [64] which had characterised the objection as “that neither of the Claimants can bring a claim in respect of conduct which occurred after June 2011”. The Tribunal then said of this objection as the Arbitral Claimants had themselves characterised it that it was an objection “to which they [i.e. the Arbitral Claimants] do not raise timeliness objections”. That leaves no scope for the Arbitral Claimants’ argument that, even though the objections arose from the same evidence and the same factual enquiry and had been advanced at the same time and responded to by the Arbitral Claimants compendiously, the Tribunal had quixotically decided to extend time for the Diag SE June 2011 Objection but not the Stava June 2011 Objection.
It is against that background that it is necessary to evaluate the intermittent submissions of the Arbitral Claimants and the Czech Republic that, having identified that both objections were being taken, summarised both objections, summarised the answer to both and noted no timeliness objections were taken, the Tribunal contrived to decide only one of them. At [398] of the Award, the Tribunal found that Diag SE was Swiss for the purpose of the BIT. At [403] the Tribunal referred to the submission that after the Lawbook Transaction, “Mr Stava no longer owned or controlled Diag Human SE” – the premise of both the Stava June 2011 Objection and the Diag SE June 2011 Objection – and rejected it. At [408], the Tribunal found (in effect) that Mr Stava controlled the Koruna Trust and through the Koruna Trust Diag SE, and at [410] that after June 2011, Mr Stava retained control of Diag SE. At [412]-[413] the Tribunal stated:
“[1] To conclude, the Tribunal finds that the evidence in the record supports the finding that Mr Stava continued to control, directly or indirectly, Diag Human SE after the Lawbook Transaction. [2] Therefore, Diag Human SE meets the definition of ‘investor in Article 1(1) of the BIT.
[3] Respondent’s objection No 5 is accordingly dismissed”.
(numbers in brackets added).
The effect of the finding in [1] is that the Stava June 2011 Objection failed. The effect of the finding in [2] is that the Diag SE June 2011 Objection failed. The effect of [3] is to record that Objection No 5 which embraced both of those objections was dismissed. I regard the finding as “crystal clear”.
I have addressed this (already determined) issue at some length because of a palpable sense in the Arbitral Claimants’ submissions that my refusal to grant permission to appeal on this issue after the March Judgment (an issue which I still struggle to discern was clearly argued at that hearing) stemmed from an insufficient understanding of the facts, and that a further two week hearing and Mr Dunning KC’s brief espousal of the point might reveal to me the error of my ways. While it has suited the Arbitral Claimants and the Czech Republic at different times to argue that only the Diag SE June 2011 Objection was determined by the Tribunal, and the Stava June 2011 Objection was left in some form of arbitral limbo, I have to confess I regard the argument as hopeless on the face of the Award, even without having regard to the benign approach the English court adopts to the interpretation of arbitral awards on curial challenges. It is utterly unarguable once the principle of “benevolent reading of awards” is brought into play. It was for those reasons I dismissed the Arbitral Claimants’ application for permission to appeal to argue the contrary. Had the Czech Republic maintained its argument that the Stava June 2011 Objection was never decided, I would have rejected it with an equal lack of hesitation.
I should also deal at this point with Mr Dunning KC’s suggestion that the March Judgment had only addressed the status of the Tribunal’s finding of Mr Stava’s ownership of Diag SE after June 2011, and not his control. I can deal with that briefly:
At paragraph 4 of its skeleton Points of Claim, the Czech Republic contended that Mr Stava did not hold the assets and/or had no standing because he had transferred all “economic benefit” in the shares in Diag SE and had not owned them since at least mid-2011. Mr Stava responded by pleading that he had standing because he controlled Diag SE after June 2011 (paragraph 14.3 of the Defence). The Reply pleaded that control was not enough and denied control (paragraph 27 of the Reply).
In its skeleton argument, the Czech Republic formulated the case as a complaint that Mr Stava “did not hold assets”. In its skeleton, the Arbitral Claimants noted that “a completely different objection is now pursued, namely that Mr Stava lost ‘control’ of D1 because of the internal composition of the Koruna Trust”.
In addressing that objection, Lord Verdirame KC referred to it as an objection that “there was no control over the investment as a result of the Koruna Trust” (Transcript of 5 February 2024 pages 57, 71). Mr Bastin KC introduced his case by referring to the fact that Diag SE “ceased to be controlled by Mr Stava” in June 2011 (Transcript of 5th February 224, page 124). He referred to a passage in the Czech Republic’s Rejoinder to the effect that a claimant must establish “that the investment was owned or controlled by the investor at the time when the challenged measure was adopted” (Transcript of 6 February 2024, page 19). At page 106, Mr Bastin KC described this point as turning on the fact that “Mr Stava had transferred all economic benefit to the shares”. He stated that “points around the control that D2 exercises over D1 are taken as jurisdictional” (page 127). He later identified the objection as arising from the fact Mr Stava “having no ownership or rights in the shares” (Transcript of 7 February 2024, page 51).
It was clear to me at the hearing that the Czech Republic was seeking to raise a jurisdictional challenge to Mr Stava’s claim by virtue of Mr Stava not having ownership or control of Diag SE from June 2011. In the March Judgment I identified the objection as being that “Mr Stava did not hold the investments held by the Tribunal to exist when the arbitration was commenced because he had transferred his interest to the Koruna Trust” which I defined as “the Koruna Trust Objection” ([63(viii]) and “the allegation that Diag SE was not controlled by Mr Stava, or not controlled by him from June 2011” which I defined as “the No Control Objection” [63(ix)]. I dealt with those objections together in Section F9. At [122(iii)] I stated that “the objection that Mr Stava had lost control of the bearer shares in June 2011 … was taken”. I then drew a distinction between “the objection relating to Mr Stava’s inability to claim in respect of conduct after June 2011” which I defined as “the Stava June 2011 Objection” and Diag SE’s inability to claim “if it was not Swiss after June 2011” which I defined as “the Diag SE June 2011 Objection” ([123]).
In addressing the Stava June 2011 Objection (which was a subset of the No Control Objection), I referred to the issue as being whether Mr Stava “retained those investments at the date of the … breach” ([145]), but I also referred to Mr Stava “owning” and “ownership” of the investment ([145] and [146]). With the benefit of hindsight, I should have made it clearer that I was rejecting the entirety of the Czech Republic’s submission that Mr Stava did not have the requisite interest in Diag SE (be that ownership or control) at the date of breach, although I remain of the view that this was clear to all concerned. At this hearing, Mr Bastin KC confirmed my understanding that he had advanced a challenge based both on lack of ownership and control, and expressed his understanding that I had decided both this issues in [146] of the March Judgment. He also confirmed that there had been no suggestion that the issue so far as it concerned control had not been dealt with in the judgment. I am grateful for Mr Bastin KC’s forthright and constructive response on these issues.
Was the determination of the Stava June 2011 Objection by the Tribunal an essential step in its reasoning?
Issue estoppel applies to issues which are “an essential step in the reasoning” of the original tribunal, or a “fundamental issue …. which formed the basis of the [determination]” (Spencer Bower & Handley, 6th, [8.01]). Is this requirement satisfied here?
I can deal with this briefly. The allegation Mr Stava had lost control of Diag SE in June 2011 was raised by the Czech Republic as a complete answer to his claim both in the BIT Arbitration and in the s.67 application which the Czech Republic issued. The Arbitral Claimants did not suggest in either context that this was not the case (merely in court contending that the issue was one of standing, and hence not reviewable on the s.67 challenge, a contention which I accepted). Nor did the Tribunal challenge the assertion that, if the point was good, it provided an answer to Mr Stava’s claim in the BIT Arbitration. Rather the Tribunal found that the premise of the contention – that Mr Stava had lost control of Diag SE in June 2011 – was not established and the objection failed for that reason.
That accords with the view expressed by Professor Douglas KC ([198]-[199]). And it is not realistically open to the Czech Republic to contend otherwise.
Is the issue which arises before me the same issue determined by the Tribunal?
It is well-established that “an issue estoppel only arises if an issue in the second proceedings is the same as one decided or covered in the first” (Spencer Bower & Handley 6th, [8.19]).
At this point, it is helpful to refer again to the contested issue of whether Mr Stava should be granted permission to appeal on the Stava June 2011 Objection, but on this occasion to the Czech Republic’s benefit. The Arbitral Claimants submitted the effect of the control issue in relation to Diag SE’s status as a Swiss investor was that:
“If the Judge is correct that the BIT Tribunal determined the merits of the Lawbook Transaction, Koruna Trust and No Control Objections … it did only as they pertain to D1’s status as an investor. Those objections have never been considered insofar as they pertain to D2, where they go to the wholly separate question of whether D2 held qualifying investments”.
(underlining added).
The underlined words are correct. That is consistent with:
Professor Douglas KC’s treatment (see [198]-[199]);
my analysis that the Stava June 2011 Objection concerns the link between the investor and the asset which is the subject of the claim and the Diag SE June 2011 Objection concerns the issue of whether Diag SE has Swiss nationality within Article 1(1)(c) of the BIT, with very different consequences (see [201]-[203]);
the possibility that those different issues might involve different legal tests ([203]); and
the Arbitral Claimants’ own submission, which I accepted, that the Stava June 2011 Objection raised an issue of standing and not jurisdiction, whereas the Diag SE June 2011 Objection raises an issue of jurisdiction.
The fact that determining the Stava June 2011 Objection may involve traversing the same factual enquiry (and it is not necessary to decide whether it would) is not enough: that would be a matter of evidentiary fact, which does not provide the basis for an issue estoppel.
If the requirements of issue estoppel were otherwise made out, are these special circumstances in which it should not be applied?
It has been noted that the special circumstances exception “should be kept within narrow limits to avoid undermining the general rule and provoking increased litigation and uncertainty” (PJSC National Bank Trust v Mints [2022] EWHC 871 (Comm), [59] citing from Spencer Bower & Handley on Res Judicata – see now the sixth edition, [8.32]).
Only one matter was put forward as constituting a “special circumstance” in this case: the statutory right to a de novo challenge to the jurisdiction of an arbitral tribunal under s.67. I am unable to accept that this constitutes a special circumstance, either as a matter of principle or given the authorities at [228]-[234] above. In this context, any issue estoppel deriving from a finding which an arbitral tribunal had jurisdiction to make is one of the “panoply of tools” available to the court as it is in other contexts in which the court has to make determinations of fact and law, be that in a s.67 hearing, when proceedings are brought to enforce an award or any other hearing in which issues arise for final determination (cf. Cockerill J’s comment on the objection to issue estoppel being relied upon when the court was asked to rule on an issue of state immunity under the State Immunity Act 1978 in Hulley Enterprises Ltd v Russia [2023] EWHC 2704 (Comm), [29]). As Males J noted in Central Trading & Exports Ltd v Fioralba Shipping Co (The Kalisti) [2014] EWHC 2397 (Comm), [50]:
“In my judgment the answer to these questions lies in the nature of a section 67 application as established by the cases cited above. In principle, this is no different from other contested applications where the court has to determine disputed questions of fact and/or law. Arbitration and the existence of an award which is the subject of the challenge provide the context in which the question arises, but do not fundamentally transform the nature of what the court has to decide or the way in which it should decide it.”
The alternative abuse of process submission
Given my decision that Mr Stava’s control of Diag SE raises different ultimate issues as between Mr Stava and the Czech Republic and as between Diag SE and the Czech Republic, I am not persuaded that it is abuse of process for the Czech Republic to exercise its s.67 right to challenge the Tribunal’s jurisdiction over Diag SE’s claim on this ground. As Lord Lowry noted in Shaw v Sloane [1982] NI 393, 397, “the entire corpus of authority in issue estoppel is based on the theory that it is not an abuse of process to relitigate a point where any of the three requirements of the doctrine is missing.” Mr Goodman suggested that the abuse arose from the fact that that there would be a binding finding entitled to recognition in this jurisdiction that Mr Stava controlled Diag SE after June 2011, and it would bring the administration of justice into disrepute if the court found that he did not. However, once it is recognised that the issues are different (even leaving aside the possibility that those issues may involve different legal tests) I do not accept that any disrepute would follow from the fact that one tribunal, on the evidence and arguments before it, reached one conclusion on one issue, and a different tribunal on different evidence and legal argument reached a different conclusion on a different issue.
THE OUTSTANDING S.68 ISSUE
In the March Judgement, I left open the issue of whether the Third Section 68(2) Challenge met the requirement of substantial injustice imposed by s.68(2) of the 1996 Act. That question arose from the fact that at the time of the Bojar Letter breach, Mr Stava did not personally own 100% of Conneco, such that if he was claiming for his own loss at that date, the issue arose (but was not determined) as to whether the award of damages to him should have reflected the extent of his interest. However, the Tribunal also found that there had been a breach – the 2014 Review breach – in 2014 when there was no suggestion that Mr Stava did not own 100% of Diag SE, and for which the Tribunal awarded the same loss, via different reasoning.
On the basis of the findings I have made, I am satisfied that the Czech Republic has suffered no substantial injustice from the Third Section 68(2) Challenge. However, it is necessary to allow for the fact that if the appeal against the March Judgment succeeds, or other appeals are brought and succeed, Mr Stava’s ability to bring a claim in respect of the 2014 Review breach might come into issue. The order will need to preserve the Czech Republic’s ability to resurrect the Third Section 68(2) Challenge if successful appeals have the effect that the Czech Republic is able successfully to challenge any award in Mr Stava’s favour in respect of the 2014 Review breach under s.67. I will ask the parties to consider the terms of an order to address this issue.
CONCLUSION
For these reasons, the Czech Republic’s surviving challenges to the Award under s.67 of the 1996 Act are dismissed, and, subject to [263] above, the third Section 68(2) Challenge fails.
I would like to conclude this judgment by thanking both legal teams for their Herculean efforts in what has been a very hard-fought dispute. The court has benefited from thoroughly researched, cleverly conceived and highly skilled advocacy on both sides, which did full justice to the interests of the protagonists.
ANNEX 1: THE CO-OPERATION AGREEMENTS
Transfusion Service Mĕlník
On 13 May 1991, Conneco entered a Co-operation Agreement dated 10 May 1991 with the District Institute of National Health (District Hospital) – Transfusion Centre Mĕlník (“Transfusion Service Mĕlník”). The agreement provided for a minimum supply of 800 litres of FFP in each 12-month period in return for blood derivative products or consumables and equipment. The schedule included a range of equipment which the Transfusion Centre could order at agreed prices. The agreement had an initial duration of two years but could be extended by the agreement of the parties “no later than within a period of 6 months prior to the expiry of the term.” I accept that the expectation at the time of entry was that this would not be a one-off transaction, but a rolling contract which would be renewed if performance proved satisfactory for both parties.
An addendum to that agreement was signed on 7 October 1991 identifying equipment which Conneco would supply up front, at a value of CZK 303,000, and recording Conneco’s agreement to supply further equipment up to CZK 1,300,000 in value. The supplied equipment was to be paid for “over the first two years of the validity” of the Co-operation Agreement through supplies of FFP, or, in default, in cash.
On 21 January 1992, Addendum No 2 to the Co-operation Agreement was signed providing for interest to be paid to Conneco at 18% on goods supplied other than by Conneco.
On 9 March 1992, Conneco entered into “Agreement No 3/92” with “Hospital Polyclinic Mĕlník”. This had the same address as the entity which entered into the first two agreements but a different company number and signatory. Its relationship with the earlier agreements is not clear, although it is fair to say that the Arbitral Claimants’ position at the opening of this hearing was that it did replace the 1991 agreement. It involved the same basic structure but provided for a minimum total supply of FFP of 1,200 litres over 12 months. The agreement had a 12-month duration, with extension being subject to the parties’ agreement.
On 1 November 1992, Conneco and Hospital Polyclinic Mĕlník entered into a termination agreement. This records that various items of equipment were supplied by Conneco at a total price of CKS 1,335,252, and 415 litres of FFP supplied to Conneco at a price of CKS 747,630. It was noted that “the Hospital with Polyclinic does not currently have the alternative to settle the deliveries of the equipment from Conneco as other than by the FFP supply”. I am satisfied that this reflects the position of recipients of equipment from Conneco generally, and that this was a reason why Conneco had a legitimate expectation that the co-operation agreements would be renewed by its counterparties. That assessment is consistent with the evidence of Colonel Milos Bohonĕk as to his expectation that the commercial relationship would have continued but for the Bojar Letter.
Hospital Frýdek Místek
On 13 May 1991, Conneco entered into a Co-operation Agreement with Frýdek Místek Hospital adopting essentially the same structure. The minimum total quantity of FFP to be supplied was 1,000 litres in each 12-month period, and the agreement had a 2-year duration and provision for a negotiated extension.
Addendum No 1, signed on 12 August 1991, showed extensive supplies of equipment being made to Frýdek Místek Hospital before FFP supplies would begin. As with the Transfusion Service Mĕlník Co-operation Agreement, the recipients needed to receive equipment from Conneco before being able to deliver the FFP to pay for it.
On 1 January 1992, Conneco entered into a replacement agreement with Frýdek Místek Hospital dated 1 January 1992 . This revised the minimum supply to 2,000 litres over the 12-month term of the agreement.
A letter from Dr Miroslav Malchar, Director of the Hospital, to the Czech Ministry of Health dated 24 March 1992 stated that under the agreement, Conneco selected from frozen plasma directly in the Hospital, referring to selections being made on 4 November 1991, 28 November 1991, 5 January 1992, 10 February 1992 and 4 March 1992. Sixteen crates had been removed, storage being Conneco’s responsibility.
A letter of 7 June 1992 records an agreement to withdraw from the contract, with an unpaid amount of CKS 185,668.60 still due to Conneco.
Polyclinic Uherské Hradištĕ
On 30 May 1991, Conneco entered into a contract with Hospital and Polyclinic Uherské Hradištĕ in similar form to these entered into with Transfusion Centre Mĕlník and Hospital Frýdek Místek. The minimum supply was to be 800 litres of FFP per 12 months, with the contract having a 2-year duration, and the parties being able to extend it with 6 months to go.
On 2 January 1992, this was replaced by a one-year agreement with a minimum quantity of 2,000 litres of FFP for each year the agreement was in operation. The agreement had a minimum duration of 1 year. There are invoices showing equipment ordered by Conneco for delivery to the Polyclinic (5 February 1992). An invoice of 5 March 1992 shows delivery of blood derivatives to the Polyclinic. There was some delivery of FFP by the Polyclinic to Conneco – for example a test on FFP is dated 10 March 1992 countersigned by a doctor at the Polyclinic.
Other evidence of dealings between Conneco and Czech health institutions
There is an unsigned Co-operation Agreement between Conneco and Olomouc Hospital in similar terms to the other 1991 Co-operation Agreements. There is also a signed document described as Amendment No 1 to a Co-operation Agreement identifying equipment which Conneco was to provide, in very similar terms to the amendments to the 1991 Co-operation Agreements with Frýdek Místek and Transfusion Service Mĕlník. There are also invoices for the supply of additional equipment to Hospital Olomouc beyond that appearing in Addendum No 1. I am satisfied that it is more likely than not that a Co-operation Agreement was concluded between Conneco and Olomouc Hospital.
A document dated December 1991 records the collection of 198.564 litres of FPP from “Ostrava – Blood Donation Centre, Poruba”, with a welding clamp of CZK 67,000 still to be paid for. This was clearly an “FFP for medical equipment” arrangement.
There is an unsigned Co-operation Agreement between Conneco and Hospital Polyclinic Kolin providing for a minimum delivery of 2,300 litres of FFP during each 12-month period of a renewable 2-year agreement. Given the letter from the identified signatory of that draft agreement, Dr Ludek Rubas, to Dr Bojar of 8 May 1991 stating that they had interrupted their negotiations with Conneco, I am not persuaded that a Co-operation Agreement was concluded with Hospital Polyclinic Kolin.
In addition, there is evidence of supplies of equipment by Conneco to other CFSR health institutions at Cheb, Prerov, Kladno, Caslav, Havlickuv Brod, Ceske Budejovice, Boleslav and Benesov u Prahy. I do not have sufficient information to know the arrangements under which these supplies were made. However, given the evidence as to the basis on which Conneco dealt with CFSR health institutions generally, and the evidence that the only means by which the institutions could have funded these acquisitions was through the supply of FFP, I am satisfied that a substantial part of these supplies would have been under similar arrangements to those in the Co-operation Agreements, albeit without any evidence of a binding framework contract of a specified duration.
Collection of FFP
The evidence establishes that 2,500 litres of FFP was shipped to Novo Nordisk (a figure confirmed by contemporary correspondence from Novo Nordisk and a Czech secret service report). There is no information as to whether there had been FFP deliveries from hospitals to Conneco which had yet to be exported. However, this seems likely:
Minutes of a meeting between Czech government officials and Conneco on 17 April 1992 refer to Conneco storing “blood plasma in cooler boxes at transfusion stations, warehouses Zbraslav, Frýdek Místek and others”.
The Czech secret service report refers to shipments on 1 November 1991; (828.33 litres); 12 December 1991 (690.809 litres); and 5 March 1992 (1,031.35 litres).
That is broadly consistent with the Novo Nordisk letter of 19 May 1991 referring to a first shipment of 828 kg, and two further shipments of 1720 kg.
A receipt refers to the collection of 198.654 litres from Ostrava Blood Donation Centre in December 1991 (which could have formed part of the 12 December 1991 export).
The settlement agreement with Hospital with Polyclinic Mĕlník refers to deliveries from 5 March 1992 of 109.96 litres (which could have formed part of the third shipment) and 305.39 litres from 19 May 1992 (which would not have formed part of these shipments).
There is evidence of delivery of 7 units of blood derivatives by Conneco to Hospital and Polyclinic Transfusion Department Uherské Hradištĕ pursuant to an order of 6 March 1992.
Further, the very fact that FFP had been collected from Czech hospitals by Conneco, that FFP had been shipped to Denmark and that at least some blood derivatives were supplied by Conneco to a Czech health institution shows that Conneco had been able to equip the hospitals to collect and store FFP, and that it had the infrastructure to collect FFP from contributing hospitals, store it and ship it to Denmark and the ability to delivery blood derivatives to Czech health institutions.
ANNEX 2 – NOVO NORDISK
The point in time at which some form of co-operation began between Diag Human AG and Novo Nordisk (or one of its constituent companies) is not clear. However, on 3 October 1988 an agreement was signed for the supply by Diag Human AG to Novo Nordisk of 48,000 litres of FFP from the Bavarian Red Cross in 1990.
From 1990, there are minutes of regular meetings in which Diag Human AG and Novo Nordisk discuss business in Eastern Europe, and the terms of a distribution agreement between them in relation to that area. Frequent reference was made to business in Poland, the CFSR and Yugoslavia, as well as the ongoing Bavarian Red Cross arrangement, and there are also occasional references to business opportunities in Switzerland and Italy. Drafts of distributions agreement were discussed and exchanged in 1990.
It is clear that there was performance under the Bavarian Red Cross arrangement in 1990 – for example a meeting note of 9 July 1990 refers to 20,000 bottles of albumin being ready for delivery under that contract. The same meeting also refers to the CFSR, which it is anticipated would be the source of 12,000 litres of FFP, and records “the condition for the cooperation are virtually agreed”.
Regular meetings continued in 1991, with discussion of a written co-operation agreement continuing (e.g. at a meeting on 14 May 1991 when the contents and duration of the proposed co-operation agreement were outlined). At the same meeting, there was specific discussion of the possibility of procurement of FFP from CFSR, in an estimated quantity of up to 24,000 litres a year, and a statement that a draft co-operation agreement between Conneco and Novo Nordisk would be worked out.
In June 1991, Novo Nordisk submitted a bid in the tender process run by the Ministry of Health in which it referred to Conneco as “our partner in Czechoslovakia”. That does suggest that there was some form of business co-operation relationship between them. The bid answered a question as to the processing capacity of Novo Nordisk by stating that “Novo Nordisk has capacity to fractionate from 10 tons to maximum 100 tons supplied from Czech Republic” and proposed a volume of 5000 litres of FFP.
At a meeting on 14 August 1991, it was noted that the contractual proposal for a distribution agreement covering Poland, CFSR and Yugoslavia had been accepted by both parties, but that the contract would only be signed when outstanding amounts arising from supplies to Yugoslavia had been resolved. It was stated that “day-to-day cooperation shall take place in accordance with the draft contract”. It was noted that Conneco had not succeeded in the CFSR tender process, but this was not regarded as bringing an end to business there. There was reference to the fact that “Diag Human and Conneco are now concentrating on the effective utilisation on the newly founded plasmapheresis facility in Brno”, with it being anticipated that 3,000 litres of CFSR plasma would be delivered to Novo Nordisk in 1991.
On 14 October 1991, Conneco applied to the Customs Office at Prague for a permit to export FFP from the CFSR to Novo Nordisk for processing there and to re-import derivatives into the CFSR. The terms on which this could be done were approved by the Customs Office on 30 October 1991. The permit referred to an anticipated value of 14 million Czech crowns per year. At this stage, therefore, some form of business co-operation relationship was continuing between Conneco (as the Czech subsidiary of Diag Human AG) and Novo Nordisk in relation to the processing of Czech FFP. An invoice for a shipment of FFP to Novo Nordisk was issued by Conneco on 5 March 1992, and a quality certificate for that shipment on 10 March 1992.
On 9 March 1992, the Bojar Letter was sent by the Czech Minister of Health to Novo Nordisk, stating that one of the reasons its participation in the 1991 tender had failed was “a doubt about respectability of the Conneco”. The letter concluded “we expect that you will draw appropriate conclusions from the problem mentioned above …” The implications of that last sentence were not lost on Novo Nordisk. On 18 March 1992, Mr Knud Daugaard of Novo Nordisk wrote to Mr Kubálek of Conneco stating:
“We have received a letter from the Czech Minister of Health to which we refer informing you that until further notice we cancel all plasma co-operation between Conneco and Novo Nordik. Novo Nordisk does not wish to receive any more plasma until the doubts raised as to the company Conneco has been completely clarified”.
Once again, the letter acknowledges the existence of a relationship of business co-operation between Novo Nordisk and Conneco at that point, which the Bojar Letter had caused Novo Nordisk to put on hold.
On 23 March 1992, Mr Klaus Eldrup-Jørgensen of Novo Nordisk wrote to Dr Bojar stating that the letter had “received our careful and urgent attention” (something readily understandable given the content and source of the Bojar Letter). He continued:
“Regarding plasma products Novo Nordisk have been active in CFSR for the last couple of years dealing through Diag Human Switzerland and their subsidiary Conneco CFSR. The two mentioned companies are in no way connected to Novo Nordisk but undertake business under their own names and in their own right. However, when doubts about Novo Nordisk’s business contacts are raised, such a situation is viewed by us with grave concern”.
It is, in my view, significant that in a context in which it would have been in Novo Nordisk’s interests to downplay the nature and extent of any dealings with Conneco, or even to deny any relationship with them, the letter did no such thing. It referred to Novo Nordisk being “active” in the CFSR “through” Conneco.
On 8 May 1992, Dr Gnadinger of Diag Human AG and Mr Eldrup-Jørgensen, Mr Thaning Larsen and Mr Habo of Novo Nordisk met in Gentofte in Denmark. Novo Nordisk was told that the Ministry of Health had agreed to send a corrective letter, but none had been received. The meeting notes that Novo Nordisk had set up a meeting with the Minister of Health which was scheduled for 18 May. They also state:
“After having processed the first consignment of plasma from CSFR Novo Nordisk ascertained no content of Factor VIII. Investigation of this has not yet been finalized. When ready information will be forwarded to Diag Human and Conneco”.
On 18 May 1992, Mr Eldrup-Jørgensen and Mr Larsen had a meeting in Prague with the CFSR Minister and Deputy Minister of Health and two others government officials. The official minutes are singularly uninformative as to what as discussed. However, Mr Eldrup-Jørgensen wrote to Dr Gnadinger on 26 May stating that Novo Nordisk had decided not to accept supplies of plasma from the CFSR until the position had been clarified, stating “Novo Nordisk has not and do not want to be involved in matters between Conneco and the CFSR Ministry of Heath” and “we must ask you to abstain from using the name of Novo Nordisk in your dealings with the CFSR Ministry of Health”. It is entirely understandable that Novo Nordisk, faced with a direct communication from a Minister of the CFSR with a barely veiled threat, reacted in a defensive manner.
On 18 August 1992, Mr Eldrup-Jørgensen wrote to Conneco stating:
“We have received 3 shipments of plasma from Czechoslovakia and only the first lot has been processed in the amount of 828kg. It was only possible for Novo Nordisk to capture very few factor VIII units (57 bottles). The 3 next shipments which amounts to approx. 1720 kg are in production for the time being and the factor VIII units we expect here will be available for sale in Czechoslovakia from approx. October 1 1992”.
On 16 September 1992, with (on his evidence) the input of Mr Jensen of Novo Nordisk’s legal department, an agreement was signed agreeing the outstanding balance as between Diag Human AG and Novo Nordisk. The agreement states that it was reached “following discussions in Copenhagen between Novo Nordisk being represented by Klaus Eldrup-Jørgensen, Torben Thaning Larsen and Diag Human represented by M Gnadinger”. The agreement also stated:
“Furthermore, from this date Diag Human and its trading partners will promise to abstain from using Novo Nordisk’s name in any way or manner until otherwise agreed. The responsibility of the marketing of Novo Nordisk’s plasma products in Eastern Europe will as of this date be transferred to Novo Nordisk’s regional office in Vienna and this office will discuss and decide upon the role Diag Human may play in the future viz-a-viz Novo Nordisk’s range of products incl plasma products”.
The communication clearly contemplated that Diag Human AG and its trading partners (including Conneco) had had some responsibility for marketing Novo Nordisk’s products in Eastern Europe (including the CFSR) and that this relationship was being brought to an end.
I have found the exchanges up to 16 September 1992 the best guide to the nature of Conneco’s relationship with Novo Nordisk at the time of the Bojar Letter:
I am not persuaded that a written co-operation agreement was signed. However, the effect of the parties’ exchanges is that Novo Nordisk and Conneco were willing to operate a continuing relationship by reference to draft terms pending satisfaction of an unrelated outstanding debt.
I am persuaded that there was an established relationship of business co-operation between Novo Nordisk and Conneco which formed the basis of a mutual venture to collect and process FFP from the Czech Republic and return fractionated blood products to the Czech Republic.
That relationship was part of the wider relationship between Novo Nordisk and Diag Human AG (Conneco’s parent) in relation to Europe, and in particular Eastern Europe, more generally.
The precise legal status of this arrangement would ultimately depend on its applicable law, which was not debated before me, but I am satisfied that there was a legally binding and continuing co-operation agreement for the supply and fractionation of FFP from the Czech Republic and the return of fractionated plasma to the Czech Republic, not simply a series of ad hoc arrangements.
That is consistent with the centrality of Novo Nordisk to Diag SE’s business model; the duration and forward-looking nature of the relationship; the description by Novo Nordisk of Conneco as its “partner”; and the fact that Novo Nordisk found it necessary to effect and record its termination in a formal manner, which is inconsistent with there being nothing to terminate because there had only been a series of ad hoc contracts which had already run their course.
At the date of the Bojar Letter, the parties’ dealings suggest that the relationship, and delivery of FFP from the CFSR, were expected to continue.
In 1995, Novo Nordisk sold its plasma business to the US company HemaSure. Evidence given by Mr Jensen to the Czech Parliamentary Investigative Committee in June 2004 suggested that HemaSure took over all documents relating to the production of blood derivatives, and that the majority of the employees of this part of Novo Nordisk’s business was transferred across. HemaSure itself appears to have become insolvent a relatively short period thereafter.
Novo Nordisk no doubt hoped that the September 1992 agreement marked the end of any involvement in the dispute between Mr Stava and the Czech Republic. However, in in the early 2000s, two former employees of HemaSure provided witness statements to Conneco for the purpose of the Commercial Arbitration against the Czech Republic. Two statements were provided by Soren Bogo Jørgensen (who had been director of Q&A in the biopharmaceuticals division at Novo Nordisk and then HemaSure). In his second statement, he stated that “the sole reason why Novo Nordisk A/S in 1992 stopped to accept plasma from CFSR” was the Bojar Letter and the subsequent meeting between Novo Nordisk and the CFSR officials. The other statement was from Claus Bildsoe Astrup (formerly Jensen) who had joined Novo Nordisk in 1995 as a marketing manager in the plasma product unit, and who gave hearsay evidence of statements by various colleagues.
On 10 June 2003, the Czech Chamber of Deputies resolved to set up an inquiry into the settlement of the dispute between Diag Human and the Czech Republic. On 9 April 2004, the secretary of the Investigative Commission met Mr Binter of Novo Nordisk in Prague to seek the company’s assistance. On 16 April 2004, the Commission sent a set of 8 questions through to Novo Nordisk. On 11 May 2004, Novo Nordisk agreed to co-operate and promised to contact former employees and obtain the required information.
It is likely that the emergence of this ghost from the past was unwelcome news for Novo Nordisk, who put the matter in the hands of Mr Anders Jensen, its inhouse lawyer. The request came over 10 years after the relevant events and 9 years after the sale of the relevant business unit. I am also satisfied that Novo Nordisk was keen, so far as possible, to distance itself from the ongoing dispute, and to minimise its role.
Mr Anders Jensen attended a meeting with two members of the Commission in the Czech Embassy in Copenhagen on 31 May 2004. In the course of that meeting, Mr Jensen appears to have handed over a document with answers to the 8 questions which he had signed. While Mr Jensen thought at trial that the document had been prepared and signed at the 31 May 2004 meeting, I am satisfied that it was prepared either by Mr Eldrup-Jørgensen or Mr Thaning Larsen before the meeting:
Question 8 had asked whether Novo Nordisk was willing to work with the Commission in the form of exchanging written information or whether someone with authority to represent Novo Nordisk would give evidence to the Commission. The answer was “no comment”, which would have made sense as an answer from an ex-employee asked to complete the questionnaire, but not from Mr Jensen who was at the meeting precisely because he had been authorised to represent Novo Nordisk before the Commission.
The answer to question 1 was clearly provided by someone who had actually been involved in the relationship in 1991/1992 (which Mr Jensen confirmed he had not been), stating “to my knowledge Novo Nordisk received one (or maybe more) shipments from the Czech Republic but it turned out that the blood plasma did not contain the vital proteins so no manufacture of finished plasma products was possible”.
The answer to question 6 was rather different from the explanation Mr Jensen gave to the Commission as to the prognosis of the Diag Human AG – Novo Nordisk relationship, and clearly came from one of the individuals who had attended the 18 May 1992 meeting with Dr Bojar:
“It is for certain that the letter from the Czech Minister of Health as well as the outcome of the meeting in May 1992 which Klaus Eldrup and I attended made Novo Nordisk not to pursue business prospects in the Czech Republic regarding blood plasma and finished plasma products”.
Mr Jensen attended a further meeting with the Commission at the Czech Embassy on 28 June 2004. The minutes on this occasion record the presence of an interpreter, and the written minutes in English were not produced until 15 December 2004. It is not clear how they came to be sent to Mr Jennsen for him to sign, but it must have occurred some time after the meeting.
Mr Jensen began by seeking to distance Novo Nordisk from the statements made by Soren Bogo Jørgensen and Claus Bildsoe Astrup (formerly Jensen), stating:
“I would like to state that at this time I am absolutely the only person with the authority to comment on the Diag Human case and present my authorisation signed by the Nordisk directors. I have been informed that at present in the Czech Republic other materials have appeared that also confirmed the alleged opinions of Novo Nordisk (the statements of Astrup Jensen and Joergensen). I would like to say that Novo Nordisk considers these statements to be purely private comments by the people in question, which have nothing to do with the opinion of Novo Nordisk”.
Mr Jensen confirmed that he had searched those records which Novo Nordisk still had after the sale of the business and produced three agreements dating back to 1991. He was careful to confirm that he could not say that these were the only agreements ever concluded. Mr Jensen had no direct involvement in most of the events: he was very clear in his evidence to the court that he was “not involved in business” and, beyond helping Mr Eldrup-Jørgensen to buy his furniture when he became head of the blood plasma unit, he was “not involved in how he ran the business”. His statements to the Commission must have reflected what he had been told or concluded, and the underlying basis for his statements is not clear. His statements of the extent of Novo Nordisk’s dealings with Diag Human understated the position, probably because the true position could no longer be ascertained from the former employees he had spoken to:
He said that Novo Nordisk received only one order of blood plasma from the Bavarian Red Cross.
At one point, he stated that only one delivery of blood plasma was received from the CFSR whereas the contemporary documents suggest that there were three. Elsewhere, there was a suggestion of more than one shipment, “the majority of which” was rejected, whereas the contemporary documents establish only one issue with one consignment.
He appeared to confirm a summary given by the Investigative Committee that there had only been two deliveries of FFP by Diag Human AG to Novo Nordisk in total – one originating from the Bavarian Red Cross and one from the CFSR. This would not have been accurate:
A meeting note of 12 July 1990 refers to contracts for deliveries from the Bavarian Red Cross having been completed for both 1988 and 1989 with one exception, and commercial activity being underway in 1990. There are documents suggesting 48,000 litres of FFP was to be delivered over 12 months from the Bavarian Red Cross in 1990. Meeting notes of 16 October 1990 refer to deliveries from the Bavarian Red Cross in October and November 1990. Another document suggests 5,400 litres of FFP were delivered from the Bavarian Red Cross in March 1991. While it is difficult to determine quantities at anything other than an order of magnitude level, it is clear that there was a great deal more than one shipment.
Contemporary documents from the CFSR customs and the letter from Mr Eldrup-Jørgensen confirm three deliveries from the Czech Republic prior to the Bojar Letter.
In his 2004 interview, and in his evidence at this trial, Mr Jensen was rather dismissive of the aspirations which Mr Eldrup-Jørgensen had to expand the blood plasma business. However, I am not persuaded that he was privy to the plans of the blood plasma division in Novo Nordisk in 1992, and his statements in 2004 are likely to have been coloured by hindsight. Nor am I persuaded that he was privy to the production capacity of the blood plasma unit, and I am satisfied that Mr Eldrup-Jørgensen (who Mr Jensen confirmed was a serious businessman) would not have made statements about Novo Nordisk’s capacity in the June 1991 tender documents unless they were accurate. In any event, even if Mr Jensen is right that Novo Nordisk was looking to dispose of the blood plasma unit from the early 1990s, that does not mean that it wanted to prevent the blood plasma unit developing its business (something which may well have facilitated such a disposal). The participation of the Novo Nordisk blood plasma unit in the 1991 CFSR tender process is significant in this respect.
In short, none of the evidence given once the Commercial Arbitration began – whether of ex-Novo Nordisk employees in support of Conneco at the arbitration, or the statements made by Mr Jensen either in 2004 or at this trial – are of real assistance. The best evidence of the position in 1992 is to be bound in the documented dealings in and around that period, the effect of which I have summarised above.
ANNEX 3: THE KORUNA TRUST AND THE LAWBOOK TRANSACTION
In the course of 2011, two connected events took place:
On 25 May 2011, Kingfish Financial Ltd, a company incorporated in the Turks and Caicos Islands, acting as settlor established a Liechtenstein discretionary trust called the Koruna Trust. The trustee was a Liechtenstein legal person, LNR Trust Reg (“the Trustee”), established by Dr Rabanser, a Liechtenstein lawyer who acted as Mr Stava’s personal lawyer. I am satisfied that Kingfish Financial Ltd was owned by and acting at the direction of Mr Stava.
On 27 May 2011, a suite of five contracts were signed relating to the sale of the shares in Diag SE to a company called Lawbook Limited, which was said to be indirectly owned by “a partner in Aram International Partners LLP” (“the Lawbook Transaction”).
The Lawbook Transaction
Lawbook Limited has its registered seat in the Irish township of Ballylickey in Bantry, Co Cork. ARAM Global describes itself as a company founded in 2009 by Raja Visweswaran and Michael Balboa, based around a group of 15 experienced financiers and investment managers who specialise in debt recovery.
The Lawbook Transaction comprised:
A Share Purchase Agreement between Mr Stava and Lawbook Limited selling the shares in Diag SE to Lawbook Ltd which, unusually, did not contain the price but provided for it to be paid in three instalments (31 August, 31 October and 31 December 2011), with interest.
A Purchase Price Agreement between Mr Stava and Lawbook Limited providing that the price would be CZK 10,050,000,000 less any creditors. To provide some context to that figure, the amount of the Final Award made in Diag SE’s favour in the Commercial Arbitration (which was its only asset of significance) was of the order of CSK 8.9 billion, on which interest would run. A statement of the outstanding amount as of 3 November 2011 was CZK 10,399,480,375.75. A rough adjustment for interest between 27 May and 3 November 2011 is CSK 216 million. The Lawbook Transaction, therefore, involved the sale of a company whose only significant asset was a highly contested arbitration award which had been set aside in the Czech Republic and the enforcement of which was being successfully resisted by the Czech Republic for something close to 100 cents on the dollar, that huge enforcement and recovery risk notwithstanding.
An Agreement Regarding Conditions Subsequent providing that if the price was not paid before 31 December 2011, the Share Purchase Agreement and the Purchase Price Agreement would be cancelled, and the shares would be transferred by the purchaser to Mr Stava or instantaneously owned by Mr Stava and any part-payment of the purchase price repaid.
An Assignment Agreement between Mr Stava and the Trustee as trustee of the Koruna Trust assigning all of Mr Stava’s rights under the Share Purchase Agreement, the Purchase Price Agreement and the Agreement Regarding Conditions Subsequent to the Trustee.
A Pledge Agreement between Lawbook Limited and the Trustee as trustee of the Koruna Trust by which Lawbook Limited pledged all of the shares and associated entitlements in Diag SE to the Trustee as security for performance of the obligations assigned to the Trustee by the Assignment Agreement.
A letter of instruction by which Lawbook Limited as the purchaser of the shares in Diag SE instructed Mr Stava as the seller to transfer the bearer share certificates for Diag SE to the Trustee as trustee of the Koruna Trust.
On 27 May 2011, Diag SE retained ARAM International Partners to represent it in negotiations relating to the Final Award in the Commercial Arbitration in return for 12% of the cash proceeds, with Diag SE meeting recovery costs (which made the Lawbook Transaction an even less rational business proposition).
On 1 June 2011, Diag SE issued a press release reporting that Mr Stava had transferred all decision-making power in Diag SE with immediate effect, as “part of an agreement through which Mr Stava has sold Diag Human to an international consortium of institutional investors”. On 7 June 2011, Mr Stava gave an interview repeating the suggestion he had sold Diag SE, and that “the Czech government already knows perfectly well who the new owner of Diag Human is”. On 10 June, another press report appeared referring to “the anonymous new owner of Diag Human” who had hired ARAM Global, and to a press statement by Mr Stava that he had sold Diag SE to a consortium of international investors. The report stated that neither Mr Stava nor ARAM Global would reveal the identity of the buyer.
On 8 June 2011, Mr Visweswaran of ARAM Global wrote to the Prime Minister of the Czech Republic referring to “the recent change of ownership” and stating ARAM had been authorised to negotiate on the new owner’s behalf.
On either 10 or 20 June 2011, the Ministry of Health replied to this letter, indicating that the legal dispute between the Czech Republic and Diag SE was ongoing, and they could see no “evident reason” for talks at that time. It also raised Diag SE’s ongoing enforcement efforts in relation to the Commercial Arbitration Award. At no stage did the Ministry of Health ask any questions about the new owner of Diag SE, even though that would have been an obvious point of interest.
By 21 June 2011, Mr Balboa of ARAM Global had been appointed to the position of Diag SE’s President and to its board of directors, as recorded in the Liechtenstein Public Register.
On 20 July 2011, ARAM Global sent a further letter enclosing an authorisation to act for Diag SE signed by Mr Balboa and Dr Rabanser, and a copy of the Liechtenstein Public Register. The Ministry of Health responded in negative terms to the request for negotiations.
On 12 October 2011, the Koruna Trust and the Trustee’s trusteeship were formally registered in Liechtenstein.
On 2 November 2011, Mr Balboa swore an affidavit in English enforcement proceedings commenced by Diag SE, stating ARAM Global had been retained by Diag SE to provide recovery advice.
On 27 November 2011, Mr Stava accepted appointment as the Protector of the Koruna Trust.
On 1 December 2011, the United States Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York announced that Mr Balboa had been charged with fraudulently overvaluing hedge fund assets.
On 2 December 2011, minutes of a meeting of Diag SE’s shareholders record Mr Stava holding 25 bearer shares in the company, and voting to remove Mr Balboa from the position of President and Director of Diag SE.
On 6 December 2011, Mr Stava wrote to Lawbook Ltd referring to the non-payment of the first two instalments of the price and stating that the 31 December deadline for payment of the full price would not be extended.
On 15 December 2011, Diag SE terminated its engagement letter with ARAM SE for material breach and revoked the authority of ARAM Global.
The Lawbook Transaction expired on 31 December 2011.
It was Mr Stava’s evidence in the BIT Arbitration and before me that the Lawbook Transaction was entered into because in early 2011, the Czech Minister of Finance, with the knowledge of the Czech Prime Minister, suggested that if Mr Stava distanced himself from Diag SE, it would facilitate the settlement of their longstanding dispute. In effect, it was intended to create the illusion that he had severed his connection with Diag SE to facilitate a settlement. That account was challenged by the Czech Republic in the BIT Arbitration and, with less enthusiasm, before me as an untruthful fabrication on Mr Stava’s part. The submission made to me was that:
“It is not accepted that Mr Stava was telling the truth, or all of the truth, about …the Lawbook Transaction never having been intended to be carried through and its origins.”
I am satisfied that Mr Stava’s has been substantially truthful in his evidence that the Lawbook Transaction represented an attempt to create apparent distance between himself and Diag SE following indications from high levels within the Czech Government that this would be helpful to any attempt to resolve the dispute. I have reached this conclusion in reliance on the following matters:
The irrational economics of the Lawbook Transaction if a genuine arms-length transaction.
The press campaign which followed it, in which Diag SE sought to present that illusion to the Czech public.
The correspondence from the Ministry of Health in response to ARAM Global’s correspondence making no enquiry about the new owner.
The fact that the Czech Republic did not call any evidence to challenge Mr Stava’s account, either in the BIT Arbitration or before me.
It is no answer that the illusion was one which it would not have been difficult for a diligent journalist to uncover because, for example, Mr Stava remained on Diag SE’s register – not least because that reflects the inherent tension between trying to create the illusion of non-involvement with Diag SE while retaining it.
The Koruna Trust
By contrast, there is no dispute that the Koruna Trust created a valid trust which was intended to and did take effect in accordance with its terms and the applicable principles of Liechtenstein law. There was some debate about why the Koruna Trust was established. The one consistent – but not at all times the only – explanation offered by or on behalf of Mr Stava was “succession planning”. I did not find that a particularly informative explanation of why a discretionary trust was set up whose sole asset was shares in a non-trading company whose sole business was the attempt to enforce a commercial arbitration award against the Czech Republic. I accept, however, that Mr Stava had benefiting his family in mind when he established the trust, as evidenced by the Class of Beneficiaries (see [23(iii)] below). I also accept that “asset protection” may have been a reason why this asset – which by this point had had a controversial and troubled history, in which the resources of the Czech state had been deployed to a striking degree in an attempt to prevent the realisation of any value – appears in a discretionary trust essentially on its own. In neither respect am I persuaded that the purpose of the trust imposed a meaningful limit on the Trustee’s responsibilities outside the context of fixing the members of the Class of Beneficiaries and in the distribution of Trust assets.
Finally, I accept that it is likely that there is some written record of Mr Stava’s intentions in relation to the distribution of the Koruna Trust, and that this has not been produced despite disclosure orders by this court. However, I am not persuaded this would have added meaningfully to the obvious fact that Mr Stava intended the Stava family to benefit.
The Koruna Trust Deed
The terms of the Koruna Trust were set out in the Trust Deed, which was subject to an express choice of Liechtenstein law and the jurisdiction of the Liechtenstein courts (clause 2). The Koruna Trust was declared to be irrevocable (clause 30).
The Trust Deed identified:
Mr Stava was a Settlor (by virtue of the Definition and the settling of the shares in Diag SE into the Koruna Trust) and the “Original Protector” (the Definitions and Schedule B). The Protector was entitled to nominate a person who would become Protector once they ceased to hold that office, with the Trustee having power to nominate a Protector during any period in which the office would otherwise be vacant (clauses 21.2 and 21.3).
The Trustee as the trustee (the identification of the parties and the Definitions). The Protector had the power to appoint new or additional trustees or remove any trustee with “the prior written consent of at least three Persons qualifying as Beneficiaries” (clauses 22.1 and 22.2). At least one trustee had to be domiciled in Liechtenstein (clause 2.2(b)) and if there was more than one trustee, they were to act by majority decision (clause 19.4). Any trustee was permitted to resign on giving three months notice (clause 22.4).
The class of Beneficiaries comprised Mr Stava’s three daughters; their ancestors in linear line (and thus, without naming him, Mr Stava himself); their issue and remote issue in linear line; and those added to the class of Beneficiaries by the trustee (Schedule A). On the evidence, Mr Stava’s three daughters all hold Swiss nationality, although I have not relied upon this in reaching my conclusion.
The Trust Deed relieved the Trustee of various default obligations arising under Liechtenstein trust law (including keeping records) (clause 2.2) and accorded the Trustee wide powers, including:
to sell trust assets to convert them into money to be invested in other assets (clause 3);
to receive additional property into the Koruna Trust (clause 4);
to add or exclude class persons to the Class of Beneficiaries with the written consent of the Protector (clause 5);
to appoint or transfer trust property to other trusts with the written consent of the Protector (clauses 6 and 11);
to advance or apply trust assets for the benefit of any Beneficiary as they saw fit (clauses 72, 10 and 18);
to release their powers with the written consent of the Protector (clause 12);
to terminate, shorten or lengthen the trust with the written consent of the Protector (clause 16);
to exercise powers of management, dealing and disposition including investment, sale, alienation, exchange, etc and “all other powers …. of an absolute beneficial owner” to the widest extent possible (clause 17);
wide administrative powers, including to appoint investment managers or advisers and delegate powers and discretions to them, or to use nominees, or to delegate any of their powers on such terms as they saw fit (clauses 19.2 and 19.5); and
to amend the proper law of the trust or the administrative provisions of Trust Deed with the written consent of the Protector (clauses 20 and 23).
Clause 24 provided that “the Trustee shall not be required to interfere in the management or conduct of the business of any Company, securities of which comprise the whole or part of the Trust Fund”.
So far as the members of the Class of Beneficiaries are concerned:
No appointment by the Trustee is to be invalid on the ground that an insubstantial, illusory or nominal share of the trust assets is appointed to one Beneficiary, or a Beneficiary is excluded altogether (clause 14).
No Beneficiary has any right or entitlement to any part of the Trust Fund or income save as arises on the valid exercise of the Trustee’s powers (clause 15.1), and no right to call for accounts or information (clause 15.2).
The Trustee is entitled to its exercise discretions as it thinks fit for the benefit of all or any Beneficiaries and is entitled to exercise or refrain from exercising any discretion or power for the benefit of any Beneficiary without being obliged to consider the interests of the others, with any decision and action being conclusive and binding on all the Beneficiaries (clause 25).
Clause 26 permits any Trustee to acquire assets from the Koruna Trust or dispose of assets to the Koruna Trust “without being liable to account for any profit and without the transaction being void provided any transaction is effected at a market price or a price certified as fully commercial” by qualified professionals.
The applicable principles of Liechtenstein law
Liechtenstein is a classic, continental European civil jurisdiction in which laws enacted by Parliament are the central sources of law. The principal statute relevant to issues in this case is the Persons and Companies Law (“the PGR”) which incorporates the Trust Enterprise Law (“TrUG”). The General Civil Code (“ABGB”) and the Property Law (“SR”) are also relevant to some extent.
The following matters of Liechtenstein trust law were common ground between the Liechtenstein law experts:
A trustee is obliged to comply with the trust deed and owes a duty to manage trust property with the diligence of a prudent businessman and a fiduciary duty of loyalty to act in what the trustee considers to be the best interest of the trust. I accept that these are separate duties, so that if a trustee acted in his own interests or those of a third party, there would still be a breach of trust even if the decision or action taken was one which a prudent business could have taken. While I regard this debate as rather theoretical, to the extent that there was a dispute between Dr Batliner and Mr Reithner on this issue, I prefer Mr Reithner’s analysis which reflects the familiar and fundamental distinction between duties of care and duties of loyalty.
A trustee is in general obliged to avoid a conflict between its own interests and those of the trust enterprise or participants as such, and to eliminate such a conflict if it arises.
The same duties are owed by a protector of the trust, who cannot hold the trust assets in the trustee’s place, or deal with third parties in relation to trust assets by virtue of the office of protector alone (as opposed to when acting on behalf of the trustee, e.g. pursuant to a power of attorney).
It is possible to be a trustee, a protector and/or one of the beneficiaries (or one of the potential beneficiaries) of a trust at the same time, although the prohibition against self-dealing would continue to apply.
A settlor cannot retain a continuous right of instruction, which is inconsistent with the existence of a trust.
A trustee must comply with the principle of equal treatment of beneficiaries (although that does not necessitate equal distribution, but the application of the same standards and principles of consideration).
A trustee must exercise his discretion by reference to objective criteria (rather than arbitrarily), and without regard to the trustee’s extraneous self-interest.
A settlor or beneficiary who consents (expressly or tacitly) to a specific act in apparent violation of the trustee’s duty is barred from raising a claim about it thereafter and if all potential claimants consent and no creditor is harmed, a subsequent trustee will not be able to bring a claim. To the extent that Mr Reithner suggested that in such a scenario there might be a breach of duty, but no one capable of enforcing it, I found that an unduly theoretical analysis. In any event, at least so far as the “no self-dealing rule” is concerned, Mr Reithner moved away from that position in the course of his cross-examination, to support a “no breach” rather than a “no standing to complain” analysis. That sensible concession undermined the coherence of the “breach but no standing” analysis more generally.
The beneficiaries (or class of potential beneficiaries) do not have any property rights with regard to the trust property (i.e. Liechtenstein law recognises no concept of “equitable property” or “beneficial ownership” as a feature of its trusts or property law, even if the latter phrase appears in certain money laundering legislation). They have the right to demand the trustee faithfully executes the terms of the trust and diligently conduct its business, and if necessary to notify the court of actual or threatened breaches so that the court can act ex officio. They also have the right to bring a claim against a trustee who breaches the restrictions on self-dealing.
The beneficiaries also have the right to bring a claim for the benefit of the trust against any third party that is in improper receipt of trust assets, and to seek an order against such a third party for the reconstitution of the trust.
An agent who acts on behalf of a trustee must act in an orderly, diligent and conscientious manner in what they believe to be the best interests of the trust, must follow any lawful instructions the trustee gives and cannot exercise the rights delegated to them in their own interests or by reference to extraneous considerations.
The voting rights attached to a share in a Liechtenstein company cannot be transferred separately from the shares themselves.
I will now briefly consider the matters on which the experts were not agreed.
First, there is a dispute as to what happens if a trustee enters into a mandate with the settlor and binds himself to follow the settlor’s instructions: Mr Reithner saying there is no trust in such a scenario, and Dr Batliner saying the trustee could bind himself in this way, although this would not relieve him from the obligation to comply with his duties as trustee. I am not persuaded on the evidence that any binding agreement of this kind was entered into – there is no documentary evidence to support it, Mr Stava’s evidence was at best equivocal as to whether there was a mutual understanding to this effect with Dr Rabanser or that was merely his own understanding, and Dr Rabanser did not give evidence, from which I have inferred that he would not have supported the suggestion he had bound the Trustee in this way. Accordingly, it is not necessary to decide this point.
Second, there is an issue as to whether a protector who is also a beneficiary could exercise the power to remove the existing trustee and/or appoint himself as trustee and distribute trust property to himself. As to this:
The protector’s exercise of his power of appointment or removal would be subject to the duties in [29(iii)] and, once appointed, the power of distribution would be subject to the trustee’s duties as summarised in [29].
However, in principle, someone with a power to remove trustee can appoint themselves as a replacement trustee (s.53 of the TrUG), and the mere fact that the decision to remove the trustee was taken with a view to appointing the protector as trustee would not involve a breach of duty if the powers were nonetheless exercised in accordance with the general duties in (i).
Mr Reithner suggests that the effect of clause 22 of the Koruna Trust Deed is that Mr Stava would need the consent of three other beneficiaries in order to appoint or remove a trustee. I prefer Dr Batliner’s construction of clause 22.2 that the need for the consent of three beneficiaries to the appointment or removal of a trustee would include Mr Stava’s approval, even when he was acting qua protector. Clause 22 is drafted against a background of Liechtenstein law in which a beneficiary can also be a trustee or protector. It would have been known when it was drafted that Mr Stava was a potential beneficiary and the protector. Against that background, if Mr Stava was not to count for the purposes of clause 22 when acting as protector, I would have expected the clause to say so.
Mr Reithner appears to suggest that for Mr Stava qua beneficiary to consent to actions by Mr Stava qua protector would involve self-dealing within the meaning of Article 925(2) and 925(3) of the PGR. For reasons I explain at [33] below, I have found Dr Batliner’s evidence as to the application of the self-dealing rule where a beneficiary also holds the office of trustee or protector more persuasive.
Third, whether clause 26.1 of the Koruna Trust Deed and Article 925 of the PGR would prevent a trustee who is also a beneficiary from making any distribution to himself. As to this:
Once again, the trustee would be subject to the duties in [29], and any such distribution would have to be undertaken in compliance with them.
I am not persuaded that clause 26 of the Koruna Trust Deed applies to distributions to a trustee who is also a beneficiary in its capacity as a beneficiary. So far as clause 26.1 is concerned, the receipt of a distribution does not readily fall within the language of “acquire from” (which clearly contemplates the sale of trust assets to the Trustee) and “dispose of to” (which clearly contemplates the sale of assets by the Trustee to the trust). That conclusion is reinforced by (i) the reference to “without being liable to account for any profit”; (ii) the description of these events as “such transaction”; and (iii) the transaction comparators – the market price of the purchase or sale or the “value of the transaction” on fully commercial terms. These are obviously inapplicable to the gratuitous disposition by a trustee to a beneficiary. Clause 26.2 would not apply because any receipt would be qua beneficiary, not “by virtue of his position as a director, officer, employee or member or as agent or adviser of any Company, undertaking or firm”. Further, I would find such a conclusion surprising in what Mr Reithner accepted was a family trust (a context in which it is not difficult to conceive of a parent or elder sibling assuming a trustee role).
Nor am I persuaded that Article 925(1) of the PGR – “in the absence of any directive to the contrary in the trust instrument … the trustee is not entitled to any benefit from the trust” – applies to benefits to the trustee qua beneficiary (alternatively, to the extent the trustee is a beneficiary, the trust deed does provide otherwise). Indeed Article 925(2) – which contemplates a trustee being able to “appropriate assets of the trust property for the trustee’s own account … to the extent that such transactions do not go beyond the scope of orderly administration” – would appear to contemplate distributions to a trustee/beneficiary (it being difficult to identify any other case in which a trustee’s appropriation of trust assets for its own account would be within “the scope of orderly administration”). Mr Reithner accepted that “if the trustee was the father and the only two beneficiaries of the trust were children, you would expect the trustee to be able to distribute trust assets to close relatives.”
More generally, it is common ground that a beneficiary can be a trustee provided it is not the sole beneficiary (something implicitly recognised in Article 927(6) of the PGR). If that deprived the trustee of his rights as beneficiary, that would not be possible (the most important right – to receive distributions – being put in abeyance for so long as the beneficiary exercised the office of trustee). Commentary to which I was referred does not support the view that a beneficiary who is appointed a trustee cannot receive distributions: Gasser, Liechtensteinisches Trustrecht, [54] notes that “personal union with the settlor, the trustee or with individual or all beneficiaries may have unintended consequences regarding … civil and tax assessment”, but it does not suggest that one consequence is that the beneficiary who becomes a trustee forfeits his eligibility for a distribution. Alexander Schopper and Mathias Walch, Trust, Trust Companies and Special Asset Dedication in Liechtenstein, [404] note that a trust can be set up with a single trustee who is one of two beneficiaries, with the other “being awarded a symbolic amount ($10/year) and/or a payout but subject to conditions that may occur theoretically but whose probability of occurrence is very low ($10, but only in years when it snows 1 metre high in Cairo on August 20).” It also notes that a sole beneficiary can be a trustee provided that there is a co-trustee ([405]), in which eventuality there would be no one else in whose favour a distribution might be made.
Finally, I should briefly address Mr Reithner’s reliance upon Supreme Court Case LES 2009, 202, a case decided before the 2009 Foundation Law Reform, which applied Article 925 of the PGR in circumstances in which the Foundation Law was silent. In that case, CB and her husband established the Foundation with a trust company, the board of which comprised A (a professional trustee and lawyer) and B, his employee. After her husband’s death, CB was the sole discretionary beneficiary. She wanted to make a gift to A, who claimed to have suffered some misfortune, and consented to A and also B making withdrawals from the Foundation. After CB fell out with A and B, CB was able to require A and B to return the amounts received to the Foundation. The Supreme Court held that the gifts amounted to self-dealing, but this was not a case in which A was a discretionary beneficiary under the Foundation (such that the trust deed expressly contemplated his benefit). For that reason, I do not derive any assistance from the case.
The Arbitral Claimants’ new ownership case
There is one further submission which I should address, namely that Mr Stava owned the shares in Diag SE because he held the bearer shares at the end of 2011. In closing, Mr Riches KC accepted that “it’s not how the case has been put” but said that the submission was “based on the fact that Mr Reithner accepted in his evidence that if you hold the bearer shares as a matter of Liechtenstein law, that makes you the owner. Now I accept that’s not the way we pleaded it”. The background to this issue is now set out.
The Arbitral Claimants in their pleading pleaded that Mr Stava was the legal and beneficial owner of the entire share capital in Diag SE until 27 May 2011 when legal title in the shares was transferred to Lawbook Limited, but that Mr Stava continued to control Diag SE, doing so “as holder of all of the bearer shares.” It was expressly accepted, therefore, that Mr Stava’s ownership of the shares in Diag SE ended on 27 May 2011.
The Arbitral Claimants also served a pleaded case on Liechtenstein law in which they made the following admissions (which they have not sought or obtained the court’s permission to be released from):
that Mr Stava “ceased to be the legal owner of the shares in D1 after the time they were settled in the Koruna Trust”, albeit he held legal rights (which were necessarily not rights of ownership) which “entitled him to re-acquire legal ownership”;
that “Mr Stava was not at any time following the settlement of the Koruna Trust the legal owner of the trust property”;
that “as a matter of Liechtenstein law, shares in [Diag SE] … were formally owned by the Trustee”;
(specifically under a heading dealing with Mr Stava’s holding of the bearer shares) that the physical bearer share certificates and the shares became trust property once they were settled into the Koruna Trust.
These unequivocal admissions were made even though it was expressly pleaded that from 25 May 2011 to 28 November 2013, Mr Stava had possession of the bearer share certificates, the pleading accepting that this involved a delegation of voting rights by the Trustee.
In support of the argument the Arbitral Claimants sought to advance in closing that ownership of the shares was in fact vested in Mr Stava, reliance was placed on Mr Reithner’s first report. This had stated “when the shares became trust property, the Trustees were obliged to take control of them … They were (and are) the owners of the shares”. Mr Reithner also referred to Mr Stava taking “possession of the share certificates on behalf of the Trustee” and acting “as an agent of the Trustee”. However, in a section addressing events in 2014, and the effect of a 2014 document which, on one view, purported to transfer voting rights separate from the shares, Mr Reithner stated:
“Bearer shares are negotiable securities … A Liechtenstein law core principle of securities is that the physical paper not only evidences the holder’s ownership rights or clams, but the claim is transferred only with the physical paper and can only be exercised by the person possessing the paper.”
The section said nothing about the position where possession was held on behalf of or in the right of someone else (as, for example, where a bank clerk holds the bearer certificates in their capacity as an employee or the bank which holds the certificates as custodian).
Dr Batliner’s report stated that the Koruna Trust became the owner of the shares as from 1 January 2012. He noted the evidence that the bearer shares were in the physical possession of Mr Stava from 27 May 2011 to 28 November 2013 and that there was no evidence as to what agreements were in place to deal with this state of affairs. However, he stated that Mr Stava was only the shareholder until 27 May 2011, with the Koruna Trust “holding the share certificates as pledgee from 27 May until 31 December 2011” and becoming “the owner of the shares as of 1 January 2012”, suggesting he had to assume that Mr Stava held the certificates “by mutual agreement”, on the basis of “an unlimited power of attorney”. He expressly stated that this did not involve a transfer of the shares out of the Koruna Trust.
The experts’ Joint Memorandum referred to Mr Stava acting as an agent of or custodian for the Koruna Trust when holding and voting the shares.
In the Arbitral Claimants’ opening, reference was made to the quoted paragraph of Mr Reithner’s report in support of the submission that Mr Stava “was the only person entitled to exercise the voting rights in respect of the … shares”, but “even if Mr Reithner was wrong about this and the bearer shares were owned by the Koruna Trust while held by Mr Stava”, Mr Stava had an unlimited power of attorney. A later paragraph stated, “as noted above, at least when voting with possession of the bearer shares, the Claimants’ expert evidence is that Mr Stava was as a matter of Liechtenstein law treated as owner” (emphasis added). Finally, in opening submissions, Mr Riches KC finished with a “final general observation” in which he stated, “it is not disputed that the trustee had some form of de jure control, subject to the undisputed Liechtenstein law evidence that the holder of the bearer shares is the owner”.
With the benefit of hindsight, it is possible to see in these fleeting references an early attempt subtly to embrace the new ownership case, but there was nothing to suggest that the Arbitral Claimants were seeking to depart from the extensive admissions they had made, still less seeking the requisite permission to do so. As will be apparent from my summary, there was no “undisputed Liechtenstein law evidence” that Mr Stava’s physical possession of the shares made him the owner to the extent that he was holding the shares (as both experts accepted he was) as agent or custodian for the Koruna Trust.
The order of the expert witnesses was reversed because of availability issues, Dr Batliner going first. In the course of his cross-examination Dr Batliner confirmed the following:
“once the shares in Diag Human SE were vested in the Koruna Trust, then from that point in time onwards the trustee … had ownership of the shares subject to the terms of the trust deed”;
“from that point in time onwards, the trustee was the sole owner of the shares”;
Mr Stava held the shares either as a custodian or agent for the Trustee and had taken possession on behalf of the Trustee;
“the Trustee became the legal owner, even though the shares were not physically in the possession of the Trustee but appear to have been held by Mr Stava at that time”;
the Koruna Trust was the owner even though Mr Stava held the shares because he was holding the shares as the Trustee’s agent; and
when Mr Stava was holding the bearer shares, he was holding them as agent only.
Mr Riches KC raised the point very briefly as his sole point in re-examination (and he did not cross-examine Mr Reithner about this topic):
“Dr Batliner, you agreed with Mr Dunning that rights in bearer shares are indivisible under Liechtenstein law. In 2012 in Liechtenstein, in general, how would you transfer ownership of bearer shares”?
(emphasis added).
Dr Batliner replied, “handing them over”. The re-examination was about to come to an end, when Dr Batliner continued:
“Well, one remark. I mean handing them over, it would be distinguished between an obligation or a contract; it’s the basis and disposal is the handing over. There are two transactions, one is --- you need to have a contractual basis and the one is the handing over.”
The point made by Dr Batliner is one which any English lawyer will immediately recognise. The postman or courier delivering bearer shares does not, by virtue of their possession, became the share owner, however briefly, nor the safety deposit box company where bearer share certificates are stored. Nor, closer to home, did the custodians with whom bearer shares in Liechtenstein companies have had to be deposited since 1 March 2013 and who are obliged to maintain a register, giving the names and details of the shareholders. This is because there is no basis for the transfer of the shares, even if there has been a handing over (with the result that the custodian is not holding them in their own right). So too of Mr Stava from 27 May 2011 who held the shares as agent or custodian for their owner, the Trustee on behalf of the Koruna Trust. That is the consistent effect of the evidence of Mr Reithner and Dr Batliner, as I have sought to show, and it is fatal to the Arbitral Claimants’ attempts to depart from their pleaded case and argue that Mr Stava was the owner of the shares on 1 January 2012. That is sufficient to dispose of the point, but I would in any event have held that it was not open to the Arbitral Claimants to advance it, against the procedural background I have outlined.
Mr Stava’s ability to influence Diag SE’s actions and decisions
Control of the legal rights which were Diag SE’s only assets
It is important to note the following matters:
Diag SE had been deleted from the Czech Commercial Register on 7 September 1996 (when it stopped trading).
Its annual general meeting of 13 October 2008 noted a negative net balance of EUR 16,476,424.64.
Its only assets of any substance were the legal claims it had arising from events while it was still trading, and in particular the Final Award in the Commercial Arbitration, the enforcement of which was facing strong (and generally effective) resistance by the Czech Republic. This was stated in Mr Balboa’s affidavit in the Commercial Court enforcement proceedings of November 2011 and in Mr Stava’s witness statement in the same proceedings of 23 March 2013 in response to the Czech Republic’s application for security for costs. It was also noted by Mr Justice Burton when rejecting the Czech Republic’s security for costs application, reported at [2013] EWHC 3190 (Comm), Mr Justice Burton finding at [42(i)] that Diag SE “is impecunious. It has not traded since 1996.”
When settled into the Koruna Trust, therefore, as the Czech Republic stated, Diag SE “had no business other than seeking to recover under its commercial arbitration award.” I accept that it was Mr Stava who was in de facto control of that process – he was the only person with first hand knowledge of the relevant events, not LNR Trust Reg nor Dr Rabanser. It was Mr Stava who was the sole source of funding for the litigation: this was stated in Mr Stava’s witness statement in the English enforcement proceedings in response to the Czech Republic’s application for security for costs; and it was noted by Mr Justice Burton in [2013] EWHC 3190 (Comm), at [42(i)]. When the Czech Republic later sought a third-party costs order against Mr Stava on the basis that he was “Diag SE’s owner and controller” – and I should interject there that I place no reliance on that particular statement – it stated that Mr Stava “was directly responsible for the instigation of this litigation. He was the sole funder of the litigation for [Diag SE]” (Mr Bridson’s eleventh witness statement of 6 November 2015). Mr Bridson also referred to confirmation from two firms of solicitors who had acted for Diag SE in English proceedings that Mr Stava was the sole funder and asserted it was clear that those solicitors received instructions from Mr Stava. Mr Bridson’s description of Mr Stava as the guiding hand and financial force behind Diag SE was accurate.
I accept, therefore, that to all intents and purposes Mr Stava had practical control of the pursuit of Diag SE’s only assets, whose pursuit was dependent on funding by him. In seeking to pursue and realise those assets, there was no scope for any conflict between Mr Stava and the Trustee (the interests of Mr Stava and the Koruna Trust which he had had established, of which he, his daughters and their children were in the Class of Beneficiaries, and into which he had settled Diag SE were perfectly aligned in that respect). Nor was there any practical scope for the Trustee to second-guess Mr Stava’s decisions in the attempt to realise that asset. These matters were peculiarly within Mr Stava’s knowledge and were being funded by assets outside the Koruna Trust.
Clauses 19.2, 19.5 and 24 of the Trust Deed permitted the Trustee to act in a way which reflected that alignment of interest, and Mr Stava’s greater knowledge of and ability to pursue the exploitation of Diag SE’s only asset. The Trustee was also entitled (but not obliged) to have regard to the wishes expressed by Mr Stava as settlor, protector and a member of the Class of Beneficiaries and on issues relating to the pursuit of legal claims open to Diag SE, I am sure the Trustee would have done so. Deferring to Mr Stava on matters relating the pursuit and control of Diag SE’s claim would inevitably comply with the “business judgment rule” and, as I have stated, there was no meaningful possibility of the Trustee forming and seeking to act on a different view to Mr Stava’s as to how to enforce Diag SE’s claims.
However, Mr Stava was not exercising legal powers of control held by him in his own right and those powers could not be exercised exclusively in his own interests. The immediate source of those powers was Diag SE itself.
The management of Diag SE
Mr Stava was a member of the board and President of Diag SE and held sole signatory rights. Those rights were held on behalf of Diag SE, and fell to be exercised in the best interests of the company, and in particular its sole shareholder, the Koruna Trust.
As the holder of the bearer share certificates in Diag SE at the end of January 2012, Mr Stava had the legal right to exercise the voting rights which attached to those shares in what he believed to be the best interests of the Koruna Trust. The exercise of those voting rights was determinative of decision-making within Diag SE. The Czech Republic also accepted that, independently of the voting rights, Mr Stava was able to influence Ms Dagmar Stava and Dr Rabanser (two other board members).
I accept that the combined effect of the very limited nature of Diag SE’s business, the particular dependence of Diag SE on Mr Stava if it was to seek pursue those rights, and the absence of any realistic scope for a conflict between Mr Stava’s personal interests and those of Diag SE and the Koruna Trust in seeking to enforce Diag SE’s rights, was that Mr Stava was the determinant voice in all decisions taken by Diag SE.
The operation of the Koruna Trust
For the reasons I have set out, I am satisfied that the Trustee had effectively delegated the conduct of Diag SE’s sole business – the exploitation of its rights under the Commercial Arbitration award and any associated rights – to Mr Stava, and that this was a perfectly proper course.
The Trustee of the Koruna Trust had the legal right to sell the shares in Diag SE, where the Trustee formed the good faith view that such a sale was in the business interests of the Koruna Trust and represented a prudent business judgement. However, it is virtually inconceivable that the Trustee would have concluded that the best interests of the Koruna Trust, and prudent business judgement, justified such a sale if Mr Stava was opposed to it. That reflected the fact that Mr Stava was uniquely placed to assess the value of Diag SE and how best to realise that value. In addition, it is difficult to see how such a sale would have been a viable business proposition without Mr Stava’s support.
Had the Trustee been intent on pursuing such a sale in defiance of Mr Stava’s wishes, I am satisfied that Mr Stava’s daughters would have supported Mr Stava in removing the Trustee in the exercise of his legal power as Protector to take that course with the requisite beneficiary consent. This would have been a means of giving effect to a straightforward business judgement, on an issue where Mr Stava’s daughters would have deferred to Mr Stava’s judgement as to the best means of securing value from the company he had created and the claims he had pursued for so long and with such effort. I am also satisfied that, in such an eventuality, Mr Stava would have been entitled properly to exercise his powers to remove the Trustee seeking to effect a sale and to appoint himself as Trustee, together with a Liechtenstein domiciled trustee. He was uniquely placed to administer the Koruna Trust given its very limited and particular asset base. Mr Stava would have been supported by his daughters in doing so. That situation never came to pass – nor was it ever remotely likely that it would be necessary.
In his capacity as Protector, Mr Stava had the legal power to prevent the Trustee adding an individual to or excluding an individual from the Class of Beneficiaries (by withholding the required consent). That power was one which Mr Stava was obliged to exercise in the interests of the Koruna Trust. Equally, the Trustee was not obliged to follow Mr Stava’s instructions to add or exclude individuals from the Class of Beneficiaries.
I accept that the Trustee would not automatically have followed Mr Stava’s wishes in relation to the addition or exclusion of potential Beneficiaries or in making distributions from the Koruna Trust. These were very different contexts to the management of Diag SE’s business. While I accept that as the Settlor and a member (albeit one of ten) of the Class of Beneficiaries, Mr Stava would have had a very important voice in these decisions, the Trustee would have had regard to all relevant circumstances (including Mr Stava’s wishes as Settlor and the source of the assets, the views of members of the Class of Beneficiaries, the purpose of the Koruna Trust of settlement planning, tax consequences, whether there were any creditors etc).
In January 2012, had Mr Stava’s three daughters (as members of the Class of Beneficiaries themselves and as parents of the other members of the Class of Beneficiaries save for Mr Stava) supported Mr Stava’s wishes as to membership of the Class of Beneficiaries or the distribution of assets from the Koruna Trust, it is virtually certain that the Trustee would have formed the perfectly proper professional judgement that it should act in the manner supported by the Stava family.
I accept the evidence of Mr Stava’s three daughters that they found it difficult presently to foresee circumstances in which they would have opposed their father’s wishes in relation to the identity of eligible Beneficiaries or the distribution of assets from the Koruna Trust. In my assessment, it is highly unlikely that there would have been any disagreement between Mr Stava and his daughters had these issues arisen as at January 2012. Had it been necessary to do so, I am satisfied that there is a high likelihood that Mr Stava’s daughters would have supported him if he had decided to exercise his legal power to remove the Trustee if it had refused to give effect to his wishes on these issues, and to appoint himself as Trustee together with a Liechtenstein-domiciled trustee.
However, I accept Mr Dunning KC’s submission that it is not fanciful to suppose that there could be circumstances in which there would be a disagreement within the Class of Beneficiaries as to who the members of the Class of Beneficiaries should be or how assets should be distributed from the Koruna Trust. In that eventuality, it is not possible to determine how the Trustee would have acted or whether the Trustee could have been removed. Everything would depend on the particular circumstances.
Conclusion
My conclusions are as follows:
Mr Stava made an investment in Diag SE and through Diag SE in the Czech Republic, for the reasons set out in my reasoning on the “No Investment” challenge.
No investment was made by the Koruna Trust or the Trustee.
The Lawbook Transaction was not a genuine arms-length transaction but an attempt to create apparent distance between Mr Stava and Diag SE following indications from high levels within the Czech Government that this would be helpful to any attempt to resolve the dispute by negotiation.
Mr Stava’s legal decision-making powers as chairman of Diag SE, holder of the bearer shares in Diag SE and as Protector of the Koruna Trust:
were not, in the first two instances, held in his own right; and
in each case, were not exercisable solely by reference to his own interests, but only in what Mr Stava believed to be the best interest of Diag SE / the Koruna Trust (as appropriate).
That was also true of the Trustee’s powers.
There was no realistic possibility of a conflict of interest between Mr Stava’s own interests and those of the Koruna Trust in relation to the conduct of Diag SE’s only business, its attempt to enforce the Commercial Arbitration Award. In relation to that matter, the Trustee was entitled to and did leave the enforcement efforts to Mr Stava (who also funded them).
There was no realistic possibility of the Trustee or any other member of the Class of Beneficiaries disagreeing with or seeking to challenge any decision take by Mr Stava in the conduct of Diag SE’s business.
The Trustee of the Koruna Trust had the legal right to sell the shares in Diag SE, where the Trustee formed the good faith view that such a sale was in the business interests of the Koruna Trust and was a prudent business judgement, but it is virtually inconceivable that it would have followed such a course if Mr Stava had opposed it. Had the Trustee been intent on pursuing such a sale in defiance of Mr Stava’s wishes, I am satisfied that Mr Stava’s daughters would have supported Mr Stava in removing the Trustee in the exercise of his powers as Protector and/or appointing himself as Trustee together with a Liechtenstein-domiciled trustee and that Mr Stava would have been able to act so as to prevent a sale which he opposed consistent with his duties as Protector.
Mr Stava had a legal power to prevent the Trustee adding or removing members of the Class of Beneficiaries, to be exercised in what he believed to be the best interests of the Koruna Trust.
As the Settlor and a member of the Class of Beneficiaries, Mr Stava would have had significant influence over any decisions by the Trustee to add or exclude members of the Class of Beneficiaries or to make a distribution. However, he had no legal right to require the Trustee to act in certain way, and the Trustee would not have automatically followed Mr Stava’s wishes but would have had regard to all relevant circumstances.
In the circumstances prevailing in January 2012, Mr Stava’s three daughters would have supported his wishes as to the eligibility of Beneficiaries or the distribution of assets from the Koruna Trust (albeit they were under no legal obligation to do so), and in those circumstances it is virtually certain that the Trustee would have formed the perfectly proper professional judgement that it should act in the manner supported by the Stava family. Had the Trustee refused to do so, there is a high likelihood that Mr Stava’s daughters would have supported him if he had decided to remove the Trustee and/or appoint himself as trustee together with a Liechtenstein-domiciled trustee (although they were under no legal obligation to provide such support).
It is not fanciful to suppose that there could be circumstances in which there would be a disagreement within the Class of Beneficiaries as to how assets should be distributed from the Koruna Trust. In that eventuality, it is not possible to determine how the Trustee would have acted or whether the Trustee could have been removed. It would all depend on the circumstances.