Grounds 1 and 2
38 I propose to deal with grounds 1 and 2 together because the basis of those grounds is essentially the same, although the statutory provisions relied upon in each case are different.
39 Subsections (1), (2), (3), (3A), (5)(e), (5)(f) and (7) of s 8 of the IAA are in the following terms:
8 Recognition of foreign awards
(1) Subject to this Part, a foreign award is binding by virtue of this Act for all purposes on the parties to the arbitration agreement in pursuance of which it was made.
(2) Subject to this Part, a foreign award may be enforced in a court of a State or Territory as if the award were a judgment or order of that court.
(3) Subject to this Part, a foreign award may be enforced in the Federal Court of Australia as if the award were a judgment or order of that court.
(3A) The court may only refuse to enforce the foreign award in the circumstances mentioned in subsections (5) and (7).
…
(5) Subject to subsection (6), in any proceedings in which the enforcement of a foreign award by virtue of this Part is sought, the court may, at the request of the party against whom it is invoked, refuse to enforce the award if that party proves to the satisfaction of the court that:
…
(e) the composition of the arbitral authority or the arbitral procedure was not in accordance with the agreement of the parties or, failing such agreement, was not in accordance with the law of the country where the arbitration took place; or
(f) the award has not yet become binding on the parties to the arbitration agreement or has been set aside or suspended by a competent authority of the country in which, or under the law of which, the award was made.
…
(7) In any proceedings in which the enforcement of a foreign award by virtue of this Part is sought, the court may refuse to enforce the award if it finds that:
(a) the subject matter of the difference between the parties to the award is not capable of settlement by arbitration under the laws in force in the State or Territory in which the court is sitting; or
(b) to enforce the award would be contrary to public policy.
40 Section 9 of the IAA provides:
9 Evidence of awards and arbitration agreements
(1) In any proceedings in which a person seeks the enforcement of a foreign award by virtue of this Part, he or she shall produce to the court:
(a) the duly authenticated original award or a duly certified copy; and
(b) the original arbitration agreement under which the award purports to have been made or a duly certified copy.
(2) For the purposes of subsection (1), an award shall be deemed to have been duly authenticated, and a copy of an award or agreement shall be deemed to have been duly certified, if:
(a) it purports to have been authenticated or certified, as the case may be, by the arbitrator or, where the arbitrator is a tribunal, by an officer of that tribunal, and it has not been shown to the court that it was not in fact so authenticated or certified; or
(b) it has been otherwise authenticated or certified to the satisfaction of the court.
(3) If a document or part of a document produced under subsection (1) is written in a language other than English, there shall be produced with the document a translation, in the English language, of the document or that part, as the case may be, certified to be a correct translation.
(4) For the purposes of subsection (3), a translation shall be certified by a diplomatic or consular agent in Australia of the country in which the award was made or otherwise to the satisfaction of the court.
(5) A document produced to a court in accordance with this section is, upon mere production, receivable by the court as prima facie evidence of the matters to which it relates.
41 Section 39(1) of the IAA provides that this Court must have regard to the matters specified in s 39(2) of the IAA when interpreting that Act, when considering exercising a power under s 8 of that Act to enforce a foreign award or when considering exercising the power under s 8 to refuse to enforce a foreign award including a refusal because enforcement of the award would be contrary to public policy.
42 Section 39(2) of the IAA is in the following terms:
39 Matters to which court must have regard
…
(2) The court or authority must, in doing so, have regard to:
(a) the objects of the Act; and
(b) the fact that:
(i) arbitration is an efficient, impartial, enforceable and timely method by which to resolve commercial disputes; and
(ii) awards are intended to provide certainty and finality.
43 The objects of the IAA are set out in s 2D.
44 At 177-178 [71]-[75] of DKN v Beach Civil, I said:
Section 9(1) of the Act obliges an applicant who seeks to enforce a foreign award under s 8 of the Act to produce the duly authenticated original award or a duly certified copy of that award and the original arbitration agreement under which the award "purports" to have been made or a duly certified copy of that agreement. Section 9 substantially reproduces Art IV of the Convention.
Subsection (5) of s 9 provides that a document produced to the court in accordance with s 9(1):
… is, upon mere production, receivable by the court as prima facie evidence of the matters to which it relates.
In the present case, a duly certified copy of the charterparty and a duly certified copy of each of the awards were produced to the court in conformity with the requirements of s 9(1).
In my view, the production of those documents in the present case constitutes prima facie evidence of:
(a) the fact that each award was made as it purports to have been made;
(b) the subject matter of each award; and
(c) the fact that each award purports to have been made pursuant to cl 32 of the charterparty. This is so because the charterparty was the only place suggested either by the arbitrator or by DKN as the place where the relevant arbitration clause was to be found. That is to say, cl 32 of the charterparty was the only arbitration agreement relied upon by the arbitrator and by DKN as the source of the arbitrator's jurisdiction and power to conduct the arbitration and to make the awards. These matters necessarily also inevitably imply that Beach Civil was the charterer under the charterparty. How else could it have been found liable to pay demurrage to DKN?
At [46] in Altain Khuder LLC, Warren CJ concluded that, in the absence of contrary evidence, the prima facie evidence described in s 9(5) of the Act would take on a stronger complexion and become conclusive evidence of the matters to which it relates. I am not convinced that this dictum is correct and do not propose to apply it in the present case.
45 Those observations apply with equal force to the present case.
46 Each of the First, Second and Third Awards purport to have been made under the auspices of cl 5 of the contract. The arbitration agreement relied upon by Armada for the purposes of s 9(1)(b) of the IAA is cl 5 of the contract. In my judgment, subs (5) of s 9 of the IAA is engaged.
47 It follows, therefore, that Armada has established to a prima facie level that each of the three Awards is a foreign award within the meaning of that expression in s 8(1) of the IAA. Subject to Pt II of the IAA, each of those Awards is binding upon Armada and Gujarat by virtue of the IAA for all purposes.
48 If Gujarat is to succeed in resisting enforcement of any of these Awards, it must make out one of the grounds specified in s 8(5)(e) and (f) and s 8(7) of the IAA, being the only subsections of s 8 relied upon by it in the present proceeding. Gujarat bears the onus of "… proving to the satisfaction of the Court …" one or more of the matters specified in those subsections.
49 As I said in DKN v Beach Civil at pp 178-179 [78]-[84]:
This approach is supported by the reasoning of Mance LJ (as he then was) (with whom Neuberger and Thorpe LJJ agreed) in Dardana Ltd v Yukos Oil Co [2002] 2 Lloyd's Rep 326 at [10]-[12] (Dardana) where his Lordship said:
(a) Under the UK Act, a successful party to a convention award has a prima facie right to enforcement. This reflects the pro-enforcement bias of the convention.
(b) At the first stage of enforcement, upon production of the award and of the arbitration agreement appropriately authenticated, the award creditor is entitled to have the award enforced. Enforcement may be refused at the second stage (the inter partes stage) only if the award debtor proves to the satisfaction of the court that the situation falls within [one of the heads in the UK Act equivalent to s 8(5) and (7) in the Act].
(c) Provided that the documents produced to the court at the first stage establish that the arbitrators had purported to act pursuant to the arbitration agreement produced at that stage, that is sufficient to move the inquiry to the stage where the award debtor must establish one or more of the statutory grounds for refusing to enforce the award.
(d) Once the award creditor establishes the matters referred to in (b) and (c) above, any challenge to the existence or validity of the arbitration agreement must be brought under [the statutory provision in the UK Act which is equivalent to s 8(5)(b) of the Act]. That is to say, it is for the party resisting enforcement of the award to raise and prove any challenge to the validity of the arbitration agreement.
In the later case of Dallah Real Estate v Ministry of Religious Affairs [2011] 1 AC 763; [2011] 1 All ER 485; [2010] 2 Lloyd's Rep 691 (Dallah Real Estate), Lord Mance repeated these views.
In Dallah Real Estate, arbitrators had held that the government of Pakistan was bound by an arbitration agreement entered into between Dallah and a statutory trust even though the government was not named therein. The arbitrators held that the government was the "true party" to the agreement because the trust was its alter ego. The primary issue in the case before the English courts was whether there existed between Dallah and the government any relevant arbitration agreement at all.
The UK Supreme Court held that the statutory equivalent to s 8(5)(b) in England covered the case before it: That is to say, it covered the case where the party resisting enforcement claimed that the asserted arbitration agreement was not binding on it because it was never a party to that arbitration agreement.
The court also held that the existence of any relevant arbitration agreement falls to be determined by the Supreme Court as a UK court under provisions of national law which are contained in the UK Act and which reflect Art V(1)(a) of the convention. The onus of proving that it was not a party to the relevant arbitration agreement rested on the government of Pakistan under the UK Act even though the arbitration clause, on its face, did not refer to the government of Pakistan. In this regard, Lord Mance at [12] expressly followed his reasoning in Dardana at [10]-[12].
Once the equivalent provision to s 8(5)(b) of the Act is invoked, in the opinion of Lord Mance (at [26]), the party resisting enforcement is entitled to an ordinary judicial determination of the issue of whether that party was a party to and thus bound by the arbitration agreement.
Lord Collins (at [77]-[98]) expressed similar views. Lords Hope, Saville and Clarke agreed with the reasons of Lords Mance and Collins.
50 This Court is not bound to follow or apply the findings of the arbitrators in the First Award in respect of the composition of the arbitral tribunal in question in the present case. It has the power to determine matters of jurisdiction for itself (see the discussion of this point in IMC Aviation Solutions Pty Ltd v Altain Khuder LLC (2011) 253 FLR 9 at 86 [266]-[270] per Hansen JA and Kyrou AJA). However, if it chooses to exercise that power, it should only do so where it is necessary to do so.
51 In the First Award, the arbitrators set out in detail their findings of fact concerning the way in which each of the parties set about addressing the question of who should be nominated as arbitrator for the purposes of the dispute between them. They also set out in some detail their conclusions in respect of those facts.
52 I have set out the relevant primary facts as found by the arbitrators at [20] above. In my view, pars 23-36 of the First Award adequately address all of those primary facts.
53 In the proceeding before me, Gujarat focussed upon the issue of whether either Mr Hill or Mr Isaacs is a "commercial man" within the meaning of cl 5. In support of its submissions in this regard, Gujarat relied upon Pando Compania Naviera SA v Filmo SAS [1975] 1 QB 742 (Pando Compania Naviera SA), in which Donaldson J had to consider an arbitration clause in terms similar to cl 5 of the contract. In the case before him, his Lordship had to decide whether an experienced maritime arbitrator who had once practised as a solicitor qualified as a "commercial man" within the arbitration clause in the case before him. At 746-747, his Lordship said:
Mr. Legh-Jones submits, rightly in my judgment, that "commercial" is a word which takes its meaning from its context. Thus, "commercial action" in the Rules of the Supreme Court includes a wide range of causes. However, in the phrase "commercial area of the port" it has a different meaning and yet another in "commercial artist." He also submits, again rightly in my judgment, that Mr. Clyde's qualification as a "commercial man" has to be assessed as at the date of his appointment in this particular arbitration.
I have to construe the words in the context of an arbitration clause in a charterparty, In that context, Mr. Legh-Jones submits that the words "commercial man" means: "(a) a business man who is employed wholly or mainly in the conclusion or performance of trading transactions, or (b) a person who is engaged wholly or partly in the conclusion or performance of trading transactions at the time of his appointment or was so employed for a substantial time previously."
The particular point has never before had to be decided by the courts, although Mocatta J. in Palmco Shipping Inc. v. Continental Ore Corporation (The Captain George K.) [1970] 2 Lloyd's Rep. 21, 25, noted:
"It was not suggested that Mr. Clyde, with his great experience in maritime arbitrations since he retired a good many years ago from commercial practice as a solicitor, was other than a 'commercial man.'"
In Rahcassi Shipping Co. S.A. v. Blue Star Line Ltd. [1969] 1 Q.B. 173, Roskill J. considered at length the history of arbitration clauses which required the appointment of commercial men and concluded that it was not necessary or desirable to attempt to define "commercial men" with precision. I respectfully agree and would only add that in my judgment any such attempt would fail. Like the elephant, they are more easily recognised than defined. But he also said that it was a general phrase which enabled the parties to choose the arbitrators or umpires from a wide field of persons with commercial experience.
That observation points, I think, to the real test. It does not matter whether or not the arbitrator has retired from commerce or is still engaged in it. What matters is his practical commercial experience. It is well known that the shipping industry has two sides: the marine side and the commercial side. The parties to this charterparty wish the arbitrators to be chosen from the commercial rather than from the marine side. In some other case it may be necessary to decide whether commercial experience which is unrelated to the carriage of goods by sea - the retail distributive trade, for example - is sufficient under such a clause, but that does not arise in the present case. The use of the words "commercial men" would also exclude those whose experience is solely as practising members of the legal profession. Some of them can rightly be described as "commercial lawyers," but whilst they serve the commercial world they are not of it.
Mr. Clyde was a commercial lawyer before he ceased to practise, but this fact cannot disqualify him from becoming a "commercial man" thereafter if he would otherwise be qualified.
In the end the crux of the matter is whether a whole time professional maritime arbitrator is within the class of person to whom the parties to a charterparty must be deemed to be referring when they speak of "commercial men."
The shipping and commodity trades of the world are unusual in that they do not regard litigation or arbitration with abhorrence. On the contrary, they regard it as a normal incident of commercial life - a civilised way of resolving the many differences of opinion which are bound to arise. Would that the same intelligent attitude were adopted within industry. As a result, a domestic arbitration service has grown up in London, which serves the shipping and commodity trades on a world-wide basis. I say "domestic" because an important characteristic is that the arbitrators are not regarded as outsiders. As I said in The Myron [1970] 1 Q.B. 527, 532:
"A person who is actively engaged throughout all available working hours in maritime arbitrations is regarded in practice as being engaged in the shipping trade."
And I could well have added "and in the commercial side of that trade." I have no doubt that a member of the London Maritime Arbitrators Association practising as a full-time maritime arbitrator would be regarded by most ship owners and charterers throughout the world as a "commercial man."
Accordingly Mr. Clyde was qualified to be appointed an arbitrator under the arbitration clause contained in this charterparty. The fact that he had also had practical experience of another aspect of the commercial side of the shipping trade by virtue of having been a director of shipping companies merely reinforces this view.
54 In Pando Compania Naviera SA, Donaldson J referred to Rahcassi Shipping Co SA v Blue Star Line Ltd [1969] 1 QB 173. Senior Counsel for Gujarat also placed reliance upon that case. However, in that case the arbitration clause provided that the arbitrator should be "commercial men" and went on to expressly exclude lawyers from being appropriately qualified for appointment. See also the decision of the US Court of Appeals, 2nd Circuit, in WK Webster & Co v American President Lines, 32F 3d 665 (2nd Cir, 1994) at 668-669, where the Court rejected the proposition that the fact that an arbitrator was a practising lawyer disqualified him from being a "commercial man". The Court held that it was the commercial experience of the arbitrator that mattered.
55 The curriculum vitae of each of Mr Hill and Mr Isaacs were tendered in evidence before me. Each of those gentlemen has considerable experience in arbitrating commercial disputes. They are also, of course, leading lawyers in London. In my judgment, however, the fact that they are lawyers does not disqualify them from satisfying the descriptor "commercial men". As Donaldson J said in Pando Compania Naviera SA, experience as an arbitrator of commercial disputes may well be sufficient to satisfy the contractual requirement. This will particularly be so in circumstances where the individuals concerned are members of a reputable professional association which regularly appoints arbitrators to determine disputes submitted to arbitration, as was the case with both Mr Hill and Mr Isaacs.
56 I am not satisfied that Mr Hill and Mr Isaacs were not commercial men within the meaning of cl 5.
57 For this reason, the substratum of grounds 1 and 2 of Gujarat's resistance to enforcement falls away. In any event, if I am wrong in that conclusion, when careful regard is paid to the relevant facts (particularly the correspondence exchanged on 6 April and 12 April 2010), it is quite clear that, as the arbitrators found, the parties agreed on the appointment of Messrs Hill and Isaacs or, alternatively, Gujarat waived its right to insist on the appointment of a commercial man and thus waived its right to object to the appointment of Mr Hill or, alternatively, Gujarat is estopped from challenging that appointment.
58 In addition, on 28 November 2011, Gujarat applied to the High Court of Justice in England for leave to appeal against the Second Award. On 28 February 2012, Gujarat discontinued that application. As well, Gujarat applied for a stay of the arbitration proceedings pending the outcome of its application for leave to appeal from the Second Award. That application was dismissed by the tribunal.
59 Eventually, Gujarat ceased to participate in the arbitration proceedings. Instead, it sought to restrain Armada from giving effect to either the First or the Second Award by bringing proceedings in India.
60 In effect, Gujarat continued to participate in the arbitration for some time after the arbitrators had determined that they had substantive jurisdiction to proceed with the arbitration. It was only after the publication of the Second Award that Gujarat took steps to extricate itself from the arbitration. It seems quite clear to me that it had decided to participate in the arbitration after the initial ruling on jurisdiction in order to see whether it could procure a favourable outcome on the issues of substance in the arbitration. It was only in the face of an unfavourable outcome that it decided to attempt to resurrect the point which it now takes concerning the composition of the tribunal.
61 For all of the above reasons, Gujarat has failed to displace the prima facie position achieved by Armada complying with s 9(1) of the IAA and has also failed to make out the requirements of s 8(5)(e) of the IAA in respect of the composition of the arbitral tribunal.