Discussion
27 Hub contends that the award should not be enforced by the Court on a number of grounds, namely:
(1) Hub did not receive proper notice of the appointment of the arbitrator as proper notice required notice to be given to Hub at its Chippendale Address giving it a period of 45 days in which to appoint an arbitrator: s 8(5)(c) of the IAA.
(2) Hub did not receive proper notice of the arbitration proceedings as it did not in fact receive any notice of those proceedings. The notice given to Elan Urban's post box was not notice to Hub. Mr Muraywed was an employee of Hub Qatar and not Hub so the email to Mr Muraywed from Elan Urban was not notice to Hub. The notices from the arbitral tribunal were not in fact received by Hub: s 8(5)(c) of the IAA.
(3) Hub was unable to present its case in the arbitration proceedings as it never in fact received notice of those proceedings: s 8(5)(c) of the IAA.
(4) The composition of the arbitral authority was not in accordance with the agreement of the parties as the Art 46 procedure in the Contract had not been followed: s 8(5)(e) of the IAA.
(5) The arbitral procedure was not in accordance with the agreement of the parties as Art 50 of the Contract provided for all matters relating to the Contract to be in English and the arbitration was conducted and the award issued in Arabic: s 8(5)(e) of the IAA.
(6) The arbitral award involved a breach of the rules of natural justice and thus the award should not be enforced as it would be contrary to public policy to do so: ss 8(7) and 8(7A)(b) of the IAA.
28 I have rejected some of Hub's factual contentions above. Specifically, I have found that it should be inferred that Hub knew about the existence of legal proceedings by ECQ against Hub in Qatar in December 2016 and knew about the arbitration proceedings involving ECQ against Hub in Qatar by April 2017. In this regard, the evidence is that the arbitration proceedings were adjourned on a number of occasions given Hub's non-attendance but the arbitral tribunal ultimately made a decision to issue the award in Hub's absence and did so on 1 August 2017. In my view, given my factual findings it is not open to Hub to make arguments (2), (3) or (6) above. Hub had actual notice of the arbitration proceedings in April 2017 before any substantive step was taken in the arbitration and thus had been given an adequate opportunity to present its case in the arbitration proceedings but chose not to do so. As such, it cannot be said that Hub was subjected to any practical injustice by reason of the arbitration proceeding as it did. Hub cannot therefore maintain that there was any breach of the rules of natural justice in connection with the making of the award and thus it would not be contrary to public policy to enforce the award on this basis.
29 The arguments in (1), (4) and (5) above remain. In this regard there is no dispute that ECQ never gave Hub any notice in accordance with Art 46 of the Contract and that the composition of the arbitral tribunal was as ordered by the Qatari Plenary Court of First Instance rather than being constituted by each party nominating one arbitrator and the arbitrators nominating a third arbitrator. Nor was there any dispute that the arbitration itself was conducted in Arabic not English and the award was issued in Arabic.
30 I have little difficulty in rejecting Hub's argument (5) as a reason to refuse enforcement of the award. As a matter of construction Hub's interpretation of Art 50 of the Contract is to be preferred. That is, the arbitration was a matter "relating to this Agreement [sic Contract]". As such, the arbitration should have been conducted in English, not Arabic and the award should have been issued in English, not Arabic. However, the notices from the arbitral tribunal to Hub about the arbitration were in English. On my findings, moreover, Hub decided to ignore the notices from the arbitral tribunal and decided to take no part in the arbitration despite knowing that it was being conducted. Having done so, there is and was no prejudice to Hub occasioned by the fact that the arbitral proceedings were conducted in and the arbitral award issued in Arabic (of which there is in evidence a certified English translation). If Hub's only argument were argument (5) I would not be persuaded that I should refuse to enforce the award despite Hub having proved that the arbitral procedure was not in accordance with the Contract because it was conducted in and the award was issued in Arabic rather than in English. As a matter of discretion I would decide to enforce the award against Hub notwithstanding the fact that the arbitral procedure was not in accordance with the agreement of the parties.
31 The real arguments in this matter are (1) and (4) which are related - because Hub was never given a notice under Art 46 of the Contract it never got the opportunity to appoint an arbitrator and the arbitral tribunal was appointed by the Qatari Plenary Court of First Instance rather than by the method specified in Art 46. Art 46 provided for each party to nominate an arbitrator and for those two arbitrators to choose a third arbitrator who should chair the arbitration. According to Art 46 if the decision about the third arbitrator could not be agreed within 28 days then the matter of appointment of such member shall be referred by either party to the competent Qatari Courts. Art 46 also however said that any dispute was to be referred to arbitration "in accordance with the rules of arbitration in Qatar".
32 Evidence of Qatari law was given by Dr Al-Adba. In his affidavit Dr Al-Adba said that:
(1) Since March 2017 the law of Qatar governing arbitration is the Qatari CCAL. This replaced Arts 190-210 of the Qatari CCCP.
(2) Article 171(1) of Law No. 22 of 2004 Promulgating the Civil Code (Qatar) (the Qatari Civil Code) provides that:
A contract is the legislation of the parties to the contract. It may not be set aside or amended without the agreement of the two parties, or for reasons prescribed in the law.
(3) Accordingly, the Contract between the parties is binding including the arbitration agreement.
(4) The most important thing to commence an arbitration validly is legal notification as agreed in the Contract. Without this, the dispute might be premature and the verdict will be invalid.
(5) The valid way a party to the Contract with the wording as per Art 46 may begin an arbitration is as follows:
(a) The claimant sends a written notice by prepaid post to the respondent to the address provided in the contract-; and
(b) Within 45 days of that notice, a party may appoint an arbitrator.
(6) The notification must be delivered to the proper address of the party and if not delivered properly then any verdict or requests which come after that will be null and void.
(7) If the notice under the Contract is not responded to, the claimant may apply to the court for a judicial notification to appoint an arbitrator.
(8) Under Art 4 of the Qatar CCAL emails are considered a valid way of delivering a legal summons when this was not previously the case.
33 Dr Al-Adba gave oral evidence. He explained that the Qatari Plenary Court of First Instance was the first level of the judicial hierarchy in Qatar. If parties had a dispute about a contract they could file proceedings in the Qatari Plenary Court of First Instance to decide the dispute, assuming the parties had not agreed to resolve any dispute by arbitration. By Art 172 of the Qatari Civil Code the Court would resolve the dispute having regard to questions of law, custom and equity. Further, if parties had a dispute about the arbitration agreement in a contract they could also file proceedings in the Qatari Plenary Court of First Instance to resolve the dispute. Above the Qatari Plenary Court of First Instance in the judicial hierarchy were two levels of appeal courts.
34 Dr Al-Adba was shown the judgment of the Qatari Plenary Court of First Instance appointing the arbitrators. The Qatari Plenary Court of First Instance referred, amongst other things, to Art 195 of the Qatari CCCP (cited in part above) and Art 46 of the Contract. The Court said:
Whereas the two parties failed to agree upon tribunal of arbitrators, with which the court decides to appoint a tribunal consisted of three arbitrators…
35 The Court then adjudicated to appoint an arbitral tribunal consisting of three arbitrators.
36 Dr Al-Adba agreed that he was unaware that the Qatari Plenary Court of First Instance had issued this judgment. He agreed that the judgment represented the law in Qatar until set aside which could only be done by way of appeal. Until set aside the judgment represented the state of Qatari law. Dr Al-Adba agreed that the arbitrators, having been appointed by the Court, had to conduct the arbitration and make an award. If a party wished to argue that the Court should not have appointed the arbitrators then it was necessary for the party to apply under Art 33 of the Qatari CCAL which provides for appeals against an arbitral award. The grounds of appeal reflect those for refusing to enforce an award in s 8(5) of the IAA but also provide for primacy of the Qatari CCAL in the event of any conflict between it and the terms of the Contract between the parties. Under Art 33(4) the party wishing to appeal the award has one month from the date of the award or the date of receiving notice of the award to do so.
37 Dr Al-Adba's attention was drawn to the statement in the judgment of the Qatari Plenary Court of First Instance that "the Defendant was legally notified thereof with a request to appoint an arbitral tribunal consisted of three arbitrators to decide in the dispute…". He agreed that the Court could determine this issue of proper notice for itself and that such a decision could be challenged by way of appeal.
38 Hub's essential argument was that the arbitration having been commenced other than in accordance with Art 46 of the Contract between the parties, nothing that followed could be valid and binding on Hub. Although Hub's primary case was that it never received actual notice of the arbitration (a case I have rejected on the facts), it was submitted for Hub that even with actual notice of the arbitration Hub was entitled to ignore the process in Qatar which was other than in accordance with the arbitration agreement.
39 ECQ's essential argument was that the decision of the Qatari Plenary Court of First Instance represented the state of the law in Qatar, which was the relevant law. It necessarily followed that Hub had been properly notified of the arbitration as the Qatari Plenary Court of First Instance found and that the arbitral tribunal, having been constituted by that Court, was properly constituted. Further, Hub had actual notice of the appointment of the arbitrators by the Court and of the arbitration proceedings and was wilfully blind to the conduct of the arbitration with the consequence that it cannot now resist enforcement of the arbitral award against it. The proper way for Hub to resist enforcement was to appeal against the arbitral award in Qatar within one month of having received notice of it, which Hub had not done.
40 The parties referred to some cases in support of their competing submissions.
41 In Uganda Telecom Limited v Hi-Tech Telecom Pty Ltd [2011] FCA 131; 277 ALR 415Foster J considered a case in which a party had actual notice of an arbitration but deliberately chose not to participate in it: [109]. Foster J said at [126]:
The whole rationale of the Act, and thus the public policy of Australia, is to enforce such awards wherever possible in order to uphold contractual arrangements entered into in the course of international trade, in order to support certainty and finality in international dispute resolution and in order to meet the other objects specified in s 2D of the Act.
42 His Honour decided to enforce the award.
43 In Dallah Real Estate and Tourism Holding Company v The Ministry of Religious Affairs, Government of Pakistan [2010] UKSC 46 (Dallah) the issue was the absence of any agreement between the parties as to arbitration. An argument was put that only the courts in the seat of the arbitration had power to determine the validity of the award: [20]. At [23] Lord Mance said:
A person who denies being party to any relevant arbitration agreement has no obligation to participate in the arbitration or to take any steps in the country of the seat of what he maintains to be an invalid arbitration leading to an invalid award against him. The party initiating the arbitration must try to enforce the award where it can. Only then and there is it incumbent on the defendant denying the existence of any valid award to resist enforcement.
44 At [30] Lord Mance said that:
The scheme of the New York Convention, reflected in ss.101-103 of the 1996 Act may give limited prima facie credit to apparently valid arbitration awards based on apparently valid and applicable arbitration agreements, by throwing on the person resisting enforcement the onus of proving one of the matters set out in Article V(1) and s.103. But that is as far as it goes in law. Dallah starts with advantage of service, it does not also start fifteen or thirty love up.
45 At [103] Lord Collins rejected an argument that the courts of the seat of the arbitration had exclusive jurisdiction to determine the existence of a valid arbitration agreement, saying:
There is nothing in the Convention which imposes an obligation on a party seeking to resist an award on the ground of the non-existence of an arbitration agreement to challenge the award before the courts of the seat.
46 At [160] Lord Hope said:
The starting point in this case must be an independent investigation by the court of the question whether the person challenging the enforcement of the award can prove that he was not a party to the arbitration agreement under which the award was made. The findings of fact made by the arbitrators and their view of the law can in no sense bind the court, though of course the court may find it useful to see how the arbitrators dealt with the question. Whether the arbitrators had jurisdiction is a matter that in enforcement proceedings the court must consider for itself.
47 In IMC Aviation Solutions Pty Ltd v Altain Khuder LLC [2011] VSCA 248; 38 VR 303 (IMC Aviation) reference was made to Dallah at [319]. At [321] Hansen JA and Krou AJA said that:
In the present case, IMCS, which denied that it was a party to the Arbitration Agreement, was not obliged to participate in the arbitration proceeding or to apply to the Mongolian courts to set aside the Award. In the circumstances of this case, IMCS's failure to take these steps cannot give rise to an estoppel precluding it from denying that it was a party to the Arbitration Agreement or from challenging the validity of that agreement in this Court.
48 Further at [53] in IMC Aviation Warren CJ said:
Section 8(5)(a) to (e) requires the enforcing court to be satisfied that a foreign award is tainted by either fraud or vitiating error on the part of the arbitral tribunal. Given that the Act declares arbitration to be 'an efficient, impartial, enforceable and timely method by which to resolve commercial disputes', the enforcing court should start with a strong presumption of regularity in respect of the tribunal's decision and the means by which it was arrived at. The enforcing court should treat allegations of vitiating irregularity as serious. A correspondingly heavy onus falls upon the award debtor if it wishes to establish such an allegation on the balance of probabilities. Furthermore, the conduct of the parties to the agreement at each of the various stages prior to an enforcement order being sought in these courts, and its consistency with the defence subsequently asserted, will be a relevant fact to consider when deciding whether that burden has been discharged to the necessary standard.
49 And at [169] in IMC Aviation Hansen JA and Kyrou AJA said:
To interpret the Act in a manner that treated the issue of whether a person was a party to an arbitration agreement as standing outside the legislative scheme that applies to all other grounds of impugning an award, would fly in the face of the express language in s 8(3A) that the Court may only refuse to enforce a foreign award in the circumstances mentioned in s 8(5) and (7).
50 In Traxys Europe SA v Balaji Coke Industry Pvt Ltd (No 2) [2012] FCA 276; 201 FCR 535 at [88] Foster J said:
The grounds for refusing enforcement specified in s 8(5) of the IAA reflect commonly accepted notions of fairness. Those grounds must be raised by the party against whom enforcement is sought and the onus of establishing one or more of those grounds is on that party. Section 8(7) specifies two bases for refusing to enforce a foreign award which are not, in terms, required to be raised by the party against whom enforcement is sought. In practice, of course, it will almost always be that party who raises one or other or both of those matters. In order to engage s 8(7), the Court must make a finding either that the subject matter of the foreign award is not capable of settlement by arbitration under the laws of the State or Territory in which the Court is sitting and/or that to enforce the award would be contrary to public policy. Once one or other or both such findings are made, the Court has a discretion to refuse to enforce the award. The proper exercise of that discretion would require the Court to pay due regard to the terms of s 39(2) of the IAA and the objects of the IAA as stated in s 2D.
51 Hub relied on Dallah and IMC Aviation to support the following propositions (leaving aside its contentions about actual knowledge of the arbitration which I have rejected above):
(1) It is apparent from the inclusion of s 8(5)(f) of the IAA ("the award has not yet become binding on the parties to the award 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") that there is no obligation on a party resisting the enforcement of an award to apply to set aside the award in the seat of the arbitration. The party may resist enforcement in the country in which the award is sought to be enforced relying on any of the grounds in s 8(5) and 8(7).
(2) There is no material difference between the argument put in Dallah and IMC Aviation that there was no valid arbitration agreement and the argument put in this case where there was a valid arbitration agreement but the arbitration was commenced other than in accordance with the Contract: IMC Aviation at [169]. The arbitration not having been properly commenced in accordance with the arbitration agreement, the arbitration is invalid and the other party (Hub in this case) was under no obligation to participate in the arbitration. Nor could it be under any obligation to have sought to set aside the arbitral award in Qatar. Rather, Hub is entitled to resist enforcement of the award on the grounds it does in Australia under ss 8(5) and 8(7).
(3) Further, it follows from the reasoning in Dallah and IMC Aviation that this Court is not involved in reviewing the judgment of the Qatari Plenary Court of First Instance. This Court must decide for itself if the grounds for resisting enforcement of the award are made out.
(4) The evidence of Dr Al-Adba confirms that the proper way to have commenced this arbitration was in accordance with Art 46 of the Contract, that is, for ECQ to send by pre-paid post to Hub at its Chippendale Address notice giving Hub 45 days to appoint an arbitrator. This evidence of the law of Qatar is unchallenged. Such notice was never given.
(5) Dr Al-Adba also gave evidence that the constitution of the arbitral tribunal should be in accordance with Art 46 of the Contract. The arbitral tribunal was not so constituted in this case.
(6) ECQ's argument, that the judgment of the Qatari Plenary Court of First Instance represents Qatari law and cannot be reviewed by this Court, is inconsistent with the reasoning in Dallah and IMC Aviation. This Court must decide for itself whether the composition of the arbitral tribunal was in accordance with the Contract between the parties having regard to what Qatar law says about the Contract and what the terms of that contract were and the events that transpired.
(7) The first time that Hub could have become aware of the arbitration was in December 2016, six months after ECQ had approached the Qatari Plenary Court of First Instance, by which time the "process was irretrievably flawed". As such, no valid arbitration or award could spring from that source.
52 ECQ contended as follows:
(1) Dallah and IMC Aviation are cases in which it was contended that there was no valid arbitration agreement in existence. They do not establish a more general principle that a party can ignore a process of arbitration merely because the party believes (rightly or wrongly) that the process is not being carried out in accordance with an arbitration agreement that does exist. In this regard I should note that I do not consider that Hub ignored the notice it had of the arbitration process because it believed it had not been properly commenced. As stated above, I Infer that it ignored the notice of the arbitration process because it considered it was in its best commercial interests to do so.
(2) The parties in the present case did not agree to an arbitration in a vacuum. They agreed in Art 46 to an arbitration "in accordance with the rules of arbitration in Qatar". Dr Al-Adba's evidence in his affidavit about the effect of Qatari law was given without knowledge of the judgment of the Qatari Plenary Court of First Instance which considered Art 46 of the Contract and decided to appoint three arbitrators to conduct the arbitration. Dr Al-Adba confirmed that this judgment was valid and binding until set aside.
(3) Accordingly, the facts of the present case bear no relationship to those in Dallah and IMC Aviation. In the present case there was a valid arbitration agreement and a court of competent jurisdiction applied the law of Qatar to that agreement and decided to appoint three arbitrators to conduct the arbitration. Hub received actual notice of the Court proceedings in December 2016 and actual notice of the arbitration proceedings through April to July 2017 but for its own reasons decided not to participate in that process.
(4) Hub has the onus of proof. In s 8(5)(c) what is required is proper notice of the appointment of the arbitrator. This is the arbitrator which made the award. Hub received such notice from the arbitrators of their appointment to its registered address in accordance with the notice provisions in both the Contract and Qatari law. As a result, Hub's argument in relation to s 8(5)(c) falls away.
(5) As to s 8(5)(e), about the composition of the arbitral authority, the agreement of the parties included arbitration "in accordance with the rules of arbitration in Qatar". The Qatari Plenary Court of First Instance applied those rules, including Art 195 of the Qatari CCCP, and decided that it should appoint three arbitrators to conduct the arbitration. It follows that the composition of the arbitral authority accorded with Art 46 of the arbitration agreement.
(6) When regard is had to the objects of the IAA and the considerations in s 39(2)(b) of the IAA (as required), in the circumstances of this case the Court would not accede to Hub's request not to enforce the award against it. Hub deliberately sat on the sidelines of the arbitration and cannot now invoke any discretionary factors to support its case that the Court should refuse to enforce the award against it. Considerations of comity with the decision of the Qatari Plenary Court of First Instance are critical: TCL Air Conditioner (Zhongshan) Co Ltd v Castel Electronics Pty Ltd [2014] FCAFC 83; 232 FCR 361at [75].
53 I do not doubt Hub's contention that I am bound to decide for myself whether it has proved any of the grounds in ss 8(5) and 8(7) of the IAA. As I have rejected Hub's arguments about s 8(7) above on the facts, the focus of further consideration is s 8(5). In that regard it is apparent that s 8(5)(b) contemplates a circumstance in which there is no arbitration agreement at all. That is, the lack of any arbitration agreement is a ground upon which a party may resist enforcement of an award under s 8(5). This suggests that the principles expressed in Dallah and IMC Aviation are not confined to the circumstance where there is no arbitration agreement. The same proposition underlies the observation in IMC Aviation at [169]. Those principles, however, do not resolve the current case. If Hub was not given proper notice of the appointment of the arbitrator and if the composition of the arbitral tribunal or the arbitral procedure was not in accordance with the Contract Hub was entitled to ignore the arbitration process in Qatar and is entitled to request that this Court refuse to enforce the award against it on these grounds. However, those questions remain unanswered by any authority to which the parties have referred.
54 In my view, the key facts are as follows.
55 First, there was no dispute between the parties that the law of Qatar governs the conduct and validity of the arbitration. Accordingly, the questions whether Hub was given proper notice of the appointment of the arbitrator and whether the composition of the arbitral tribunal or the arbitral procedure was not in accordance with the Contract are subject to the operation of Qatari law. Australian law governs the enforcement of the arbitral award in Australia but that law is to be applied having regard to the fact that Qatar law determines the validity of the arbitration and its conduct.
56 Second, there was no dispute that the Contract between the parties is governed by Qatar law: Art 47 of the Contract.
57 Third, Art 46 of the Contract provides that any dispute connected with the Contract which is not amicably settled within 28 days "shall be referred to arbitration in accordance with the rules of arbitration in Qatar".
58 Fourth, the rules of arbitration in Qatar included, at the time the Qatari Plenary Court of First Instance constituted the arbitral tribunal, Art 195 of the Qatari CCCP which (as noted) provides that:
If a dispute arises between the parties prior to an agreement between them as to the arbitrators…the court which has jurisdiction to consider the dispute shall appoint the necessary number of arbitrators at the request of one of the parties.
59 It is clear from its judgment that the Qatari Plenary Court of First Instance applied Art 195 in deciding to appoint the arbitral tribunal. It must be taken therefore that the Qatari Plenary Court of First Instance was satisfied that a dispute had arisen between ECQ and Hub prior to an agreement between them as to the arbitrators. Whether that is so or not, Hub has not proved that according to Qatari law Art 195 of the Qatari CCCP did not apply to the circumstances of this case. This is because Dr Al-Adba's affidavit evidence did not take into account the judgment of the Qatari Plenary Court of First Instance and did not consider whether Art 195 of the Qatari CCCP was engaged by the factual circumstances in this case. Further, there is a factual foundation in the evidence for the conclusion that a dispute had arisen between the parties prior to an agreement between them as to the arbitrators. ECQ had sought repayment of the money paid to Hub in 2012. Hub had indicated it would revert to ECQ once it had obtained legal advice. Instead of so doing, Hub remained silent. In my view, refusal to respond to a request for repayment is capable of constituting a dispute within the meaning of Art 195 of the Qatari CCCP. In any event, as I have said the onus of proof lies on Hub and Hub has not proved that Art 195 does not operate in this way. As such, Hub has not proved that the appointment of the arbitrators by the Qatari Plenary Court of First Instance was not in accordance with Art 46 of the Contract which provided for the referral to arbitration to be in accordance with the rules of arbitration in Qatar.
60 In these circumstances, and given that:
(1) the onus of proof is on Hub;
(2) "the enforcing court should start with a strong presumption of regularity in respect of the tribunal's decision and the means by which it was arrived at": IMC Aviation at [53]; and
(3) "the conduct of the parties to the agreement at each of the various stages prior to an enforcement order being sought in these courts, and its consistency with the defence subsequently asserted, will be a relevant fact to consider when deciding whether that burden has been discharged to the necessary standard": IMC Aviation at [53],
I am not satisfied on the balance of probabilities that Hub was not given proper notice of the appointment of the arbitrator or of the arbitration proceedings or that the composition of the arbitral authority or the arbitral procedure was not in accordance with the agreement of the parties, save and except that the arbitral procedure must be inferred to have been conducted in Arabic rather than in English. As I have said, however, the conduct of Hub after I infer that it became aware of the arbitration proceedings (in December 2016 or, at the latest, by April 2017) is inconsistent with a decision to refuse to enforce the award merely because the agreement in Art 50 requires all matters relating to the Contract to be in English and the arbitration must be inferred to have been conducted in Arabic. This is because there was no unfairness to Hub as a result in circumstances where I have inferred that Hub decided not to involve itself in the arbitration despite being on notice that it was proceeding in Qatar.
61 If my conclusions above are incorrect then I would nevertheless decline to exercise the discretion given by s 8(5) of the IAA in Hub's favour. Relevantly:
(1) ECQ and Hub entered into the Contract, governed by Qatari law, and agreed that any dispute should be referred to arbitration in accordance with the rules of arbitration in Qatar;
(2) ECQ had sought repayment of the money paid to Hub and Hub had effectively ignored ECQ's request;
(3) Hub received actual notice of the proceedings by ECQ against Hub in the Qatari Plenary Court of First Instance in December 2016;
(4) it must be inferred that Hub knew this notice concerned ECQ seeking repayment of the money, yet Hub did nothing to ascertain what the proceedings were about;
(5) Hub received actual notice of the constitution of the arbitral tribunal and the conduct of the arbitration between April and July 2017 in ample time for Hub to take a role in the arbitration had it wished to do so; and
(6) it must be inferred that despite knowing about the arbitration Hub had no wish to involve itself in the arbitration.
62 In these circumstances the evidence that Hub, had it known about the arbitration, may have wished to counter-claim in some way cannot be accepted. Hub had years in which to make a claim and yet never did so. Nor did it ever suggest to ECQ any basis on which it was entitled to retain the money paid to it. It must be inferred, for the reasons given above, that Hub knew about the arbitration but chose not to involve itself or make any counter-claim against ECQ in the arbitration. For these reasons I consider that there would be no unfairness to Hub by enforcement of the award against it. Hub had an adequate opportunity to participate in an arbitration which was constituted and carried out in accordance with the laws of Qatar which governed its contract with ECQ. Even if there was some procedural default within the scope of s 8(5)(c) or (e) of the IAA, the considerations in s 39(2) of the IAA, would support rejection of Hub's case that the Court should refuse to enforce the award against it.
63 For these reasons ECQ should be granted the relief it seeks, being enforcement of the award as if it were a judgment of this Court.
64 I propose to give the parties a period of seven days in which to confer and to file agreed or competing orders reflecting these reasons for judgment.
I certify that the preceding sixty-four (64) numbered paragraphs are a true copy of the Reasons for Judgment herein of the Honourable Justice Jagot.