Derains & Gharavi International

Noticias

December 2017

Wake up (with) Arbitration !

Una nueva mesa-redonda « Wake up (with) Arbitration ! » tubo lugar el 14 de diciembre de 2017 sobre el tema de « Procédure d’arbitrage accélérée : ‘Fast and Furious’? », animada por Melanie Van Leeuwen. Se puede consulter el informe en la página web Wake up with arbitration.

Istanbul International Construction Law Conference 2018

Melanie van Leeuwen intervendrá sobre el tema siguiente “Internal Disputes among the members of Construction Joint Ventures” durante la conferencia “Instanbul International Construction Law Conference 2018″ que tendrá lugar en Estambul el 4 de mayo de 2018.

DROIT DE L’ARBITRAGE INTERNATIONAL EN IRAN

Hamid Gharavi intervendrá sobre el tema de “Les TBIs comme solution aux sanctions et pressions américaines pour les investisseurs iraniens à l’étranger ou les investisseurs étrangers en Iran” durante la conferencia siguente : “Droit de l’arbitrage international en Iran”, organizada por la Société de Législation Comparée, que tendrá lugar en París el 5 de febrero de 2018.

3rd JOINT TRAC-ISTAC CONFERENCE

Hamid Gharavi intervino durante la conferencia “3rd Joint TRAC-ISTAC conference” que tuvo lugar en Estambul el 1er de febrero de 2018.

ICC PANARB 2018

Yves Derains intervendrá sobre el tema de “El Alcance de los efectos de la clausula arbitral; como lograr clausulas arbitrales efectivas” durante la conferencia ICC PANARB 2018 el 30 de enero de 2018 en Panamá.

 

Hamid Gharavi and Melanie van Leeuwen secure a third consecutive victory against Kazakhstan for a US$ 30 million award

Hamid Gharavi and Melanie van Leeuwen secured a US$22.7 million damages award (US$30 million with interest and costs) against Kazakhstan in an ICSID case Aktau Petrol Ticaret A.Ş. v. Republic of Kazakhstan, case number ARB/15/8. This is a third consecutive win in ICSID treaty claims against Kazakhstan for Hamid Gharavi, following the awards in Rumeli and Caratube II, issued in 2008 and in September this year respectively. This victory was reported in Global Arbitration Review (GAR), in two different articles, in the following terms:

Kazakhstan ordered to pay for actions of court Bailiffs

An ICSID tribunal has ordered Kazakhstan to pay nearly US$25 million for the seizure of investments at the port of Aktau on the Caspian Sea through the “executive action” of court bailiffs that went uncorrected by the courts – but rejected allegations of judicial corruption.

The 125-page award of Ian Binnie QC, Bernard Hanotiau and Sir Daniel Bethlehem in favour of Turkish investor Aktau Petrol Ticaret was dispatched to the parties yesterday. It is the third successive time Hamid Gharavi of Derains & Gharavi has won damages for a client in ICSID treaty claims against Kazakhstan, following the awards in Rumeli and Caratube II, issued in 2008 and in September this year.

The tribunal upheld jurisdiction and held Kazakhstan to be in breach of the protections against uncompensated expropriation in the Energy Charter Treaty and Turkey-Kazakhstan bilateral investment treaty. It also held that the state had violated the fair and equitable treatment provision of the Switzerland-Kazakhstan BIT, imported into the Turkey-Kazakhstan BIT by virtue of a most-favoured nation clause.

The tribunal stressed at several points of the award that this was a case about expropriation “by executive action” – namely the action of court bailiffs. It said Kazakh courts had not initiated or approved the action but had failed to correct it despite “every reasonable opportunity” to do so.

In this respect, it said there had been “systemic” failure by the courts – however it did not accept allegations by Aktau that they were “puppets, tools” of prominent Kazakh businessmen.

In fact, it said there was “no evidence of judicial corruption” in this case and declined to order that Kazakhstan pay Aktau’s legal costs on the usual “loser pays” principle on the basis that this allegation had failed.

Of US$80 million claimed at the hearing earlier this year, the tribunal awarded US$22.7 million damages plus the costs of the arbitration, taking the value of the award to US$24.5 million. It also ordered the payment of pre and post judgment interest at a rate of LIBOR plus 2 per cent.

With interest so far, the award is worth US$30 million. In the early days, the claim had been reported as US$150 million but this sum was not mentioned in the award.

Transhipment investments

Aktau Petrol is part of the ASB Group, owned by Turkish citizen Sitki Ayan. Between 2006 and 2014, it and other companies in the group invested in oil transhipment and storage facilities at the port of Aktau in western Kazakhstan, including a private railway connecting the state railway system to the port, an oil terminal and 695 railway tank cars.

The dispute began in 2007 when Ayan struck up a commercial relationship with Askar Kulibayev, a prominent Kazakh businessman and former government official, in the hope it would make it easier for ASB Group to overcome bureaucratic obstacles and to operate and thrive in Kazakhstan. Although it was not mentioned in the award, GAR has previously reported that Kulibayev is related to Kazakhstan’s president Nursultan Nazarbayev by marriage.

According to Aktau Petrol, the commercial relationship was abused and exploited by Kulibayev, who orchestrated multiple court proceedings that led to the expropriation of its investments in breach of the ECT and BIT.

Kazakhstan for its part argued that Aktau lacked any investment in the railway, having acquired its shares by transfer from other corporate entities in the ASB Group, and that its title to the railway cars had been assigned away by the time of the alleged expropriation.

It said the company had invested only a small amount in the oil terminal and that any losses it suffered were inflicted by Kulibayev and Ayan’s own Azerbaijani representative in Kazakhstan, for whom the state bears no responsibility.

Overzealous bailiffs

An interesting discussion at the outset of the award – covered by GAR separately here – concerns the relevance of “similar fact evidence”, in light of Aktau’s arguments that Kazakhstan’s conduct followed a familiar “modus operandi” seen in the Rumeli case and elsewhere. The tribunal said it would not be swayed by such “propensity evidence”.

This was followed by the tribunal’s finding that it had jurisdiction over all Aktau’s claims, including ones relating to the private railway line. The line had been acquired for a nominal share value as part of a corporate reorganisation of ASB Group’s investments in Kazakhstan, the tribunal said.

Turning to the merits, the tribunal observed that Aktau had “cast its net of accusations and opprobrium broadly over Kazakh officials and judges.”

It said that in its view, the company’s problems were caused mainly by the conduct of bailiffs employed by Kazakhstan to implement court decisions, rather than by the courts themselves. It said Aktau had made “reasonable efforts” to get the Kazakh courts to correct the illegalities but the courts were “uninterested” – and thus “crystallised the expropriation” of the investments.

For example, the tribunal described how following a US$870,000 court judgment against a Swiss-incorporated company in the ABS Group, a Kazakh court bailiff took Aktau Petrol’s entire shareholding in the railway line in satisfaction of the debt – despite the fact that they were separate entities.

It held that this was in breach of Kazakh law – which, according to experts for both sides of the arbitration, prohibits the state from “taking the property of corporation A to satisfy the debt of corporation B”.

It also noted that the bailiff had seized goods quicker than permitted by the law and failed to carry out a legally-required valuation of the shares – to determine whether Aktau was entitled to any money back through a public sale.

The tribunal found there had been similar misconduct by court bailiffs in relation to Aktau’s other losses, set out in detail in the award.

Apart from a single first instance court decision in relation to the railway shares, the Kazakh courts had avoided delving into Aktau’s complaints or reviewing the legality of the bailiffs’ conduct, it said. Further litigation by Aktau would not have been constructive “because the appellate courts demonstrably lacked any will to intervene”.

The tribunal said that what had occurred in this case was not judicial expropriation, as contemplated in the NAFTA case of Eli Lilley v Canada, but “judicial apathy” in discharging the responsibility to hold the executive to account.

It took the hypothetical view that Kazakhstan could also have been found liable for a denial of justice since in two separate sets of proceedings, there had been “the same failure of proper judicial supervision of executive action” at the appellate level, not just “isolated maverick decisions by first instance judges.”

Unconsummated agreements

The tribunal said quantum in the case posed “considerable difficulty” as there had been three accepted but “unconsummated” agreements to buy Aktau’s investment in the oil terminal in the late 2000s. The last of these was with Kulibayev’s company AKA Oil Trading and named a sale price of US$70 million.

Aktau considered these agreements “reliable indicators” of the value of its investments that supported its US$80 million claim. However, the tribunal said that “extrapolating an accurate assessment of quantum” from any of them was problematic, even with the assistance of experts from KPMG and BDO (for Aktau) and Navigant Consulting (for Kazakhstan).

For one thing, the tribunal noted the evidence of Sitki Ayan, the owner of Atkau, that the reality of business in Kazakhstan meant he could only sell to Kulibayev – who had successfully chased away rivals and had the company “in the grip” of litigation.

“The evidence shows that there was no ‘fair market’ […] in which ‘fair market value’ could meaningfully be ascertained,” the tribunal said. It also raised doubts over the “bona fide” nature of Kulibayev’s own offer to buy the terminal in light of Aktau’s portrayal of him as “a manipulative, unprincipled and deceitful businessman”.

In the end, the tribunal said none of these offers could be taken “at face value” and favoured a much earlier, 2003 valuation of the oil terminal as worth US$11.4 million. It explained that it had added sums for the railway track and cars and proceeded on the basis that Aktau’s expropriated investments were “a package,” the value of which had increased briefly then declined because of their poor financial performance.

It also took into account fluctuations in the economy and the price of oil that had “knock-on” effects on the value of oil-related service industries.

The final damages award reflected Aktau’s sunk costs, with some inflation to reflect repairs and improvements it had made to the terminal.

While normally ICSID tribunals observe “the losers pays” principle in relation to costs, the tribunal said in this case it would not because of the “broad allegations of corruption” Aktau had made against the Kazakh judiciary, with “no probative evidence.”

It also noted that most of the “voluminous” court documents on which Aktau had relied had been collected by, Kazakhstan’s lawyers, who naturally had “greater clout” in dealing with Kazakh court officials.

It declined to award a “success fee” of 5% of the damages, interest and costs requested by Derains & Gharavi.

In passing, the tribunal revealed details of another arbitration brought by one of the potential buyers of the oil terminal, Hawkinson Capital Incorporated, against Ayan’s company SOM Petrol Ticaret, for failing to transfer the promised shares. This case went to LCIA arbitration and ended with a US$20 million award in Hawkinson’s favour delivered by sole arbitrator W Laurence Craig in 2009.

Aktau’s counsel reacts

Speaking to GAR today, Gharavi said that arguing against Kazakhstan is always a challenge “because of the legal spin it gives to its expropriations and the quality of lawyers it hires to defend it” – and this case was “no exception”.

He adds that it was refreshing for him and his co-counsel Ziya Akinci to see “a tribunal of such experienced arbitrators render an award so promptly” [less than six months after the hearing]. It is also hard to find a “sharper, more prepared and humbler arbitrator than Ian Binnie QC, who was tribunal president,” he said.

Gharavi won US$125 million plus interest for Turkish investor Rumeli against Kazakhstan in 2008 and has recently won US$39 million for oil company Caratube after the claim was rejected on jurisdictional grounds the first time round. He is currently fighting a further claim against the state brought by investors in a pharmaceutical business.

In the Aktau case, Kazakhstan was represented by a team from Reed Smith in London led by partner Belinda Paisley and by barrister Christopher Harris of 3 Verulam Buildings, who both have a long track record of acting for the state. Harris declined to comment on the award, which has yet to be published by ICSID.

The case saw an early challenge to Hanotiau by Kazakhstan on the basis of his involvement in the Rumeli case, which the state said involved similar issues of facts of law. The challenge was rejected by his co-arbitrators in 2015, with the case proceeding to a week-long hearing in Paris in March and April this year“.

Aktau tribunal considers “similar fact evidence”"

The tribunal in the Aktau award refused to be swayed by “similar fact evidence” alleged to show a propensity by Kazakhstan to expropriate foreign investments through its courts.

An early discussion in the ICSID award dispatched to the parties yesterday concerns the relevance of such evidence. This was in light of the claimant Aktau Petrol’s submissions that the expropriation of its investments followed (in the tribunal’s words) “a well worn pattern of mistreatment of foreign investors who initiate and grow businesses in Kazakhstan, only to be deprived of their investments by unscrupulous Kazakh businessmen connected to the president, Nursultan Nazarbayev.”

According to Aktau a “signature element” of these deprivations was the “use of the machinery of a compliant, complicit and corrupt judiciary.”

The tribunal cited Hamid Gharavi of Derains & Gharavi, counsel to Aktau, who said in his opening submissions that his case concerned the “modus operandi” of Kazakhstan and “its oligarchs and elite”.

They control “everything” including commercial matters, Gharavi alleged – and “use the judiciary as their puppets, tools.”

To establish Kazakhstan’s liability for the expropriation of its investments, Aktau drew parallels with the ICSID case of Rumeli Telekom v Kazakhstan, in which the state was held responsible for depriving a Turkish telecoms investor (also represented by Gharavi) of a major financial investment and ordered to pay US$125 million compensation. That award came out in 2008.

Aktau also filed background, information, reports and international commentary which it said further showed that Kazakhstan regularly expropriates foreign investors in this way.

However, the tribunal including Ian Binnie QC, Bernard Hanotiau and Daniel Bethlehem QC was not swayed. “Similar fact evidence presupposes that entities or personas alleged to be guilty of misconduct on one or more occasions are likely to have misconducted themselves in the case under consideration. It is ‘propensity’ evidence,” it said.

“The danger is that the prejudice created by ‘propensity’ evidence generally outweighs any probative value. People ought not to be assumed to be guilty of a particular offence simply because they have been convicted of other offences. Similar fact evidence that amounts to little more than an allegation of pre-disposition to a certain type of bad conduct does not prove that an individual misconducted himself or herself on the present occasion.”

Such evidence is all the more problematic when it relates to “the numerous individuals who individually and collectively act on behalf of a state,” the tribunal said.

The tribunal added that it could not “infer” that Kazakhstan was liable for misconduct based on the tribunal’s decision in Rumeli or the Aktau’s “generic allegations of misconduct by Kazakh officials in even less comparable situations involving different investors.”

It distinguished Rumeli on the basis that the Kazakh state actor found to be primarily at fault in that case was a state organ called the investment committee – which was accused of impropriety but exonerated by the courts. In Aktau, in contrast, the courts were alleged to be to blame for the expropriation.

This distinction had already been made in response to proceedings brought by Kazakhstan to disqualify Belgian arbitrator Bernard Hanotiau early on in the case, it noted.

The tribunal went on to offer the view that Aktau’s evidence regarding Kazakhstan’s alleged propensity to expropriate was in fact not “similar fact evidence” at all as the factual situations it raised were quite different even though the outcomes (the seizure of foreign investments) were the same.

Gharavi had acknowledged this when he told the tribunal, “Every time they do it differently. The fact pattern of each case is different”.

To the tribunal, this defeated the evidence’s value. “The essence of similar fact evidence, as the name implies, is similarity of facts not outcomes,” it said.

Similar fact evidence is occasionally raised in criminal court trials in the UK and other jurisdictions, when it is alleged that a defendant had a propensity to commit a certain type of offence in a certain way, raising the likelihood of guilt in the case before the court. However, there is normally vehement debate as to whether the probative value of the evidence is outweighed by its prejudicial effect.

Speaking to GAR, Gharavi explained there are some actions by states that can only be proved by “circumstantial evidence” and that referring to the findings of other investment tribunals can be helpful, especially where the “same players” are involved [in Rumeli, the expropriation supposedly benefitted Timur Kulibayev, the son-in-law of president Nursultan Nazarbayev; while in Aktau the beneficiary was his father, Askar Kulibayev].

“In this case, the tribunal did not believe such evidence to be probative or that it needed it to make findings that Kazakhstan illegally expropriated Aktau’s investments and denied it fair and equitable treatment,” Gharavi says.

Kazakhstan was represented in the case by a team from Reed Smith in London led by partner Belinda Paisley and by Christopher Harris of 3 Verulam Buildings. Harris declined to comment”.

Hamid Gharavi and Nada Sader secure a US$39.2 million damages award against Kazakhstan

Hamid Gharavi and Nada Sader secured a US$39.2 million damages award (more than US$ 53 million with interest) against Kazakhstan in ICISD arbitration Caratube International Oil Co. LLP and Devincci Salah Hourani v. Republic of Kazakhstan, case number ARB/13/13. This important win was reported in Global Arbitration Review (GAR) and Law 360 in the following terms:

GAR article of 29 September 2017:

Caratube tribunal vindicates Gharavi’s decision to bring second claim

The award in Caratube II vindicates the decision of Hamid Gharavi of Derains & Gharavi to bring a second case against Kazakhstan on behalf of the oil company after jurisdiction was refused first time round, dismissing the state’s objections in their entirety and awarding US$39.2 million in damages. Claims by the company’s majority stakeholder, Devinnci Hourani, were dismissed on jurisdictional grounds.

In the first ICSID claim brought by Caratube International Oil Company under the US-Kazakhstan bilateral investment treaty, the tribunal said there was no evidence of “foreign control” of the company and suggested that Devincci Hourani was a mere “puppet” of the true owners, alleged to be his brother Isaam Hourani and one of his companies.

In light of those findings, there must have been many who doubted the success chances of Caratube’s second claim filed by Gharavi – who was not counsel for the company first time round – even though it was based not on the BIT but on a contract and Kazakhstan’s foreign investment law.

But in an award issued to the parties on 27 September, a tribunal including Laurent Lévy, Laurent Aynès and Jacques Salès upheld jurisdiction over Caratube’s claims, rejecting Kazakhstan’s defences that they were an abuse of process, time-barred and precluded because of collateral estoppel and res judicata. It also said Caratube had been “fully justified” in bringing the claims even though it evidently thought the US$1 billion of damages sought was excessive.

The tribunal further ruled that the claims were not precluded by Article 25 of the ICSID Convention, as argued by Kazakhstan. This article says at subparagraph 1 that for jurisdiction to be established there needs to be consent to ICSID arbitration and the investment in dispute needs to have been made by a “national of another contracting state” to the respondent state.

Article 25(2)(b) defines that phrase, saying it includes “any juridical person which had the nationality of the contracting state party to the dispute [on the date of consent to ICSID arbitration] and which, because of foreign control, the parties have agreed should be treated as a national of another contracting state for the purposes of the convention”.
It was on the basis of this article, read with the US-Kazakhstan BIT, that the claim in Caratube I failed – with the tribunal ruling that the Kazakh-registered claimant company had not proved that it was controlled by Devincci Hourani, a US national since 2001, and was therefore a foreign investment.

Commentators have noted that this imposed a higher jurisdictional threshold under Article 25(2)(b) of the ICSID Convention than exists in the US-Kazakhstan BIT, which says that investors must have ownership or control but not necessarily both.
The findings on abuse of process, whether the claim was time-barred, collateral estoppel and res judicata

In the latest award, the tribunal first found that Caratube was not guilty of an abuse of process – rejecting Kazakhstan’s suggestion that it had deliberately failed to raise all its claims in Caratube I in a bad faith attempt to pave the way for a further case.

Nor did the tribunal accept that Devincci Hourani was made majority shareholder of Caratube (with a 92% stake bought for a US$6,500) as a “frontman for the real parties in interest” – to give them access to ICSID jurisdiction.

Hourani became a US national in 2001 and the majority shareholder in Caratube in 2004, several years before the termination of the contract and start of ICSID proceedings, the tribunal said. It added that it did not have the power to rule, as Kazakhstan wanted, that his US nationality was illegally obtained on the basis of a false statement that he was married – this was a matter for the competent US authorities to decide.

With regard to the argument that the claim was “time barred”, the tribunal said that to prevent it would be incompatible with “international prescription principles”. Caratube had acted promptly in initiating Caratube I after the termination of the contract “on a jurisdictional basis that was not manifestly unfounded”, it said. The company was thus anything but “in repose” about its rights and it was not its fault that the Caratube I tribunal took more than three years to deny jurisdiction.

On collateral estoppel, the tribunal held that the Caratube I award had not included a final and binding decision with respect to who actually controlled the company or made a “standalone” decision on the definition of investment under Article 25 of the ICSID Convention.

Kazakhstan’s res judicata defence similarly foundered on the grouds that the claims in the second case were based on contract and Kazakhstan’s foreign investment law, not the BIT used in the first case. This distinction ensured Caratube’s right to access ICSID jurisdiction and to be heard, the tribunal said.

Article 25

Turning to Article 25, the tribunal held that Kazakhstan had agreed in its contract with Caratube to treat it as a foreign national and found no reason to disregard Devincci Hourani’s ownership of Caratube in favour of piercing the corporate veil.
It also said Kazakhstan had not rebutted the presumption that Caratube was under foreign control at all relevant times.

The tribunal gave careful consideration to the contract in the case, signed in 1994 by Kazakhstan’s Ministry of Energy and Mineral Resources and a Lebanese construction company that later assigned its rights to Caratube. In this contract, it said the parties had agreed that their transaction was a foreign investment and consented to ICSID arbitration of any disputes.

There was no allegation by Kazakhstan that it was an ordinary commercial transaction falling outside the objective meaning of an investment, it noted.

The tribunal rejected also rejeted the notion that either Caratube or Devinnci Hourani were “mere puppets” for Issam Hourani and his company. Kazakhstan had provided “no explanation” as to why one of the brothers would hide behind the other in relation to this project, when they were joint shareholders of other companies – such as the pharmaceutical plant that is the subject of the other pending ICSID claim – it said.
Based on the contract, the tribunal found that its jurisdiction covered Caratube’s claims against Kazakhstan for breach of the foreign investment law. It accordingly did not need to decide whether it had jurisdiction on any other basis.

Was Caratube I tainted?

Gharavi and his team were less successful in persuading the tribunal to accept jurisdiction over a claim by Devincci Hourani in person. It held that Kazakhstan had repealed its foreign investment law a year before he acquired his shares in Caratube. However, speaking to GAR, Gharavi notes that he only needed to establish jurisdiction in relation to Caratube, since Hourani owns the company.

“The tribunal’s holding that Caratube – a company owned by a US national of Palestinian origin – met ICSID’s nationality and investment requirements, and that Devincci Hourani was a bona fide investor, serves to highlight how the award of the tribunal in Caratube I was tainted by ignorance of international law and prejudice,” he says.

What is clear is that the award’s highly technical jurisdictional findings are likely to be poured over by arbitration lawyers for many days to come”.

LAW 360 Article of 29 September 2017:

Kazakhstan Must Pay $39M In Oil Field Dispute, Tribunal Says

An international tribunal has ordered Kazakhstan to pay $39 million to Caratube International Oil Co. LLP, concluding that Kazakhstan expropriated the company’s investment in the country by unlawfully terminating a contract to develop oil fields.

The International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes tribunal concluded in its award, dated Wednesday and published Friday, that Kazakhstan had breached its obligations to Caratube when it terminated their contract, depriving the company of its existing rights to exclusively explore and develop the oil fields. In fact, at the time the contract was terminated in 2008, Caratube still had the right to perform under the contract until May 2009 and, if necessary, to extend the exploration period another two years.

“Based on the foregoing, a majority of the tribunal concludes that the respondent unlawfully terminated the contract,” according to the award. “Due to this unlawful termination of the contract, CIOC, at the time of the termination, was unreasonably and substantially deprived of its existing rights under the contract.”

The tribunal rejected arguments put forward by Kazakhstan that Caratube had obtained an initial extension of the contract by misrepresenting whether a certain seismic study had been successfully completed, which would have meant that it was in a position to begin its key exploration obligation of drilling four deep wells.

And although the tribunal did conclude that Caratube had failed to comply with some of its financial obligations under the contract, it concluded that Kazakhstan had not adequately notified Caratube of certain alleged material breaches.

Kazakhstan’s appointed arbitrator, Jacques Salès, dissented on these points, concluding that the study was unusable and amounted to a material breach of the contract, and that Kazakhstan had given Caratube adequate notice of its breach. That meant Kazakhstan had the right to terminate the contract, he said.

Turning to damages, the tribunal rejected Caratube’s claims for lost profits that could have come from the sale of oil obtained from the field or from the sale of the company, or lost opportunities, concluding that the claimants hadn’t sufficiently or convincingly established either of these claims. Instead, it awarded $39.2 million, representing investment costs spent by Caratube.

The tribunal concluded it did not have jurisdiction over claims put forward by Caratube’s majority shareholder, Devincci Hourani, a U.S. national. The tribunal also rejected allegations that Kazakhstan had engaged in a politically motivated campaign against the Hourani family, concluding that the claimants had not been able to specifically prove the country’s involvement in the alleged acts of harassment.

Attorneys for both sides hailed the award as a victory Friday.

“The award is yet another example that it ultimately serves no purpose for states such as Kazakhstan to give a legal spin to a political taking, as the tribunal found, and then spend tens of millions of USD of the state budget in legal fees, which Kazakhstan did in the case at hand, to defend by creative arguments on jurisdiction and merits,” said Hamid Gharavi of Derains & Gharavi International in Paris, who represented the claimants.

Curtis Mallet-Prevost Colt & Mosle LLP partner Peter M. Wolrich, representing Kazakhstan, meanwhile, pointed out that the $39 million award is a “mere fraction” of the $991 million the claimants had sought.

“This is a typical unfortunate example of what happens in arbitrations when claimants make ridiculous exaggerated claims. It makes cases far longer and far more expensive,” he said, adding that exaggerated claims negatively affect the public’s perception of the arbitration process.

The dispute has its origins in a 2002 contract providing for the exploration and production of hydrocarbons entered into by Kazakhstan’s Ministry of Energy and Mineral Resources and an international construction company called Consolidated Contractors (Oil and Gas) Co. SAL. The contract was later assigned to Caratube.

Under the contract, Consolidated Contractors and later Caratube were charged with demonstrating the commerciality of certain oil reservoirs that had been discovered in the 1960s, and to explore certain other reservoirs though seismic surveys and the drilling of exploration wells.

The parties differed on whether Caratube had met its obligations under the contract. Kazakhstan claimed that Caratube was in a persistent state of material breach of its obligations under the contract, and that the company was only interested in taking advantage of certain known deposits and wells to produce oil for its own benefit, rather than to carry out essential exploration, according to the award.

Kazakhstan ordered Caratube to halt its operations under the contract in 2007, and the contract was ultimately terminated in 2008.

Meanwhile, Caratube and Hourani alleged that they were caught up in a dispute between the president of the Republic of Kazakhstan, Nursultan Nazarbayev, and his son-in-law at the time, Rakhat Aliyev, because the Hourani family was thought to have given Aliyev assistance.

Aliyev and certain members of the Hourani family have been accused of a number of serious crimes, including money laundering, kidnapping, sequestration, torture, murder, extortion and corporate raiding. The claimants contend that certain members of the Hourani family were targeted by Kazakhstan for alleged criminal matters, and certain of Caratube’s documents were seized as part of this campaign of harassment. In addition, beginning in 2007, Caratube was subjected to an “avalanche” of state inspections and audits, the claimants said.

The arbitration is the second between the parties. An initial arbitration submitted in 2008 was dismissed for lack of jurisdiction in 2012.

The tribunal was led by Laurent Lévy and included the claimants’ appointee, Laurent Aynès, and the dissenting arbitrator, Salès.

The claimants are represented by Hamid G. Gharavi and Nada Sader of Derains & Gharavi.

Kazakhstan is represented by Peter M. Wolrich, Geoffroy Lyonnet, Gabriela Alvarez Avila, Jérôme Lehucher, Yerzhan Mukhitdinov, Marie-Claire Argac, Lisa Arpin-Pont and Olena Stasyk of Curtis Mallet-Prevost Colt & Mosle LLP. Two other attorneys, Anna Kouyaté and Svetlana Evliya, who are no longer with Curtis, also represented the country.

The case is Caratube International Oil Co. LLP and Devincci Salah Hourani v. Republic of Kazakhstan, case number ARB/13/13, in the International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes”.

The New Generation of Arbitrators: Challenges and Opportunities

Melanie van Leeuwen intervendrá sobre el tema de “Drafting the award: common pitfalls” durante la conferencia siguiente: “The New Generation of Arbitrators: Challenges and Opportunities”  organizada conjuntamente por el CEPANI 40,  YAWP e ICC Belgium en Bruselas, el 23 de noviembre de 2017.

15th ICC Miami Conference

Yves Derains intervendrá sobre el tema de “Arbitration in the face of an anti-trade political atmosphere” durante la conferencia 15th ICC Miami Conference que tendrá lugar en Miami del 5 hasta el 7 de noviembre de 2017.

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