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England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Econet Satellite Services Ltd. v Vee Networks Ltd [2006] EWHC 1664 (Comm) (13 July 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2006/1664.html Cite as: [2006] ArbLR 20, [2006] EWHC 1664 (Comm) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Econet Satellite Services Limited |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Vee Networks Limited (formerly known as Econet Wireless Nigeria Limited) |
Respondent |
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Mr Simon Browne-Wilkinson QC and Mr Edward Levey (instructed by DLA Piper Rudnick Gray Cary) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 30 June 2006
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Field:
15. GOVERNING LAW
15.1 This Agreement shall be (a) governed by the substantive internal laws of the United Kingdom applicable to contracts executed and to be wholly performed in United Kingdom without giving effect to any conflict of laws or choice of laws principles which may be applicable thereto and (b) interpreted in accordance with the UNIDROIT Principles of International Commercial Contracts of the International Institute for the Unification of Private Laws [1994] as then in force, applied mutatis mutandis to the extent not inconsistent therewith.
16. ARBITRATION
16.1 It is the express desire and intent of the parties hereto that any disputes, controversies or claims arising under, out of or by virtue of this Agreement, including those relating to the formation, validity, interpretation, content, performance, non-performance or termination of this Agreement, or the entitlement to damages for any breach thereof, be settled and resolved through negotiation and without litigation. However, should the parties be unable to settle and resolve any such dispute through negotiation, and except for any action or proceeding seeking a temporary restraining order or injunction relating to this Agreement or to compel compliance with this Section 16.1, any such dispute, controversy or claim shall be exclusively and finally settled resolved and determined by arbitration in accordance with the procedures for arbitration set forth in the UNCITRAL Arbitration Rules of the United Nations Commission on International Trade (1976) as then in force.
Article 19
1. Within a period of time to be determined by the arbitral tribunal, the respondent shall communicate his statement of defence in writing to the claimant and to each of the arbitrators.
2. The statement of defence shall reply to the particulars (b), (c) and (d) of the statement of claim (article 18, para.2). The respondent may annex to his statement the documents on which he relies for his defence or may add a reference to the documents or other evidence he will submit.
3. In his statement of defence, or at a later stage in the arbitral proceedings if the arbitral tribunal decides that the delay was justified under the circumstances, the respondent may make a counter-claim arising out of the same contract or rely on a claim arising out of the same contract for the purpose of a set-off.
4. The provisions of article 18, paragraph 2, shall apply to a counter-claim and a claim relied on for the purpose of a set-off.
Firstly, the arbitration agreement in Section 16 1 of The VTTRA is in narrow terms. It provides for "any such dispute, controversy or claim" "arising under, out of, or by virtue of this Agreement", ie The VTTRA, to be "finally settled, resolved and determined by arbitration". No evidence has been presented to the Tribunal to show and the Respondent has not suggested that the set-off "arises under, out of or by virtue of" the VTTRA. The Tribunal has decided that it cannot decide any issues which do not arise out of or relate (sic) the VTTRA as its authority was limited to that agreement.
60. In any event the Tribunal members are all agreed that Article 19 (3) of the UNCITRAL Rules is an express exclusion of any right of transactional set-off. The UNCITRAL Rules are clear with respect to the use of set-offs: "the respondents may make a counter claim arising out of the same contract or rely on a claim arising out of the same contract for the purposes of a s set-off". (Emphasis added). The Tribunal consider that the UNCITRAL Rules were expressly incorporated in to the arbitration agreement. The Rules must be read together with the arbitration agreement.
61. The language of Article 19 (3) is clear. To give it the meanings suggested by the Respondent would be perverse in the circumstances of this arbitration. It makes absolutely clear that any counter-claim or set-off in an arbitration under the UNCITRAL Rules must arise out of the same contract; by corollary, if it does not arise out of the same contract it will be outside the Tribunal's jurisdiction.
62. Nothing precludes parties excluding transactional or any other settlement being sought in a particular situation. Equally, parties can and do determine the nature of the jurisdiction clause, and decide that certain types of dispute would be determined in different fora, eg financial issues in a national court, technical issues before an expert, and legal and factual issues before an arbitration tribunal. Article 19 (3) is a provision of this kind. It is a clear limitation of the extent to which the UNCITRAL Rules can apply generally to this arbitration, but is also an express limitation on the matters which may be dealt with in an arbitration concerning the VTTRA.
63. Furthermore, for the reasons given above, the Tribunal is not persuaded by the Respondent's argument that transactional set-off is a matter of substantive law such that it should apply regardless of the terms of the arbitration agreement and the UNCITRAL Rules. Those two instruments are an integral part of the parties' agreement to arbitrate and to allow transactional set-off would go against the express terms of the arbitration agreement and Article 19 (3) of the UNCITRAL Rules
Transaction set-off ….. is a cross-claim arising from the same transaction or one so closely related that it operates in law or in equity as a complete or partial defeasance of the plaintiff's claim. The category covers a common law abatement of the price of goods or services for breach of warranty, as explained by Parke B in Mondel v Steel (1841) 8 M & W 858, 872 and equitable set-off, as explained by Morris LJ in Hanak v Green [1958] 2 QB 9, 19. At common law, as Parke B said, the purchaser "defend[s] himself by showing how much less the subject matter of the action was worth" and in equitable set-off the defendant asserts what Morris LJ called "an equity which went to impeach "the title of demand".
………I agree, however, that no detailed consideration of set-off is called for. My reasons are these:
i) Questions of some intricacy arise as to the classification of set-offs and the correct approach to be followed when a claim before an arbitrator is met by an argument that there is a set-off available arising under some separate transaction over which the tribunal does not have jurisdiction. Provisionally, I would be minded to think that an arbitrator does or should have jurisdiction to allow a "transaction" set-off, in effect amounting or akin to a defence, to be raised to reduce or extinguish a claim, even though that set-off arises under another contract, outside the tribunal's jurisdiction: see: Aectra Refining, at pp.1648 and following and ... sic) Glencore v Agros, at pp. 416-417, both supra. As it seems to me, the investigation and determination of the availability and amount of such a set-off do not involve the arbitrator arrogating to himself a jurisdiction over separate contracts which he does not have (albeit that considerations of issue estoppel may well arise); instead, these steps form part of the process of arriving at a conclusion of whether a defence is properly available in respect of the contract as to which the arbitrator alone has jurisdiction. However, all these observations are provisional only, given that for reasons which follow, such questions do not arise for decision in this matter.