BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> P v Q & Ors [2017] EWHC 194 (Comm) (09 February 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2017/194.html Cite as: [2017] WLR 3823, [2017] WLR(D) 239, [2017] EWHC 194 (Comm), [2017] 1 WLR 3823 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [View ICLR summary: [2017] WLR(D) 239] [Buy ICLR report: [2017] 1 WLR 3823] [Help]
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
P |
Claimant |
|
- and - |
||
Q R S U |
Defendants |
____________________
David Foxton QC and James Willan (instructed by Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton LLP) for the First Defendant
Wendy Miles QC and William Hooker (instructed by Boies, Schiller & Flexner (UK) LLP)
for the Second and Third Defendants
The Fourth Defendant was not represented and did not attend
Hearing dates: 3 February 2017
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
The Hon. Mr Justice Popplewell :
Introduction
The Dispute and the Arbitration
(1) In 2015, the Tribunal made a decision in relation to the sharing of documents between the two arbitrations to which the Claimant was party namely (1) the LCIA arbitration between the Claimant and the First Defendant and (2) the other arbitration between the Claimant and the opposing party ("the Record Sharing Decision"). So far as concerned documents in the other arbitration, the opposing party had agreed to the non-confidentiality of the record, and so the Claimant had agreed to share it with the Tribunal and the First Defendant in the LCIA arbitration. The Decision recorded this uncontroversial position. So far as concerned the question whether material in the LCIA arbitration could be shared with the parties to the other arbitration, by the time the Decision was reached both parties were agreed that such material could be shared, subject to a concern on the part of the Claimant that where witnesses had agreed to provide statements on the basis that the LCIA proceedings were confidential, such confidentiality would adequately be preserved in the other arbitration (the opposing party having offered to give an undertaking of confidentiality); and that the same should apply to documents supplied in confidence. The Tribunal's decision was that it was premature to make a ruling on disclosure of any such potentially confidential witness evidence or documents before any confidentiality had been identified or explained. The Decision set out a procedure for such identification and for the subsequent resolution of any confidentiality issues by the Tribunal.
(2) On 24 July 2015 the Tribunal issued a decision refusing the Claimant's application for an order staying the LCIA arbitration until after the other arbitration had been heard ("the Second Stay Decision"). This was not the first application for such a stay. On 16 December 2014 the Tribunal had issued a 17 page written decision refusing the First defendant's application for such a stay. No criticism is made of the Tribunal's handling of this decision. It identified as one of the reasons for refusing a stay, albeit not the only one, that the other arbitration was at a relatively early stage; and expressly recognised that the Claimant could renew its application depending on how the other arbitration developed. The Second Stay Decision addressed and rejected the Claimant's submission that there were relevant subsequent developments in the other arbitration, in particular four "compelling" and "new" circumstances, which justified imposing a stay.
(3) On 16 February 2016 the Tribunal issued a decision in relation to production of documents ("the Second Document Production Decision"). This followed an earlier decision in relation to production of documents in which a major issue between the parties was the extent to which the Claimant had control over the relevant documents in the hands of third parties, including affiliates, or was able to procure them. In its first document production decision dated 17 October 2015, in respect of which the Claimant makes no criticism of the conduct of the Tribunal, the Claimant was ordered to take certain steps to seek to obtain documents, reflected in three formulations of different width applied to different categories of documents. The Second Document Production Decision arose because the First Defendant alleged that the Claimant was in breach of the first decision and had not been making genuine attempts in good faith to obtain the documents it was required to. Written submissions were exchanged and a teleconference hearing took place before the Chairman alone on 4 February 2016, with the agreement of the parties. By its Second Document Production Decision the tribunal concluded that it was premature to rule on whether the Claimant was in breach of the first decision, because that might prejudge the extent to which a particular individual exercised control over various entities described as affiliates of the Claimant, which was an issue in the dispute; but that the First Defendant was entitled to detailed information about the efforts which had been made to obtain documents, and therefore the Claimant's counsel should certify, in forms prescribed by the Tribunal, the steps taken in that respect. The Second Document Decision dealt with a number of categories of documents, but the reasoning was repetitive being essentially the same for many of the categories. Following the Second Document Production Decision, the Claimant disclosed an additional 10,000 or so documents to the First Defendant, which it is to be inferred should have been produced pursuant to the first document production decision.
(1) Ground 1: the Tribunal improperly delegated its role to the Secretary by systematically entrusting the Secretary with a number of tasks beyond what was permissible under the LCIA Rules and the LCIA Policy on the use of arbitral secretaries;
(2) Ground 2: the Chairman breached his mandate as an arbitrator and his duty not to delegate by seeking the views of a person who was neither a party to the arbitration nor a member of the tribunal on substantial procedural issues (i.e. the Secretary);
(3) Ground 3: the other members of the Tribunal equally breached their mandate as arbitrators and their duty not to delegate by not sufficiently participating in the arbitration proceedings and the decision-making process;
(4) Ground 4: circumstances existed which gave rise to justifiable doubts as to the Chairman's independence or impartiality; these arose out of comments the Chairman had made at an international conference;
(5) Ground 5: the Chairman breached his duty to maintain the confidentiality of the arbitral proceedings.
(1) In Procedural Order No. 17 dated 17 October 2016, the Tribunal concluded that the Record Sharing Decision should stand because it gave effect to an agreement to share the record and could be treated as equivalent to a consent order.
(2) In the same Order, the Tribunal also considered ("upon a review… and after deliberation") to confirm the Second Stay Decision. The Tribunal concluded that it was "appropriate" to dismiss that application for the reasons given in the decision, taking into account the differences between the LCIA and the other arbitration proceedings and the difference in parties.
(3) In Procedural Order No. 19 dated 26 January 2017, the Tribunal carefully considered the Second Document Production Decision and decided, for brief reasons given in respect of each distinct category of documents, that the Decision was justified and should stand.
The section 24 challenge
"25.3 The discrepancy between the Co-Arbitrators' time and the Secretary's time is so large that it can only be explained by the members of the Tribunal having delegated their tasks to the Secretary. The three decisions dealt with evidence in this case, and had (and continue to have) a substantial impact on the parties' respective positions and thus the outcome of the dispute. They required the involvement of the Co-Arbitrators in order for a fair decision to be reached.
59. The failure of the Co-Arbitrators to render their duties personally has frustrated, rather than furthered, the very object of arbitration. In particular the Co-Arbitrators have failed to deal with the issues put to the Tribunal in relation to the three decisions under review, failed to make their own decisions, and failed properly to participate in deliberations of the Tribunal. Instead the Co-Arbitrators effectively passed their pens to the Tribunal Secretary, in breach of their general duties. This causes prejudice which cannot be un-done. The decisions that were sent to the Co-Arbitrators were fully formed before the Co-Arbitrators considered them. They adopted them: they did not make them or properly participate in the discussions which led to them."
(1) A new argument was advanced that the Co-Arbitrators had improperly delegated to the Chairman the task of deciding the Secretary's role and the scope of his responsibilities. This was a variation of the improper supervision allegation but framed as an allegation of improper delegation. It was said to justify removal irrespective of whether the Chairman, Secretary or Co-Arbitrators had failed properly to delineate or perform their respective decision-making functions. I shall call this the Secretary Tasks Delegation Argument.
(2) The misrepresentation argument was amended so that the nature of the representation said to be extracted from the letters became "there had been no delegation in any way of any of the tribunal's functions or responsibilities at any time and that only tasks of an administrative nature had been assigned to and undertaken by the Secretary." The falsity of the allegation was still said to lie in the implied admission that some function or responsibility had been delegated, but additionally in the fact that "The Secretary reviewed voluminous written submissions (at least in respect of [the Second Document Production Decision]) and formulated and/or drafted reasons and/or analysis forming or intended to form part of or the basis of (what became) each of the Decisions."
(3) A new misrepresentation argument was advanced. A further misrepresentation was said to have been made by the Co-Arbitrators in their letter dated 20 June 2016, namely that all tasks entrusted to the Secretary had been delegated to him by the Tribunal as a whole i.e. with their involvement and oversight, whereas neither of them took part in instructing or delegating tasks to the Secretary or in supervision of his performance of delegated tasks.
The Adjudicative Function Argument
(1) "….. There was no inappropriate delegation of Tribunal decision-making to the Secretary… In this case it is impossible to suggest that the Secretary actually decided anything or influenced the Tribunal improperly.
It is normal for a Secretary to work under the direct supervision of the Chairman, who will give multiple written and oral instructions to the Secretary in relation to the work which he/she wants the Secretary to do. The Secretary's job (among other things) is to assist the Chairman to prepare the work product for the review of the co-arbitrators. It is unnecessary and impractical for the co-arbitrators to be apprised of all communications between the Chairman and the Secretary. We are confident that, in the present case, the Chairman and [the Secretary] have worked closely and properly together to produce the drafts of the relevant decisions for our comment. The proposed conclusions contained in those drafts for our review had been those of the Chairman. The Chairman has then taken our comments into consideration and decided upon any appropriate amendments before providing a final draft for our approval. All relevant decisions referred to by [the Claimant] in this challenge had been made unanimously.
… In any event, we have repeatedly said there has been no delegation of the decision-making process."
(2) "We have read the relevant correspondence and participated in all key decisions… It is evident from the time spent by the Chairman on this case that the way in which this Tribunal has functioned on important procedural/interlocutory matters (such as document production and applications for a stay of proceedings) has been that the Chairman, with the assistance of the Secretary, has prepared a draft decision for our review. Having studied the relevant materials beforehand, including the submissions of the parties, we would then comment on the draft and review any subsequent drafts incorporating our suggested amendments. As expected, neither co-arbitrator was involved in the substantive drafting of the final decisions. This is, in our experience, standard procedure which is both expeditious and cost efficient."
(3) In relation to the Record Sharing Decision:
(a) "[The First Defendant] requested an order from the Tribunal to share the LCIA record with the [other arbitral] Tribunal... Further correspondence was received … with an email from the Tribunal … and further correspondence …. The Tribunal's decision was issued. ...
We can confirm that, at the time, we read the party correspondence and considered the issues which arose in that connection. A draft was provided to us by the Chairman of the proposed decision. We read and approved the draft decision before it was issued and we were both in full agreement with the contents of that decision. The decision was six pages long and did not contain issues that were controversial, as the parties had agreed on most of the issues and a decision on the issues still in dispute was deferred to a later date."
(b) The letter then went on to identify that the Second Defendant had spent a total of 3 hours in relation to the decision. The times spent by others in respect of that decision were 1½ hours by the Third Defendant, 9 hours by the Secretary, and 8½ hours by the Chairman.
(4) As to the Second Stay Decision:
(a) "We confirm that we read the parties' correspondence and submissions on this issue and reviewed the draft decision thoroughly before it was issued. This was a short decision, prepared once again by the Chairman with the assistance of the Secretary and sent to us for our approval. We were in full agreement with the reasoning and the outcome contained in this Decision."
(b) The letter identified the time spent by the Second Defendant in relation to the Decision as having been 2 hours. The time spent by others was 4¾ hours by the Third Defendant, 10 hours by the Chairman, and 14 hours by the Secretary.
(5) In relation to the Second Document Production Decision:
"We confirm that we read the parties' correspondence and submissions and participated in internal tribunal discussions on relevant matters (both before and after the draft decision was produced).
Each of us were sent and reviewed three drafts of the Decision before it was issued and read the transcript of the telephone hearing conducted by the Chairman with the parties.
Although this was a 65 page decision, a large proportion of the document contained summaries of the parties' positions on the various applications. In relation to the sections which contained substantive reasoning and the Tribunal's decision on the requested documents, we note that there was much repetition – given that the same reasoning was essentially applied to several categories of similar documents. Contrary to [the Claimant's] suggestion … we consider it reasonable to have reviewed the final draft (being the third draft we had been sent) in one hour."
(1) "[The Claimant] repeatedly alleges that the Co-Arbitrators "rubber stamped" the proposed draft. This is a patently wrong characterisation, as has been made plain in our earlier Submissions. We confirm that we both carefully examined the draft Rulings before deciding to assent to them and did not "rubber stamp" the draft. We had read the relevant papers, and had formed a preliminary view of the merits of the applications before the Chairman sent us his draft rulings. As to the … Second Decision on Document Production,… comprised of… 68 pages, … we commented on the first draft received and subsequent drafts were exchanged and commented upon by us until we received a final draft, which we approved. Generally, and more broadly, the Chairman's drafts accorded with our views on the merits of the issues they addressed, and his skill and experience in drafting Rulings resulted in our often having little (if anything) to criticize or seek to amend significantly. In short, we emphatically affirmed his conclusions as expressed in his drafts after having considered the matters ourselves. Being of one mind with the Chairman clearly does not equate to "rubber stamping"."
(2) "[The Claimant] argues here that "The Tribunal Secretary's substantial influence is further confirmed by the little time that the co-arbitrators spent on reviewing the decision". This is plainly a non sequitur. If the drafts had been drafted solely by the Chairman, we would most likely have spent exactly the same amount of time on reviewing the drafts and commenting on them. Our only responsibility was to study the work product placed before us by the Chairman and to respond with our views, having studied the relevant papers, listened to the oral arguments (in the case of the First Stay Application) and read the transcripts of the oral arguments (in the case of the Second Decision on Document Production). All we were concerned with was whether the Chairman's draft expressed our own views on the outcome of the application to our satisfaction. So long as we had (in our own estimation) spent enough time on reviewing the relevant papers to form a clear view on the desired outcome, all we needed to do was to check that the Chairman was on the same page as us, and that his drafts accorded with our views on how the application in question should be disposed of, and why."
"…We also confirm that the draft sent to us was the Chairman's draft decision, regardless of whether the Secretary assisted in drafting duties. It was then our task to independently examine the draft and decide whether to agree to it or to offer amendments (or alternative conclusions) based on our prior reading of the parties' submissions…. The precise point is whether all three members of the Tribunal had examined for themselves the draft prepared by the Chairman, with the assistance of the Secretary, and agreed with the draft. This is what happened."
(3) "[The Claimant] contends that "the time records of the wing members indicate that they cannot have formed any form of independent review (emphasis added) of the matters in issue and as such were simply "rubber stamping" the decisions of [the Secretary]". This begs the question of what is meant by an "independent review" by [the Co-Arbitrators]. [The Claimant] does not explain why the reviews [the Co-Arbitrators] conducted were not "independent". .… In short the fact that we:
(a) appreciated the Chairman's wisdom and experience in articulating what to the three of us were the appropriate decisions to make in respect of the three applications placed before us; and
(b) fully agreed with his conclusions,
does not make us any the less independent."
(4) "This is the last point directed against the wing arbitrators, where [the Claimant] complains we breached our duty not to delegate by:
(a) not sufficiently participating in the decision making process; and
(b) allowing the Tribunal Secretary to exercise substantial influence over the decision.
We have in our previous Submissions explained why we did not delegate our essential decision making duties to [the Secretary]… we have in those Submissions …explained why we have sufficiently participated in the decision making process.
We now respond to the charge of allowing the Tribunal Secretary to exercise substantial influence over the decision. We do not accept that [the Secretary] "exercised substantial influence over the decision". We believed that, while [the Secretary] would have provided assistance to the Chairman in the draft rulings and orders, those drafts had been painstakingly worked out by the Chairman, who would have been ultimately responsible for every word of the drafts. In other words, we considered the drafts as the Chairman's drafts, reflecting his personal view of the substance and wording of each ruling or order, regardless of whatever assistance he may have received. Accordingly while we did ultimately exercise our own independent judgement on each draft ruling or order, we dealt with the various drafts on the basis that these were the Chairman's views, and not those of [the Secretary]."
"We have also made the exhaustion of any arbitral process for challenging an arbitrator a pre-condition of the right to apply to the Court. Again it would be a very rare case indeed where the Court will remove an arbitrator notwithstanding that that process has reached a different conclusion."
The Indirect Delegation Argument
"First, for the avoidance of any doubt, neither the Tribunal nor any of its members has "delegated" any function to the Tribunal Secretary. The Tribunal Secretary operates, and from the time of his appointment with the agreement of the Parties has operated, as circumscribed by the LCIA's "Notes for Arbitrators" (paragraphs 68-73), the LCIA website's "What is the LCIA's position on the appointment of Secretaries to Tribunals?" and the "Young ICCA Guide on Arbitral Secretaries" (Article 3 ("The Role of the Arbitral Secretary")). Thus the Tribunal Secretary has assisted the Tribunal "with the internal management of the case" and has engaged in such matters as organising papers for the Tribunal, highlighting relevant legal authorities, maintaining factual chronologies, preparing drafts of orders and correspondence for consideration by the Tribunal, and sending correspondence on behalf of the Tribunal. Therefore there has been no occasion for any of the members of the Tribunal to have "passed [communications] between [them] in connection with the role of and the tasks delegated to [the Secretary] in this arbitration," and in fact none exist. As the three members of this Tribunal reside… [around the globe], all three of whom travel frequently around the world for hearings and other professional engagements, the Tribunal Secretary necessarily must spend a proportionately large amount of time relative to that spent by the Tribunal members, which results in maximum efficiency of the proceedings and overall lower total cost to the Parties."
"For the sake of completeness however and in order to dispel the "confusion" experienced by [the Claimant's] counsel, it is appropriate to note that the request by the Tribunal Chairman to the Tribunal Secretary encompassed in the misdirected e-mail of 23 March 2016 had been intended simply to elicit from him, on behalf of the Tribunal, a response as to the status of outstanding issues relating to the Tribunal's First, Second and Third decisions on Document Production based on the letter of [the Claimant's] counsel dated 22 March 2016."
"…..by no means intended to provide an exhaustive list of "best practices" in the conduct of arbitration, nor do [they] supplant or interpret the LCIA Rules. Rather [they] highlight the broad principles by which Arbitral tribunals should be guided in the conduct of LCIA arbitrations."
"8. SECRETARIES TO TRIBUNALS
68. Subject to the express written agreement of the parties, an Arbitral Tribunal may, if it considers it appropriate in a particular case, appoint a tribunal secretary to assist it with the internal management of the case.
69. The duties of the tribunal secretary should, however, neither conflict with those for which the parties have contracted with the LCIA, nor constitute any delegation of the Arbitral Tribunal's authority.
70. The LCIA Secretariat will deal with all matters required of it under the LCIA Rules; will provide any reminders that may be required on the procedural timetable; and will, if requested, finalise arrangements for hearing venues, transcripts and so on.
71. Tribunal secretaries should therefore, confine their activities to such matters as organising papers for the Arbitral Tribunal, highlighting relevant legal authorities, maintaining factual chronologies, reserving hearing rooms, and sending correspondence on behalf of the Arbitral Tribunal."
"The LCIA will provide the Tribunal and the parties with the administrative support that they require.
However, the LCIA has no objection, in principle, to the appointment of a Secretary or to the Tribunal, provided that the parties agree, and subject to the usual conflicts checks.
The duties of the administrative secretary should neither conflict with those for which the parties are paying the LCIA Secretariat, nor constitute any delegation of the Tribunal's authority. Whilst the LCIA is prepared to liaise with the Secretary on administrative matters, the LCIA Secretariat will finalise arrangements for hearing venues, transcripts and so on; provide any reminders that may be required on the procedural timetable; and deal with all matters required of it under the LCIA Rules.
Administrative secretaries should, therefore, confine their activities to such matters as organising papers for the Tribunal, highlighting relevant legal authorities maintaining factual chronologies keeping the Tribunal s time sheets and so forth."
"Article 1. General Principles on the Appointment and Use of Arbitral Secretaries
(1) An arbitral secretary should be appointed to support an arbitral tribunal where it considers that such appointment will assist it in resolving the dispute effectively and efficiently.
(2) An arbitral secretary should only be appointed with the knowledge and consent of the parties.
(3) An arbitral tribunal should notify the parties of its intention to appoint an arbitral secretary at its earliest convenience.
(4) It shall be the responsibility of each arbitrator not to delegate any part of his or her personal mandate to any other person, including an arbitral secretary.
(5) It shall be the responsibility of the arbitral tribunal to appropriately select and supervise the arbitral secretary.
(6) Where an arbitration is proceeding under institutional arbitration rules, any rules and policies of the institution relating to arbitral secretaries shall apply."
"Although there may be a risk of a "dilution in mandate" when appointing an arbitral secretary, the Task Force considers the fact that 95.0% of 2012 Survey respondents supported the use of arbitral secretaries as showing that there is significant acceptance within the arbitration community that this risk is outweighed by the benefits inherent in the use of arbitral secretaries. In order to minimize that risk, however, arbitral tribunals must ensure that they maintain tight control over the tasks entrusted to the arbitral secretary and provide close oversight of the arbitral secretary's responsibilities. While 55.2% of 2012 Survey respondents indicated that the arbitral secretary is controlled by the chairperson, the remaining 44.8% indicated that the entire arbitral tribunal is in control of the arbitral secretary. The Task Force believes that, while it is common practice for the arbitral secretary to be selected from the chairperson's law firm or organization, the benefits associated with the use of an arbitral secretary would be furthered if he or she was controlled by, and tasked with supporting, the arbitral tribunal as a whole."
"Article 3. Role of the Arbitral Secretary
(1) With appropriate direction and supervision by the arbitral tribunal, an arbitral secretary's role may legitimately go beyond the purely administrative.
(2) On this basis, the arbitral secretary's tasks may involve all or some of the following:
(a) Undertaking administrative matters as necessary in the absence of an institution;
(b) Communicating with the arbitral institution and parties;
(c) Organizing meetings and hearings with the parties;
(d) Handling and organizing correspondence, submissions and evidence on behalf of the arbitral tribunal;
(e) Researching questions of law;
(f) Researching discrete questions relating to factual evidence and witness testimony;
(g) Drafting procedural orders and similar documents;
(h) Reviewing the parties' submissions and evidence, and drafting factual chronologies and memoranda summarizing the parties' submissions and evidence;
(i) Attending the arbitral tribunal's deliberations; and
(j) Drafting appropriate parts of the award".
"Article 3(1):
In practice, many arbitrators responsibly make full use of arbitral secretaries, beyond the purely administrative sphere, to help them in the discharge of their functions. Indeed, to ensure that the maximum benefit is derived from the appointment of an arbitral secretary, the responsibilities entrusted to the arbitral secretary must go beyond the purely administrative. To limit the arbitral secretary's role in supporting the arbitral tribunal to administrative matters only would largely eliminate the gains in efficiency sought through the appointment of a secretary. In order to minimize the risk of diluting the arbitrators' personal mandate, however, tribunals must closely instruct and supervise the arbitral secretary. Ultimately, it should be left to the discretion of the tribunal to determine what duties and responsibilities can appropriately be entrusted to the arbitral secretary, taking into account the circumstances of the case and the arbitral secretary's level of experience and expertise. If an arbitrator exercises poor judgment in determining what tasks to assign to the arbitral secretary, it reflects badly on the institution of arbitral secretaries.
Article 3(2):
This article sets out those tasks that may reasonably be undertaken by the arbitral secretary (subject to the caveats set out in relation to Article 3(1) above). This is not an exhaustive list and should be seen as a default list of responsibilities that is subject always to the preferences of the parties. If the parties so desire, they may discuss with the arbitrator the scope of tasks and duties to be undertaken by the arbitral secretary at or prior to the time of his or her appointment."
"International Arbitrator's Obligation Not to Delegate Duties
An arbitrator's obligations include the duty not to delegate his or her responsibilities or tasks to third parties. This duty is widely reflected in ethical guidelines, national court decisions and commentary. Most fundamentally, an arbitrator cannot delegate the duty of deciding a case, attending hearings or deliberations, or evaluating the parties' submissions and evidence to others: these are the essence of the arbitrator's adjudicative function and they are personal, non-delegable duties.
It is nevertheless common for arbitrators to obtain a range of assistance in connection with the arbitral proceedings from third parties. Arbitrators obviously use clerical assistance, which can readily extend beyond typing, organizing files and the like, to dealing with administrative matters; these tasks will often be conducted either by secretarial or similar staff, but sometimes by junior lawyers or interns. As discussed below, in some instances arbitrators will appoint a "secretary" to assist the tribunal, being a younger lawyer (often from the presiding arbitrator's law firm).
…
A central premise of the role of the secretary is that he or she may not assume the tribunal's (or an arbitrator's) functions and may not influence the tribunal's decision. In the words of the ICC Secretariat's Note Concerning the Appointment of Administrative Secretaries
"Under no circumstances may the Arbitral Tribunal delegate decision-making functions to an Administrative Secretary. Nor should the Arbitral Tribunal rely on the Administrative Secretary to perform any essential duties of an arbitrator."
Nevertheless, it is common practice for secretaries (or other junior lawyers) to conduct legal research for tribunals, to organize files and witness statements (sometimes going beyond merely administrative work) and sometimes to draft portions of awards. Obviously, the latter tasks can, if not carefully monitored and checked, risk inappropriately involving a secretary or other junior lawyer in the tribunal's deliberations or decision-making. Nevertheless, the better view is that there is no per se prohibition on secretaries or junior lawyers performing such tasks, provided that the members of the tribunal carefully review and make appropriate use of any preparatory work."
"The role of the arbitrator is characterised by its intuitu personae nature. The appointment of a secretary may be reconciled with this fundamental principle so long as the arbitral tribunal exercises both close supervision of and has ultimate authority over the decision-making process." (p.586).
and
"There is concern that a secretary permitted substantial involvement may exercise undue influence over the arbitral tribunal and, as a result, affect the disposition. This concern is best addressed by disclosure, transparency and informed consent of the parties." (p.591).
(1) The use of a tribunal secretary to analyse submissions and draft procedural orders is not an improper delegation of decision making functions, absent contrary agreement by the parties. Nor would it necessarily be such an improper delegation were the chairman to solicit or take account of the views of this arbitral secretary on the merits of these procedural decisions.
(2) The account given by the Chairman of the use of the Secretary in relation to the Decisions is within the bounds of the proper and appropriate use of such a secretary. The Chairman explained in the letter of 20 June 2016 that for the first year of the reference the Secretary was employed as his "Legal Adviser" and they worked side by side in the same building. The Chairman's comment that he "worked cheek by jowl" with the Secretary does not, as the Claimant submitted, indicate any impropriety. It indicates careful supervision of the Secretary's work, not that the latter improperly participated in or influenced the decision-making process.
(3) The Misdirected Email is not indicative of improper delegation. The explanation given by the Chairman that he was asking for a status update is one there is no reason to doubt, and would not involve any improper delegation. In any event, had the Chairman been asking the Secretary's view on the merits of the submission, it cannot be inferred (and the Chairman has denied) that he thereby surrendered any part of his own decision-making role.
(4) The number of hours worked by the Chairman on each of the Decisions under consideration (8.6 hours on the Record Sharing Decision, 10 hours on the Second Stay Decision and 45 hours on the Second Document Production Decision) strongly corroborate his statement that he did not improperly delegate his decision-making functions but rather performed them fully and properly.
(5) Mr Daele's witness statement relies on what he suggests was a disproportionate number of hours billed in respect of the Decisions by the Secretary relative to those of the Chairman (9 hours to 8.6 hours, 14 hours to 10 hours and 33 hours to 45 hours). This is misconceived. No criticism is addressed to the number of hours spent by the Chairman as such. If the time spent by him was sufficient for his decision making responsibilities, the time spent by the Secretary tells one little. In any event, the time spent by the Secretary is not indicative of any inappropriate role on his part. The Decisions recited some of the relevant procedural background and, as is common in international arbitrations although not strictly necessary, recited in detail the rival submissions of the parties. Marshalling the material for those parts of the Decisions and being involved in their drafting would be a proper function of the Secretary and would account for the hours spent.
(6) The LCIA Division considered and dismissed the allegation of improper delegation against the Chairman: paragraphs 262-266. The Court should be slow to differ from such a conclusion for the reasons identified earlier in this judgment.
The Secretary Tasks Delegation Argument
The Supervision Argument
The Misrepresentation argument
Conclusion on failure properly to conduct the proceedings
Substantial Injustice
(1) The Record Sharing Decision merely gave effect to an agreement to make the LCIA record available in the other arbitration, deferring the contentious issue about whether certain statements/documents should be excluded.
(2) The Second Stay Decision merely concluded that there had been no significant change of circumstances since the First Stay Decision but left open the possibility of a further stay application.
(3) The Second Decision on Document Production was intended to secure the Claimant's compliance with the Tribunal's (unchallenged) previous orders requiring efforts to be made to obtain documents from third parties, largely by requiring certification of what efforts it had used to obtain documents in accordance with the previous order. Contrary to the Claimant's submissions, the Second Decision did not order the Claimant to undertake large-scale search and production of documents, the scope of the disclosure exercise having been determined by the first decision, about which no complaint is made; nor did it pre-judge whether the Claimant controlled certain third parties, the Tribunal being careful not to do so but, instead, requiring certification of the efforts used to obtain documents from those third parties. There can be no substantial injustice in requiring a party to identify and affirm the efforts that it has made to obtain identifiable categories of documents.
"… I do not accept that an alleged loss of confidence in an arbitrator caused by an irregularity in the proceedings is capable itself of being substantial injustice. In my judgment, an applicant who invokes s. 68 must show that the irregularity has caused, or will cause him to suffer substantial concrete or substantive prejudice. It is not sufficient to show that the irregularity has demonstrated incompetence on the part of the Arbitrator and has undermined the confidence of the applicant in the ability of the Arbitrator. Loss of confidence is neither a sufficient nor a necessary condition of substantial injustice. It is simply not the test. It is possible for an arbitrator to commit an irregularity which raises a question as to his competence and yet which causes no injustice to either party, still less any substantial injustice. Conversely it is possible for a competent arbitrator to make a mistake which causes substantial injustice and which needs to be put right by the court but in circumstances where, in the general sense, the applicant retains full confidence in the arbitrator. After all, Homer does sometimes nod."