Before: LADY JUSTICE ARDEN LORD JUSTICE LONGMORE and LORD JUSTICE TOULSON Between:

Similar documents
Before: LORD JUSTICE THORPE LORD JUSTICE LLOYD and LORD JUSTICE PATTEN Between: KOTECHA

B e f o r e: LORD JUSTICE FLOYD EUROPEAN HERITAGE LIMITED

B e f o r e: LORD JUSTICE LEWISON LORD JUSTICE FLOYD

Neutral Citation Number: [2009] EWHC 1190 (Admin) Case No. CO/6528/2007 IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION THE ADMINISTRATIVE COURT

B e f o r e: MR JUSTICE BLAIR Between: THE QUEEN ON THE APPLICATION OF ABDULLAH Claimant

Before MASTER OF THE ROLLS LORD JUSTICE FLOYD LORD JUSTICE SIMON. Between: ENGEHAM. - and - LONDON & QUADRANT HOUSING TRUST

Before: JUSTICE ANDREW BAKER (In Private) - and - ANONYMISATION APPLIES

Before : LADY JUSTICE ARDEN and LORD JUSTICE BRIGGS Between : - and -

Before : MR JUSTICE LEGGATT Between : LONDON BOROUGH OF RICHMOND UPON THAMES. - and

B e f o r e: MR JUSTICE BURTON. Between: THE QUEEN ON THE APPLICATION OF ASSOCIATION FOR INDIVIDUAL AND GROUP PSYCHOTHERAPY & OTHERS Claimant

B e f o r e : LORD JUSTICE AULD LORD JUSTICE WARD and LORD JUSTICE ROBERT WALKER

LOWIN. and W PORTSMOUTH & CO. JUDGMENT (As Approved)

B e f o r e: LORD JUSTICE JACKSON LORD JUSTICE LINDBLOM. BRADFORD TEACHING HOSPITALS NHS FOUNDATION TRUST Respondent

The Queen on the application of Yonas Admasu Kebede (1)

Judgement As Approved by the Court

Neutral Citation Number: [2009] EWHC 2452 (QB) IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE QUEEN S BENCH DIVISION Royal Courts of Justice Strand London WC2A 2LL

Employment and Discrimination Tribunal

Before: LORD JUSTICE LAWS LORD JUSTICE LLOYD AND LORD JUSTICE GROSS Between: (2) KI (SOMALIA) AND OTHERS

Re L-A (Children) [2009] EWCA Civ 822 (14 July 2009) Case No: B4/2009/1297 IN THE SUPREME COURT OF JUDICATURE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)

Before : LADY JUSTICE ARDEN LORD JUSTICE UNDERHILL and LORD JUSTICE BRIGGS with MASTER GORDON SAKER (Senior Costs Judge) sitting as an Assessor

Arbitration Act CHAPTER Part I. Arbitration pursuant to an arbitration agreement. Introductory

B e f o r e: THE LORD CHIEF JUSTICE OF ENGLAND AND WALES (The Lord Woolf of Barnes) LORD JUSTICE WALLER and LORD JUSTICE LAWS


B e f o r e: MR JUSTICE DINGEMANS. Between: 93 FEET EAST LTD LONDON BOROUGH OF TOWER HAMLETS

B e f o r e: MR JUSTICE OUSELEY. Between: THE QUEEN ON THE APPLICATION OF ASSOCIATION OF BRITISH COMMUTERS LIMITED Claimant

Before : LORD JUSTICE MUMMERY LORD JUSTICE ETHERTON and LORD JUSTICE McFARLANE Between : - and -

B E F O R E: LORD JUSTICE BROOKE (Vice President of the Court of Appeal, Civil Division)

JUDGMENT. BPE Solicitors and another (Respondents) v Gabriel (Appellant)

JUDGMENT. R (on the application of AA) (FC) (Appellant) v Secretary of State for the Home Department (Respondent)

PLEASE NOTE. For more information concerning the history of this Act, please see the Table of Public Acts.

Arbitration Act 1996

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF BELIZE A.D.2009 BETWEEN: THE ATTORNEY GENERAL CLAIMANT

Before : LORD JUSTICE MAURICE KAY (Vice President of the Court of Appeal, Civil Division) and LORD JUSTICE RIMER

Before : MR JUSTICE KNOWLES CBE Between : (1) C1 (2) C2 (3) C3. - and

PRIVATE INTERNATIONAL LAW : CONFLICT OF LAWS

Before : THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE SUPPERSTONE Between :

Before: LORD JUSTICE THORPE and LORD JUSTICE MAURICE KAY IN THE MATTER OF C (Children)

THE COURTS ACT. Rules made by the Chief Justice, after consultation with the Rules Committee and the Judges, under section 198 of the Courts Act

Financial Services Tribunal Rules 2015 (as amended 2017 and 2018)

Before: THE QUEEN (ON THE APPLICATION OF GUDANAVICIENE) - and - IMMIGRATION AND ASYLUM FIRST TIER TRIBUNAL

Shalson v DF Keane Ltd [2003] Adj.LR. 02/21

2009 No (L. 20) TRIBUNALS AND INQUIRIES

Before: LORD JUSTICE SULLIVAN LORD JUSTICE TOMLINSON and LORD JUSTICE LEWISON Between:

Before: LORD JUSTICE CARNWATH LADY JUSTICE HALLETT and LORD JUSTICE LAWRENCE COLLINS Between:

THE STATUTES OF THE REPUBLIC OF SINGAPORE ARBITRATION ACT (CHAPTER 10)

CHAPTER 4 THE ARBITRATION AND CONCILIATION ACT. Arrangement of Sections.

B e f o r e: MRS JUSTICE LANG. Between: THE QUEEN ON THE APPLICATION OF DEAN Claimant

B e f o r e : LORD JUSTICE THORPE LORD JUSTICE CLARKE IN THE MATTER OF RE: S (A CHILD)

JUDGMENT. In the matter of an application by Hugh Jordan for Judicial Review (Northern Ireland)

JUDGMENT. Eclipse Film Partners No 35 LLP (Appellant) v Commissioners for Her Majesty s Revenue and Customs (Respondent)

Before : - and - THE HIGH COMMISSION OF BRUNEI DARUSSALAM

Judgment As Approved by the Court

Neutral Citation Number: [2009] EWCA Civ 442 Case No: C4/2008/1737; C4/2008/1809; C4/2008/3091

Gafta No.125. Copyright THE GRAIN AND FEED TRADE ASSOCIATION

B e f o r e: MR JUSTICE OUSELEY. SECRETARY OF STATE FOR COMMUNITIES AND LOCAL GOVERNMENT Defendant

Before: MRS JUSTICE O'FARRELL DBE Between:

JUDGMENT. R (on the application of Fitzroy George) (Respondent) v The Secretary of State for the Home Department (Appellant)

Arbitration Act of United Kingdom United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland

JUDGMENT REFERRAL UNDER SECTION 4 OF THE JUDICIAL COMMITTEE ACT before. Lord Neuberger Lord Hope Lord Mance

IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE CHANCERY DIVISION. Before: MR. JUSTICE LIGHTMAN. - and -

Number 45 of 2001 PROTECTION OF EMPLOYEES (PART-TIME WORK) ACT, 2001 ARRANGEMENT OF SECTIONS PART 1. Preliminary and General

Before: THE SENIOR PRESIDENT OF TRIBUNALS LORD JUSTICE UNDERHILL Between:

"10. (1) Subject to subsection (3) and section 36(3) below, the following,

Raymond George Adams v Mason Bullock (A Firm) [2004] APP.L.R. 12/17

Before: LORD JUSTICE BRIGGS and LORD JUSTICE SALES Between:

Before : LORD JUSTICE GROSS LORD JUSTICE LEWISON and LORD JUSTICE FLAUX Between :

Before: LORD JUSTICE WARD LORD JUSTICE WILSON and SIR PAUL KENNEDY Between: KEBABERY WHOLESALE LIMITED

Before: MR RECORDER BERKLEY MISS EASHA MAGON. and ROYAL & SUN ALLIANCE INSURANCE PLC

Before : MR. JUSTICE EDWARDS-STUART Between :

EMPLOYMENT AND DISCRIMINATION TRIBUNAL (PROCEDURE) ORDER 2016

JUDGMENT. Rolle Family and Company Limited (Appellant) v Rolle (Respondent) (Bahamas)

2011 No. 586 (L. 2) SENIOR COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES COUNTY COURTS, ENGLAND AND WALES. The Civil Proceedings Fees (Amendment) Order 2011

THE PRUDENTIAL ASSURANCE COMPANY LIMITED - and - THE PRUDENTIAL INSURANCE COMPANY OF AMERICA

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION) ON APPEAL FROM THE UPPER TRIBUNAL (IMMIGRATION AND ASYLUM CHAMBER) McCloskey J and UT Judge Lindsley.

Before : LORD JUSTICE MUMMERY LORD JUSTICE LONGMORE and MR JUSTICE LEWISON Between :

2010 No. 791 COPYRIGHT

Before : DAVID CASEMENT QC (Sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge) Between :

Before: MR. JUSTICE BIRSS Between: VRINGO INFRASTRUCTURE, INC.

JUDGMENT. Tiuta International Limited (in liquidation) (Respondent) v De Villiers Surveyors Limited (Appellant)

Before: NEIL CAMERON QC Sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge. Between:

Before : LORD JUSTICE THORPE LORD JUSTICE RIX and LORD JUSTICE STANLEY BURNTON Between :

ARBITRATORS POWERS TO ORDER INTERIM MEASURES (INCLUDING ANTI-SUIT INJUNCTIONS)

B e f o r e: LADY JUSTICE SHARP DBE MR JUSTICE HOLROYDE. HIS HONOUR JUDGE LAKIN (Sitting as a Judge of the CACD) R E G I N A DENNIS OBASI

B e f o r e: THE LORD CHIEF JUSTICE OF ENGLAND AND WALES (LORD PHILLIPS OF WORTH MATRAVERS) MR JUSTICE BURTON AND MR JUSTICE DAVID CLARKE R E G I N A

Before: THE MASTER OF THE ROLLS LORD JUSTICE ELIAS and LORD JUSTICE BEATSON Between:

JUDGMENT OF THE LORDS OF THE JUDICIAL COMMITTEE OF THE PRIVY COUNCIL, Delivered the 21st October 2004

IN THE COUNTY COURT AT CENTRAL LONDON Thomas More Building Royal Courts of Justice, Strand, London WC2A 2LL. Before:

AN BILLE EADRÁNA 2008 ARBITRATION BILL Mar a tionscnaíodh As initiated ARRANGEMENT OF SECTIONS. PART 1 Preliminary and General

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF BELIZE AD 2014 CIVIL APPEAL NO 4 OF 2011 THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF BELIZE

PART I ARBITRATION - CHAPTER I

A nightmare for social landlords and their tenants?

Mostafa (Article 8 in entry clearance) [2015] UKUT (IAC) THE IMMIGRATION ACTS. Before

SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT -v- ABBAS

Before : PRESIDENT OF THE QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION LADY JUSTICE SMITH and LORD JUSTICE AIKENS Between :

Before: HIS HONOUR JUDGE WULWIK Between: - and -

Before : The Honourable Mr Justice Popplewell Between :

DEFENCES TO ENFORCEMENT OF FOREIGN JUDGMENTS AND AWARDS IN ENGLAND

JUDGMENT. HM Inspector of Health and Safety (Appellant) v Chevron North Sea Limited (Respondent) (Scotland)

IN THE UPPER TRIBUNAL BEFORE THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE CRANSTON UPPER TRIBUNAL JUDGE REEDS. Between THE QUEEN ON THE APPLICATION OF RA.

ARCHIBALD KENRICK & SONS LTD.'s international application. 22 July 1994

Transcription:

Case No: A3/2006/0902 Neutral Citation Number: [2007] EWCA Civ 471 IN THE SUPREME COURT OF JUDICATURE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION) ON APPEAL FROM QUEEN S BENCH DIVISION (MR JUSTICE DAVID STEEL) Royal Courts of Justice Strand, London, WC2A 2LL Before: Date: Wednesday, 25 th April 2007 LADY JUSTICE ARDEN LORD JUSTICE LONGMORE and LORD JUSTICE TOULSON - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Between: THE REPUBLIC OF KAZAKHSTAN - and - ISTIL GROUP LTD - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Appellant Respondent (DAR Transcript of WordWave International Limited A Merrill Communications Company 190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838 Official Shorthand Writers to the Court) - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - MR H PAGE QC and MR M VINALL (instructed by Messrs Penningtons) appeared on behalf of the Appellant. MR A MALEK QC and MR M PARKER (instructed by Messrs Reed Smith Richards Butler LLP) appeared on behalf of the Respondent. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Judgment

Lord Justice Longmore: 1. In 1994 and 1995, a British Virgin Island company called Metals Russia Corp Limited ( Metals Russia ) made three contracts for the purchase of rolled steel. All three contracts contained a London arbitration clause requiring the disputes to be resolved under the auspices of the London Court of International Arbitration ( the LCIA ). The counterparties to those contracts were as to the first contract an organisation called Estate Foreign Trade Company Kazakhstan Sauda ( Sauda ), and as to the second and third contracts, Oltex Trading Limited ( Oltex ). 2. Metals Russia and their successors in title, Istil Group Inc, whom I shall call Istil, the present applicants, have from an early stage contended that Sauda and Oltex made the sale contracts as agents for the owners or operators of the steel mill from which the steel was to be provided, pursuant to those contracts, Karaganda Metallurgical Combine ( Karmet ). No steel has ever been delivered pursuant to those sale contracts. 3. In late 1995, Karmet was experiencing severe financial difficulties and, on 17 October 1995, the Republic of Kazakhstan ( ROK ), passed decree number 1338, by clause 6 of which all export sales and agreements for supply of raw materials were suspended with effect from 18 October 1995. Istil now contend that Karmet was not a legal entity distinct from ROK, and ROK itself was liable on the contracts as principal. 4. Alternatively, it is said that ROK agreed as part of the subsequent sale of Karmet s assets, by way of privatisation to a company called Group Ispat UK, that it would discharge the debts and liabilities of Karmet. One such debt was said to arise from various verification of debt documents signed on 17 and 18 October 1995, whereby Karmet acknowledged that various sums in excess of $10 billion were due to Metals Russia. But neither payment nor damages for non-delivery have been forthcoming. 5. Metals Russia therefore started proceedings in the Paris Commercial Court by a writ dated 7 November 1997. Since any claim under the contracts themselves would be subject to the arbitration clause, it seems that Metals Russia put its claim mainly, if not entirely, on the basis that ROK was responsible for Karmet s debts. But it was also said that Karmet was an emanation of ROK and that ROK was liable for Karmet s debts for that reason also. ROK responded by relying on the arbitration clause in the contracts and claiming that, in any event, ROK was entitled to sovereign immunity. The Paris Commercial Court in the judgment of 23 June 1999 pointed out that the arbitration clause would not apply to a claim that ROK was responsible for Karmet s debts by reason of the privatisation agreement and that the privatisation agreement was for the benefit of Ispat, not of third parties. It then upheld the plea that the French courts had no jurisdiction. 6. Thus rebuffed, Metals Russia did not in fact start proceedings in Kazakhstan but resorted to arbitration proceedings in London by a notice of arbitration of 5 July 2001. The LCIA duly appointed three arbitrators, Dr Volka Tribel of Düsseldorf being the Chairman. The tribunal dealt with the question of jurisdiction in what they called a partial award of 15 January 2003. By that time

Metals Russia had in early April 2002 merged into its parent company, Metals Russia Group Holdings Limited, which in turn had merged in mid April 2002 into Istil. According to British Virgin Island law that meant that both Metals Russia and its parent company had ceased to exist. No one, however, informed the arbitrators of that fact, so that their partial award which decided that they did indeed have jurisdiction was in favour of Metals Russia. 7. It was only on 14 April 2003 that Istil informed the arbitrators of the position. A final hearing then took place in February 2004 which led to a final award in favour of Istil of 11 June 2004. The final award decided that the partial award was a nullity, since Metals Russia had ceased to exist. The arbitrators then substituted Istil as claimant and confirmed their original conclusion as to jurisdiction. They further held that ROK had in 1995 accepted an obligation to be responsible to Karmet s trade creditors, that ROK had in any event succeeded to Karmet s obligations and that ROK should pay Istil a sum of about $6 million. 8. ROK then issued proceedings before the Commercial Court under section 67 of the Arbitration Act 1996, on the grounds that the award of the arbitrators was outside their jurisdiction. On 3 April 2006, David Steel J held: 1) Any contention by Istil that the tribunal had exceeded its powers in setting aside its partial award should have been pursued under section 68 of the Act but that it had not been. 2) The parties were therefore now bound by the decision that the partial award was a nullity. 3) Obiter, that the partial award was not in fact a nullity since Istil had succeeded to Metals Russia s right to arbitrate under British Virgin Island law and that, although English law required notice of Istil s succession to be given, once it was given the arbitration could continue and any orders or awards already made would be effective. 4) ROK never made any ad hoc agreement to the effect that the tribunal could finally decide the question of jurisdiction. 5) Karmet and ROK were separate legal entities so that ROK could not be liable just because Karmet was. 6) None of the contracts was made by Sauda or Oltex as agents of ROK but only, if at all, as agents for Karmet. 7) ROK never became a party to any arbitration clause. 8) The claim before the arbitrators was essentially the same as that made before the Paris Commercial Court, which had decided that the claim did not fall within the arbitration clause, and Istil were now estopped from arguing the contrary. 9. For all those reasons, David Steel J decided that the arbitration tribunal lacked substantive jurisdiction to consider Istil s claims and that the award should be set aside. He refused permission to appeal. Istil now seek permission to appeal and

the question now before us is whether this court has any jurisdiction to grant permission to appeal once the judge has refused. 10. The 1996 Act itself has vested in the court of first instance the duty to decide whether permission to appeal should be granted in cases where under section 67 the judge decides questions of jurisdiction. It has done likewise under section 68, where procedural irregularity has been alleged, and under section 69, where permission to appeal an award has been granted or refused or where a decision on such an appeal has been made. 11. In order to maintain the compatibility of sections 68 and 69 with the Human Rights Act and the European Convention s Article 6 requirement of a fair hearing, the courts are allowed a very limited inroad on the finality of the judge s decision and have held that if there was any procedural unfairness in the judge s decision, in relation to the question of an appeal or, if this is different, a failure to engage with the arguments on that limited question this court can set aside the judge s decision and consider what further order should be made, see CGU v AstraZeneca [2006] EWCA Civ 1340, [2007] 1 Lloyds Reports page 142. The judgment of this court was delivered by Rix LJ, with whom, as it happens, myself, and the Master of the Rolls agreed. In paragraph 79 Rix LJ said this: What one is looking for is not merely an error of law, but such a substantial defect in the fairness of the process as to invalidate the decision. He continued in paragraph 80: For these purposes, it is clear that perversity in itself, a decision that no reasonable decision-maker could make, is not enough. It might be enough in judicial review: but in this context, perversity is an error of law like any other. 12. On behalf of the applicant s in this application, Mr Hugo Page QC submits that permission to appeal should have been given and that this court should so decide or refer the matter back to the judge. He supported this originally by four main arguments. 13. Firstly, he said that section 67(4) is incompatible with Article 6 of the European Convention of Human Rights and should be construed so as to provide that the leave of the court of first instance or the Court of Appeal is required for any appeal from a decision under section 67. 14. Secondly, he submitted that the refusal of permission to appeal by the judge was indeed procedurally unfair in that, although he changed the original draft of his judgment to delete any reference to any encouragement by or cooperation from Istil, which produced the second award to the effect that the first award was a nullity, he adhered to the results to which he had already come in his draft judgment and became so wedded to that conclusion that for that reason he refused permission to appeal. Indeed, in oral submissions Mr Page said that in the course of discussion the judge said, It is not going to affect the result.

15. When this court examined the transcript with the help of Mr Page, it became apparent not merely that the judge had not said any such thing but that the judge made it clear that he was going to consider the consequences of the wrong facts to which his attention had been drawn and whether it would in fact make any difference to the judgment and that he was going to consider those consequences carefully. In those circumstances, this court put it to Mr Page that perhaps he would wish to withdraw this part of his argument and on reflection he accepted that he should do so. That acceptance by Mr Page was entirely right. 16. Thirdly, Mr Page submitted that the judge had failed to engage with the applicant s argument that the Republic was precluded from objecting to the decision that the arbitration tribunal had jurisdiction because it had failed to challenge the partial award and that the judge also failed to appreciate that the point if decided in Istil s favour by him or on appeal would dispose of the application. 17. Fourthly, there was a submission that in his written reasons as opposed to his oral reasons the judge had applied a test which was stricter than the test which should be applied: namely, whether there was any reasonable prospect of success. 18. I turn to the first submission. In my judgment that submission is an impossible one, partly because this court has already decided this question of construction in Athletic Union of Constantinople v National Basketball Association [2002] EWCA Civ 830, [2002] 1 WLR 283, by holding that once the judge at first instance has made a decision on the arbitration tribunal s jurisdiction and has refused permission to appeal, this court has no jurisdiction to grant permission to appeal, and partly because the proposed construction is not necessary to protect Istil s human rights. It is true that no Human Rights Convention point was raised in the Athletic Union case, but it has now been raised and comprehensively dealt with in the North Range Shipping Limited v Sea Tram Shipping Corporation [2002] 1 WLR 2397 and the CGU case, to which I have already referred in relation to section 69 of the Act, and indeed in ASM Shipping Limited v TTMI [2006] EWCA Civ 1341, [2007] 1 Lloyds Reports 136, in relation to section 68 of the Act. 19. Now that it is clear that there is the residual jurisdiction in this court, in these cases, to ensure that a fair hearing of the application for permission to appeal has been afforded it must to say the least be doubtful whether any special construction has to be given to section 67 (4). It is, however, said by Mr Page that the safeguards afforded by the North Range and CGU cases are not sufficient for cases where there is alleged to be an excess of jurisdiction since, unlike the situation which arises under section 68 and 69 of the Act where the parties have agreed to arbitration and the court is a second tier, the court is the first tier for jurisdiction or disputes in cases where, on one view of the matter at least, there has never been any arbitration agreement. 20. In those circumstances, Mr Page invites the court to return to Human Rights basic principles. He submits that the Article 6 right of an impartial hearing before an independent tribunal is engaged and that for the restriction on appeal contained in section 67(4) to be justifiable, it must not only be in pursuit of a legitimate aim but the means used musts be proportional to that aim.

21. For my part, while acknowledging that we have not found it necessary to call on Mr Malek on this application, who in his skeleton argument argued to the contrary, I would accept that Article 6 is engaged where a state grants a right of appeal but seeks to restrict that right. This court has so held in relation to section 69 and has construed the restrictions in the way that I have mentioned in the North Range and CGU cases. 22. That latter case itself referred to one of the cases Mr Page cited to us DePonte Nascimento v United Kingdom decision 55331/00, a decision on admissibility of an application to the court in relation to this Court s restrictions on second appeals. That case is of some relevance because effectively the restrictions on appeals in the relevant sections of the Arbitration Act do, in my judgment, relate to second appeals. That is obviously so in relation to the section 69 but, despite submissions to the contrary, is scarcely less so in relation to section 67. 23. The scheme of the 1996 Act is that when the jurisdiction of arbitrators is under challenge it should be the arbitrators who in the first instance decide their jurisdiction; see section 30, which also provides that the rulings of the arbitrators are not final and may be challenged by, for example, an application under section 67. Section 31 specifically provides that any objection to jurisdiction must be taken at the earliest possible moment so that the matter is properly before the arbitrators and indeed section 73 of the Act makes a similar provision in relation to the applications which can be made under section 72. Thus the parties will, in most if not all cases, have had the benefit of two decisions by the time an award has been made and a challenge to that award has been made in front of the first instance judge. 24. In these circumstances it is, in my view, a legitimate aim for Parliament to seek to restrict further appeals. That is particularly so when section 1(1) of the 1996 Act provides that the relevant provisions of the Act are to be construed so as to achieve the object of obtaining fair resolution of disputes without unnecessary delay or expense and, also, that the court should not intervene except as provided by the Act. Those aims are themselves legitimate and one way of achieving those aims is by restriction of appeals. 25. Of course, the restriction has to be proportionate and the question is whether it is proportionate to restrict what are effectively second appeals to those cases where the judge deciding the application considers that there is no reasonable prospect of success. This restriction is itself, one might observe, a broader concept than the more restricted test for appeals under section 69 of the Act. 26. In my judgment, it is proportionate because it is in the interests of the legitimate aim that only second appeals which do have a reasonable prospect of success should be permitted to proceed. The only way in which the restriction in this case differs from second appeals in general is that it is the judge rather than this court that is given the final say. It is, of course, true that the decision is vested in the judge who has himself decided whether the point argued is right or wrong. That does not seem to me to be a relevant consideration. Judges are independent tribunals and one of their common, though no doubt unenviable, tasks is to decide whether to give permission to appeal against their own decisions. In other parts of

the civil system, their decision may not be the final one but it is nevertheless a decision which they are accustomed to make. In the context of arbitration cases, where disputes have to be resolved without unnecessary delay or expense, it is, in my view, proportionate that it should be the judge who knows about the case and who decides the dispute who should be entrusted with the decision whether there is a reasonable prospect of success. 27. I would, therefore, hold that section 67 (4) is human rights compliant, provided that it is read in the same way that CGU v AstraZeneca has decided that section 69 should be read viz that it is open to the court to review the fairness of the process of the determination of the question whether leave to appeal should be given. 28. As I have already said, Mr Page has withdrawn the second submission that he made. I therefore turn to deal shortly with his third submission, that the judge has here failed to engage with his argument. The position here is that it is said that he failed to deal with the argument that the partial award was a fully enforceable award which ROK had not sought to set aside and that, pursuant to section 58 of the Act, Istil therefore had an unassailable right to rely on it. 29. In my judgment this is incorrect for two reasons. First, the partial award would be likely to be useless to Istil because it was in favour not of Istil but in favour of Metals Russia. Secondly, a partial award which a later award has declared is a nullity can scarcely be said to be an enforceable award, whether by reason of section 58 of the Act or at all. More importantly however, contrary to Mr Page s submissions, the judge did in fact engage with that argument by saying that Istil would have had first to apply to set aside the decision in the final award that the partial award was a nullity but had never sought to do so. The learned judge gave an oral judgment on the application for permission to appeal. In the course of that he said this at paragraph 4: The position it seems to me is perfectly plain. The arbitrators if and to the extent they exceeded their powers in setting aside the partial award were responsible for an irregularity which if either party had objected to they could and should challenge. The Metals Russia group, if I may call them that, did not do so and the time for that has expired, so I confidently feel that the submission that the Metals Russia group s objection to ROK s attempt to set aside the final award because there was in existence an earlier award is not made out and thus there is no reasonable prospect of success on any appeal. 30. Mr Page complains that that is wrong. Whether right or wrong, however, is beside the point. The judge has engaged with the point; he has given a decision on it. It echoes the relevant paragraph in his judgment on the merits and it is impossible to say that he has not engaged with the argument that Mr Page presented. 31. Lastly, Mr Page complains that in the written reasons, which every judge now has to compile, even when he has given his oral reasons in a form which comes before this court, the judge did not make any reference to reasonable prospect of success

but said that the absence of any entitlement to seek permission from the Court of Appeal emphasises the reason for finality. If we are going to get to a stage where the written reasons the judge has to provide, some time after his oral judgment, are going to be compared with his oral judgment and nitpicking points are going to be made about whether the same is said in the written reasons as in the oral judgment, we have come to a sorry pass. The judge clearly had the correct test in mind or, more accurately, the test which Mr Page says is the correct test in mind, and that is no reason to suppose that his written reasons were in any sense overruling what he said in his oral reasons. 32. Finally, I would repeat paragraph 100 of Rix LJ s judgment in the CGU case and seek to underline it as emphatically as I can: It is important to underline what was also said in North Range about the dangers of this residual jurisdiction being misused. There may be a temptation, even an unconscious one, to present an unfavourable decision as one which is not only wrong but arrived at unfairly. But in the nature of things it is likely to be an exceptionally rare case where the submission of unfairness is justifiably advanced. The courts will not permit the residual jurisdiction, which exists to ensure that injustice is avoided, to become itself an unfair instrument for subverting statute and undermining the process of arbitration. 33. It is all too easy to dress up an argument on paper seeking to persuade this court that the process of the hearing in respect of the permission to appeal has been unfair or that the judge has not engaged properly with the submission made but it is an application that is only very rarely going to succeed and this application does not come within several miles of it. 34. I would refuse this application on the basis that it is an application which this court has no jurisdiction to grant. Lord Justice Toulson: 35. I agree. I add one short point only in relation to the first issue. The point, which may seem rather obvious, is that arbitration is an optional regime. This is relevant when considering the proportionality of the legislative restrictions on rights of appeal. The principal attractions of arbitration are seen as speed, privacy and the limited control available to the court through challenges and appeals. A party which wishes to challenge the jurisdiction of arbitrators must take the point before the arbitrators, and will lose the right to challenge it before the court unless it has taken the point before the tribunal or can show that the party did not know the grounds of objection and could not with reasonable diligence have discovered them (section 73). Therefore, ordinarily in the case of a section 67 challenge there will be hearings at two levels. I can see nothing inimical to Article 6 in Parliament leaving it to the judge to decide whether the case is fit to go onto a third tier. As I have said, the limit in the number of permissible court challenges is an integral part of the package for which parties, in the free exercise of their

autonomy, opt when they contract out of the ordinary process of litigation and refer their disputes to arbitration. Lady Justice Arden: 36. I agree with both judgments and would add three short points. First, Lord Justice Longmore said that the partial award would be useless to Istil. This was only one of the reasons which my Lord gave. I would like to leave this question open. We have not heard full argument on that point, which was one of the points dealt with by Steel J in his judgment. The effect of a merger on the liabilities of a company absorbed by a merger may well depend on the law of its domicile. 37. Secondly, I would like to express my particular agreement with Lord Justice Longmore s rejection of the argument that it was not open to the judge to decide the question of permission to appeal, given that the permission was sought to appeal from his own judgment. I agree with the reasons my Lord gave and would add that this is not a case in which it is suggested that the judge had any personal or financial interest. In this type of situation, the litigant has the protection that the judge has taken a solemn and important judicial oath. If by chance that there were any evidence, which there is certainly not here, to show that the judge had departed from his judicial oath that would, in my judgment, be procedural unfairness within the exception formulated in the AstraZeneca case. 38. Thirdly, although the effect of this court s judgment is to refuse permission to appeal, in view of the argument that we have had, albeit only orally from the appellant, but also in writing from the respondent, I would make an order that these judgments may be reported and referred to hereafter as authority. Order: Appeal dismissed.