INTERNATIONAL CENTRE FOR SETTLEMENT OF INVESTMENT DISPUTES BERNHARD VON PEZOLD AND OTHERS (CLAIMANTS)

Similar documents
INTERNATIONAL CENTRE FOR SETTLEMENT OF INVESTMENT DISPUTES BERNHARD VON PEZOLD AND OTHERS (CLAIMANTS)

INTERNATIONAL CENTRE FOR SETTLEMENT OF INVESTMENT DISPUTES

INTERNATIONAL CENTRE FOR SETTLEMENT OF INVESTMENT DISPUTES

INTERNATIONAL CENTRE FOR SETTLEMENT OF INVESTMENT DISPUTES WASHINGTON, D.C. In the arbitration proceeding between

RECTIFICATION OF AWARD

INTERNATIONAL CENTRE FOR SETTLEMENT OF INVESTMENT DISPUTES (ADDITIONAL FACILITY) In the interpretation proceeding between

CASE No. ARB/97/4. CESKOSLOVENSKA OBCHODNI BANKA, A.S. (Claimant) THE SLOVAK REPUBLIC (Respondent)

CASE No. ARB/97/4. CESKOSLOVENSKA OBCHODNI BANKA, A.S. (Claimant) versus. THE SLOVAK REPUBLIC (Respondent)

A11Y LTD. CZECH REPUBLIC. (ICSID Case No. UNCT/15/1) PROCEDURAL ORDER NO. 9 Organization of the Hearing

INTERNATIONAL CENTRE FOR SETTLEMENT OF INVESTMENT DISPUTES. Gabriel Resources Ltd. and Gabriel Resources (Jersey) Ltd. Romania

IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION UNDER THE [GOLD & SIVER INTERNATIONAL, INC] PARTIAL AWARD

Islamic Republic of Pakistan (ICSID Case No. ARB/01/13) Procedural Order No. 2

INTERNATIONAL CENTRE FOR SETTLEMENT OF INVESTMENT DISPUTES. Carnegie Minerals (Gambia) Limited. Republic of The Gambia

CORRECTION AND INTERPRETATION OF THE AWARD

RULES FOR ARBITRATION BETWEEN THE BANK FOR INTERNATIONAL SETTLEMENTS AND PRIVATE PARTIES

ORDER OF THE TRIBUNAL ON FURTHER PROCEEDINGS

INTERNATIONAL CENTRE FOR SETTLEMENT OF INVESTMENT DISPUTES Washington, D.C. (ICSID Case No. ARB/04/14) Wintershall Aktiengesellschaft (Claimant)

INTERNATIONAL CENTRE FOR THE SETTLEMENT OF INVESTMENT DISPUTES IN THE PROCEEDING BETWEEN ATA CONSTRUCTION, INDUSTRIAL AND TRADING COMPANY (CLAIMANT)

PCA Case No

Siemens v Argentina, ICSID Case No. ARB/02/8, Award

International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes Washington, D.C. In the proceedings between

AND CHAPTER ELEVEN OF THE NORTH AMERICAN FREE TRADE AGREEMENT ( NAFTA ) PROCEDURAL ORDER ON TWO DISPUTED ISSUES DATED 6 FEBRUARY 2015 (English Text)

Box 16050, Stockholm, Sweden Phone: ,

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

COMMERCE GROUP CORP. SAN SEBASTIAN GOLD MINES, INC. REPUBLIC OF EL SALVADOR REJOINDER REPUBLIC OF EL SALVADOR S PRELIMINARY OBJECTION.

INTECO BETEILIGUNGS AG. and SYLMORD TRADE INC

EIGHTY-FIRST SESSION. Considering that the facts of the case and the pleadings may be summed up as follows:

ICSID Case No. ARB/07/5 ABACLAT AND OTHERS (CLAIMANTS) and THE ARGENTINE REPUBLIC (RESPONDENT) PROCEDURAL ORDER NO. 32

INTERNATIONAL CENTRE FOR SETTLEMENT OF INVESTMENT DISPUTES

INTERNATIONAL CENTRE FOR SETTLEMENT OF INVESTMENT DISPUTES. ACP Axos Capital GmbH. Republic of Kosovo. (ICSID Case No. ARB/15/22)

Box 16050, Stockholm, Sweden Phone: ,

INTERNATIONAL CENTRE FOR SETTLEMENT OF INVESTMENT DISPUTES

INTERNATIONAL CENTRE FOR SETTLEMENT OF INVESTMENT DISPUTES IN THE ARBITRATION UNDER CHAPTER ELEVEN OF THE NAFTA AND THE ICSID CONVENTION BETWEEN:

Burimi S.R.L. and Eagle Games SH.A. Claimants. Republic of Albania Respondent. ICSID Case No. ARB/11/18

ARBITRATION INSTITUTE OF THE STOCKHOLM CHAMBER OF COMMERCE

HIGH COURT JUDGMENT ENFORCEMENT OF AN ICSID AWARD AGAINST THE REPUBLIC OF VENEZUELA

Source: BOOK: International Handbook on Commercial Arbitration, J. Paulsson (ed.), Suppl. 30 (January/2000)

PCA CASE NO

International Arbitration Case Law

FINAL DETERMINATION Adjudicator: S Pezaro

THE LMAA TERMS (2006)

2016 FDI MOOT Africa Regional Rounds SKELETAL BRIEF FOR CLAIMANT

INTERNATIONAL CENTRE FOR SETTLEMENT OF INVESTMENT DISPUTES WASHINGTON, D.C. IN THE PROCEEDING BETWEEN PLAMA CONSORTIUM LIMITED (CLAIMANT) and

PCA Case No

ARBITRAL AWARD BASKETBALL ARBITRAL TRIBUNAL (BAT)

THE RENCO GROUP, INC. V. REPUBLIC OF PERU (UNCT/13/1) PROCEDURAL ORDER NO. 1

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF BELIZE A.D.2003 BETWEEN: LYDIA GUERRA PLAINTIFF BELIZE CANE FARMERS

THE LONDON MARITIME ARBITRATORS ASSOCIATION THE INTERMEDIATE CLAIMS PROCEDURE (2012)

IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION UNDER CHAPTER ELEVEN OF THE NORTH AMERICAN FREE TRADE AGREEMENT AND THE UNCITRAL ARBITRATION RULES

PROCEDURAL ORDER NO. 4 Regarding the Procedure until a Decision on Bifurcation

JUDGMENT. [1] The applicants herein had earlier approached this Court for an order, inter

CIArb/IMPRESS ARBITRATION SCHEME RULES ( the Rules ) FOR USE IN ENGLAND & WALES

INTERNATIONAL CENTRE FOR SETTLEMENT OF INVESTMENT DISPUTES

ORDER NO September 2010

Victoria House 7 October 2016 Bloomsbury Place London WC1A 2EB. Before: THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE ROTH (President)

INTERNATIONAL CENTRE FOR SETTLEMENT OF INVESTMENT DISPUTES ABACLAT AND OTHERS (CLAIMANTS) AND

RESOLUTION. Resolution No. 1/2000 INTERNATIONAL CIVIL AND COMMERCIAL LITIGATION

Procedural Order No 20 (Post-Hearing Organisation)

LAW ON THE INTERNATIONAL COMMERCIAL ARBITRATION BULGARIA. Chapter I GENERAL PROVISIONS

ARBITRATORS INDEPENDENCE AND IMPARTIALITY: A REVIEW OF SCC BOARD DECISIONS ON CHALLENGES TO ARBITRATORS ( )

117th Session Judgment No. 3309

THE COMMONWEALTH SECRETARIAT. Before the Tribunal constituted by. Mr Christopher Jeans QC, President; Mr David Goddard QC, member; and

INTERNATIONAL CENTRE FOR SETTLEMENT OF INVESTMENT DISPUTES. Unión Fenosa Gas, S.A. Arab Republic of Egypt. (ICSID Case No.

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

DECISION ON ANNULMENT

(3) Any written inquiry concerning the case, including submission of a defence, must be made via the case portal of the Complaints Board.

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

PCA Case No

109th Session Judgment No. 2951

DECISION ON ANNULMENT

IN THE MATTER OF THE INDUS WATERS KISHENGANGA ARBITRATION. -before-

International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes Washington, D.C. Tokios Tokelės (Claimant) v. Ukraine (Respondent) Case No.

ICC Rules of Conciliation and Arbitration 1975

AS TO THE ADMISSIBILITY OF. Application No /91 by M.T.J. against Denmark

PROCEDURAL ORDER No. 2 (Revised) May 31, Glamis Gold, Ltd., Claimant v. The United States of America, Respondent

RULES OF ARBITRATION

Procedural Order (PO) No.1

Ronnie Musanga v Maria Ligaga [2017] eklr REPUBLIC OF KENYA IN THE CO-OPERATIVE TRIBUNAL AT NAIROBI CTC N0.41 OF 2013 RONNIE MUSANGA...

Introduction... 1 The Meaning of Each Contracting Party Reserves the Right... 1 The Meaning of Third State in Article 17(1)... 3 Annex 1...

PROCEDURAL ORDER Nº 2

Ruling On the Application to Strike Out the Re-Amended Claim Form and Statement of Case

APU JOINT STOCK COMPANY v SINGER (CHINGGIS KHAN TRADE MARK)

INTERNATIONAL CENTRE FOR THE SETTLEMENT OF INVESTMENT DISPUTES. ICSID CASE No. ARB/11/13. Rafat Ali Rizvi (Claimant)

Body Corporate Plan No. PS509946A v VM Romano Construction Group Pty Ltd & Anor (Domestic Building) [2009] VCAT 1662

RULES OF PROCEDURE OF THE GENERAL COURT

INTERNATIONAL CHAMBER OF COMMERCE INTERNATIONAL COURT OF ARBITRATION. CASE No /AC

THE IMMIGRATION ACTS. Heard at: Field House Decision and Reasons Promulgated On: 10 June 2015 On: 20 July Before

PCA Case No

Netherlands Arbitration Institute REQUEST FOR ARBITRATION

INTERNATIONAL CENTRE FOR SETTLEMENT OF INVESTMENT DISPUTES WASHINGTON, D.C. In the arbitration proceeding between. Claimant. and.

IN THE RETIREMENT BENEFITS APPEALS TRIBUNAL AT NAIROBI. CIVIL APPEAL No. 2 of Titus Kimondo Ndirangu & 6 Others Appellants -VERSUS

ANNEX V PROCEDURAL RULES ON CONCILIATION AND ARBITRATION OF CONTRACTS FINANCED BY THE EUROPEAN DEVELOPMENT FUND (EDF)

IN THE RETIREMENT BENEFITS APPEALS TRIBUNAL AT NAIROBI. CIVIL APPEAL No. 1 of CPF Financial Services Limited Appellants -VERSUS

Procedural Order No. 3

Japan Arbitration Update: New JCAA Rules Comparison of Key Asian Arbitral Institutions

(ICSID Case Nos. ARB/10/11 and ARB/10/18) Procedural Order No 16. (Concerning the Respondents Request for Reconsideration of 30 June 2016)

VIANINI LAVORI S.P.A. v THE HONG KONG HOUSING AUTHORITY - [1992] HKCU 0463

IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE BETWEEN JULIANA WEBSTER CLAIMANT AND

IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE

Dr. Nael Bunni, Chairman, Dispute Resolution Panel, Engineers Ireland, 22 Clyde Road, Ballsbridge, Dublin 4. December 2000.

Transcription:

INTERNATIONAL CENTRE FOR SETTLEMENT OF INVESTMENT DISPUTES BERNHARD VON PEZOLD AND OTHERS (CLAIMANTS) V. REPUBLIC OF ZIMBABWE (RESPONDENT) (ICSID CASE NO. ARB/10/15) - AND - BORDER TIMBERS LIMITED, BORDER TIMBERS INTERNATIONAL (PRIVATE) LIMITED, AND HANGANI DEVELOPMENT CO. (PRIVATE) LIMITED (CLAIMANTS) V. REPUBLIC OF ZIMBABWE (RESPONDENT) (ICSID CASE NO. ARB/10/25) PROCEDURAL ORDER NO. 8 Members of the Arbitral Tribunals Mr. L. Yves Fortier, P.C., C.C., Q.C., President Professor David A.R. Williams, Q.C., Arbitrator Mr. Michael Hwang, S.C., Arbitrator Secretary of the Tribunals Frauke Nitschke Assistant to the Tribunals Alison G. FitzGerald Representing the Claimants Mr. Matthew Coleman Mr. Kevin Williams Mr. Anthony Rapa Ms. Helen Aldridge Steptoe & Johnson, London, United Kingdom Mr. Charles O. Verril, Jr. Wiley Rein LLP, Washington, D.C., U.S.A. Representing the Respondent The Honorable Johannes Tomana Advocate Prince Machaya Ms. Sophia Christina Tsvakwi Ms. Fortune Chimbaru Ms. Elizabeth Sumowah Attorney General s Office Harrare, Republic of Zimbabwe Mr. Phillip Kimbrough Mr. Tristan Moreau Kimbrough & Associés, Paris, France

I. INTRODUCTION 1. On 22 September 2013, the Respondent brought a procedural request in connection with its submission due on 23 September 2013 in reply to the Claimants 9 September 2013 submission (the Procedural Request ). Specifically, the Respondent seeks the following relief: (a) extend the current page limit for a single submission to 13 pages (endnotes included, but cover page and table of contents page excluded), 14 pages if footnote presentation is preferred (footnotes included, but cover page and table of contents pages excluded); or (b) maintain the 10-page limit for Respondent's Reply (endnotes included, but cover page and table of contents pages excluded) on all matters and permit a separate 4 page submission (endnotes included, but cover page and table of contents pages excluded), 5 pages if footnote presentation is preferred (footnotes included, but cover page and table of contents pages excluded) to permit Respondent's response to these three new items: a. MFN clause to remove Article 9b of the German [BIT] b. Admissibility, not jurisdiction and c. Amendment of Claimants' Surrejoinder on estoppel to remove Article 9b. 2. On 23 September 2013, the Respondent wrote to the Secretary of the Tribunals advising that the Parties had agreed that they would file all submissions presently due on 23 September 2013 within 24 hours of the Arbitral Tribunals decision with respect to the Respondent s Procedural Request. 3. The Arbitral Tribunals have considered the Procedural Request and have decided unanimously as follows. II. PROCEDURAL HISTORY 4. On 8 August 2013, the Tribunals issued Procedural Order No. 7 which disposed of an application brought by the Claimants in connection with a new objection to jurisdiction, 2

based on Article 9(a) of the Germany-Zimbabwe BIT (the German BIT ) and Article 2 of Switzerland-Zimbabwe BIT (the Swiss BIT ), pleaded by the Respondent for the first time in its pleading filed on 19 April 2013 (the Rebutter ), and new evidence filed in support thereof and in support of a prior jurisdictional objection relating to Article 9(b) of the German BIT raised in the Respondent s Rejoinder. 5. In Procedural Order No. 7, the Tribunals allowed the Respondent s new jurisdictional objections and evidence and directed a further limited briefing schedule to ensure that each Party had a reasonable opportunity to plead its case in writing prior to the hearing in relation to those objections. 6. Consistent with the Tribunals directions, the Respondent filed an addendum to its Rebutter on 16 August 2013, setting out its new jurisdictional objections (the Re- Rebutter ). The Claimants filed their response to the Re-Rebutter on 9 September 2013 ( Claimants 9 September Response ). The Respondent was due to file its reply to the Claimants 9 September Response on 23 September 2013 ( Respondent s September 23 Reply ). The Respondent s 23 September Reply was to have been the last written pleading in connection with this issue, a scant month before the merits hearing is scheduled to commence. III. DISCUSSION 7. The Respondent states that the Claimants raised three new arguments in their 9 September Response, namely (see Respondent s Procedural Request, p. 1): (i) the German MFN clause to rely on provisions of Swiss and Danish BITs, which would according to the Claimants, not require approval to fulfill or remove Article 9b of the German BIT from the debate (cf Section I.F MFN, para. 25); (ii) admissibility, not jurisdiction (cf Section I.B, para. 2) and (iii) amendment of Claimants Surrejoinder pleading on estoppel to remove Article 9b of German BIT (cf Section II.F, para. 80). 8. In order to address these new arguments, the Respondent states that it requires additional pages to expand in writing on case law references included in its 23 September 3

Reply, failing which the Respondent considers that its right to be heard will not be respected (see Procedural Request, p. 2): After Respondent drafted and edited its 23 September Reply, it appears that the new issues Claimants just raised for the first time, particularly regarding MFN to remove Article 9b of the Swiss BIT, and to a lessor [sic] degree admissibility versus jurisdiction, involve discussion of case law, which would not have been necessary but for Claimants' new amendments I arguments. Respondent's 23 September Reply discusses 14 cases, principally in this regard. To merely list the reference to the case to come within the 10-page limit, without a couple of sentences to explain Respondent's view as to how each case enlightens the debate, does not serve due process, either for the Respondent or for the Claimants. Failing the three or four page expansion of the page-limit, Respondent will consider that its right to be heard will not be respected if Claimants' new theories stand. Further, Claimants will benefit from Respondent's explanation over one month before hearings begin to better advance their preparation of oral proceedings. 9. The Arbitral Tribunals have elected not to invite comment on the Procedural Request from the Claimants, as they consider it unnecessary in the circumstances. Moreover, the Claimants have not requested an opportunity to reply to the Procedural Request. 10. The relevant provisions of the Claimants 9 September Response, as identified in the Procedural Request, are reproduced below. The Claimants arguments relating to the MFN clause in the German BIT are as follows (see Claimants 9 September Response, para. 25): The Swiss BIT and the Danish BIT do not contain any provisions that (in the words of Article 9(b) of the German BIT) require Swiss investments and Danish investment to be specifically approved by the competent authority [of Zimbabwe] at the time of their admission in order for the Swiss BIT and Danish BIT to apply. In the circumstances, the Swiss BIT and Danish BIT are more favourable than the German BIT. Therefore to the extent that the von Pezold Claimants investments have not been approved for the purpose of Article 9(b) of the German BIT, the von Pezold Claimants invoke the German MFN clauses to rely on the more favourable provisions of the Swiss BIT and Danish BIT, which do not require such approval. 11. The Claimants arguments relating to admissibility are as follows (see Claimants 9 September Response, para. 2): For the reasons stated in paras 30 to 31 below, the issue regarding the approval of the Claimants investments pursuant to Article 9(b) is one of admissibility, not jurisdiction. Therefore there may be an investment for the purpose of the BITs, whether or not it has been approved for the purpose of Article 9(b) of the German BIT. 12. The Claimants arguments relating to estoppel are as follows (see Claimants 9 September Response, para. 80): 4

The Claimants pleaded estoppel in the Surrejoinder in regard to the Approval Objection. The Claimants hereby amend their Surrejoinder pleading on estoppel so that the estoppel argument also applies to the Illegality Objection. In particular, all of the evidence and legal arguments cited in that pleading in regard to estoppel as applied to the Approval Objection are also equally applicable to the Illegality Objection. IV. ANALYSIS 13. The Tribunals do not consider the Claimants 9 September Response to be inconsistent with or contrary to the directions issued to the Parties in Procedural Order No. 7 such that the Tribunal s directions must be re-considered or amended. The arguments in question are clearly responsive to the Respondent s new jurisdictional objections, admitted by the Tribunals in Procedural Order No. 7 and pleaded fully for the first time in the Respondent s Re-Rebutter. The Claimants are entitled to defend those jurisdictional objections, even if this means raising a defence or defences that have not previously been pleaded. This is a consequence of raising new jurisdictional objections at this stage of the proceedings. 14. The Respondent has been afforded ample opportunity to present its case and to defend the Claimants claims. In Procedural Order No. 3, all of the Respondent s challenges to jurisdiction, as pleaded for the first time in the Rejoinder, were admitted. In Procedural Order No. 7, the Respondent was permitted to raise additional jurisdictional objections at an even later stage of the proceedings, was given an opportunity to present those objections cogently in a supplemental pleading to its Rebutter, and was given a right of reply to the Claimants 9 September Response. The Respondent now seeks additional pages for this last submission to expand on how, in its view, certain cases cited in its Reply in response to the arguments raised by the Claimants in their 9 September 2013 Response enlighten the debate between the Parties in respect of the Respondent s jurisdictional objections. 15. The Tribunals are not persuaded that it is necessary or appropriate at this stage to re-open the directions set out in Procedural Order No. 7 so as to afford the Respondent additional 5

pages to plead its reply to the Claimants 9 September Response. The Respondent s Procedural Request is therefore denied. 16. The Tribunals are of the view that in so denying the Procedural Request, the Respondent s right to be heard is not in any way impinged. In addition to the multiple opportunities afforded to the Respondent to plead its jurisdictional objections in relation to Article 9(a) and 9(b) of the German BIT and Article 2 of the Swiss BIT in writing, the Respondent is also entitled to make submissions on both law and evidence on the record in respect of these objections during the oral hearing, scheduled to commence on 28 October 2013, and in any post-hearing procedures that may be agreed by the Parties and the Tribunals or decided by the Tribunals. 17. The Tribunals note the Respondent s reservation of right to develop its subsidiary position (which is not part of the present request) that Claimants new arguments be excluded. As the Tribunals are not at this time seized of such a request, it shall not be considered further here. V. THE ARBITRAL TRIBUNALS DECISIONS 18. The Respondent s Procedural Request is dismissed. 19. There shall be no order as to costs. Dated as of 25 September 2013 Signed on behalf of the Arbitral Tribunals L. Yves Fortier, C.C., Q.C. President 6