not over yet
Pacific Wildcat Resources receives ICSID ruling
2018-10-25 12:15 ET - News Release Shares issued 295,131,981
Mr. Don O'Sullivan reports
PACIFIC WILDCAT ANNOUNCES ICSID ARBITRATION DECISION
Further to its press release dated Oct. 5, 2018, Pacific Wildcat Resources Corp. has received the decision from the tribunal appointed to hear the claim against the Republic of Kenya. Disappointingly, the tribunal's decision was not in favour of Pacific Wildcat Resources.
Pacific Wildcat Resources is considering grounds for a possible annulment application. The company will keep shareholders updated on any progress regarding this decision.
The Origin of the Annulment Provision 7. The grounds for annulment in the ICSID Convention derive from the 1953 United Nations International Law Commission Draft Convention on Arbitral Procedure (“ILC Draft”), which was an effort to codify existing international law on arbitral procedure in State-toState arbitration. 6 The ILC recognized that the finality of an award is an essential feature 5 For a summary of steps in drafting the Convention, see ICSID, History of the ICSID Convention: Documents Concerning the Origin and the Formulation of the Convention on the Settlement of Investment Disputes between States and Nationals of Other States Vol. I-IV (1970) (“History”), Vol. I, 2-10. 6 See Documents of the Fifth Session Including the Report of the Commission to the General Assembly, [1953] 2 Yearbook of the International Law Commission 211, U.N. Doc. A/CN.4/SER.A/1953/Add.1 (“1953 ILC Yearbook II”) (Article 30 of the Draft Convention on Arbitral Procedure); Aron Broches, “Observations on the 3 of arbitral practice, but also recognized that there was a need for “exceptional remedies calculated to uphold the judicial character of the award as well as the will of the parties as a source of the jurisdiction of the tribunal.” 7 It thus “sought to reconcile finality of the award with the need to prevent flagrant cases of excess of jurisdiction and injustice.” 8 During its deliberations, the ILC decided that no appeal against an arbitral award should be allowed, but that the validity of an award might be challenged “within rigidly fixed limits.” 9 An independent body, the International Court of Justice, would rule on whether a challenge should lead to the annulment of the award. 10 8. The provision in the ILC Draft read as follows: (1) The validity of an award may be challenged by either party on one or more of the following grounds: (a) That the tribunal has exceeded its powers; (b) That there was corruption on the part of a member of the tribunal; (c) That there has been a serious departure from a fundamental rule of procedure, including failure to state the reasons for the award. 11 9. During its deliberations, the ILC debated the scope of specific grounds, including whether an excess of jurisdiction might warrant annulment, while misapplication of the law would not. 12 Ultimately, the ILC Draft made no attempt to define what conduct each ground would cover, with the exception of the express reference to the “failure to state the reasons for the award” as an example of a serious departure from a fundamental rule of procedure. 13 |