B. v. A. and ad-hoc Arbitral Tribunal c/o Daniel Wehrli, Esq. [The Two Call Options] - Swiss International Arbitration Law Reports (SIALR) - 2007 Vol. 1 Nos. 1 & 2
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26 pages
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Published:
December, 2007
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Originally from:
Swiss International Arbitration Law Reports - 2007 Vol. 1 Nos. 1 & 2
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Headnote
An arbitrator does not exceed his jurisdiction by determining
preliminary questions with respect to the enforceability of the contracts
in dispute.
A decision to stay arbitration proceedings is discretionary unless the
stay is mandated by compelling reasons. A stay of proceedings, whether
ordered or denied by an arbitrator, does not in principle affect the parties’
right to present their case.
An arbitrator is not bound in principle to seek the parties’ views as to
the legal principles he will apply to the merits of the dispute; however, an
arbitrator is bound to do so if he intends to base his decision on a
principle of law that was not relied upon by either party and of which
neither party could possibly have expected to be applied in the award.
Summary of the Decision
B. entered into two contracts with A., obtaining call options for the
purchase of equity in C. Upon B.’s exercise of the call options, A.
challenged their validity as well as the validity of the underlying
contracts. B. then brought two separate arbitration proceedings against
A. In the arbitration at issue here, B. sought an award ordering specific
performance or damages in the alternative. The arbitrator dismissed the
action holding that the object and purpose of one of the contracts sued
upon were illegal and that the claimant’s beneficial owner had acted
against provisions of Russian criminal law. B. then sought to have this
award set aside claiming inter alia (1) that the arbitrators had exceeded
their jurisdiction and (2) that they had breached the petitioner’s right to
present its case (i) by refusing to stay proceedings and (ii) by relying in
their final award on legal provisions, the application of which could not
possibly have been anticipated.
The Federal Supreme Court held: (1) an arbitral tribunal called upon to
grant specific performance of a contract did not exceed its jurisdiction by
finding that provisions of criminal law had been breached and that the
contract sued upon was illegal, as such a finding determines only a
preliminary question with respect to the enforceability of the contracts in
dispute; (2) a decision to stay proceedings is within the arbitrator’s