Swiss Federal Tribunal Renders Ruling on the Meaning of Public Policy in International Commercial Arbitration - WAMR 2006 Vol. 17, No. 7
Author(s):
Charles H. Poncet
Page Count:
4 pages
Media Description:
PDF from World Arbitration and Mediation Report (WAMR) 2006 Vol. 17, No. 7
Published:
July, 2012
Jurisdictions:
Practice Areas:
Author Detail:
Dr. Charles Poncet, The author is a partner at ZPG Geneva and is a member of the Advisory Board, World Arbitration and Mediation Report.
Description:
Originally from: World Arbitration and Mediation Report (WAMR)
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News Abroad
Swiss Federal Tribunal Renders Ruling on the Meaning of Public
Policy in International Commercial Arbitration
By Dr. Charles Poncet∗
Introduction
The judgment issued by the Supreme Court of Switzerland
(“Federal Tribunal”) on March 8, 2006 in the case of Tensacciai S.P.A v.
Freyssinet Terra Armata S.R.L will be the object of praise and criticism
for a long time. The original decision is in French. While not yet
published, it can be downloaded from the website of the Federal Tribunal.
In view of Switzerland’s traditional importance as a venue for
international arbitrations, it is believed that an English translation can be
of interest to both practitioners and scholars in this field, as the issue
addressed by the court was nothing less than the search for the perpetually
elusive answer to a complex question: what exactly should practitioners of
international arbitration in Switzerland understand when they hear the
buzz words “public policy”? Is it Swiss public policy, international public
policy, and, if so, as defined by Swiss legal theories and concepts, or by
some broader measurement? Is it to be derived from some as yet
undefined lex mercatoria concept of public policy or from some other
source?
The case originated from a contract entered in 1998 between two
Italian companies, Freyssinet Terra Armata S.R. L (“Freyssinet”) and
Tensacciai S.P.A (“Tensacciai”). Governed by Italian law, the contract
bound Freyssinet and Tensacciai to submit joint bids for the use of
specific technologies in the construction of two bridges on the new Milan-
Naples high-speed railway line. More importantly, Freyssinet and
Tensacciai undertook to refrain from any separate agreements with other
companies and from bidding individually in answer to the tenders. The
contract contained an arbitration clause providing for ICC arbitration with
venue in Lausanne (Switzerland). A dispute arose when one of the
companies was awarded only part of the work but not the other. A panel
of two Italian party-appointed arbitrators and a Swiss chairman issued an
award in French on September 12, 2005, ordering the payment of damages
for breach of the obligation not to engage in separate bids or agreements
with other companies.
Tensacciai appealed to the Federal Tribunal, seeking the
annulment of the award as inconsistent with and contrary to public policy
because European and Italian competition laws had been disregarded to
the extent that they would render null and void the agreement to refrain
from competing in a similar process. In the appellate proceedings, both
parties were represented by highly qualified practitioners of international
arbitration. No hearing was held by the Federal Tribunal because in