X. SA v. Y. SA [The Spanish LNG Storage Tank] No. 4A_254/2010 - Swiss International Arbitration Law Reports (SIALR) - 2010 Vol. 4 Nos. 1 & 2
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November, 2013
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Swiss International Arbitration Law Reports 2010 Vol. 4 Nos. 1 and 2
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No. 31
X. SA v. Y. SA
[The Spanish LNG Storage Tank]
No. 4A_254/2010
Headnote
■ Preliminary awards, as opposed to partial awards, cannot be
directly challenged before the Federal Supreme Court on the basis
that the parties’ right to present their case has been breached
(confirmation of previous decisions).
■ A petitioner cannot complain that an arbitrator based his decision
on a legal ground which was unforeseeable for the parties and
therefore breached the parties’ right to present their case when the
arbitrator has examined whether an agreement was a sham of his
own motion in a case in which evidence conclusively pointed to a
sham transaction.
Summary of the Decision
X. SA (a company incorporated in Belgium) and Y. SA (a company
incorporated in Spain) entered into a Business Consultancy Agreement
(“the 2001 BCA”) under the terms of which Y. SA undertook to provide
services to X. SA so as to enable X. SA to be selected as a contracting
party by V. SA. V. SA. was about to build a storage tank for liquefied
natural gas (LNG) in Spain. Y. SA in addition undertook to assist X. SA
in the performance of the contract to be concluded with V. SA. In due
course X. SA transferred its LNG business to X.A. GmbH. V. SA finally
concluded a construction contract with a company of the X. Group, of
which it informed X. SA. Later on, X.A. GmbH and the Dutch company
W. BV entered into a Business Consultancy Agreement (“the 2003
BCA”), almost identical to the 2001 BCA. At the beginning of April
2004 Y. SA contacted X. SA to complain of the fact that it had no longer
received any information with respect to the payment of the commission
owed under the 2001 BCA. As a result, Y. SA brought arbitration
proceedings against X. SA. The ICC appointed a sole arbitrator in order
to decide the dispute. The sole arbitrator made a partial award in which
he declared that he had jurisdiction to hear the dispute and dismissed the
objections relating to Y. SA’s standing to sue as well as X. SA’s standing
to be sued. The arbitrator then made a final award in which he found that
Y. SA had been instrumental in the award of the construction contract to
X. SA’s subsidiary, but he dismissed Y. SA’s claims for damages.