Литмир - Электронная Библиотека
Содержание  
A
A

The Working Group prepared the UNCITRAL Model Law on International Commercial Conciliation (2002), the amendments to the UNCITRAL Model Law on International Commercial Arbitration (1985) adopted in 2006, the UNCITRAL Arbitration Rules (as revised in 2010), the UNCITRAL Arbitration Rules (with new Article 1(4) as adopted in 2013), the UNCITRAL Rules on Transparency in Treaty-Based Investor-State Arbitration (effective date 1 April 2014), the Convention on Transparency in Treaty-Based Investor-State Arbitration, also referred to as the “Mauritius Convention on Transparency” (New York, 2014) and the UNCITRAL Notes on Organizing Arbitral Proceedings (2016). Since 2015 the Working Group has considered the topic of enforceability of international commercial settlement agreements resulting from conciliation.

Professor Lebedev participated as a representative of the Russian Federation actively in the work of this Working Group as well as in the deliberations that took place when the products of the Working Group were before the Commission. His interventions were always constructive and balanced. He also had the ability to listen to and to take into account arguments presented by others. His contribution to the achievements of the Working Group was considerable, in particular when the Model Law and the UNCITRAL Arbitration Rules were revised.

3. Professor Lebedev as Сo-arbitrator

From 2004 to 2007 I had the honour and the pleasure to chair an arbitral tribunal where Professor Lebedev was one of the two party-appointed arbitrators. The case became public, since the Claimant brought an action for setting aside the final award before the Svea Court of Appeal.

The case concerned a contract for the purchase and resale of uranium from nuclear weapons from the former Soviet Union. The claimant Globe Nuclear Services and Supply (GNSS) had purchased such uranium from AO Techsnabexport (Tenex) for resale. Tenex was responsible for all of Russia’s exports of uranium products and uranium services and was wholly-owned by the Russian state. GNSS was formed as a joint venture between Tenex and a Swiss company, to support Tenex with marketing and distribution. The ownership of GNSS had since then changed and it was now privately held.

The tribunal found by majority that the circumstances in which the contract between GNSS and Tenex was made were such, that it would having knowledge of these circumstances be inequitable to enforce that contract. Since GNSS was aware of these circumstances when the contract was concluded, the tribunal held that that GNSS was not entitled to rely on that contract and that GNSS’s claim for damages because of breach of contract was not made out. On this ground the tribunal dismissed all GNSS’s claims.

Although the grounds on which the arbitral tribunal eventually dismissed GNSS’s claims from a legal point of view may seem rather simple, several quite complicated legal issues were discussed in the parties’ pleadings. The arbitral tribunal rendered on 31 August 2006 a partial award on liability issues. As Professor Lebedev said in his dissenting opinion with regard to this partial award, the case was a very complicated one in view of numerous arguments and counter-arguments put forward by the parties, and the need to assess a variety of facts and actions taken by them and by other persons and authorities, and to interpret a whole set of documentation and evidence submitted to the arbitral tribunal.

In the partial award the tribunal decided inter alia questions relating to arbitrability, the law applicable to the merits, whether the GNSS-Tenex Contact according to the Agreement between the Government of the United States of America and the Government of the Russian Federation Concerning the Disposition of Highly Enriched Uranium Extracted from Nuclear Weapons required approval of the US and Russian Governments, whether GNSS was entitled to purchase UF6Feed Component from Tenex and whether Tenex was eligible to sell the component to GNSS, whether the termination of sales to GNSS was due to an Act of State and whether liability for force majeure was excluded by the GNSS-Tenex Contract.

After this partial award had been rendered, Tenex submitted new evidence, which had come up in ongoing criminal investigation in Russia and in the United States of America. The tribunal decided in December 2006 to allow this evidence. The Tribunal’s decision to dismiss the Claimant’s claims on the grounds mentioned above was mainly based on the evidence that cane up in the aforementioned investigation and that was presented by Tenex after the above mentioned partial award on liability issues had been rendered.

Given the tribunal’s findings in the final award, the Tribunal did not have to consider GNSS’s request to confirm that the GNSS-Tenex Contract was avoided effective 5 November 2004 or any quantum issues, including the qualification of the Contract. Neither did the Tribunal need to consider Tenex’s arguments that the GNSS-Tenex Contract was invalid by virtue of the Swedish law principle of underlying assumptions, or because of the fact that it violates law or is contrary to good practice (pactum turpe), or as a matter of international public policy.

In its action for setting aside the award before the Svea Court of Appeal GNSS argued that the award should be set aside 1) since the arbitral tribunal addressed and decided a criminal law matter and 2) since the tribunal had exceeded its mandate in seven different respects, each of which was a sufficient ground to set aside the award. In any event, said GNSS, the arbitrators’ conduct in each of those situations (1 and 2) was an irregularity in the course of the proceedings which probably influenced the outcome of the case.

After a detailed review of the allegations made, the Court of Appeal concluded that the arbitral tribunal had not exceeded its mandate and had not committed any procedural errors. Further, since GNSS had not, during the arbitral proceedings, objected in enough detail with regard to some of the alleged irregularities, they were, in any event, time-barred from invoking them in support of their claim. Therefore the Svea Court of Appeal dismissed GNSS’s claim that the award shall be declared invalid or set aside. The Court did not grant leave to appeal its judgment.

To work together with Professor Lebedev in this case was a very pleasant experience. Although we in the above-mentioned partial award did not agree on all issues and Professor Lebedev wrote a dissenting opinion, this did in no way adversely affect the good spirit of cooperation that prevailed in the arbitral tribunal. On the contrary, we respected each other’s views also when we could not reach an agreement.

4. Other occasions to meet professor Lebedev

In addition to working with Professor Lebedev in UNCITRAL and as an arbitrator, I had the pleasure to meet Professor Lebedev on many other more informal occasions. We met, inter alia, on some ICCA congresses and Professor Lebedev visited Finland many times and gave there also some lectures on international commercial arbitration in Russia. He also visited my home in Helsinki for an informal dinner during which we discussed mainly other things than arbitration or other legal issues, inter alia the history of Russia and Finland. We were both wondering whether historical studies could ever be totally objective.

Further, I also had the pleasure to participate as a speaker together with him and some other Russian and Finnish lawyers, among others Professor Nina Vilkova and Professor Hannu Honka in a seminar on international commercial arbitration which took place in Kaliningrad.

These more informal events gave me an opportunity to get to know Professor Lebedev better also as a private person and not only as a lawyer. He was not only a brilliant lawyer but also a very cultivated person very knowledgeable, inter alia in history and art.

13
{"b":"626661","o":1}