{"id":2416,"date":"2013-01-14T06:44:45","date_gmt":"2013-01-14T12:44:45","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/itn.mattrock.ca\/?p=2416"},"modified":"2017-06-16T15:26:59","modified_gmt":"2017-06-16T20:26:59","slug":"counterclaims-by-states-in-investment-arbitration-2","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.iisd.org\/itn\/2013\/01\/14\/counterclaims-by-states-in-investment-arbitration-2\/","title":{"rendered":"Counterclaims by States in Investment Arbitration"},"content":{"rendered":"<p style=\"text-align: left;\" align=\"center\">It is quite common in investment arbitration for the respondent State to include in its defense to treaty claims one or more criticisms of the investor\u2019s underlying conduct. Such \u201ccounterattacks\u201d may include arguments that the investment was illegal from the start, that its operations in due course violated local law, or that the investor breached its direct obligations to the State under a contract. Yet while such arguments feature prominently in State defenses, they are rarely framed as counterclaims seeking affirmative relief. The reason may lie in an instinctive preference by States to pursue any affirmative claims in their own courts. But it may also lie in perceived limits to the jurisdiction of international tribunals to hear State counterclaims. The perception that the institution of investment arbitration is limited to a one-sided presentation of claims, rather than a mutual airing and balancing of claims by both parties, has led to broader criticism of the system.<\/p>\n<p>Two recent <span class='tooltipsall tooltipsincontent classtoolTips18'>ICSID<\/span> decisions, reaching entirely different conclusions on the issue of jurisdiction over State counterclaims (<i>Spyridon Roussalis v. Romania<a title=\"\" href=\"#_ftn1\"><b>[1]<\/b><\/a><\/i> and <i>Goetz v. Burundi<a title=\"\" href=\"#_ftn2\"><b>[2]<\/b><\/a><\/i>), suggest a need to revisit this issue in a more systematic way. This essay touches briefly on certain jurisprudential and policy factors that may explain the divergent results and frame future cases for further analysis.<\/p>\n<p>First, by way of background, until recently very few cases squarely confronted the issue of jurisdiction over State counterclaims. In some early cases, counterclaim jurisdiction was founded on contract rather than a treaty,<a title=\"\" href=\"#_ftn3\">[3]<\/a> and the issue was therefore uncomplicated, since contracts generally allow either party to assert claims for breach. In other cases, tribunals found it unnecessary to address the jurisdictional issue head on.<a title=\"\" href=\"#_ftn4\">[4]<\/a> One early tribunal that did consider these issues carefully was <i>Saluka Investments B.V. v. Czech Republic<\/i>, which found that in principle counterclaims could be heard under a treaty that referred broadly to arbitration of \u201call disputes \u2026 concerning an investment\u201d and incorporated the <span class='tooltipsall tooltipsincontent classtoolTips3'>UNCITRAL<\/span> Rules, which themselves directly contemplate counterclaims.<a title=\"\" href=\"#_ftn5\">[5]<\/a> However, the import of this ruling was significantly limited by two other findings: first, that the tribunal could not hear counterclaims based on breach of a State contract that had its own mandatory dispute resolution clause; and second, that it could only hear counterclaims arising directly as a consequence of the claimant\u2019s having made an investment, not based on general obligations of law applicable to everyone within Czech territory. These two caveats largely swamped the general observation about counterclaims under the treaty.<\/p>\n<p>The <i>Roussalis <\/i>and <i>Goetz <\/i>decisions have now revived the issue, by expressly considering the ability of States to pursue counterclaims at ICSID under BITs. The tribunals differed in result, with the majority in <i>Roussalis<\/i> (Andrea Giardina and Bernard Hanotiau) rejecting jurisdiction over a strong dissent by Michael Reisman, and the unanimous tribunal in <i>Goetz<\/i> (Gilbert Guillaume, Jean-Denis Bredin and Ahmed El-Kosheri) upholding jurisdiction over counterclaims. The different rulings have engendered debate, both as a strict doctrinal matter involving the sources of consent to State counterclaims in investment arbitration, and as implicating a broader policy debate about the fundamental objectives of investment arbitration.<\/p>\n<p>Because the policy debate lurks not far beneath the doctrinal debate, it is worth bringing it front and center, before examining the more complex issues of consent. First, what are the reasons to allow counterclaims by States? There are several. It may lead to efficiency, to the centralization of inquiry and the avoidance of duplication, all factors that Professor Reisman emphasized in his <i>Roussalis<\/i> dissent, where he argued that these are \u201cthe sorts of transaction costs which counterclaim and set-off procedures work to avoid.\u201d It may avoid inconsistent results in different fora that can engender confusion for the parties and create threats to the legitimacy of the system. It can avoid the sort of impasses that result from anti-suit injunctions and anti-anti-suit injunctions against parallel proceedings, such as have plagued (for example) the many chapters of <i>Chevron v. Ecuador<\/i>. And it could avoid the irony of a State having moved so far towards acceptance of international arbitration that it embraces it as an alternative to its own national courts, only to be confronted by an investor (who selected arbitration over those local courts for its own claims) insisting on local court exclusivity for the State\u2019s corresponding claims. Professor Reisman in <i>Roussalis<\/i> criticized the majority for \u201cdirecting the respondent State to pursue its claims in its own courts where the very investor who had sought a forum outside the state apparatus is now constrained to become the defendant.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>On the other hand, there are important policy reasons also for restricting counterclaims by States in investment arbitration. Since State claims are more likely to arise from concession contracts than <span class='tooltipsall tooltipsincontent classtoolTips63'>BIT<\/span> obligations (treaties generally do not impose any direct obligations on investors), counterclaims may be seen as an end-run around carefully negotiated contractual dispute resolution clauses. Counterclaims may also embroil tribunals, even more than they are already, in disputes governed solely by local law rather than international law, creating a potential crisis for the legitimacy of tribunals which can claim no greater expertise on such matters than national courts. Finally, extensive use of counterclaims could chill investors from invoking international arbitration against States, and thus potentially defeat the broader goal of BITs to reassure investors by providing an agreed forum for their own claims if and when aggrieved.<\/p>\n<p>The doctrinal debate about sources of consent to State counterclaims has played out, importantly, against this complex policy debate. The first doctrinal question is whether it is sufficient for jurisdiction that both parties have consented to arbitrate under the ICSID Rules.\u00a0 For this question, it is necessary to unpack the dense text of <span class='tooltipsall tooltipsincontent classtoolTips1'>ICSID Convention<\/span> Article 46,<a title=\"\" href=\"#_ftn6\">[6]<\/a> which couples a mandatory \u201cshall\u201d (\u201cthe Tribunal shall \u2026 determine any \u2026 counterclaims\u201d) with a series of prerequisites (\u201cexcept as the parties otherwise agree,\u201d \u201carising directly out of the subject matter of the dispute,\u201d \u201cprovided they are within the scope of the consent of the parties\u201d and \u201cprovided they \u2026 are otherwise within the jurisdiction of the Centre\u201d). The recent decisions have focused mainly on one of these requirements: that the counterclaims \u201care within the scope of the consent of the parties.\u201d For Professor Reisman (dissenting in <i>Roussalis<\/i>)<a title=\"\" href=\"#_ftn7\">[7]<\/a> and for the <i>Goetz<\/i> tribunal,<a title=\"\" href=\"#_ftn8\">[8]<\/a> the investor\u2019s consent to ICSID was sufficient to imply a consent to counterclaims; there was no need to locate additional or affirmative consent in the underlying BIT. But while this approach may be satisfying from a policy perspective, it arguably is not consistent with Article 46\u2019s own reference to \u201cwithin the scope of consent\u201d as an <i>extrinsic<\/i> precondition to the tribunal\u2019s hearing counterclaims. It is worth recalling the bedrock notion that States\u2019 ratification of the Convention does not itself provide their consent to jurisdiction over any particular dispute; rather, consent for any particular claim must be sourced to a writing other than the Convention, such as a treaty, contract, or national legislation. If that is the case for the investor\u2019s claims, why not also for the State\u2019s counterclaims? Stated otherwise, if Article 46 itself provided that consent, then its incorporated requirement of consent (\u201cprovided they are within the scope of consent\u201d) would be entirely circular and extraneous.<\/p>\n<p>In this sense, the <i>Roussalis<\/i> majority\u2019s conclusion that a claimant\u2019s mere filing at ICSID is insufficient in and of itself to create consent to counterclaims is more intellectually robust; the majority reasoned that \u201cthe scope of the consent\u201d of the parties referenced in Article 46 must be determined by reference to instruments external to the Convention, such as by the dispute resolution clause contained in the BIT. And certainly, if we examine the different BITs at play in the two recent cases, the differing treaty language provides a more satisfying explanation for the divergent results. The Greece-Romania BIT in <i>Roussalis<\/i> provided in its Article 9 that \u201cdisputes between an investor\u2026and the other Contracting Party concerning <i>an obligation of the latter<\/i> under this Agreement, in relation to <i>an investment of the former<\/i>, shall if possible be settled,\u201d or \u201c<i>the investor concerned<\/i> may submit the dispute\u201d to arbitration (emphasis added).\u00a0 The majority found this was a narrow offer to arbitrate only investor claims, not a consent to arbitrate State counterclaims\u2014 and that it covered only obligations \u201cunder this Agreement\u201d (<i>i.e. <\/i>ones imposed on States), not obligations imposed on investors under local law or contract. By contrast, Article 8(1)(b) of the Belgium-Burundi BIT in <i>Goetz<\/i> covered disputes concerning the interpretation or application of any investment authorization granted by host State authorities; the tribunal noted that Burundi\u2019s claims about a bank\u2019s alleged noncompliance with its operating certificate fell within this definition.\u00a0 Article 8(5) of the BIT apparently also referred to national law as well as international law.<\/p>\n<p>For future cases, however, the text of the relevant BIT may not be sufficient to answer all questions regarding jurisdiction over State counterclaims. Contractual dispute resolution clauses may be equally relevant, and could function in one of two ways.\u00a0 First, a clause could be an independent source of consent to counterclaims notwithstanding a <i>narrow<\/i> BIT clause:\u00a0 even if the BIT has a consent clause framed as narrowly as the one in <i>Roussalis<\/i>, if a concession contract stipulates that claims for breach may be presented to ICSID, that would constitute an independent source of consent, along the lines of the two early Guinea cases addressed above (<i>MINE<\/i> and <i>Atlantic Triton<\/i>). But equally, a contract clause could function as a potential \u201cagreement otherwise\u201d within the language of ICSID Convention Article 46, notwithstanding a <i>broad<\/i> BIT clause; even if a BIT covers \u201call disputes relating to investments,\u201d which could be seen as reflecting consent to State counterclaims brought under local law, if a concession contract sends contractual claims exclusively to another forum, then arguably this would be a specific \u201cagreement otherwise\u201d precluding that particular class of counterclaims, notwithstanding the broader BIT consent to counterclaims more generally. This was what <i>Saluka<\/i> held back in 2004, with regard to counterclaims arising directly out of a Share Purchase Agreement. In addition to contractual clauses, future cases also may have to examine issues of possible waiver or possible ad hoc consent to counterclaims. In principle, nothing in Article 46 requires that the investor\u2019s consent to counterclaims appear in the same instrument as the State\u2019s consent to the investor\u2019s claims. After all, consent without privity is a hallmark of ICSID arbitration.<\/p>\n<p>An alternate solution lies, of course, in the development of treaty language expressly to address counterclaim jurisdiction. If future jurisprudence\u2014based on interpretations of Article 46 and varying BIT or contract language\u2014does not reliably permit State counterclaims to be resolved in a single efficient forum with investors\u2019 claims arising from the same subject matter, then States in due course may reform the system to clarify their intent that this occur. This could take the form either of interpretative notes about existing treaty text, or more likely the negotiation of specific provisions about counterclaims in new treaties. Some countries are already beginning to contemplate such provisions, including in proposed model BIT language that would directly impose certain substantive obligations on investors and expressly reference the possibility of State claims against investors for breach of such obligations. In some models currently under review, the investor would have to submit, as a condition precedent to its presenting its own claims, an instrument confirming its advance consent to any counterclaims the State may wish to assert. It remains to be seen, of course, whether such ideas are accepted in any new treaties, and if so whether investors themselves embrace the structure, or alternatively consider it a deterrent to structuring investment through vehicles falling within the scope of the new treaty language. That is a subject for another day.<\/p>\n<p><em>Author<\/em>: Jean Kalicki is a partner at Arnold &amp; Porter LLP focusing on international arbitration as both arbitrator and counsel.<\/p>\n<hr align=\"left\" size=\"1\" width=\"33%\" \/>\n<div>\n<div>\n<p><a title=\"\" href=\"#_ftnref1\">[1]<\/a> ICSID Case No. ARB\/06\/1 (7 Dec. 2011).<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<p><a title=\"\" href=\"#_ftnref2\">[2]<\/a> ICSID Case No. ARB\/01\/2 (21 June 2012).<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<p><a title=\"\" href=\"#_ftnref3\">[3]<\/a> <i>See, e.g., MINE v. Guinea<\/i>, ICSID Case No. ARB\/84\/4 (6 January 1988) (awarding Guinea damages from the investor\u2019s initiation of AAA arbitration in violation of an agreement to resolve disputes before ICSID); <i>Atlantic Triton Co., Ltd. v. Guinea<\/i>, ICSID Case No. ARB\/84\/1 (21 April 1986) (rejecting Guinea\u2019s counterclaim on the merits).<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<p><a title=\"\" href=\"#_ftnref4\">[4]<\/a> <i>See, e.g., Alex Genin et al. v. Estonia<\/i>, ICSID Case No. ARB\/99\/2 (25 June 2001) (finding that evidence did not support Estonia\u2019s counterclaim, without expressly addressing the issue of jurisdiction); <i>Gustav F.W. Hamester GmbH &amp; Co. v. Ghana<\/i>, ICSID Case No. ARB\/07\/24 (18 June 2010) (finding that Ghana had not pursued its counterclaims after listing them in its initial prayer for relief, and therefore that it was unnecessary to determine whether counterclaims would fall within the scope of consent).<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<p><a title=\"\" href=\"#_ftnref5\">[5]<\/a> <i>Saluka<\/i>, Decision on Jurisdiction over the Czech Republic\u2019s Counterclaim (7 May 2004).<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<p><a title=\"\" href=\"#_ftnref6\">[6]<\/a> \u201cExcept as the parties otherwise agree, the Tribunal shall, if requested by a party, determine any incidental or additional claims or counterclaims arising directly out of the subject matter of the dispute provided that they are within the scope of the consent of the parties and are otherwise within the jurisdiction of the Centre.\u201d<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<p><a title=\"\" href=\"#_ftnref7\">[7]<\/a> <i>See Roussalis<\/i> dissent (\u201cWhen the States Parties to a BIT contingently consent \u2026 to ICSID jurisdiction, the consent component of Article 46 is <i>ipso facto<\/i> imported into any ICSID arbitration which an investor then elects to pursue,\u201d so long as the BIT itself does not preclude counterclaims).<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<p><a title=\"\" href=\"#_ftnref8\">[8]<\/a> <i>See Goetz<\/i> \u00b6\u00b6 278-79 (reasoning that by concluding the BIT, Burundi accepted that disputes could be submitted to ICSID arbitration according to the conditions and procedures in the Convention, including that counterclaims would be evaluated under the conditions in Article 46; by accepting the offer, Goetz in turn consented; therefore jurisdiction exists <i>regardless<\/i> of whether the BIT contains any provision affirmatively providing jurisdiction over counterclaims).<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<script type=\"text\/javascript\"> toolTips('.classtoolTips1','Convention on the Settlement of Investment Disputes between States and Nationals of Other States'); <\/script><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> toolTips('.classtoolTips3','United Nations Commission on International Trade Law'); <\/script><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> toolTips('.classtoolTips18','International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes'); <\/script><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> toolTips('.classtoolTips35','Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership<!--more-->'); <\/script><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> toolTips('.classtoolTips36','Partenariat \u00e9conomique r\u00e9gional global'); <\/script><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> toolTips('.classtoolTips37','Asociaci\u00f3n Econ\u00f3mica Integral Regional'); <\/script><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> toolTips('.classtoolTips63','Bilateral investment treaty'); <\/script><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> toolTips('.classtoolTips65','East African community'); <\/script><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> toolTips('.classtoolTips67','Energy Charter Treaty'); <\/script><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> toolTips('.classtoolTips72','Investment Court System'); <\/script><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> toolTips('.classtoolTips76','multilateral investment court'); <\/script><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> toolTips('.classtoolTips100','investissement direct \u00e9tranger'); <\/script><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> toolTips('.classtoolTips104','responsabilit\u00e9 sociale des entreprises'); <\/script><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> toolTips('.classtoolTips106','asociaci\u00f3n p\u00fablica-privada'); <\/script><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> toolTips('.classtoolTips114','Sistema de Tribunales de Inversiones'); <\/script><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> toolTips('.classtoolTips116','European Commission'); <\/script><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> toolTips('.classtoolTips118','Union europ\u00e9enne'); <\/script><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> toolTips('.classtoolTips119','Uni\u00f3n Europea'); <\/script>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>It is quite common in investment arbitration for the respondent State to include in its defense to treaty claims one or more criticisms of the investor\u2019s underlying conduct. Yet while such arguments feature prominently in State defenses, they are rarely framed as counterclaims seeking affirmative relief. The reason may lie in an instinctive preference by States to pursue any affirmative claims in their own courts. But it may also lie in perceived limits to the jurisdiction of international tribunals to hear State counterclaims.<\/p>\n<p>Two recent <span class='tooltipsall tooltipsincontent classtoolTips18'>ICSID<\/span> decisions have reached entirely different conclusions on the issue of jurisdiction over State counterclaims. This essay touches briefly on certain jurisprudential and policy factors that may explain the divergent results and frame future cases for further analysis.<br \/>\n<script type=\"text\/javascript\"> toolTips('.classtoolTips18','International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes'); <\/script><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> toolTips('.classtoolTips63','Bilateral investment treaty'); <\/script><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> toolTips('.classtoolTips65','East African community'); <\/script><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> toolTips('.classtoolTips72','Investment Court System'); <\/script><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> toolTips('.classtoolTips114','Sistema de Tribunales de Inversiones'); <\/script><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> toolTips('.classtoolTips116','European Commission'); <\/script><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> toolTips('.classtoolTips118','Union europ\u00e9enne'); <\/script><script type=\"text\/javascript\"> toolTips('.classtoolTips119','Uni\u00f3n Europea'); <\/script><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":2427,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[234],"tags":[1987,1924],"class_list":["post-2416","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-analysis","tag-counterclaims","tag-icsid"],"acf":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.iisd.org\/itn\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/2416","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.iisd.org\/itn\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.iisd.org\/itn\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.iisd.org\/itn\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.iisd.org\/itn\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=2416"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.iisd.org\/itn\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/2416\/revisions"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.iisd.org\/itn\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/2427"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.iisd.org\/itn\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=2416"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.iisd.org\/itn\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=2416"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.iisd.org\/itn\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=2416"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}