Russian decree shows the country’s courts are still broadly biased against arbitration
On 2 September the Supreme Arbitrazh Court of the Russian Federation -
the highest judicial authority for state commercial courts - made
public an important decree in the case of Russian Telephonic Company v
Sony-Ericsson Mobile Communications Rus, by which it held that an
asymmetrical arbitration clause is invalid.
An asymmetrical
arbitration clause ensures that disputes must be referred to
arbitration, but gives only one of the parties the option to disregard
the arbitration clause and commence proceedings in a court of law.
The court’s decree held that an asymmetrical arbitration clause is
invalid on the premise that it violates the procedural rights of one
party as well as the adversarial principle and the principle of the
parties’ equality.
It also made it clear that this legal position should be binding on lower courts when they are deciding similar cases.
As
a result, all asymmetrical clauses may be declared invalid by the
Russian courts, and Western parties to contracts containing such clauses
will have to litigate before the country’s courts or, if they
arbitrate, they may face problems enforcing arbitral awards in Russia.
Asymmetrical
clauses, in which the right to litigate in court usually rests with the
bank but not the borrower, are widespread and a common feature of loan
and other funding agreements in the country.
The general rule of
thumb in Russia is that a case is tried by the court based at the
location of the defendant. This means that if an asymmetrical clause in a
loan agreement is invalid and the loan was extended to a company based
in, say, Vladivostok (where the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation forum
is currently taking place), banks must be prepared to sue the debtor in
the arbitrazh courts based there.
The trouble is that Vladivostok
is a nine-hour flight from Moscow and the aforementioned decree raises
the question of how comfortable Western banks will be appearing before
courts in what is seen as a remote part of Russia.
Since the
collapse of the Soviet Union Russia has pursued an active
anti-arbitration stance, although the situation has improved slightly in
recent years - for example, the Supreme Arbitrazh Court has delivered a
number of landmark decisions in which it has supported international
arbitration.
Moreover, arbitration in Russia has traditionally
enjoyed a friendly hearing from the Constitutional Court, which has
recently overruled a practice of the commercial courts that was based on
the assertion that real estate disputes fall within the exclusive
jurisdiction of state courts and therefore, allegedly, could not be
submitted to arbitration.
While there has been some softening of
approach generally, the most recent decree underscores the fact that
Russian courts are continuing to display a broadly anti-arbitration
bias.
Source: thelawyer
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