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In  Molecular Dynamics, Ltd., SDBM Limited, & Chauncey Capital Corp. v. Spectrum Dynamics Medical Limited & Biosensors International Group Ltd., No. 22-5167, 2024 WL 3523414 (S.D.N.Y. July 23, 2024), the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York refused to vacate a Swiss arbitration award, finding that federal courts lack jurisdiction to vacate the award.


U.S. courts generally do not possess subject matter jurisdiction to vacate foreign arbitral awards. This principle is grounded in international arbitration law and practice, which typically confers the authority to annul or vacate an arbitral award on the courts of the country where the arbitration took place or under whose laws the arbitration was conducted. This approach aligns with the doctrine of territoriality in arbitration, ensuring that the legal framework and judicial oversight of the arbitration process are consistent with the local laws and procedures governing the arbitration.


The Molecular Dynamics court explained that under the New York Convention, a “competent authority” in a country under the laws of which the award is “made” “is said to have primary jurisdiction over the arbitration award," meaning that the state in which, or under the law of which, an award is made, will be free to set aside or modify an award in accordance with its domestic arbitral law and its full panoply of express and implied grounds for relief. Under the New York Convention, all other signatory states become secondary jurisdictions, where "parties can only contest whether that State should enforce the arbitral award." Thus, under the New York Convention, courts in countries with secondary jurisdiction may only decline to enforce an arbitral award, and do so based “only on the limited grounds specified in Article V [of the New York Convention].” This is implemented in the Federal Arbitration Act in Section 207.


The Southern District opened its analysis of respondents' argument that it lacks subject matter jurisdiction to vacate the award by recognizing that the Second Circuit has held in Zeiler v. Deitsch, 500 F.3d 157, 165 n.6 (2d Cir. 2007), that “[n]either the [New York] Convention nor its enabling statute, 9 U.S.C. §§ 201-08, grant[s vacatur] power with regard to [awards governed by the New York Convention].” The Seventh and Eleventh Circuits have similar holdings. The Court explained:


Under the New York Convention, only a “competent authority” of the country in which, or under the law of which, an award was made, may vacate or annul the award under domestic law. See N.Y. Conv., art. V(1)(e). Thus, while “courts of a primary jurisdiction may apply their own domestic law” — such as the FAA — “when evaluating an attempt to annul or set aside an arbitral award,” “courts in countries of secondary jurisdiction may refuse enforcement only on the limited grounds specified in Article V.”


The Court then found that Switzerland was the primary jurisdiction in this case because the Arbitration was seated in Switzerland and governed by Swiss law, both procedurally and substantively. The Court rejected petitioners' argument that the United States is the primary jurisdiction because the forum selection clause in an underlying agreement confers jurisdiction to vacate the Swiss awards in U.S. courts. That clause stated that "the seat of the [arbitration] shall be Geneva Switzerland,” and that “on matters concerning the [arbitration], the courts of New York, New York will have exclusive jurisdiction thereupon.” Nevertheless, the Court was not persuaded that this is a proper way to circumvent the New York Convention. Indeed, the Court found that this reading of the forum selection clause contravenes the New York Convention which reserves the power to vacate foreign awards to courts sitting in primary jurisdiction alone. The Court explained that it is not within the parties' power to "expand[] the powers of a court beyond the confines set by the New York Convention," "as there is a 'basic difference between the court's power and the litigant's convenience,' and no contract can convey to the court the 'power to adjudicate' matters which it otherwise could not."


The rationale behind limiting the jurisdiction to vacate arbitral awards to the courts of the seat of arbitration is to maintain coherence and predictability in the arbitration process. When parties choose a specific jurisdiction for arbitration, they implicitly accept the legal and procedural standards of that jurisdiction, including the grounds and procedures for challenging the award. Allowing U.S. courts to vacate foreign arbitral awards would create a risk of conflicting decisions and undermine the stability of the international arbitration system. Instead, U.S. courts focus on the recognition and enforcement of foreign arbitral awards under frameworks such as the New York Convention, which provides a uniform standard for enforcing awards while respecting the jurisdictional boundaries.


In practice, U.S. courts can refuse to enforce a foreign arbitral award on limited grounds, such as if the award violates public policy or if due process was not observed during the arbitration. However, these are exceptions rather than the norm, and they do not equate to a broad authority to vacate the award. By adhering to this jurisdictional limitation, U.S. courts contribute to the global predictability and reliability of the arbitration process, fostering an environment where international parties can resolve disputes with confidence that the agreed-upon legal framework will be respected and enforced.

The Middle District of North Carolina confirmed a Dutch arbitration award, rejecting the respondents' argument that the petition to confirm was untimely because it came more than three years after the award was issued. Although the Fourth Circuit never reached this questions before, the Court explained that the language in the Federal Arbitration Award (FAA) governing foreign arbitral awards is similar to that governing domestic awards, and the Fourth Circuit held that the three-year confirmation window governing domestic awards is permissive rather than mandatory. Sverdrup Corp. v. WHC Constructors, Inc., 989 F.2d 148, 156 (4th Cir. 1993).


The award arises from a dispute related to a Dutch court's 2017 order demanding the transfer of De Nederlandsche Bank N.V.'s shares in Conservatrix to Trier Holding B.V., a Dutch corporation, with Mr. Lindberg, through NIH and NIH Capital, being the ultimate shareholder of Trier. Under European regulation and the Dutch Financial Supervision Act, insurance companies are required to maintain a solvency capital ratio of at least 100%. In March 2019, respondents agreed to maintain Conservatrix's minimum solvency capital ratio at 135%. However, in August 2019, a financial report showed Conservatrix's solvency capital ratio had fallen below the minimum threshold.


In response, Conservatrix initiated summary arbitral proceedings against the respondents before the Netherlands Arbitration Institute, seeking provisional relief to replenish the solvency capital ratio. The arbitral tribunal issued a detailed ruling and arbitral award on January 31, 2020, ordering respondent Trier to replenish the shortfall in Conservatrix's solvency capital ratio to 135%, with core equity contributions, and ordering other respondents to procure Trier's compliance. If they did not comply within 60 days, the tribunal ordered payment of €150 million to Conservatrix. A Dutch court promptly granted leave to enforce the arbitration award in February 2020. Despite subsequent appeals by Trier, including an appeal to the Supreme Court of the Netherlands, the attempts to nullify the award were denied. As of the latest update in March 2022, there has been no action in the main proceeding, indicating a standstill in the legal proceedings. Petitioner filed a petition to confirm the award in the Middle District of North Carolina in October 2023.


Section 207 of the FAA outlines the procedure for confirming foreign arbitration awards, stating that within three years of the award being made, any party to the arbitration may apply to a court for an order confirming the award against any other party. Respondents argue that because the petitioners filed their petition more than three years after the arbitrator entered the award, the petition should be dismissed. However, the Fourth Circuit has interpreted similar language in Section 9 of the FAA differently, finding that the one-year limitation period for domestic arbitrations is permissive rather than mandatory, allowing for confirmation of awards beyond the one-year period to encourage dispute resolution outside of federal court.

Although the Fourth Circuit has not specifically interpreted the three-year language in Section 207, the language in both Section 9 and Section 207 is nearly identical, stating that "any party to the arbitration may apply" to confirm the award within a specified time. At least one other court in the circuit has concluded that the time limitation in Section 207 is also permissive, citing the Fourth Circuit's reasoning in a similar case. Therefore, despite the Petitioners filing their petition more than three years after the arbitrator entered the award, the permissive nature of the three-year period outlined in Section 207 means that it does not serve as a bar to confirming the award beyond the three-year timeframe. Consequently, the Court denied Respondents' motion to dismiss based on a time bar. This holding is similar to that in First Kuwaiti Gen. Trading & Contracting W.L.L. v. Kellogg Brown & Root Int'l, Inc., No. 1:23-MC-1, 2023 WL 6221771, at *4 (E.D. Va. Sept. 22, 2023).


The case is Van Andel et al. v. Lindberg et al., No. 1:23-CV-879, 2024 WL 1860385 (M.D.N.C. Apr. 29, 2024).

On September 6, 2023, the Southern District of New York confirmed the arbitration award held by Telecom Business Solutions, LLC, LATAM Towers, LLC, and AMLQ Holdings Ltd. against Terra Towers Corp., TBS Management S.A., and DT Holdings, Inc.


The respondents in this case sought to vacate the award on four bases: (1) the Tribunal acted in "manifest disregard of law," (2) the Tribunal denied the respondents a full and fair opportunity to be heard, (3) the Tribunal exceeded its authority, and (4) the Tribunal demonstrated "evident partiality." The Court found these arguments to be "without merit."


In rejecting respondents' arguments, the Southern District emphasized that the "manifest disregard of law" basis for vacating an award is a "doctrine of last resort" limited to "exceedingly rare instances where some egregious impropriety on the part of the arbitrators is apparent." Similarly, vacatur under FAA Section 10(a)(3) is limited to those "most egregious error[s] which adversely affect the rights of a party." The Court found that not to be the case here where "[r]espondents had ample opportunity to be heard during the proceedings ... including -- by [r]espondents' own estimation -- 'more than 80 (mostly signle spaced) pages of briefing,' 'more than 1,300 pages of exhibits,' and a three-hour hearing with arguments from both sides." The Court further found that the Tribunal had a "broad grant of authority" and that respondents' claim of bias fails, among other reasons, because they had agreed to abide by the AAA Commercial Arbitration Rules stating that decisions by the ICDR shall be conclusive.


The case is Telecom Business Solution, LLC v. Terra Towers Corp., No. 22-cv-1761 (S.D.N.Y.). Petitioners were represented by David Landman, Gregory Djordjevic, Karherine Michelle Poldneff, and Michael Ungar from Ulmer & Berne LLP, as well as Gregg Weiner, Andrew Simon Todres, Daniel Ward, Ethan Fitzgerald, and Katherine McDonald of Ropes & Gray LLP. Respondents were represented by George Kroup and John Baughman from the Law Offices of John F. Baughman, Jonathan Lupkin and Michael B. Smith of Lupkin PLLC, John Basinger of Saul Ewing Arnstein & Lehr LLP, as well as Luke Jacobs and Juan Jose Rodriguez of Carey Rodrigues Milian, LLP.


The opinion may be downloaded below.










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