Offshore Floating Production
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CHAPTER 13
Dispute resolution
A Introduction
13.1 The performance of an FPSO charter is bound to give rise to many circumstances in which the Company and the FP Contractor may disagree. The FPSO must be procured, installed and operated to precise standards in conditions that may be untested and uncertain. Remuneration may be dependent on achieving exacting targets, and circumstances may change from the date the charter was agreed and the date of performance. That is, of course, the whole reason for this book. However, the parties to an FPSO charter cannot afford the time and energy that may be needed for each potential dispute to be resolved entirely to both parties’ satisfaction – the priority is to continue with production. This requires a collaborative relationship. We consider in the relational nature of an FPSO charter. Therefore, although disagreements cannot be avoided, both parties have a common interest in avoiding disputes, and, where disputes arise, resolving those as quickly and efficiently as possible. That said, when significant problems do arise, the consequences may be so great that formal legal proceedings cannot be avoided. The purpose of this chapter is to set out the nature of the variety of dispute resolution procedures available to the parties to an FPSO charter in order that they may consider which is most suitable for any disputes that may arise.B Dispute resolution procedures
(i) Expert determination
13.2 There are two roles of an ‘expert’ in English legal proceedings. The first is that of an independent witness of opinion in formal legal claims.1 The second role is that of a ‘valuer’, i.e. an independent person appointed to make a determination which is finalPage 201
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(ii) Adjudication
13.8 Under the English Housing Grants, Construction and Regeneration Act 1996,5 the parties to a construction contract are required to refer a dispute to resolution by an adjudicator; a right to adjudication that the parties cannot contract out of. Each party will be required to provide its submissions and evidence according to an expedited timetable set by the adjudicator,6 who will make a decision based on the contract terms and their own experience of similar disputes. The process has similarities to the expert determination procedure referred to earlier, but is more intense, requiring more engagement of each party in persuading the adjudicator of its case, and, crucially, the adjudicator’s determination is final and binding only insofar as either party does not challenge that determination either in arbitration, if that is what the contract provides, or before the courts. Thus, it is an interim, albeit enforceable, determination, designed primarily to allow a contractor to overcome quickly objections to its claims for payment and schedule extension, but it may not be a final determination. The expectation is that, in most cases, if the Company,Page 203
(iii) Mediation
13.10 This is an important and often undervalued form of dispute resolution. It may be used for resolution of disputes under relational contracts where the parties may place a higher priority on resolving their dispute quickly and with certainty rather than to allow it to damage their ongoing relationship and absorb energy and expense.7 The parties agree to appoint a nominated person as mediator. This is not a form of expert determination, as the mediator is not required to make a decision on the competing arguments. For the same reason, this is not a form of adjudication. The role of the mediator is nothing more than to find ways to encourage and entice the parties to find common ground and negotiate a settlement. In other words, it is a structured and disciplined form of senior management negotiation (see later in this chapter). 13.11 Mediation is not a forum for each party to argue the strengths of its case and the weakness of the other’s. It is a method of fathoming the importance and value to each party of a settlement and arriving at a position where the terms are acceptable to both. Each party is required to set aside time and to attend the mediation with a delegate from senior management with full authority to settle the dispute there and then. It works, provided both parties have reached the stage of the resolution of their dispute when settlement is a greater priority than continuing to a formal legal hearing. It may be engaged at any time during a legal process, whether before formal proceedings are commenced, after the parties have exchanged their submissions and evidence, or shortlyPage 204
(iv) Tiered, or ‘escalation’ resolution options
13.12 It is common in FPSO contracts for the parties to agree that if a dispute arises, it must first be referred to each party’s senior management for negotiations before any formal legal process is commenced. For example, the terms may provide that any dispute shall be referred to the parties’ managing directors, “who shall discuss the matter in dispute in good faith and make all reasonable efforts to reach an agreement”. 13.13 It is more common for there to be a tiered, or ‘escalation’ process of informal resolution steps, starting with discussions between the parties’ contractual representatives. If they fail to reach agreement, the matters are referred on to party nominated persons and, in the event of failure to agree at that stage, a final step is to take the matter for resolution to senior executives. There may even be an additional step requiring the parties to engage in a mediation procedure; all are stages to be completed before proceeding to formal legal proceedings. 13.14 If one party is in a hurry to enforce its remedies, or at least to show the other party that it is serious in its intent, a tiered structure may be problematic. The negotiation process may require the parties to arrange meetings at a time convenient to both, or provide a lengthy period of time before it may be presumed that the negotiations have failed. In some cases, whilst the negotiations are continuing, the legal process is suspended. The question arises whether the party in a hurry may ignore the contract negotiation procedures and proceed straight to enforce its legal remedies. 13.15 The answer depends on whether the negotiation procedures are written as a condition precedent of either party’s right to invoke the legal process. If they are, English law will enforce this intention, and prevent commencement of a legal process until the requirements of the negotiation procedure have been met.9 13.16 In contrast, if the requirement for negotiation is drafted more widely, or is vaguely worded and lacking in detail, this may be interpreted as an agreement to agree or an agreement to negotiate, which under English law is unenforceable.10 In such case, the party wishing to commence legal proceedings may do so, without following the negotiation procedure. 13.17 It will be a question of construction whether compliance with any particular mechanism constitutes a condition precedent preventing the initiation of legal proceedings until that condition has been satisfied, or whether provisions are insufficiently clear and certain by reference to objective criteria to be enforceable. In order to avoid disputes concerning the parties’ intentions as to how they are even to approach the resolution of an underlying claim and whether the terms are contractually binding, careful drafting of the tiered dispute resolution clause is advised. Factors to consider include:- •
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- • A clear procedure, with a timetable should be set. The procedure should not be left open nor the transition between stages subject to further agreement. Avoid open ended provisions with no time limits. Confirmation of a dispute should be by written notice, following which, a provision that states for example, “the dispute shall initially be referred to the Company Representative and the Contractor Representative who shall discuss the matter in dispute and make all reasonable efforts to reach an agreement” needs to include a time limit on those discussions, such as “if no agreement is reached under Clause [X] above within [X] days of the service of the notice referred to in Clause [X], the dispute shall be referred to [the persons next up the chain]”. This should focus minds and prevent one party from deliberately dragging its heels;
- • If an escalation clause is to include referring disputes to mediation, state the administrative processes – for example, by reference to a particular mediation body (such as the CEDR (the Centre for Effective Dispute Resolution) Model Mediation Procedure);
- • Should the process apply to all disputes, or should there be any carve-outs for e.g. disputes relating to specific technical issues, or payment or performance differences?
- • To reduce arguments as to whether the tiered procedure is a condition precedent to arbitration or litigation, express it as so.
(v) Contractual negotiations: ‘without prejudice’ communications
13.18 When the contractual negotiation procedure is followed, confusion often arises concerning use of the English law expression ‘without prejudice’. Without prejudice discussions and commercial negotiations are not synonymous. Further, without prejudice correspondence may take two forms. The first is where an offer of settlement is made or commented on. In order for the parties to be able to make commercial settlement proposals without the risk of their offers being used as evidence subsequently in formal legal proceedings, they are entitled to claim ‘privilege’ over such offers, i.e. the right to prevent these being used as evidence. Written or oral ‘without prejudice’ statements made in a genuine attempt to resolve a dispute will generally stop statements that may be adverse to the maker’s interest from being referred to in subsequent legal proceedings.11 To make it clear that privilege is being claimed, it is common for these offers to be described as being made without prejudice. This is good practice, although not strictly necessary. The second reason for describing correspondence as being made without prejudice is where one party relies on contrasting arguments in the alternative. As mentioned in concerning claims from a construction subcontractor which the FP Contractor wishes to pass on to the Company, the FP Contractor may wish to adopt a ‘back-to-back’ legal position.12 Thus, in correspondence, the FP Contractor may say to the EPCI subcontrac-Page 206
(vi) Arbitration
13.19 Arbitration is a contractual procedure. It occurs when the parties have agreed in their contract to submit their disputes to arbitration, or, once the dispute has arisen, to refer the particular dispute to an arbitration tribunal.13 Under English law, such arbitration would be in accordance with the Arbitration Act 1996. No other formal procedure or institutional body of rules is required. 13.20 Nonetheless, in offshore oil and gas contracts, the parties tend to prefer to nominate an institutional body to govern their disputes, even if pursuant to the English Arbitration Act. Common choices are the International Chamber of Commerce (the ICC), the London Court of International Arbitration (the LCIA) and, to a lesser extent, the London Maritime Arbitrators Association (the LMAA). Each of the arbitral bodies has their own set of rules. The major institutional rules have many similar features; for example, as to expedited procedures, emergency arbitrator appointments, rules on consolidation of separate claims and, most recently, for virtual proceedings. There are, however, important differences in how these institutions function, their expense, bureaucracy, flexibility and general suitability for the type of disputes that may arise in an FPSO charter dispute. These need to be considered carefully before a choice is made.14 13.21 Institutional rules set out provisions for commencing arbitration proceedings, the appointment of the arbitrators and establishing the tribunal and the procedures to be followed, leading up to the publication of the final award. In the following sections (1) to (4), there are some particular features which may be considered in making a choice of institution. The authors focus on what may be described as ‘global’ institutions, namely the ICC and LCIA, adding references to the LMAA whose procedures may be less familiar to parties to offshore oil and gas contracts.15 The following assumes that the chosen ‘seat’ of the arbitration (i.e. the place where the arbitration will take place) is London, in which case the procedural aspects will be governed by English law (subject to any other choice in the parties’ arbitration agreement). Note that the seat need not correspond with the law chosen to govern the main contract; for example, the parties may choose a London seat, even if the governing law of the main agreement is French.
(1)
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Ease of commencement of proceedings
13.22 Arbitrations under both the ICC and LCIA are started by a request sent to the appropriate officer of the institution. This requires comprehensive details of the parties, their legal advisers, a copy of the document evidencing the parties’ submission to the jurisdiction of the institution, a brief summary or description of the nature and circumstances of the dispute, the estimated value of the claim, proposals regarding the number of and proposed choice of arbitrator(s) and payment of a filing/registration fee.16 Both the LCIA and the ICC then have separate provisions for the appointment of the arbitrator(s); absent agreement between the parties, there is a general presumption for the appointment of a sole arbitrator unless the ICC/LCIA decides that a tribunal of three is more appropriate. In contrast, an LMAA arbitration is simply commenced when one party appoints its arbitrator and gives the other party written notice of that appointment. The appointment fee is fixed by the LMAA.17 The LMAA Terms contemplate the appointment of a three-person tribunal. However, the parties are free to agree to the appointment of a sole arbitrator.
13.23 Notwithstanding the slower procedure of the tribunal by the ICC and LCIA, both have provisions allowing an application for the appointment of an ‘emergency arbitrator’ in suitable cases.
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(2) Fees
13.24 The administrative assistance and back-up provided by the ICC and LCIA come at a cost. The fees of the ICC, and the costs of the arbitrators, are calculated by reference to the value of the claim, with both being adjusted to take account of the case’s complexity. This may be seen as a disadvantage for high value, yet simple, disputes. The LCIA calculates its fees (and those of the arbitrators) on an hourly basis. Arbitrators appointed for arbitrations under the LMAA terms charge on an hourly basis. Advance payment for costs is required by the ICC and invariably directed by the LCIA, and by the LMAA in respect of booking fees for hearings.(3) Procedure
13.25 Once appointed, and subject to the specific rules set out in the relevant terms, a tribunal under the auspices of the ICC, LCIA or LMAA has discretion as to how to conduct proceedings.18 For a typical arbitration, this will include service of written ‘submissions’ setting out the parties’ respective claims and defences, procedural steps regarding disclosure of documents, the exchange of witness statements and expert evidence and the setting of timetables through to the hearing itself. All three bodies now expressly recognise that a hearing (including any interim hearing) may take place in person, remotely or by a combination of the two. 13.26 The ICC Rules provide specifically for Terms of Reference to be drawn up by the tribunal after its appointment. This sets out the parties’ respective claims and issues to be arbitrated and the procedure to be followed; no new claims may be admitted withoutPage 208
(4) Appeals
13.31 Under English law the decision, or ‘award’ of a tribunal is, like a judgment of the court, legally binding on the parties, subject only to challenge under narrow statutory rights; namely if- 1. The award is made by a tribunal lacking substantive jurisdiction;21
- 2. There has been a “serious irregularity” affecting the tribunal, the proceedings or the award, which has caused, or will cause “substantial injustice” to the party appealing;22
- 3.
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(vii) Litigation – English court proceedings
13.33 Most of the contracts dealt with in this book require disputes to be submitted to arbitration, as opposed to court proceedings. However, it is not unusual for underlying documents, such as parent company guarantees or performance bonds, to provide that the court has jurisdiction. For example, the dispute in the case of Kellogg Brown & Root Inc v Concordia Maritime AG and others 26 arose under a guarantee claim. 13.34 The English High Court has a specialist division called the Business and Property Courts, an umbrella term for civil claims including the Commercial Court27 and the Technology & Construction (TCC) Court, offering the “best court-based dispute resolution service in the world, served by top-class, independent specialist judiciary”.28 Disputes under an FPSO charter that are not destined for arbitration would likely find themselves being dealt with in the Commercial Court or the TCC. 13.35 The Commercial Court deals with complex disputes “arising out of trade and commerce”, including carriage of goods by sea, banking and financial services, commodities, ship construction and “the exploitation of oil and gas reserves or other natural resources”.29 13.36 The TCC is a specialist court dealing with technology and construction disputes, and other disputes involving technically complex issues, such as those by and against engineers, architects and surveyors and also contractual disputes involving oil and gas installations, onshore and offshore, and ship building. It also adjudicates claims to enforcePage 210
1 An independent expert witness provides an arbitral tribunal or court with specialist evidence. They will have professional or technical knowledge, expertise and experience. Their role is to assist the judge or arbitrators to understand matters outside the experience of the court or tribunal, by giving their opinion on the relevant issues in dispute. They owe their duties to the court/tribunal, not to the party appointing them. In English court proceedings they are often referred to as “Part 35” witnesses, after the relevant section of the Civil Procedure Rules, which govern English court procedure. The responsibilities of an expert witness were considered in some detail in the case of National Justice Compania Naviera SA v Prudential Assurance Co Ltd (The Ikarian Reefer) , [1993] FSR 563. For an explanation of an expert witness’ duty in relation to a case on delay and disruption, see S Beadnall and S Moore Offshore Construction: Law and Practice (2nd edn, Informa Law from Routledge, 2021), Chapter 8, Section B.