1. Home
  2. |Insights
  3. |U.S. Supreme Court Confirms Arbitrators' Authority to Determine Jurisdiction in BIT Disputes

U.S. Supreme Court Confirms Arbitrators' Authority to Determine Jurisdiction in BIT Disputes

Client Alert | 2 min read | 03.06.14

In a 7-2 decision, the U.S. Supreme Court on Wednesday upheld the $185 million award of an UNCITRAL tribunal in a dispute brought by BG Group under the UK-Argentina Bilateral Investment Treaty (BIT). The decision reversed a unanimous decision of the D.C. Circuit that had vacated the 2007 arbitral award under Section 10(a) of the Federal Arbitration Act, citing BG Group's failure to observe the treaty's requirement to pursue remedies in Argentine courts for a period of 18 months before bringing a BIT claim. 

The Court's decision in BG Group PLC v. Republic of Argentina tied bilateral investment treaty arbitration to the Court's prior jurisprudence in commercial arbitration cases, under which arbitral tribunals enjoy broad discretion to determine whether contractual preconditions to arbitration have been satisfied. Specifically, the Court noted that a treaty is a contract "between nations" and that, as a result, arbitral tribunals interpreting procedural provisions in treaties should be afforded the same level of deference as arbitral tribunals interpreting procedural provisions in contracts. Notably, the Court chose not to adopt the position advanced by the U.S. Solicitor General's office, an amicus in the case, which had argued that the Court should establish a higher standard of review in international treaty cases where there is a "consent-based" objection to arbitration. Instead, the Court held that the tribunal's determination that the treaty's local litigation provision did not preclude BG Group's claim was one that lay "well within" the tribunal's interpretive authority. In a dissenting opinion, Chief Justice Roberts emphasized that the BIT is an agreement between nations, not between the host nation and the foreign investor, and argued that the local litigation requirement is thus a pre-condition to the host nation's consent to arbitrate with the investor that should accordingly be interpreted by the courts, not the arbitrators.

Though the parties to the arbitral dispute were both foreign, the site of the arbitration was Washington, D.C., and each had sought review under the New York Convention and the Federal Arbitration Act to either confirm or vacate the award. The Court's decision stands as a reminder that for international arbitrations sited in the U.S., arbitrators will be given substantial deference even on basic jurisdictional matters. 

Insights

Client Alert | 3 min read | 04.23.24

DOJ Promises NPAs to Certain Individuals Through New Voluntary Self-Disclosure Pilot Program

On April 15, 2024, the Acting Assistant Attorney General for the Criminal Division of the Department of Justice (“DOJ”) Nicole Argentieri announced a new Pilot Program on Voluntary Self-Disclosure for Individuals (“Pilot Program” or “Program”). The Pilot Program offers a clear path for voluntary self-disclosure by certain corporate executives and other individuals who are themselves involved in misconduct by corporations, in exchange for a Non-Prosecution Agreement (“NPA”). The Pilot Program specifically targets individuals who disclose to the Criminal Division at DOJ in Washington, D.C. information about certain corporate criminal conduct. By carving out a clear path to non-prosecution for those who qualify, DOJ has created another tool to uncover complex crimes that might not otherwise be reported to the Department. ...