Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-ndw9j Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-11T02:15:48.710Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Continental Casualty Company v. Argentine Republic

ICSID (Arbitration Tribunal).  22 February 2006 ; 05 September 2008 ; 16 September 2011 .

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 January 2021

Get access

Abstract

Jurisdiction — Dispute — ICSID Convention, Article 25(1) — Whether dispute was of a legal nature — Whether the dispute arose out of an investment — Whether the claim was premature

Jurisdiction — Investment — Whether a foreign investor had standing to bring claims for damages suffered by the assets, investments and activities of its local subsidiary

Procedure — Addition of a party — ICSID Convention, Article 25(2)(b) — ICSID Convention, Article 46 — Whether the local subsidiary of the claimant could be added as a party to the dispute — Whether the request for addition could be made by the claimant — Whether the claims of the local subsidiary needed to be different from those of the foreign parent

Interpretation — World Trade Organization — International Monetary Fund — Whether the norms of multilateral economic institutions assisted in investment treaty interpretation

Defence — Necessity — Exclusions and reservations — Public order — Essential security interests — Margin of appreciation — Customary international law — World Trade Organization — Whether the strict conditions of application for the plea of necessity under customary international law applied to the safeguard clause — Whether the economic crisis required the maintenance of public order or the protection of essential security interests — Whether the law of the World Trade Organization assisted in the interpretation of the defence — Whether the State had any reasonably available alternatives that were more compliant with its international obligations — Whether the State was barred by its own conduct from relying on the defence

Defence — Necessity — ILC Articles on State Responsibility, Article 25 — Customary international law — Whether the defence under general international law was available in the alternative

Free transfer — Interpretation — International Monetary Fund — Whether a currency transfer impeded by a bank freeze was related to an investment — Whether the provisions and principles of the International Monetary Fund assisted in interpretation of the investment treaty standard

Fair and equitable treatment — Legal stability — Legitimate expectation — Taxation — Whether the expectation of stability in the exchange and currency regime was legitimate and protected by the BIT — Whether unilateral restructuring of governmental financial instruments was reasonable once the economic crisis had ended — Whether imposition of a capital tax on a nominal gain resulting from currency devaluation was in breach of fair and equitable treatment

Expropriation — Indirect expropriation — Monetary sovereignty — Municipal law — Constitutional law — Taxation — Whether sovereign management of the exchange rate could result in an indirect expropriation — Whether compulsory currency conversion was protected from expropriation under constitutional law — Whether constitutional court decisions were relevant — Whether a breach of constitutional law amounted to an expropriation under international investment law — Whether losses for payment delays could be considered an expropriation — Whether unilateral restructuring of governmental financial instruments was an expropriation — Whether imposition of a capital tax on a nominal gain resulting from currency devaluation was an expropriation

Umbrella clause — Whether the State entered into any commitments with regard to investments — Whether the standard applied to contractual undertakings made to a local subsidiary — Whether domestic laws addressed to the general public created obligations specific to a foreign investor

Remedies — Interest — Compound interest — Whether simple or compound interest should be awarded in the circumstances

Annulment — Manifest excess of powers — Failure to state reasons — Serious departure from a fundamental rule of procedure — ICSID Convention, Article 52(1) — Whether the tribunal failed to decide the investor’s claim for loss after the state of necessity was over — Whether the tribunal failed to determine the investor’s expropriation claim in relation to unilateral restructuring of governmental financial instruments — Whether the tribunal failed in its construction of the scope of freedom of transfer — Whether the tribunal failed to explain why the State could no longer rely on the necessity defence — Whether the tribunal had awarded damages on a ground not invoked by the investor

Annulment — Procedure — Whether an annulment committee may consider an additional ground on its own motion

Type
Case Report
Copyright
© Cambridge University Press 2020

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)