On the big questions, Simon Batifort and J. Benton Heath are plainly right.Footnote 1 Dogmatic presumptions about the necessary effect of particular clauses and woolly notions of systemic teleology may distract the interpreter from the task of finding the meaning that represents the intentions of the parties, best articulated in the specific terms chosen. Customary rules on treaty interpretation, reflected in Articles 31 and 32 of the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties (VCLT),Footnote 2 are meant to be flexibly adapted to the case in hand.Footnote 3 But in applying their insight to the small print of the interpretative question, Batifort and Heath are less persuasive. Can most favored nation (MFN) clauses be generally relied upon to, as they put it, “import” substantive standards of treatment of investment protection law? The authors are critical of the apparent consensus in favor of an affirmative answer—they call it “conventional wisdom”—and in this regard seem to me to be significantly overstating their case.
My comment takes the perspective of the mainstream public international law of treaties. I will suggest that Batifort and Heath have understated the breadth of state practice in support of the “conventional wisdom.” The modest broader point is this: to approach the international legal argument with, as it were, ICSID Reports in hand and “ordinary meaning” rather loose in the holster Footnote 4 may well be a helpful technique for drafting a pleading. However, it reflects a restrictive conception of the international legal order, where “conventional wisdom” is not a pejorative but rather a shorthand description of the process by which the shared judgement on rules of international law is formed.Footnote 5
The Question
Batifort and Heath argue that an interpreter of an investment treaty who determines the content of a party's primary obligations by reference to another treatyFootnote 6 may commit a legal error in two ways: either by erroneously identifying such an ordinary (or special) meaning of an MFN clause in the first place; or by giving it excessive weight in the interpretative process that downplays the significance of context.Footnote 7 It is a perfectly plausible argument about the character and interpretative weight of treaty language: after all, there is no such thing as “the” (or even “an”) MFN clause, but only a series of particular provisions, each of which is to be assessed on its own merits in context.
The argument must stand or fall against the traditional benchmark of consensus in state practice. Have states challenged the determination of their obligations in investment treaties by means of (particularly formulated) MFN clauses? Or have they generally endorsed this practice? It is a trite point that state practice is more difficult to identify in investment law than in other fields of international law, because formalized dispute settlement between investors and states pushes practice away from interstate relations where it is usually generated. But it is not impossible, and the last two decades reveal much about states' views on MFN clauses and substantive treatment, as expressed in multilateral fora, international dispute settlement, and treaty-making.Footnote 8 It appears, in fact, that states have generally endorsed interpretation of variously drafted MFN clauses in investment treaties to determine the content of a party's primary obligations by reference to another treaty.
Multilateral State Practice
The International Law Commission's (ILC's) work on MFN clauses, resulting in its adoption of Summary Conclusions on the Most-Favoured-Nation clause in 2015,Footnote 9 provided an opportunity for states to express their views in the Sixth Committee of the General Assembly. Some states objected to application of MFN clauses to substantive standards. Venezuela noted that “States generally had no idea how the concept of most-favoured-nation was applied, even with respect to substantive matters. In fact, the concept was unworkable in investment treaties.”Footnote 10 For Cuba, the practice was problematic in both legal and policy terms: it “was blatantly contrary to the principles of treaty interpretation and application as established by the Vienna Convention,” “affected the balance of the investment protection agreements and impinged upon the sovereignty of the host State in respect of policymaking.”Footnote 11
But most states to address the issue endorsed, whether explicitly or by necessary implication, application of MFN clauses to substantive rules in other treaties. Thus, Austria thought that “[t]he question of the proper scope of most-favoured-nation clauses … depended primarily on … whether it included or excluded procedural and jurisdictional matters.”Footnote 12 Australia's position was that, “[i]n interpreting a treaty where the ambit of the MFN obligation with respect to dispute settlement was not specified, it was not appropriate to assume that MFN obligations applied broadly in a manner that would negate the negotiated procedural requirements.”Footnote 13 Italy described the question as “whether, in investment treaty arbitration, MFN clauses should apply only to substantive obligations.”Footnote 14 The Netherlands referred to its “Model Bilateral Investment Agreement, on the basis of which MFN clauses were usually specified in that they were limited to treatment for ‘investment’ and were not applicable to provisions regarding dispute settlement.”Footnote 15 India echoed the ILC on “a new dimension” of the recent decisions that went beyond “confining the [MFN] clause to the substantive obligations imposed under bilateral investment treaties.”Footnote 16 In Thailand's view, “such clauses should be narrowly interpreted as to whether or not they should apply beyond substantive obligations.”Footnote 17 Malaysia suggested that “[t]he clause should be interpreted in such a way that it applied only to substantive preferential treatment provided for in treaties.”Footnote 18 The Philippines was concerned that “the provisions of such clauses in bilateral investment treaties could extend from substantive obligations.”Footnote 19 Taking stock of this practice as a whole, states that directly engage with the issue overwhelmingly endorse application of MFN clauses to substantive rules; this includes (traditional) home and host states, developed and developing states, and states with various domestic legal traditions and attitudes to international dispute settlement.
State Practice in Dispute Settlement
Reasonable people may disagree about whether states' pleadings in favor of their position carry much weight in identifying international law more generally. But there is a stronger case for taking pleadings as expressing a general position when states accept or at least do not challenge an argument that directly and unfavorably affects their rights.Footnote 20 That is how most states have dealt with invocation of (variously drafted) MFN clauses regarding substantive standards in bilateral investment treaty (BIT) disputes. Kazakhstan, for example,
accepts that, under the MFN clause, it was obliged to treat Claimants in accordance with any more favourable treatment afforded to nationals of other countries. … To interpret the obligations claimed by Claimants that are not in the Turkey-Kazakhstan itself, Respondent will refer only to the United Kingdom-Kazakhstan BIT. This contains all of the obligations Claimants allege they were owed and Respondent accepts that, were Claimants United Kingdom companies, the standards of that treaty would be applicable to them.Footnote 21
Chile,Footnote 22 Jordan,Footnote 23 and Ukraine Footnote 24 have similarly accepted such invocation of MFN clauses.
Other states have accepted the general argument but distinguished its application in particular circumstances. Algeria argued that the MFN clause could not apply to rules on protection of investment because it was included in the section on promotion.Footnote 25 Pakistan objected to application of the MFN clause to treaties already in force.Footnote 26 Mongolia noted the limitation of the MFN clause to the operation or disposal of investments.Footnote 27 India objected because “both Contracting Parties placed a strong and unusual emphasis on the application of national laws to investments.”Footnote 28 Argentina and Moldova argued against application of MFN clauses to umbrella clauses because they were different in kind from properly international obligations.Footnote 29 For technical legal purposes, an argument of this kind that explains why a general proposition is distinguishable counts as an endorsement of that proposition, i.e., that MFN clauses usually apply to substantive standards.
Few states challenge “conventional wisdom” directly. Only Turkmenistan appears to have done so in a BIT dispute (highlighted by Batifort and Heath)Footnote 30—but it has not made the same argument either in the Sixth Committee or in earlier disputes raising MFN issues, and this inconsistency must diminish the weight of its position. North American Free Trade Agreement practice is more helpful to the authors' argument. But there is greater nuance in positions of different states on different legal issues (and at different points in time) than they admit. At least the United States apparently has avoided articulating its position in these terms, e.g., it objected to the argument for application of MFN treatment to Article 1105 because of the binding interpretation by the Free Trade Commission that could not be circumvented, rather than because it accepted the limited applicability of the MFN clause.Footnote 31 Taking stock of dispute settlement practice as a whole, despite a limited number of weak objections, the core consensus is formed by failure to challenge or even clear acceptance of an unfavorable argument by states. Such conduct goes against the grain of expectation in a procedural setting and therefore constitutes strong endorsement of the “conventional wisdom” that Batifort and Heath challenge.
Treaty Practice
Batifort and Heath are right to discuss developments in recent treaty practice, although examples that illuminate shifting policy preferences may be without obvious relevance to a technical interpretative argument. Treaty drafting that adds a “for greater certainty” proviso may suggest the position of states on the ordinary (or special) meaning of the particular term more generally, including in other treaties. But the small print is important. Take Article 8.7(3) of the EU-Canada Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA), which explains “for greater certainty” that “treatment” in the MFN clause is inapplicable to substantive obligations in other treaties. Did that explanation carry any interpretative weight before September 21, 2017, when CETA became provisionally applicable?Footnote 32 What is the effect of the “only in so far as foreign direct investment is concerned” qualification in the decision on provisional application?Footnote 33 Does the explanation reflect the legal position of EU member states before ratification? Is it limited to MFN clauses with “like circumstances” language?Footnote 34 Some of these questions have clearer answers than others, but the broader point is that treaty practice, just as any other legal argument, comes with nuances, qualifications, and conditions, and putting favorable examples forward en masse is not particularly illuminating.
Subsidiary Means for the Determination of Rules of Law
States' general acceptance of determination of content of primary investment obligations by reference to another treaty is confirmed by subsidiary means for the determination of rules of law. The Institute of International Law (IIL) endorsed it by necessary implication,Footnote 35 as did the ILC by noting that “new dimension[s]” were brought to the discussion when MFN clauses were not “limit[ed] to substantive obligations.”Footnote 36 (For some, the ILC “tended to state the obvious,”Footnote 37 but that only speaks to the strength of professional consensus.)
The approach is also reflected in arbitral decisions, even if the authors are unimpressed by arbitral reasoning. The first point to note is the key reason for arbitral brevity: few disputing parties raised the issue. Pursuit of international judicial function may sometimes push tribunals beyond the consensual elements of dispute settlement, but, in the world of ever-longer decisions, few people will call for expansive proprio motu exploration of issues that reflect shared consensus of disputing parties as well as the broader community. The second point relates to the quality of decision-makers. International (investment) arbitration is highly decentralized, and the quantity of decisions in support of a proposition is often less important than the caliber of people who make them. The great minds are divided on many questions of international law. But in this instance those who endorse the “conventional wisdom” include some of the (if not the) greatest public international lawyers of our times. If their decisions have been brief, perhaps it is because they were dealing with a “but of course” issue. The third and broader point is this: IIL, ILC, and international arbitral tribunals, whatever their imperfections, are the best institutions that the modern international legal order has to offer for the determination of rules of international law in this field. One should perhaps pause before sweepingly rejecting the consensus that they have helped to generate.
Conclusion
I have considerable sympathy for an argument that takes seriously the rules on sources and interpretation and that evaluates critically the output of international institutions and tribunals against these benchmarks. But Batifort and Heath significantly overstate their contrarian claim that almost all tribunals have gotten the issue wrong and therefore states have to be saved from the wider consequences of their agreements by the dint of “interpretation.” When one considers what states have actually said and done, it appears, rather less excitingly, to be in line with the near-consensus in curial circles.
A different approach may well replace the current consensus. The authors put forward a perfectly coherent argument that (pace Stephan Schill Footnote 38) is not out of line with systemic teleology. But it cannot be willed into legal existence by mere assertion: a change in the ordinary (special) meaning would have to take place through the traditional international legal process. When states generally start to articulate their claims in these terms in international organisations, international disputes, international treaties, and elsewhere, and generally persuade international tribunals about their correctness, the legal position will change. Reasonable people may disagree on how significant the first steps in the direction of change have been, but we are still quite far from overturning the “conventional wisdom” of the last two decades. Whether or not it is wise, it is generally accepted, and that is what counts for the purpose of an international legal argument.
Target article
The New Debate on the Interpretation of MFN Clauses in Investment Treaties: Putting the Brakes on Multilateralization
Related commentaries (5)
Introduction to the Symposium on Simon Batifort and J. Benton Heath, “The New Debate on the Interpretation of MFN Clauses in Investment Treaties: Putting the Brakes on Multilateralization”
MFN Clauses and Substantive Treatment: A Law of Treaties Perspective of the “Conventional Wisdom”
Putting the MFN Genie Back in the Bottle
The Enduring but Unwelcome Role of Party Intent in Treaty Interpretation
The Fictions and Realities of MFN Clauses in International Investment Agreements