Contracts are relevant, frequently central, for a significant number of investment disputes. Yet, the way tribunals ascertain their content remains largely underexplored. How do tribunals interpret contracts in investment treaty arbitration? How should they interpret contracts? Does national law have any role to play? Contract Interpretation in Investment Treaty Arbitration: A Theory of the Incidental Issue addresses these questions. The monograph offers a valuable insight into the practice and theory of contract interpretation in investment treaty arbitration. By proposing a theoretical frame for seamless integration of contract interpretation into the overall structure of decision-making, the book contributes to predictability, coherence, sufficiency and correctness of the tribunalsâ interpretative practices in investment treaty arbitration.
Yuliya Chernykh, Ph.D. University of Oslo, is Associate Professor of the Inland Norway University of Applied Sciences. She is Chartered Arbitrator and an author of various publications in the fields of international law, international arbitration and legal history.
Foreword
Acknowledgements
List of Figures and Tables
Abbreviations
Introduction
part 1 Setting the Scene
1âOverview of Contract Interpretation in Investment Treaty Arbitration
â1.1âInterpretative Material: Contracts and Contractual Provisions
â1.2âInterpretative Occasions
â1.2.1âJurisdiction
â1.2.2âAttribution
â1.2.3âExpropriation
â1.2.4âFair and Equitable Treatment
â1.2.5âNational Treatment and Most-Favoured-Nation Treatment
â1.2.6âThe Umbrella Clause
â1.2.7âCompensation
â1.3âProcedural Setting
â1.4âPatterns for Contract Interpretation
â1.5âConclusion
part 2 Defining a Relevant Legal Frame
2âNational Laws and Contract Interpretation
â2.1âWhat Do We Know: Comparative Scholarship
â2.2âThe Concept of Contract Interpretation
â2.3âRegulation
â2.4âInterpretative Approaches: Good Faith and Predictability
â2.5âLimits of Subjective-Objective and Other Dichotomies
â2.6âConclusion
3âInternational Law and Contract Interpretation
â3.5âSubsidiary Means for Determining the Content of International Law
â3.5.1âJudicial Practice
â3.5.2âScholarly Publications
â3.6âConclusion
part 3 Enabling National Law
4âThe Power of Treaty-Based Tribunals to Interpret Contracts
â4.1âTheory and Foundation
â4.1.1âThe Concept and Types of Tribunal Powers
â4.1.2âContract Interpretation as an Inherent Power
â4.1.3âContract Interpretation as an Implied Power
â4.2âExercise
â4.2.1âContract Interpretation or Fact-Finding
â4.2.2âContract Interpretation or Doctrinal Assessment of Contractual Provisions under International Law
â4.2.3âDeference
â4.3âIn a Broader Context
â4.3.1âSimilar Powers
â4.3.1.1âThe PCIJ
â4.3.1.2âThe ICJ
â4.3.1.3âThe ECtHR
â4.3.2âUnsuitable Analogies
â4.4âConclusion
5âContract Interpretation as the Incidental Issue
â5.1âIncidental Issues in Private International Law
â5.2âNational Law Incidental Issues in Investment Treaty Arbitration
â5.2.1âThe Predisposition to Conceptualise Incidental Issues
â5.2.2âScholar Attempts to Conceptualise National Law Issues as Incidental Issues
â5.2.3âOther Supporting Considerations (1): Direct Conceptualisation â National Law Incidental Issues before Other Public International Law Courts
â5.2.4âOther Supporting Considerations (2): Reverse Conceptualisation â Public International Law Incidental Issues in Domestic Contexts
â5.2.5âContribution of Conceptualising National Law Issues as Incidental Issues
â5.3âContract Interpretation as the Incidental Issue in Investment Treaty Arbitration
â5.3.1âA Legal Issue
â5.3.2âA Separable Legal Issue
â5.3.3âPlaying a Subsidiary Role to the Principal Cause of Action
â5.3.3.1âThe Case of Contract Termination
â5.3.3.2âThe Case of Implied Terms
â5.3.4âPosing a Question about the Applicable Law
â5.3.5âAdditional Consideration: Cases with Compound Jurisdiction
â5.4.âNational Law in Operation through the Concept of an Incidental Issue
â5.4.1âJura Novit Curia
â5.4.2âExpert Testimony
â5.4.3âWhy Does It Matter?
â5.5âConclusion
General Conclusion
Future Research
List of Annexes
Annexes
âAnnex IâAll Known Treaty-Based Cases as of 30 January 2019
âAnnex IIâCases Excluded from Assessment (Publicly Unavailable Awards
and Decisions, or Available Awards and Decisions in Languages
Other than English or Russian)
âAnnex IIIâCases with Publicly Available Awards and Decisions in English or Russian Language (the Basis for Assessment)
âAnnex IVâCases with Elements of Contract Interpretation
âAnnex VâCases with the Application of National Law to Contract Interpretation (Interpretative Rules of National Laws)
âAnnex VIâCases with the Application of National Law to Contract Interpretation (Interpretation in Light of Various Other Rules of National Laws)
âAnnex VIIâModel BITs as of 30 January 2019
âAnnex VIIIâList of Analysed BITs
âAnnex IXâProvisions of Some Relevance for Contract Interpretation in the Selected Uniform Private Law Conventions
âAnnex XâIIAs with Reference to Conflict of Laws of the Host State
Bibliography
Index
The monograph is of relevance for legal scholars, practitioners and policymakers in the field of investment treaty arbitration. The book will also be of additional value to postgraduate and doctoral students.