CL-2024-000457, 000458, 000459 - [2025] EWHC 1803 (Comm)
Commercial Court

CL-2024-000457, 000458, 000459 - [2025] EWHC 1803 (Comm)

Fecha: 17-Jul-2025

Moore-Bick J concluded that a contention of that kind was not a contention that the award should be upheld for a reason not expressed within the award, but an argument that it was not just and proper

A15.

Moore-Bick J concluded that a contention of that kind was not a contention that the award should be upheld for a reason not expressed within the award, but an argument that it was not just and proper for the court to determine the question of law, so that under s.69(3)(d) of the 1996 Act leave to appeal should not have been granted (ibid, at [23]-[24]). He considered that it was not open to the respondent, in effect, to reopen on such a ground the question whether leave to appeal should have been granted. Icon Navigation was an unusual case, and I do not consider it is an authority on the availability of arguments by respondents to s.69 appeals that are to the effect that, on the facts set out in the award, the result was correct in law even if the arbitrators erred in their reasoning as contended by the appellant. Nor is it contrary to the principle that leave to appeal decisions do not create issue estoppels for the appeal. The terms of s.69(1) require the court on the argument of the appeal to consider for itself whether any question on which leave to appeal was granted, and on which therefore the appeal will have been argued, is a question of law arising out of the award. The leave to appeal criterion that Moore-Bick J considered to be uniquely engaged by the point the respondent sought to argue in Icon Navigation, set by s.69(3)(d), does not arise as part of applying s.69(1)/(7) at the final hearing of the appeal.