The English Commercial Court has refused to enforce an arbitral award made in a JAMS arbitration seated in California on the basis that it would be contrary to UK public policy under section 103(3) of the Arbitration Act 1996 (the "Act"), as enforcement of the award would breach English consumer protection legislation and financial regulation (each of which have the status of UK public policy). Payward Inc v. Chechetkin1 is a rare example of the English courts refusing to enforce a foreign award on public policy grounds, and may become a leading case on the interaction between consumer protection mechanisms and standard form dispute resolution provisions. The decision may have particularly significant ramifications for international business to consumer ("B2C") companies.
In this Legal Update, we summarise the case background and the English court's decision, and highlight the key takeaways, including considerations for B2C operators utilising standard form contracts with consumers.
Background: parallel English Litigation and US Arbitration
Mr Chechetkin, a UK-based lawyer, traded cryptocurrency on "Kraken", a trading platform managed by Payward, and incurred losses of c. £600,000.
Mr Chechetkin is attempting to recover his losses by suing Payward in the English courts, on the basis that Payward engaged in regulated activity (for the purposes of the UK Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 ("FSMA") without the requisite authorisation, in breach of FSMA (the "FSMA Litigation").
To this point, the key obstacle that Mr Chechetkin's claim has faced is that Payward's terms of service ("Terms"), to which he agreed, provided, at "Clause 23":
In particular, this meant that:
Enforcement of the Award in the English Court
Payward sought to enforce its Award in the English court on the basis that it was enforceable as a New York Convention award, and was therefore to be "recognised as binding on the persons as between whom it was made" and "enforce[able] in the same manner as a judgment or order of the court", pursuant to section 101 of the Act.
Enforcement of the Award would have ended the FSMA Litigation, as it would have prohibited Mr Chechetkin from continuing his claim before the English courts.
As such, Mr Chechetkin resisted enforcement, submitting that enforcement must be refused pursuant to section 103(3) of the Act, as "it would be contrary to public policy to recognise or enforce the award". In relevant part, Mr Chechetkin argued that enforcement of the Award would be contrary to the public policy set out in FSMA and the Consumer Rights Act 2015 (the "CRA").
The English Commercial Court’s Decision
On 14 July 2023, Bright J ruled in Mr Chechetkin's favour, holding that enforcement would be contrary to public policy pursuant to section 103(3) of the Act3. To do so, he made a number of findings:
Enforcement and public policy
Issue estoppel and the Arbitration
Accordingly, the court exercised its discretion to refuse recognition and enforcement of the Award under section 103(3) of the Act.
Key Takeaways
A Broader Perspective on the Case
Relationship with digital consumer protection
As Lord Simon of Glaisdale made clear, the English courts only apply the public policy exception "with extreme reserve."9 Therefore, this decision seems to be exceptional.
However, it is worth noting that UK and EU authorities have been working to buttress the consumer protections underlying the Payward decision for an extended period. For example:
In this light, the decision in Payward is in line with the broader position that exists in relation to B2C arbitration clauses in European jurisprudence.
Could this case set a trend of consumers seeking to resist enforcement of non-UK arbitration clauses in B2C contracts on the basis of the CRA?
Within weeks of delivering his judgment in Payward, Bright J faced submissions in a further application to refuse enforcement of an arbitration clause – on the basis of the CRA, and by reference to his own judgment – in the case of Eternity Sky12.
In Eternity Sky, a Hong Kong law, HKIAC arbitration clause in a personal guarantee was deemed to be enforceable on the principle basis that the personal guarantee did not have a "close connection with the United Kingdom", as required by section 74 of the CRA, and therefore the CRA did not need to be considered. Bright J further considered that the arbitration clause in question was, on the facts, not unfair under the CRA.
Eternity Sky affirms that escaping award enforcement by relying on the unfairness provisions of the CRA will depend on the circumstances of the individual case (and, in each case, it will require a consumer contract which has a close connection with the UK but which applies non-UK law).
Further Information
The authors and the International Arbitration and Litigation and Dispute Resolution Teams are well-placed to advise on drafting dispute resolution provisions, award enforcement, as well as technology disputes more generally.
1 Payward Inc., Payward Ventures, Inc., and Payward Limited v. Maxim Chechetkin [2023] EWHC 1780 (Comm).
2 Chechetkin v. Payward Ltd and others [2022] EWHC 3057 (Ch).
3 Payward Inc v. Chechetkin, paragraph 166.
4 Payward Inc v. Chechetkin, section H2. Bright J noted, in particular, sections 71, 74 and 62 of the CRA.
5 Payward Inc v. Chechetkin, section H2. Bright J noted, in particular, the decisions of the CJEU in C-168/05 Mostaza Claro [2007] 1 CMLR 22 [35]-[38] and C-40/08 Asturcom Telecomunicaciones SL [2010] 1 CMLR 29. These decisions have the status of retained CJEU case law and thus bound Bright J in the Commercial Court, as confirmed by the Court of Appeal in Lipton v BA City Flyer [2021] EWCA Civ 454 at [69].
6 Payward Inc v. Chechetkin, section H3. Bright J noted, in particular, sections 19, 23 and 26 of FSMA.
7 Dallah Real Estate and Tourism Holding Company v The Ministry of Religious Affairs, Government of Pakistan [2011] 1 AC 763.
8 An example of adaptive wording would be: "The Terms will be governed by and interpreted in accordance with the laws of the State in which you are a legal resident."
9 Vervaeke v Smith [1983] 1 AC 145/164.
10 Guidance on the unfair terms provisions in the Consumer Rights Act 2015', CMA, 31 July 2015. See, in particular, paragraphs 5.29.2-5.29.4. See also paragraph 134 of Soleymani v Nifty Gateway LLC (CMA Intervening) [2022] EWCA Civ 1297, as heavily referenced in Payward.
11 Regulation (EU) 2016/679 on the protection of natural persons with regard to the processing of personal data and on the free movement of such data, and repealing Directive 95/46/EC (General Data Protection Regulation) (the "EU GDPR"), dated 27 April 2016. The first of these two quotes reproduces wording from Article 79(1) of the EU GDPR, which also features in the UK GDPR. The second of these two quoted paragraphs reproduces wording from Article 79(2) of the EU GDPR, which does not feature in the UK GDPR.
12 Eternity Sky Investments Ltd v Mrs Xiaomin Zhang [2023] EWHC 1964 (Comm).
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