UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF IDAHO
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THE GOVERNMENT OF THE LAO PEOPLE’S DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC,
Plaintiff,
v.
JOHN K. BALDWIN; BRIDGE
CAPITAL, LLC; COLEMAN, LLC; and CAMPBELL HOLDINGS, LLC,
Defendants.
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Case No.: 2:20-cv-00195-CRK
MEMORANDUM DECISION ANDORDER RE: MOTION TO STAY
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1.
Before the Court is Defendants John K. Baldwin’s
(“Baldwin”), Bridge Capital, LLC’s (“Bridge”), Coleman LLC’s
(“Coleman”), and Campbell Holdings LLC’s (“Campbell”) (collectively,
“Defendants”) motion to stay further proceedings in this arbitral award enforcement action
pending resolution of three foreign proceedings. Defs.’ Mot. to Stay Proceedings, Apr. 29, 2022,
ECF No. 149 (“Mot. to Stay”); see also Defs.’ Memo. in Support
of [Mot. to Stay], Apr. 29, 2022, ECF No. 149-1 (“Def. Br.”); Decl. of [Baldwin] in
Support of [Mot. to Stay], Dated Apr. 27, 2022, ECF No. 149-2 (“Baldwin Decl.”); Decl. of
Jeffrey T. Prudhomme in Support of [Mot. to Stay], Dated Apr. 26, 2022, ECF No. 149-3 (“Prudhomme
Decl.”). Defendants contend that the Court should stay further proceedings in this action in
light of the fact that the two arbitral award debtors, non-parties Sanum Investments Ltd.
(“Sanum”) and Lao Holdings N.V. (“LHNV”), have challenged the arbitral
awards at issue in Singapore,
the seat of the arbitrations. Def. Br. at 2–3. Defendants
further contend Sanum and LHNV are currently prosecuting arbitrations against Plaintiff The Government
of the Lao People’s Democratic Republic (“Lao PDR”), which, if successful, would
entirely set-off any amounts owed under the arbitral awards at issue in this action. Id. Lao PDR opposes
the motion on the grounds that Article VI of the Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of
Foreign Arbitral Awards of June 10, 1958 (the “New York Convention”), as interpreted by
the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, does not provide for a stay in these circumstances,
and that if the Court does grant a stay, the Court should require Defendants to post security in the
full amount of the arbitral awards plus interest. Pl.’s Opp’n to [Mot. to Stay],
4–18, May 20, 2022, ECF No. 150 (“Pl. Br.”); see also Decl. of
David J. Branson, Dated May 19, 2022, ECF No. 150-1 (“Branson Decl.”). Defendants further
contend that Article VI of the New York Convention is not applicable, and even if it was, a stay is
appropriate under Article VI. Defs.’ Reply in Support of [Mot. to Stay], 1–8, June 3, 2022,
ECF No. 151 (“Def. Reply”); see also Second Decl. of [Baldwin] in
Support of [Mot. to Stay], Dated June 3, 2022, ECF No. 151-2 (“Second Baldwin Decl.”).
Finally, Defendants assert that they should not be required to post any security because they are not
the award debtors and because the award debtors, Sanum and LHNV, own property in Laos that is sufficient
to satisfy the awards should they be found to be enforceable. Def. Reply at 8–10; see also Second Baldwin Decl. For the following reasons, Defendants’ Motion
to Stay is denied.
2.
The background to this action is extensively set forth in the
Court’s recent Memorandum Decision and Order denying Lao PDR’s fourth motion to amend its
complaint to add Sanum and LHNV as parties. Government of the Lao People’s
Democratic Republic v. Baldwin, Case No. 2:20-cv-00195-CRK, 2022 WL 2047825, at *2–5 (D.
Idaho June 7, 2022). The Court assumes familiarity with the discussion of the background from that
opinion, and briefly recites only the background specifically relevant to the present motion to stay.
3.
Lao PDR commenced this action in 2020 to enforce two arbitral
awards issued in its favor and against Sanum and LHNV, respectively. Compl. to Enforce Arbitration
Awards, Apr. 21, 2020, ECF No. 1. The arbitral tribunals awarded Lao PDR certain of its costs, fees, and
expenses incurred defending the arbitrations, which were initiated by Sanum and LHNV. See Third Am.
Compl., Ex. C and D, July 16, 2021, ECF Nos. 108 (“TAC”), 108-3, 108-4 (TAC Ex. C and D
are referred to collectively as the “Awards”). Defendants have filed five motions to
dismiss, and Lao PDR has responded with four motions to amend its complaint, thus the Court has not
ruled on any of Defendants’ motions to dismiss.
See ECF Nos. 21, 26, 34, 45,
56, 57, 59, 121, 141. The Court denied Lao PDR’s most recent motion to amend, and Baldwin’s
and Bridge’s motion to dismiss the TAC for lack of jurisdiction remains undecided pending
supplemental briefing.
See Baldwin, 2022 WL 2047825 at *17. To
date, the Court has not determined that it has jurisdiction over Baldwin and Bridge, while Coleman and
Campbell have each answered the TAC.
1
See id.; [Coleman and Campbell’s] Answer to [TAC], Aug.
5, 2021, ECF No. 122.
4.
Prior to Lao PDR commencing this action, the award debtors,
Sanum and LHNV, commenced an action in Singapore, the seat of the arbitrations, to set aside the Awards
(the “Set Aside Action”). Baldwin Decl. ¶ 4; Branson Decl., Ex. A, ¶ 14, ECF No.
158-2. The Singapore International Commercial Court denied Sanum’s and LHNV’s request to set
aside the Awards, and Sanum and LHNV have appealed that decision to the Singapore Court of Appeal.
Baldwin Decl. ¶ 4. The appeal is fully briefed, and the Singapore Court of Appeal heard oral
argument in April 2022. Id.; see also Def. Br. at 2. Sanum and
LHNV are also prosecuting new arbitrations against Lao PDR in Singapore (the “BIT 2
Arbitrations”). Baldwin Decl. ¶¶ 5–6. The BIT 2 Arbitrations also arise out of
Sanum and LHNV’s activities in Laos and are brought under the Bilateral Investment Treaties
between Laos and China and the Netherlands, respectively. See id.; see also Prudhomme Decl., Ex. A, B. The liability phase of the BIT 2 Arbitrations
concluded in 2019. Baldwin Decl. ¶ 6. The parties agree that the tribunals overseeing the BIT 2
Arbitrations are poised to make a decision on the liability phase in the coming months. Id., Ex. A; Def. Br. at 4, 11; Pl. Br. at 14. If Lao PDR is found liable in the
BIT 2 Arbitrations, the awards could potentially subsume the amounts Sanum and LHNV owe to Lao PDR
pursuant to the Awards. See Def. Br. at 2. Defendants now move to stay further
proceedings in this action pending the outcome of the Set Aside Action and the BIT 2 Arbitrations. Mot.
to Stay.
5.
The parties disagree about whether the Court should analyze the
present motion under the Court’s inherent power to stay cases on its docket or under Article VI of
the New York Convention.
2 U.S.
District Courts have inherent power to control and manage the cases on their dockets, including the
power to stay cases even for indefinite periods.
Landis v. N. Am. Co., 299 U.S.
248, 254–55 (1936). The power to stay a case is within the Court’s discretion; however, in
considering whether to issue a stay, the Court must consider the competing interests of the parties,
including what, if any, prejudice or hardship would result from a stay or from denying a stay, as well
as the effect of a stay on judicial resources. Id.
6.
Similarly, Article VI of the New York Convention permits a
court presiding over an action to enforce a foreign arbitral award to stay such action, in its
discretion, if there is an action to set aside the award proceeding in the place where the arbitration
took place or the place whose law governed the arbitration. New York Convention, Art. VI. Lao PDR
contends that the Court should follow the Second Circuit’s interpretation of Article VI. Pl. Br.
at 5 (citing
Europcar Italia, S.p.A. v. Maiellano Tours, Inc.,
156 F.3d 310 (2d Cir. 1998)). In
Europcar, the Second Circuit set forth six
factors for District Courts to consider in deciding whether a stay under Article VI was appropriate.
Europcar, 156 F.3d at 317–18. The
Europcar factors
are
(1)
the general objectives of arbitration—the
expeditious resolution of disputes and the avoidance of protracted and expensive litigation;
(2)
the status of the foreign proceedings and the
estimated time for those proceedings to be resolved;
(3)
whether the award sought to be enforced will
receive greater scrutiny in the foreign proceedings under a less deferential standard of
review;
(4)
he characteristics of the foreign proceedings
including (i) whether they were brought to enforce an award (which would tend to weigh in
favor of a stay) or to set the award aside (which would tend to weigh in favor of
enforcement); (ii) whether they were initiated before the underlying enforcement proceeding
as to raise concerns of international comity; (iii) whether they were initiated by the party
now seeking to enforce the award in federal court; and (iv) whether they were initiated
under circumstances indicating an intent to hinder or delay resolution of the dispute;
(5)
a balance of the possible hardships to each of the
parties, keeping in mind that if enforcement is postponed under Article VI of the
Convention, the party seeking enforcement may receive ‘suitable security’ and
that, under Article V of the Convention, an award should not be enforced if it is set aside
or suspended in the originating country . . . ; and
(6)
any other circumstances that could tend to shift
the balance in favor of or against adjournment.
7.
The Court concludes that a stay of further proceedings in this
case is not warranted whether the Court reviews Defendants’ motion under its inherent authority to stay
cases on its docket or under the Second Circuit’s interpretation of Article VI of the New York
Convention.
8.
Defendants assert two bases for their request to stay further
proceedings: (i) the Singapore Court of Appeal will issue its decision in the Set Aside Action in the
coming months, and such decision may obviate the need for further litigation to enforce the Awards; and
(ii) the tribunals in the BIT 2 Arbitrations may award Sanum and LHNV greater sums than the Awards grant
to Lao PDR. Def. Br. at 2– 3. Regardless of the standard under which the Court reviews Defendants’
contentions, the Court concludes that a stay is not justified at this time. Despite having been
commenced more than two years ago, this action is still in its early stages with a pending motion to
dismiss. There is no present risk that the Court will enforce the Awards only to have the Singapore
Court of Appeal set aside the Awards requiring further litigation to return the money to Defendants. Nor
is there a present risk that the Court will enforce the Awards and the tribunals in the BIT 2
Arbitrations will issue awards favorable to Sanum and LHNV that offset any amount paid pursuant to a
final judgment of this Court. Should the Court find it has jurisdiction over Baldwin and Bridge and that
Lao PDR may attempt to enforce the Awards against Baldwin and/or Bridge as the alter ego(s) of Sanum
and/or LHNV, and the Set Aside Action and/or the BIT 2 Arbitrations have not been decided, then
Defendants may renew their motion at that time.
9.
The Set Aside Action is not a sufficient reason to stay the
proceedings in this action either pursuant to Article VI of the New York Convention or pursuant to the
Court’s inherent power to stay cases.
3 Under Article VI of the New York Convention, a court that has been
asked to enforce a foreign arbitral award has the discretion to stay such an action if a party to the
arbitration has commenced action to set aside the award in either the country where the arbitration took
place or the country whose law governed the arbitral proceedings. New York Convention, Art. VI.
4
Likewise, the Court has discretion to stay any action on its docket, but the Court must consider the
potential prejudice and hardship to the parties as well as the interests of judicial economy.
Landis, 299 U.S. at 254–55.
10.
The first Europcar factor, the purpose of
arbitration, weighs against granting a stay. The purpose of arbitration is to resolve disputes quickly
and inexpensively and without the need for protracted litigation. Europcar, 156
F.3d at 317. The New York Convention and the FAA codify the United States’ policy of enforcing
foreign arbitral awards except in the limited circumstances enumerated in Article V of the New York
Convention. See 9 U.S.C. § 201; New York Convention Art. V. Granting a stay
here would frustrate the purpose of arbitration by delaying the resolution of the dispute and
potentially the enforcement of the award. Although it is possible that this Court could enforce the
Awards against Baldwin and Bridge and then the Singapore Court of Appeal sets aside the Awards, thus
necessitating further and potentially protracted litigation to undo this Court’s prior enforcement, that
scenario is speculative at this point. In any event, if the proceedings reach a point where that result
becomes more likely, Defendants may renew their motion to stay at such time.
11.
The second Europcar factor, the status of
the foreign proceedings, slightly weighs against granting a stay. Although the Set Aside Action has
progressed to the point where a decision from the Singapore Court of Appeal is expected in the coming
months, a three-judge panel of the Singapore International Commercial Court has already unanimously
rejected Sanum’s and LHNV’s challenges to the Awards. See Branson
Decl., Ex. A. Moreover, that a decision is expected within a matter of months suggests that the decision
in the Set Aside Action will be made before this Court gets to the point of enforcing the Awards against
any of the Defendants in this action. As noted above, this case has not progressed past the motion to
dismiss phase. If Lao PDR’s TAC survives Baldwin’s and Bridge’s motion to dismiss, the
parties would then file additional pleadings and engage in discovery. The Court would then need to make
a determination that Baldwin and Bridge were the alter egos of Sanum and LHNV, see
TAC ¶¶ 13, 124–207. Only after those preliminary issues are decided would the Court get
to the merits of whether to enforce the Awards. Thus, this Court will be able to appropriately react to
the decision in the Set Aside Action prior to reaching the merits of Lao PDR’s enforcement claims. The
status of the Set Aside Action weighs against granting a stay.
12.
The third Europcar factor, the standard
of review used in the foreign proceedings, is neutral or weighs slightly against granting a stay. The
Singapore courts are analyzing whether to set aside the Awards under standards substantially similar to
those set forth in the New York Convention. Compare New York Convention, Art. V,
with UNCITRAL Model Law on International Commercial Arbitration (2006), Art. 34; see
also Singapore International Arbitration Act, § 24, Cap 143A, 2002; Branson Decl., Ex. A
¶¶ 38–47. Thus, there is no indication that the Singapore Court of Appeal will review
the Awards with a different level of scrutiny than this Court. Defendants contend that even “the
mere possibility that the reviewing court will set aside the award[] weighs mildly in favor of granting
a stay.” Def. Reply at 7 (quoting CEF Energia, B.V. v. Italian Republic,
No. 19-cv-3443 (KBJ), 2020 WL 4219786, at *6 (D.D.C. July 23, 2020)). However, there is always a
possibility that a reviewing court would set aside an award. Moreover, as already discussed, that the
Singapore Court of Appeal may set aside the Awards does not weigh in favor of stay because there are a
multitude of preliminary issues that this Court must decide prior to even reaching any argument about
whether to enforce the Awards. Thus, the concerns of the CEF Energia court are not
relevant here. The parties do not suggest that the Singapore Court of Appeal will reach its decision
after this Court reaches a decision on the merits of Lao PDR’s enforcement claims, see Def. Br. at 11 (“It would be reasonable to believe that the Singapore
Court of Appeal will issue its determination in a matter of months”); therefore, that the
Singapore courts use the same standard of review renders the third factor is neutral or weighs slightly
against granting a stay.
13.
The fourth Europcar factor, the
characteristics of the foreign proceeding, is neutral. The nature of the proceeding as a set aside
action weighs in favor of enforcement under the fourth Europcar factor. Europcar, 156 F.3d at 318. However, the fourth factor also considers when the
proceeding was initiated and whether it was meant to hinder or delay enforcement. Id. Sanum and LHNV commenced the Set Aside Action prior to Lao PDR commencing
this action. See Branson Decl., Ex. A ¶ 37. Although Sanum’s and
LHNV’s challenges were unsuccessful in the first instance, there is no indication that those
challenges are frivolous or intended hinder or delay. Sanum and LHNV should be permitted their
challenges pursuant to the New York Convention. See New York Convention, Art.
V(1)(e). Again, as discussed, the possibility that this Court reaches a determination on the merits
prior to the Singapore Court of Appeal appears slight, and if that scenario becomes more likely,
Defendants may renew their motion. The Defendants’ ability to renew their motion at a later date
also renders Defendants’ appeal to international comity is inapposite. Any concerns regarding
international comity are not relevant at this time. The fourth factor is neutral.
14.
The fifth
Europcar factor, balancing the
hardships, is neutral. Should the court decline to grant a stay, Defendants will need to continue
litigating this action, which will undoubtedly require time and expense. However, Baldwin and Bridge
have a pending motion to dismiss in which they seek to end their involvement in this action.
5 Notably, any potential hardship
that would result from the Court enforcing the Awards against Defendants only to have the Singapore
Court of Appeal set aside the awards can be ameliorated by allowing Defendants to renew their motion to
stay. On the other hand, Lao PDR contends that it would be prejudiced by the delay of these proceedings.
Pl. Br. at 11. There are a number of preliminary issues that must be decided before reaching the
question of whether to enforce the Awards, and Lao PDR should not have to wait until the Set Aside
Action is decided before the Court answers those preliminary questions. Although such delay would not
prejudice Lao PDR,
see Lockyer v. Mirant Corp., 398 F.3d
1098, 1109–12 (9th Cir. 2005) (delay in recovering monetary damages is not prejudice for purposes
of a stay), Lao PDR is entitled to a speedy resolution of its claims. Thus, neither party makes a
compelling case of hardship from either granting or denying a stay, and the fifth
Europcar factor is neutral.
15.
The parties do not point to any other relevant considerations
under the sixth Europcar factor. Therefore, the sixth factor is neutral. Thus, out
of the six factors, two weigh against a stay and four are neutral. Notably, the first two factors, which
several courts have found to be the most important, both weigh against granting a stay. See LLC SPC Stileks v. Republic of Moldova, 985 F.3d 871, 880 (D.C. Cir. 2021);
Europcar, 156 F.3d at 318.
16.
Likewise, a stay is not warranted under the Court’s
inherent powers. As noted above Defendants’ proffered standard of balancing the hardships and
considering judicial economy overlaps with the first and fifth Europcar factors,
one of which weighs against granting the stay and the other of which is neutral. For the reasons
discussed above, the balance of the hardships is neutral. Finally, a stay is not likely to conserve
judicial resources. The preliminary issues have been extensively briefed, and the motion to dismiss will
be fully submitted in approximately one month. Thus, the Set Aside Action is not grounds for a stay
under the New York Convention or the Court’s inherent power.
II.
The BIT 2 Arbitrations
17.
The parties disagree about whether the Court must analyze
Defendants’ motion to stay as it pertains to the BIT 2 Arbitrations under Article VI of the New
York Convention. See Pl. Br. at 5; Def. Reply at 3. The BIT 2 Arbitrations are not
grounds for a stay under the New York Convention, which only contemplates a stay pending resolution of a
challenge to the awards at issue; however, the Court declines to deny Defendants’ motion on those
grounds. Instead, the Court considers whether the BIT 2 Arbitrations are grounds for a stay based on the
Court’s inherent power to stay cases. As discussed, the Court has the power to stay any case on
its docket. Landis, 299 U.S. at 254–55. When considering a stay based on
its inherent power, the Court will consider the prejudice to non-moving parties by the granting of a
stay, the hardship to the moving party by being forced to continue litigating, and the judicial
resources of the Court. Id. Here, the respective burdens on the parties are
minimal, though a prolonged stay during the BIT 2 Arbitrations prior to deciding the preliminary issues
in this action would be unfair to Lao PDR. The Court’s resources will not be conserved by staying this
action while the BIT 2 Arbitrations are decided because the outcome of the BIT 2 Arbitrations will not
have an impact on the merits of the parties’ claims in this action, only on the amount of damages that
Lao PDR may ultimately collect enforcing the Awards.
18.
As already discussed, the Court denies Defendants’ motion
without prejudice to renew. Thus, Defendants only face the burden of continuing to litigate the
preliminary issues before the Court reaches the merits of the enforcement claims. Those issues have been
extensively briefed and would not require substantial additional resources for the Court to decide.
Thus, the burden on Defendants is slight. Moreover, even if Sanum and LHNV are successful in the BIT 2
Arbitrations, Defendants would still need to litigate Lao PDR’s claims in this Court. That Sanum and
LHNV may be entitled to a set-off does not mean that the Court will dismiss Lao PDR’s claims.
19.
In contrast, Lao PDR would be forced to wait out not only the
BIT 2 Arbitrations, but also potentially an action to set aside any awards issued in the BIT 2
Arbitrations. Once the BIT 2 Arbitrations and any challenges are finalized, Lao PDR would then be in the
same position it is in now regardless of the outcomes of the BIT 2 Arbitrations. Thus, Lao PDR will
still need to proceed with litigating the preliminary issues before the Court and potentially the merits
of its claims to enforce the Awards. That the amounts potentially owed to Lao PDR pursuant to the Awards
could be set off by awards in the BIT 2 Arbitrations does not moot Lao PDR’s claims in this action.
20.
Finally, since the outcomes of the BIT 2 Arbitrations could
only affect the amount of the judgment this Court issues, rather than making further litigation in this
action superfluous or moot, a stay would not have any effect on judicial resources.
6 Indeed, even if Sanum and LHNV
were successful in the BIT 2 Arbitrations, Defendants would still have an interest in continuing to
litigate this case to conclusion because the Court assumes the Defendants, and/or Sanum and LHNV, would
not simply agree to deduct the amount owed under the Awards from the awards in the BIT 2 Arbitrations
without this Court determining that the Awards are enforceable.
21.
The BIT 2 Arbitrations are not a sufficient reason to stay this
action at this time. The parties fail to demonstrate any prejudice or hardship that would result from
the Court’s decision regarding a stay at this time. Nor have Defendants demonstrated that a stay
would conserve judicial resources. The motion is denied.
7
For the foregoing reasons, Defendants’ motion is denied,
and it is ORDERED that Defendants’ Motion to Stay is DENIED without prejudice.
/s/ Claire R. Kelly
Claire R. Kelly, Judge*