In Deciding Whether To Vacate Confirmation Of Arbitral Award Subsequently Vacated By Primary Jurisdiction, Second Circuit Considers Normal Rule 60(B)(5) Factors Plus International Comity

The Second Circuit recently affirmed a lower court's decision to vacate its earlier judgment enforcing a Malaysian-based arbitration award against the government of Laos where a Malaysian court subsequently set aside the award. After a dispute between a Thai company and its Laotian subsidiary ("TLL") against the Laotian government over mining contracts, an arbitration panel in Malaysia found Laos in breach and awarded TLL $57 million. Once the period for challenging the award under Malaysian law passed, TLL pursued enforcement actions against Laos in the U.S., U.K., and France. In late 2010, nine months after the operative deadline, Laos moved for an extension of time to challenge the award, which the Malaysian court granted. While a U.S. district court issued relief enforcing the award in 2011, the Malaysian court then set aside the award in 2012. The present appeal arose from the district court's 2014 decision granting Laos' Rule 60(b)(5) motion to vacate its previous confirmation order to give effect to the Malaysian court's set-aside judgment and two subsequent orders.

First, the court held that Rule 60(b)(5) applies to motions to vacate judgments confirming arbitral awards that are subsequently set aside by the primary jurisdiction. Reviewing the New York Convention and FAA texts, it found the Convention's requirement of enforcing arbitral awards in accordance with the secondary jurisdiction's procedural rules includes post-judgment procedures like Rule 60(b). Further, the FAA provision subjecting judgments to the "provisions of law relating to" judgments in an action extends to the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.

Next, the court discussed what a district court's Rule 60(b)(5) analysis should entail in this context. It found that a district court should take into consideration the Convention's concern for...

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