two-thirds of the shares in Hydrox, while U.S. company WDR Delaware Corporation (WDR), a subsidiary of Lowe's Companies, Inc. (Lowe's), owned one third. Disputes arose in relation to the Masters business. WDR and Lowe's commenced proceedings alleging oppressive conduct by Hydrox and sought orders that Hydrox be dissolved pursuant to the oppression remedy or alternatively on "just and equitable" grounds. Woolworths sought that the proceedings be stayed on the basis that the terms of the joint venture agreement between the parties required disputes to be determined by arbitration. Section 7(2) of the Australian International Arbitration Act 1974 requires proceedings to be stayed and referred to arbitration if they are commenced by a party to an arbitration agreement and the matter is capable of being settled by arbitration. The central issue in the proceedings was whether the matters raised by WDR and Lowe's in their proceedings could be resolved by arbitration. WDR and Lowe's argued that there was only one matter to be determined by Hydrox should be dissolved. WDR and Lowe's argued that this determination could only be made by a court and not by private arbitration. The court rejected this argument and agreed with Woolworths in finding that the proceedings involved several matters to be referred to arbitration (such as whether there was a failure to provide information and whether the joint venture agreement had been breached as alleged by WDR and Lowe's). The court stated that whether these matters were arbitrable involved "a consideration of the inherent power of a national legal system to determine what issues are capable of being resolved through arbitration. The issue goes beyond the will or the agreement of the parties. The parties cannot agree to submit to arbitration disputes that are not arbitrable." The court noted that matters incapable of being resolved by arbitration shared a "sufficient element of legitimate public interest in the subject matters making the enforceable private resolution of disputes concerning them outside the national court system inappropriate." for a dissolution order is not arbitrable on the basis that it affects the legal status of a person, it affects a number of third parties, the creation and dissolution of a company legal entity is a matter of governmental authority, and there is a public interest in ensuring that the procedural steps by which a company is liquidated are governed by court and determined publicly rather than by private arbitration. Woolworths argued that the question the arbitrator would answer was not whether to dissolve Hydrox. The arbitrator would resolve the matters that the court would have regard to in determining whether to dissolve Hydrox, such as whether there had actually been a failure to provide information or whether a breach of the joint venture agreement had occurred as alleged by WDR and Lowe's. The court had regard to Australian and international case law on the arbitrability of matters, and was of the view that the matters raised by WDR and Lowe's could be arbitrated. The matters were in substance contractual disputes and other obligations between private parties. The fact that a dissolution order was sought by WDR and Lowe's did not change the nature of the dispute between the parties that needed to be resolved. While the court saw no issue in having these matters determined by arbitration, it held that the ultimate decision of whether to dissolve Hydrox was only capable of being made by the court and was not arbitrable. from agreements that are reached between local and foreign parties. It is essential that local expertise be obtained in dealing with any cross- border transactions. The Masters Case is an example in which local Australian shareholder remedies did not overrule the joint venture agreement reached between an Australian company and a U.S. company. |