The next focusIR Investor Webinar takes place tomorrow with guest speakers from WS Blue Whale Growth Fund, Taseko Mines, Kavango Resources and CQS Natural Resources fund. Please register here.

Less Ads, More Data, More Tools Register for FREE

Pin to quick picksCloudified Holdings Limited Regulatory News (CHL)

Share Price Information for Cloudified Holdings Limited (CHL)

London Stock Exchange
Share Price is delayed by 15 minutes
Get Live Data
Share Price: 6.00
Bid: 5.00
Ask: 7.00
Change: 0.00 (0.00%)
Spread: 2.00 (40.00%)
Open: 6.00
High: 6.00
Low: 6.00
Prev. Close: 6.00
CHL Live PriceLast checked at -

Watchlists are a member only feature

Login to your account

Alerts are a premium feature

Login to your account

Further re Annulment Application and suspension

4 Apr 2017 08:15

RNS Number : 4921B
Churchill Mining plc
04 April 2017
 

4 April 2017

 

AIM: CHL

CHURCHILL MINING PLC

 

CHURCHILL FILES REQUEST FOR ANNULMENT OF ICSID AWARD

 

UPDATE ON SUSPENSION

 

Further to the announcement of 28 February 2017, the Directors of Churchill Mining plc (AIM: CHL) and its subsidiary Planet Mining Pty Ltd (collectively "the Company") advise that on 31 March 2017, following a detailed analysis of the ICSID Award ("Award") of 6 December 2016 with its solicitors Clifford Chance LLP, the Company lodged an application to annul the Award under Article 52 of the ICSID Convention ("Annulment Application").

 

A copy of the Company's Annulment Application is available on the Company's website at www.churchillmining.com

 

In the Annulment Application, the Company explains how the Award is the product of a process that was tainted by a range of serious departures from fundamental rules of procedure and fairness and manifest excesses of power by the arbitrators. In particular:

 

1. Long after all of the evidence was filed and over a year after the document authenticity hearing, the Tribunal requested new submissions on a legal authority that neither side had relied upon (this new legal authority was the case of Minnotte v Poland). The Tribunal prevented the parties from introducing new factual evidence with their submissions, even though Minnotte v Poland gave rise to a distinct legal framework which clearly raised new issues of fact, specifically whether the Company (i) lacked due care or was negligent in investigating the factual circumstances surrounding the making of its investment and (ii) deliberately closed its eyes to indications of serious misconduct or crime or unreasonably failed to perceive such indications. The Tribunal eventually disposed of the case on the basis of this new legal framework - a clear violation of the Company's right to be heard.

 

2. The Tribunal re-admitted (without notice) the witness evidence of the State's key witness, Mr Isran Noor (the Regent of East Kutai) - despite having previously struck Mr Noor's testimony from the record because he outright refused to attend the hearing to face questions (even via video-link). The Tribunal then relied on Mr Noor's evidence as part of the Award, including when applying the new legal framework described above.

 

3. The Tribunal dismissed the Company's claims in respect of the exploitation licences for the EKCP (in respect of which no allegations of forgery were made by the State) without giving the Company the right to be heard on (and without applying) Indonesian law, which was critical to determining the validity of these licences as stand-alone title instruments. The Tribunal did this even though the Company emphasised the importance of this Indonesian law issue at the hearing and requested notice if the Tribunal intended to decide this issue. The Tribunal subsequently expressly carved-out this issue from the scope of the parties' post-hearing briefs, which the Company took as a clear and unambiguous indication that it would be addressed in a subsequent phase of the proceedings.

 

4. The Tribunal committed a range of other annullable errors, including failing to state the reasons on which the Award was based.

 

In its Annulment Application, the Company invoked three grounds for annulment of the Award:

 

(i) that the Tribunal seriously departed from a fundamental rule of procedure (ICSID Convention, Article 52(1)(d));

(ii) that the Tribunal manifestly exceeded its powers (ICSID Convention, Article 52(1)(b)); and

(iii) that the Tribunal failed to state the reasons on which the Award was based (ICSID Convention, Article 52(1)(e)).

 

As part of its Annulment Application, the Company requested a stay of enforcement of the Award (ICSID Convention, Article 52(5)) and asked the ICSID Secretary-General to inform the State that the enforcement of the Award has been provisionally stayed (ICSID Arbitration Rules, Rule 54).

 

The filing of the Annulment Application has automatically resulted in a provisional stay of the Award (including the costs order). This remains in place until the ICSID ad hoc Committee has decided on whether or not to continue the stay, having given each party an opportunity to present its observations. The ad hoc Committee takes into account the specific circumstances of each case when considering whether it should grant a continued stay of enforcement of the Award. This process may take three to four months, but the overall duration will depend on how quickly an ad hoc Committee is constituted to hear the Company's application, how quickly Indonesia applies for the provisional stay to be lifted (we assume it will do so promptly) and, finally, how long it takes the ad hoc Committee to hear and determine the parties' submissions on continuation of the stay. Please note that if the stay is continued, the ad hoc Committee may at any time modify or terminate the stay if requested to do so by either party (after hearing the parties).

 

Update on suspension

 

The Company confirms that the suspension in trading in the Company's shares on AIM remains in place and will be reviewed following the ad hoc Committee's decision as to whether it should grant a continued stay of enforcement of the Award.

 

Churchill Chairman David Quinlivan said:

 

"Our detailed assessment has revealed that the Award contains many annullable errors. As we explain in the Annulment Application, the Tribunal was not clear in the procedural orders it used to manage the document authenticity phase.

 

The Tribunal surprised the parties by unilaterally changing the scope of the document authenticity phase at the eleventh hour. At the same time, the Tribunal denied the Company the opportunity to present the evidence needed to address the new issues raised. We protested the Tribunal's surprising change in scope but this protest was ignored by the Tribunal.

 

In my view, one of the most unsound things about the Award is the Tribunal's unsubstantiated condemnation of the Company for its failure to conduct reasonable due diligence over a period that spanned many years without ever articulating what it considered the standard due diligence program of an investor in the Indonesian mining sector was at the time. We also note that the State did not put on any such evidence. Indeed, the few due diligence materials that were incidentally on the record were filed by Churchill and went directly against the Tribunal's conclusions on this critical point: none of the documents showed that other mining investors into Indonesia considered the forgery of signatures on official State documents to be a known risk at the time, let alone that forensic document examination was a standard due diligence item for mining companies investing in Indonesia.

 

Having not identified what it considered a reasonable due diligence process to be, we are even more confused by the Tribunal's conclusion that Churchill should have done yet more due diligence after the making of the investment. Due diligence is of course an important process but it occurs prior to the making of an investment not after.

 

We were also aggrieved by the Tribunal's failure in the Award to apply any sanctions at all for the refusal by Indonesia to produce certain documents, particularly documents relating to investigations into events that were the focus of the document authenticity phase of the proceedings. Despite long-term investigations by various agencies, no charges have ever been laid against anyone connected to the Company or the EKCP. The Company fails to understand how the Tribunal could accept Indonesia's allegations of forgery and fraud without having seen these documents, especially when the Tribunal previously ordered that they be produced by Indonesia. It is concerning that the Tribunal seems to have been willing to accept at face value serious allegations that the State's own agencies have never made, let alone prosecuted.

 

But, from our perspective, probably the most unsound aspect of the Award is that it shows that, despite having decided to disregard Mr Noor's witness statement due to his outright and contemptuous refusal to attend the hearing on document authenticity at all, the Tribunal then re-admitted and relied upon Mr Noor's witness statement as part of its finding that the exploitation licences were signed by him in circumstances where he was deceived by another senior member of the Regency staff. The Tribunal did not give the Company any notice that it was considering doing this and, if it had, the Company would obviously have objected in the strongest terms. In the Company's view, this was a gross violation of due process.

 

In the Annulment Application we note that, the day after the issuance of the Award, Mr Noor hosted a press conference in which he accepted congratulations for the Tribunal's decision. I struggle to see how the same witness who refused to attend the hearing to face cross-examination can take credit for the result, unless of course the decision not to come to the hearing was calculated to achieve that result. In my personal opinion, the behaviour of Isran Noor in this case has been very poor and reflects badly on Indonesia as an investment destination.

 

There are many other aspects of the Award that the Company challenges in the Annulment Application, including the Tribunal's failure to apply Indonesian law to determine the validity of the exploitation licences signed by Mr Noor and the Tribunal's failure to state the reasons on which it dismissed certain of the Company's claims, including its intellectual property claims based on the feasibility studies. Overall, the Company is extremely disappointed with the way its case has been handled so far but looks forward to the opportunity to present its grievances to the Annulment Committee."

 

ENDS

 

 

For further information, please contact:

Churchill Mining plc

Northland Capital Partners Limited

David Quinlivan

Nicholas Smith

Russell Hardwick

Nominated adviser

Edward Hutton/William Vandyk/Gerry Beaney

Broking

John Howes

+ 61 8 6380 9670

+44 (0)20 3861 6625

 

 

 

 

This information is provided by RNS
The company news service from the London Stock Exchange
 
END
 
 
MSCMMGGDNDZGNZG
Date   Source Headline
1st May 20249:03 amRNSHolding(s) in Company
30th Apr 20247:30 amRNSRestoration - Cloudified Holdings Limited
30th Apr 20247:00 amRNSInterim results
29th Apr 20248:30 amRNSNotice of Interim Result & Restoration of Trading
3rd Apr 20248:29 amRNSRetirement of Director
28th Mar 202411:42 amRNSUpdate
28th Mar 202411:37 amRNSFinal Results
12th Dec 20232:43 pmRNSCompletion of the Disposal & Directorate Changes
7th Jun 201712:00 pmRNSCancellation of AIM admission
16th May 20178:00 amRNSUpdate on Annulment Application
19th Apr 20179:00 amRNSFurther re Annulment Application
6th Apr 20179:00 amRNSBlock Listing Six Monthly Return
4th Apr 20178:15 amRNSFurther re Annulment Application and suspension
31st Mar 201710:00 amRNSHalf Yearly Report and Annulment Application
16th Mar 20178:00 amRNSBlock Listing Six Monthly Return
28th Feb 201711:45 amRNSUpdate
31st Jan 20178:23 amRNSUpdate
23rd Dec 20162:00 pmRNSUpdate
23rd Dec 20167:00 amRNSBlock Listing Six Monthly Return
7th Dec 20168:45 amRNSChurchill's claim against Indonesia struck out
6th Dec 20167:30 amRNSSuspension - Churchill Mining Plc
2nd Dec 20167:00 amRNSTiming of ICSID decision and temporary suspension
1st Dec 201611:52 amRNSResult of AGM
30th Nov 201611:00 amRNSTotal Voting Rights
30th Nov 20167:50 amRNSICSID Arbitration Update
29th Nov 20167:00 amRNSICSID Arbitration Update
16th Nov 20164:41 pmRNSSecond Price Monitoring Extn
16th Nov 20164:35 pmRNSPrice Monitoring Extension
16th Nov 20162:28 pmRNSICSID Arbitration Update
7th Nov 20167:40 amRNSHolding(s) in Company
7th Nov 20167:40 amRNSHolding(s) in Company
3rd Nov 201610:41 amRNSDirector Shareholding
2nd Nov 20168:00 amRNSPosting of Annual Report and AGM Notice
19th Oct 20162:24 pmRNSFinal Results
11th Oct 20168:57 amRNSBlock Listing Six Monthly Return
6th Oct 20167:00 amRNSBlock Listing Six Monthly Return
15th Sep 20168:00 amRNSBlock listing six monthly return
12th Sep 201612:37 pmRNSICSID Arbitration Update
12th Aug 20169:12 amRNSDirector/PDMR Shareholding
29th Jul 20167:00 amRNSTotal Voting Rights
1st Jul 20163:00 pmRNSIssue of Shares
23rd Jun 20168:00 amRNSBlock listing six monthly return
21st Jun 20169:53 amRNSFurther re forgery dismissal application timing
17th Jun 201612:03 pmRNSUpdate on forgery dismissal application
6th May 20169:30 amRNSResult of General Meeting
5th May 20161:30 pmRNSUpdate on Indonesia's default in ICSID proceedings
29th Apr 201610:00 amRNSTotal Voting Rights
20th Apr 201612:39 pmRNSUpdate on Indonesia's default in ICSID proceedings
14th Apr 20164:40 pmRNSSecond Price Monitoring Extn
14th Apr 20164:35 pmRNSPrice Monitoring Extension

Due to London Stock Exchange licensing terms, we stipulate that you must be a private investor. We apologise for the inconvenience.

To access our Live RNS you must confirm you are a private investor by using the button below.

Login to your account

Don't have an account? Click here to register.

Quickpicks are a member only feature

Login to your account

Don't have an account? Click here to register.