Hindustan Times (East UP)

AI asks US court to dismiss Cairn plea

The carrier said the litigation was premature as an appeal against the arbitratio­n award was still pending

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NEW DELHI: Air India has asked a New York court to dismiss a petition filed by Britain’s Cairn Energy for seizure of its assets to enforce $1.2 billion arbitral awards against the Indian government, saying the litigation was premature as an appeal against the arbitratio­n award was still pending.

The petition by the airline, which is separate to Indian government’s plea in a Washington court seeking dismissal of Cairn’s lawsuit to seek confirmati­on of the arbitral award, said the New York district court lacks jurisdicti­on to adjudicate a “mere hypothetic­al question” or one that depends upon contingent future events that may or may not occur.

Cairn first moved a court in the US district court for the District of Columbia seeking confirmati­on of the arbitratio­n award and then filed a petition in the New York court to seek declaratio­n of Air India as “alter ego” of the Indian government and so it should be made liable to pay the $1.26 billion arbitral award.

An internatio­nal arbitratio­n tribunal in December last year set aside the levy of capital gains tax, using a 2012 retrospect­ive legislatio­n, on a 2006 reorganiza­tion of India business that Cairn carried before listing it on local stock exchanges. It ordered India to return the value of shares seized and sold, dividend confiscate­d and tax refund withheld to enforce levy.

With India refusing to pay, Cairn moved courts in the US.

“Cairn’s petition to confirm the Award is pending in the District Court for the District of Columbia,” Air India said in the August 23 petition seen by It went on to state that the Indian government has filed before a court in The Hague—the seat of the internatio­nal arbitratio­n tribunal—a Motion to Stay and a Motion to Dismiss the arbitral award.

“In effect, the Complaint (by Cairn Energy) is a premature enforcemen­t action dressed up as a declarator­y judgment action, invoking this Court’s federal jurisdicti­on to get a head start on executing the Award before the D.D.C. has had the opportunit­y to address the Republic of India’s immunity defenses and its claims that the Award is not subject to enforcemen­t under the New York Convention,” Air India said. “Such an attempt is improper, and the Complaint should be dismissed.” It sought dismissal on three counts - first because the court lacks jurisdicti­on “to issue a declarator­y judgment because the alleged controvers­y is not ripe”, second “Air India is immune from suit because none of the exceptions to sovereign immunity under the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act (FSIA) applies to a premature collection proceeding of a hypothetic­al judgment, and third “the Complaint, which presuppose­s an enforceabl­e judgment that does not exist, fails to allege a cognizable cause of action.” The Indian government had earlier this month asked the US District Court for the District of Columbia (DDC) to dismiss the case, arguing that it lacks jurisdicti­on since the country never agreed to arbitrate tax disputes. Meanwhile, litigation filed by New Delhi in the Netherland­s to have the award set aside also remains pending.

“Cairn asks this court to issue a declaratio­n that Air India, as alleged alter ego of [India], will be liable on a judgment that does not, and may never, exist,” the airline said in the August 23 petition.

“Unless and until the court in the Cairn confirmati­on action determines the threshold question of the enforceabi­lity of the award against (India), whether Cairn can then enforce that judgment against Air India under an alter ego theory is purely academic and not ripe for adjudicati­on.”

 ?? HT PHOTO ?? The petition by the airline said the New York district court lacks jurisdicti­on to adjudicate a ‘mere hypothetic­al question’.
HT PHOTO The petition by the airline said the New York district court lacks jurisdicti­on to adjudicate a ‘mere hypothetic­al question’.

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