1 Introduction
International Investment Agreements (IIAs)Footnote 1 regulate the basic treatment and protection of foreign investors and their investments in cases of expropriation where an adequate compensation based on the investment’s value has been provided.Footnote 2 They do not, however, regulate compensation for other substantive protections granted to investors. This includes, for instance, the fair and equitable treatment (FET), the minimum standard of treatment (MST) or the prohibition of discrimination. In the absence of a conventional standard of compensation in assessing the value of damages to be paid to an alien for international wrongful acts of States, today, there is a common understanding among arbitral tribunals that customary international law (CIL) is a valuable source to apply. Nevertheless, determining the amount to be paid for damages, through an application of the relevant CIL rules, is far from a simple task since tribunals are faced with assessing the evidence provided by the parties, if any, and taking a position on the existence and content of the CIL rule.Footnote 3 Thus, a myriad of important questions arise, both for the parties to argue and for the tribunals to determine the connection to such CIL rules in a concrete case. For instance, where should tribunals look for the existence of an invoked CIL rule and should it be identified? When did the rule emerge as a result of the practice of States and how can it be interpreted?
Despite recognising the Herculean task of establishing the generality of State practice and opinio juris of a CIL rule for damages in international investment law, some commentators maintain that for practical reasons international tribunals: (i) often find it in the International Law Commission’s (ILC) Articles on the Responsibility of States for Internationally Wrongful Acts (ARSIWA) simply because there is no better legal source for guidance; (ii) oftentimes, they also turn to decisions of courts and other tribunals that, in their view, have established the content of these customary rules;Footnote 4 and, (iii) draw inspiration from UN General Assembly (UNGA) resolutions.Footnote 5 In the latter case, for example, some authors frame the discussion of the CIL rule for the standard of compensation as ‘appropriate compensation’ by utilising its articulation in the 1962 UNGA Resolution No 1803, relating to the ‘Permanent Sovereignty over Natural Resources’, to assert the existence of opinio juris,Footnote 6 which bears a resemblance to one of the elements of CIL. However, as ‘evidenced by the process of elaboration of this instrument … the classical doctrine [on compensation] does not represent the general consensus of States and consequently cannot be considered as a rule of customary law’.Footnote 7
The Chorzów Factory case has been widely commented on and is still referenced by international courtsFootnote 8 to follow the full reparation principle for reparations as in Chorzów and to expand on cases when there is ‘uncertainty about the extent of the damage caused’ to say that it should be taken into ‘account of equitable considerations’Footnote 9 and ‘to make reparation in and adequate form’ where ‘compensation should not, however, have a punitive or exemplary character.’Footnote 10 However, there is a persistent narrative perpetuated by some investment tribunals, after 2001, that some of the rules on the assessment of compensation interpreted in Chorzów are CIL, or that this case itself is CIL.Footnote 11 This is not necessarily an accurate reflection of the existing normative status quo, because the rules described in the case did not automatically achieve CIL status. Nevertheless, Chorzów is still being used as a jurisprudential golden standard for applying ‘recognised’ CIL rules when assessing damages, and is often invoked to assert that when expropriations do not follow the rules provided in the treaty,Footnote 12 ie when compensation to the investor is not promptly paid, it subsequently becomes an illegal expropriation.Footnote 13
However, a closer reading of Chorzów reveals that this judgment did not state that neither the rules of full compensation, nor the one applied for the illegal taking of German interests in Upper Silesia, provided in its decision to assess the quantum of damages were CIL. The famous passage in page 47 of the decision, which has been invariably quoted by tribunals and scholars, could not be considered an assertion of CIL.
2 The Chorzów Narrative
The lack of guidance from primary investment protection norms in assessing damages has led to discussions in the academiaFootnote 14 and international investment arbitral tribunals,Footnote 15 where it has been claimed that in the absence of a conventional norm to assess the amount of the reparation for the investor, CIL must be applied. Although this claim might be correct, there has been a lack of explanation in the realms of investment literature and arbitral decisions about the moment when the customary rule for the assessment of damages, and the standard of full reparation, were formed. Subsequently, the Chorzów case has emerged as an initial point of reference for many scholars and arbitral tribunals, who have created a storyline claiming that this case represents CIL in the assessment of damages.Footnote 16 The language of the often-cited passage states that
[T]he essential principle contained in the actual notion of an illegal act – a principle which seems to be established by international practice and in particular by the decisions of arbitral tribunals – is that reparation must, as far as possible, wipe-out all the consequences of the illegal act and re-establish the situation which would, in all probability, have existed if that act had not been committed.Footnote 17
Firstly, the language used in this passage did not explicitly say that it was interpreting or applying CIL rules. Secondly, if that passage is intended to be interpreted as a statement of the Permanent Court of International Justice (PCIJ) about the CIL in 1928, a closer look shows that contrary to what the judgment said, as will be seen further on, prior to the Chorzów case neither international practice nor arbitral tribunals have consistently applied the full reparation principle and its means to assess the damages suffered by an injured alien.
So, from where has this narrative – which considers Chorzów as the distillation of the CIL on the assessment of damages – been conceived? Looking at the doctrine and cases, from 1928 to present, one can find that the Chorzów case especially rose to prominence after the adoption of the 2001 ARSIWA.Footnote 18 Special Rapporteur James Crawford quoted it when commenting on Article 36 ARSIWA regarding compensation.Footnote 19 At that time, there was also the boom of Investor-State dispute settlement (ISDS) cases against Latin American countries, where many arbitrators that had no prior experience or knowledge in public international law were thrust onto the ISDS scene.Footnote 20 Such reasons may have facilitated the post-2001 diversion of arbitral decisions from the previously established doctrine and cases, where Chorzów has increasingly been featured prominently as a reference of a principle of law in assessing damages.Footnote 21 These same post-2001 international arbitral decisions also relied on Chorzów as a legal source, because of the prestige of the PCIJ. In essence, the invocation of the Chorzów ‘precedent’ functioned on two levels. One, by invoking it, investment tribunals hoped that this would by ‘association’ bestow, somehow, an authority, or gravitas, behind their reasoning on assessment of damages. Two, the Chorzów case was a focal point in their argument that, under international investment law, CIL perhaps provided the rules for assessment of damages for responding to the so-called “illegal” expropriations where a payment was not made promptly. As a result, this narrative needs to be questioned to demystify the Chorzów judgment as a custom-making moment, where supposedly custom was interpreted in the decision and the rules for illegal takingsFootnote 22 were created. Yet, in reality, CIL cannot be found nor identified in this decision.
This narrative implies that the decision was a custom-making moment,Footnote 23 where, back in 1928, the Court identified the already crystalised international custom to measure damages for international wrongs and that it interpreted the contended CIL with authority in the way it did so. However, no crystallised custom was revealed in the decision, but still, the Chorzów case has been utilised for different purposes by arbitral tribunals under the contour of that authoritative narrative. In order to cast a critical eye on whether this narrative stands up to scrutiny, three different periods with regards to damages in international law will be examined. The following sub-sections will seek to determine whether the CIL rules on assessing damages existed in these periods and whether a custom-making moment had emerged. These three periods are: (i) prior to the Chorzów judgment, ie prior to 1928; (ii) from 1928 to 2001, ie between Chorzów and the adoption of the ARSIWA; and (iii) from 2001 to present. A point that needs to be mentioned here, and to which we shall return, is that in these last two periods the Chorzów case was interpreted by arbitral tribunals and academia in a variety of different ways.
2.1 Damages before the Chorzów Decision in 1928
In 1929, Clyde Eagleton wrote that little attention was devoted by writers ‘to the measure of damages in international law; and the paucity of doctrine and precedent has embarrassed recent attempts to codify the law relating to the responsibility of states’.Footnote 24 Also, he saw that no consistent practice existed in these words.
[B]ecause of the divergencies of theory which underlie the measuring of damages, which, indeed, lie at the foundation of international responsibility, it is contended, however, that, because of contrariety of opinion, and the difficulties of statement, no effort should be made to state rules as to the measure of damages.Footnote 25
A closer look at the arbitral and mixed claims commissions’ practice before 1928 confirms Eagleton’s assertions, ie, that the Chorzów decision was not the alleged custom-making moment and that the PCIJ could not have relied on earlier cases in identifying CIL rules for the assessment of damages, for the simple reason that prior practice was vastly inconsistent in the means and methods employed in determining the amount of reparation. This simple verification contradicts the narrative that a full reparation standard was customarily applied before 1928 to determine the amount of compensation in international claims; least of all, in expropriations to ‘wipe-out all the consequences of the wrongful act and re-establish the situation which would, in all probability, have existed if that act had not been committed’.Footnote 26
The pleadings of States before mixed commissions and arbitral tribunals is a veritable treasure trove of variety for the proposed means of reparations for different kinds of breaches of international obligations. Sometimes, discussions were on the different ways to provide reparations, such as in the Delagoa case (1900),Footnote 27 where Portugal proposed two different means that could be acceptable. The compromis, which granted the tribunal its jurisdiction and determined its scope, was concerned exclusively with the form and measure of the compensation for a cancelled railway concession. At no time was there any question raised on the validity of the act of expropriation itself, as to verify whether this was legal or not.Footnote 28
In the Spanish Treaty Claims Commission of 1901, Rule 9 required proof to sustain an award.Footnote 29 Consequently, injuries were assessed by the value of the property, ie, the market price of the houses, machinery, furniture, and buildings with affidavits, which would include further explanation.Footnote 30 In this commission, the method for calculation of damages was not a debated issue, but only the property subject to reparation.
In the Janes Claim (1926), the Claims Commission awarded damages, not because the amount ‘corresponded to the injury’ caused by the original harm, but because the respondent Government had been guilty of an ‘international delinquency’ in failing to measure up to ‘its duty of diligently prosecuting and properly punishing the offender’.Footnote 31
In the Lorenzo A Oliva case, large damages were claimed for future profits that could have been achieved during the concession granted to the claimant for the construction of a pantheon in Caracas cemetery because the claimant’s wrongful expulsion from Venezuela. In awarding damages for the claimant’s expulsion, and for the loss sustained on account of the interference with his concession, ‘Umpire Ralston disallowed the claim for estimated profits’.Footnote 32 Other cases, such as the Alabama, Montijo or Cotesworth, also merit mention, as they demonstrate the multifarious approaches used in assessing damages.Footnote 33
Thus, upon reviewing the case-law preceding the 1928 Chorzów judgment, it is clear that in some of the most well-known cases, arbitral tribunals did not consistently follow the full reparation principle, unlike what the Chorzów judgment may lead one to believe, nor did they state that any breach of an engagement would transform an expropriation into an illegal one.Footnote 34 This makes both the claims that there was a constant line of international precedents applying the principle of full reparation, and that a CIL rule was applied by the PCIJ to decide Chorzów, baseless or shaky at best.
A similar lack of evidence exists with respect to the assertion of arbitral tribunals that the principle of full reparation forms part of the applicable international law in cases where no prompt payment by the State has occurred. This principle was infrequently applied, and a contextual reading of Chorzów lends no real support to this assertion. More specifically, in Chorzów, the PCIJ interpreted Article 6 of the Geneva ConventionFootnote 35 as providing a clear prohibition of the liquidation of German interests in Upper Silesia.Footnote 36 Commenting on the case, Manley O Hudson observed that the Court stated that Poland’s action was not an expropriation to render which lawful only the payment of fair compensation would have been wanting, ‘but a seizure of property which could not be lawfully expropriated even against compensation’.Footnote 37 So, the result of the seizure in this case was to create an ‘obligation to restore the undertaking and, if this be not possible, to pay its value at the time of indemnification’.Footnote 38 Thus, because Poland seized German interests it behaved contrary to international law, since the legal course of action was to expropriate, not seize, property, according to Chorzów’s interpretation of the Geneva Convention. From this, many arbitral tribunals have extrapolated that expropriating with no prompt compensations is illegal,Footnote 39 ie, in direct violation of an obligation enshrined in an international treaty. However, this may be an oversimplification. As Herz correctly noted as early as 1941, even if the compensation was provided with a delay, this does not render an expropriation automatically illegal because ‘in practice deferred payments have frequently been accepted or agreed upon, the fact that interest has usually been paid for the delay seems to corroborate this rule’.Footnote 40
2.2 Damages after Chorzów and until 2001
After the Chorzów decision, there remained a lack of consensus among scholars and tribunals about the assessment of damages. For example, on the problem of compensation of expropriations and requisitions, Bin Cheng asserted that, according to the Upton case, compensation was indispensable and that the duty to compensate has been ‘either based upon respect for private property’Footnote 41 or, as the Norwegian Ships case provided, ‘upon enrichment of the community at the expense of isolated individuals’.Footnote 42
In 1938, LH Woolsey recognised that ‘international commissions have not followed definite rules’ in assessing indemnity, because they have ‘treated each case according to its peculiar circumstances and considered several standards of value in reaching the final result’.Footnote 43 He also made a distinction between just compensation related to lawful expropriations and damages for tortious actions, where ‘[i]t is clear that damages might be more comprehensive than just compensation for property taken’.Footnote 44 For Woolsey, ‘the distinction between lawful and unlawful dispossession is commented upon by the Permanent Court of International Justice in the Chorzów Factory case’.Footnote 45 Other authors have claimed that the PCIJ held the principle of full compensation, but such decisions were regarding the interpretation of a specific treaty, thus it was not a dictum where a general rule was identified.Footnote 46 Given the different views between various authors and tribunals, it cannot reasonably be argued that there was a consensus on the assessment of damages.Footnote 47
This is buttressed by the jurisprudence of the period. During this, there were different kinds of cases, such as those before the Iran-U.S. Claims Tribunal (IUSCT), contractual cases, and some (although not too many) ISDS cases, which dealt with assessing damages. A common theme in all of these was that the tribunals involved did not consider Chorzów as either reflecting CIL or providing guidance on how to identify the relevant CIL rules. In furtherance to this, out of 28 public cases reviewed for this piece, not even one held that there were illegal expropriations in play.Footnote 48 Eight cases did not make an analysis on damages,Footnote 49 13 cases did not even mention CIL or Chorzów,Footnote 50 three mentioned Chorzów on the assessment,Footnote 51 and three (with Metalclad falling under both these last categories) mentioned CIL within the context of damages’ assessment.Footnote 52
In 1992, in the Southern Pacific Properties v Egypt case, no reference was made to CIL, and Chorzów was referred to in regard to the application of the Discounted Cash Flow (DCF) method to assess the damages. Following the Amoco case, the Tribunal considered that DCF method was not appropriate for determining fair compensation in this case, because of the lack of operational time that would result from awarding ‘possible but contingent and undeterminate damage which, in accordance with the jurisprudence of arbitral tribunals, cannot be taken into account’,Footnote 53 and then held that ‘no reparation for speculative or uncertain damage can be awarded’.Footnote 54
From the above, one can see that none of these cases said that Chorzów was CIL, but there was some rudimentary consistency among certain arbitral tribunals, which held in broad strokes that the Chorzów case contained some principles. The tribunals understood such principles in varying ways: as a principle without qualification to award the costs of the investment, such as in Metalclad v Mexico;Footnote 55 or stated as a principle of international law as Myers v Canada held;Footnote 56 or, as Amoco v Indonesia stated, full compensation is a general principle of law ‘which may be considered as a source of international law’, with Chorzów functioning as ‘the basic precedent in this respect’.Footnote 57 However, in other cases, a different line was followed, as for instance in Mobil Oil Corporation, where the Tribunal was of the view that the investor was ‘entitled under the principles of customary international to appropriate compensation’.Footnote 58
2.3 Damages from 2001 until Present
Examining the cases relating to assessment of damages post-adoption of the ARSIWA, it seems that the Chorzów case has served as a means for tribunals and scholars to make different kinds of claims regarding the standard of compensation, and its assessment and application under CIL. So much so, in fact, that the Chorzów standard has been seen by some not only as a reflection of CIL, but ‘as a static set of uncontested rules that can be applied automatically and deductively in granting redress whenever an international wrongful act takes place’.Footnote 59 Despite this, what is striking is that such statements are not supported by delving deeper into the matter or providing any further evidence other than merely quoting the Chorzów judgment. Several scholars have fallen in line with this view, assenting to this conception of the narrative.Footnote 60 Some also claim, in relation to the so-called illegal expropriations, that ‘the standard of compensation is found, not in the applicable … BIT, but rather in customary international law under the rubric of the widely reputed Chorzów Factory rule’.Footnote 61
However, more established authors currently recognise in Chorzów a general principle of law as opposed to a CIL rule, expressing that ‘the guiding principle is that reparation must, as far as possible, restore the situation that would have existed had the illegal act not been committed, expressed in the Chorzów Factory case’Footnote 62 and that ‘[u]nder this principle, damages for a violation of international law have to reflect the damage actually suffered by the victim’.Footnote 63 As a source of international law, general principles of law have been recognised as a legal basis for international legal principles relating to foreign investment. As Sornarajah notes, ‘[t]he principle that compensation must be paid is itself said to be a general principle of law’.Footnote 64
As already mentioned, cases after 2001 show that many arbitral tribunals have resorted to, and argued that the Chorzów judgment reflects CILFootnote 65 without giving reasons why this is so while others do not even mention it at all.Footnote 66 For example, in some tribunals when the IIAs do not provide a rule for illegal takings, the tribunal is required to apply the default standard contained in ‘[t]he customary international law standard for the assessment of damages resulting from an unlawful act is set out in the decision of the PCIJ in the Chorzόw Factory case …’.Footnote 67 Similarly, ‘for purposes of determining the compensation’ the tribunal must assess this, ‘which is governed by customary international law as reflected in Factory at Chorzów’.Footnote 68 For others, ‘it is appropriate for the Tribunal to apply the standard of reparation found in customary international law. The claimants correctly cite, and the respondent does not dispute, the full reparation standard articulated in Chorzów’.Footnote 69 Or, when tribunals conflate two sources of international law, principles and CIL, by interpreting them as being the same, they quote Chorzów, where ‘[i]t is these well-established principles that represent customary international law, including for breaches of international obligations under BITs, that the Tribunal is bound to apply’.Footnote 70
Most of the cases that state Chorzów is CIL have ignored the basic requisites for custom, State practice and opinio juris, distilled from Article 38(1)(b) 1920 Statute of the PCIJ.Footnote 71 Additionally, and perhaps most importantly, these cases have ignored that according to Article 59 of the PCIJ Statute, decisions ‘of the Court [have had] no binding force except between the parties and in respect of that particular case’.Footnote 72 So, its jurisprudence did not create international law nor was it a source of law in 1928; contemporarily, it is likewise not the case as the 1945 ICJ Statute basically replicates the same rules of 1920 PCIJ Statute.Footnote 73
3 Concluding Remarks
The different and flexible interpretations given to Chorzów might be explained because it was written by way of general statements, which referred to the principles of law and international law that had supposedly been constantly applied in the international cases preceding it. So, despite the fact that the Court did not explicitly mention any of these previous cases that established such rules, subsequent cases have blindly trusted those general statements, thus ignoring that the principles of reparation in Chorzów were already enshrined in the Geneva Convention.Footnote 74 Further, as has been demonstrated, the principle of full reparation was not previously provided for nor consistently applied in prior arbitral practice as Chorzów had claimed. However, being a sound judgment, after Chorzów, the principle of full reparation was used more frequently by arbitral tribunals.
Thus, tribunals and commentators assembled the story of Chorzów by conflating rules that were intended to serve different purposes. For example, those rules for the determination of the amount of compensation as provided in Chorzów, being simultaneously placed together with the principle of international responsibilityFootnote 75 and the obligation of reparation for wrongful acts, which were considered in the judgment to be principles of international law.Footnote 76 A close look at the judgment shows that these are rules that need to be applied in different times; first, when finding whether the State is responsible for breaching an international obligation and, second, at the time of assessing the amount for reparation.Footnote 77
At present, many arbitral tribunals do not explain why Chorzów is CIL, nor if it is being applied as a general principle of law. Mostly, the technique used by these tribunals has consisted of merely quoting the passages of Chorzów that contain such assertions.Footnote 78 In other cases, tribunals will occasionally interpret the rules regarding international responsibility contained in Chorzów to assert that they are CIL in order to apply them when determining the amount of compensation in a case.Footnote 79 By 1928, it is arguable that there was constant international practice in the application of the principle of full reparation or that the method to determine the amount of compensation, as stated by Chorzów, had been well developed.
Reasons for the lack of contemporary explanation could be attributed to the recognition of the authority of the World Court, or perhaps because the ARSIWA cites the dicta of the case. Also, such confidence in the narrative, that the Chorzów case established the rules for assessing the damage in a case, may have surged because this judgment had explicitly asserted that these rules were internationally recognised.Footnote 80
Following this line of argument, the principle of full reparation and the distinction between legal and illegal expropriation emerges where some tribunals and case laws claim that these would form part of CIL.Footnote 81 This claim has had important effects on matters pertaining to the applicable law, especially when discussing the date for the assessment of damages and the standard of reparation.
To summarise, the narrative built around Chorzów has some inconsistencies, mostly (i) because the decision has been taken out of context by some in academia, and by investment arbitration tribunals alike, when assessing damages;Footnote 82 (ii) because the Chorzów ruling does not cite the legal sources that, without doubt, would allow them to affirm that the full reparation principle was applied consistently by claims commissions and arbitral tribunals before 1928, and that the counterfactual method to assess damages were CIL;Footnote 83 (iii) the ruling did not categorically say, neither show, that CIL had been applied to the case as a legal source,Footnote 84 but this has not prevented many investment arbitral awards after 2001 from claiming that Chorzów is CIL;Footnote 85 and (iv) the context in which the judgment ruled upon the international illegal act, ie by breach of the Geneva Convention, is overlooked by those who argue that in the context of Bilateral Investment Treaty (BIT) claims, there are illegal expropriationsFootnote 86 to justify awarding damages with a different date that that provided by the BIT.Footnote 87