Reed Smith Client Alerts

Key takeaways

  • English Court of Appeal has confirmed that English courts will deal robustly with attempts by award debtors to dissipate assets to frustrate enforcement, including where those assets are owned by a state-owned company
  • Various powers are available to the courts to enforce an award, including those under the English Insolvency Act 1986, to transfer a wrongfully dissipated asset directly to a creditor
  • The Court also provided authoritative guidance on the meaning of section 53(1)(b) Law of Property Act 1925 relating to the requirements for evidencing the existence of a trust – a question on which there was no previous binding authority

Summary

This alert summarises a recent judgment of the English Court of Appeal in the case of National Iranian Oil Company and another v. Crescent Gas Corporation Ltd [2025] EWCA Civ 1211, which upheld the earlier judgment of Sir Nigel Teare in the Commercial Court, Crescent Gas Corporation Ltd v. National Iranian Oil Company & Anor. [2024] EWHC 835 (Comm). Reed Smith represented the successful award creditor, Crescent Gas Corporation (CGC).

In its judgment, the Court of Appeal dismissed attempts by the National Iranian Oil Company (NIOC) and the Retirement, Saving and Welfare Fund of Oil Industry Workers (the Retirement Fund) to overturn the enforcement of an arbitral award of US$2.4 billion plus interest against NIOC, the Iranian state-owned oil company. The Court of Appeal had to determine various issues of English trust and land law on which there was no previous authoritative decision and which arose from the first instance judgment.

The judgment is therefore significant not only because of the legal issues it determines, but also because it highlights the powers and mechanisms available to the courts to assist with the enforcement of arbitral awards, including against state-owned entities. In the present case, CGC was able to use powers available under the English insolvency regime to secure the direct transfer of a high-value commercial property to it, partially satisfying the arbitral award.