Legal Blogs and Articles
  • All Technology
  • AI
  • Autonomy
  • B2B Growth
  • Big Data
  • BioTech
  • ClimateTech
  • Consumer Tech
  • Cybersecurity
  • DevOps
  • Digital Marketing
  • Ecommerce
  • EdTech
  • Enterprise
  • FinTech
  • GovTech
  • Hardware
  • HealthTech
  • HRTech
  • LegalTech
  • Nanotech
  • PropTech
  • Quantum
  • Robotics
  • SaaS
  • SpaceTech
AllNewsDealsSocialBlogsVideosPodcastsDigests
HomeIndustryLegalBlogsIrreconcilable Decisions and Corruption Allegations in International Arbitration: The Paris Court of Appeal Upholds the ICC Award in KFZO
Irreconcilable Decisions and Corruption Allegations in International Arbitration: The Paris Court of Appeal Upholds the ICC Award in KFZO
Legal

Irreconcilable Decisions and Corruption Allegations in International Arbitration: The Paris Court of Appeal Upholds the ICC Award in KFZO

•February 25, 2026
Kluwer Arbitration Blog
Kluwer Arbitration Blog•Feb 25, 2026

Key Takeaways

  • •Paris Court upheld ICC award, rejecting annulment
  • •Irreconcilability requires recognized foreign judgment in France
  • •Corruption claim dismissed due to insufficient indicia
  • •Tribunal's damages assessment beyond judicial review
  • •Decision reinforces French public‑policy threshold for arbitration

Summary

The Paris Court of Appeal refused to set aside a 2022 ICC arbitral award that ordered the Kish Free Zone Organization (KFZO) to pay €39.5 million to Flower of the East Kish Development Company and its shareholder. KFZO’s challenges – alleging irreconcilability with an unrecognised Iranian judgment and corruption involving Iranian and German criminal findings – were rejected. The court held that a foreign judgment must be recognised in France before it can create an international public‑policy conflict, and that KFZO failed to produce the precise, converging indicia required to prove corruption. It also affirmed that the tribunal’s damages methodology lies outside judicial review.

Pulse Analysis

French courts have long balanced respect for arbitral autonomy with the need to protect international public policy. The Paris Court of Appeal’s decision in the KFZO case underscores that a foreign judgment, even from a non‑EU state, does not create an irreconcilable conflict unless it has been granted exequatur in France. By reaffirming the jurisprudence set out in SNEL and related cases, the court clarified that the mere existence of a domestic ruling cannot invalidate an arbitral award, preserving the predictability of cross‑border enforcement.

The judgment also sharpens the evidentiary standards for corruption allegations in arbitration. French jurisprudence adopts a “maximalist” approach, allowing courts to examine evidence beyond the tribunal’s record, but it demands “serious, precise, and converging indicia” that enforcement would further illicit gains. KFZO’s reliance on Iranian court findings and a German fraud conviction fell short of this threshold, illustrating that speculative or delayed claims will not overturn awards. This reinforces the principle that corruption must be demonstrably linked to the contract’s formation and execution, not merely inferred from unrelated criminal matters.

Practitioners should note the decision’s broader implications for arbitration strategy. Parties seeking annulment on public‑policy grounds must secure robust, transaction‑specific evidence early, and anticipate that French courts will defer to arbitral discretion on damages calculations. The ruling therefore bolsters confidence in ICC awards while signalling that opportunistic challenges, especially those hinging on unrecognised foreign judgments or peripheral criminal allegations, are unlikely to succeed. This balance promotes both the integrity of the arbitration system and the enforcement of its outcomes across jurisdictions.

Irreconcilable Decisions and Corruption Allegations in International Arbitration: The Paris Court of Appeal Upholds the ICC Award in KFZO

Read Original Article

Comments

Want to join the conversation?

Legal Pulse

EMAIL DIGESTS

Daily

Every morning

Weekly

Tuesday recap

Top Publishers

  • The Verge AI

    The Verge AI

    21 followers

  • TechCrunch AI

    TechCrunch AI

    19 followers

  • Crunchbase News AI

    Crunchbase News AI

    15 followers

  • TechRadar

    TechRadar

    15 followers

  • Hacker News

    Hacker News

    13 followers

See More →

Top Creators

  • Ryan Allis

    Ryan Allis

    194 followers

  • Elon Musk

    Elon Musk

    78 followers

  • Sam Altman

    Sam Altman

    68 followers

  • Mark Cuban

    Mark Cuban

    56 followers

  • Jack Dorsey

    Jack Dorsey

    39 followers

See More →

Top Companies

  • SaasRise

    SaasRise

    196 followers

  • Anthropic

    Anthropic

    39 followers

  • OpenAI

    OpenAI

    21 followers

  • Hugging Face

    Hugging Face

    15 followers

  • xAI

    xAI

    12 followers

See More →

Top Investors

  • Andreessen Horowitz

    Andreessen Horowitz

    16 followers

  • Y Combinator

    Y Combinator

    15 followers

  • Sequoia Capital

    Sequoia Capital

    12 followers

  • General Catalyst

    General Catalyst

    8 followers

  • A16Z Crypto

    A16Z Crypto

    5 followers

See More →
NewsDealsSocialBlogsVideosPodcasts