italaw180924 - DTEK v. Russia, Judgment of the Court of Appeal of The Hague, February 24, 2026 (Dutch)

Document Summary: 

Procedural Posture and Factual Background

This document is an appeal judgment from the Civil Law Division of The Hague Court of Appeal in summary proceedings. The appellant, Gazprom International Limited, sought the annulment of a first-instance judgment that had denied its request to lift an executory attachment. The attachment was placed by the respondent, JSC DTEK Krymenergo, on Gazprom International's shares in Wintershall Noordzee B.V. DTEK sought to enforce a substantial arbitral award rendered in its favor against the Russian Federation, the second respondent on appeal.

Legal Issues on Appeal

The Court of Appeal addressed several key legal issues raised by Gazprom International. These included: (i) the formal validity of the attachment writ and its service; (ii) whether Article 435(3) of the Dutch Code of Civil Procedure (Rv) provides a legal basis for attaching the assets of a third party (Gazprom International) to satisfy a debt of the award debtor (the Russian Federation) based on an alter ego theory; (iii) whether DTEK's underlying claim for recovery against Gazprom International was summarily without merit, particularly under the applicable Russian law on piercing the corporate veil; and (iv) whether the attachment violated the Russian Federation's sovereign immunity from execution.

The Court's Analysis and Decision

The Court of Appeal dismissed all of Gazprom International's grounds of appeal and affirmed the lower court's decision. The Court held that any formal defects in the attachment writ or its service did not prejudice the appellant and thus did not warrant nullification. Critically, the Court found that the scope of Article 435(3) Rv is not limited to statutorily enumerated instances and can encompass situations where a third party is liable for a debtor's obligations, such as through abuse of rights or alter ego principles.

Regarding the merits, the Court determined that, for the purposes of summary proceedings, it was sufficiently plausible that Russian law (specifically Article 10 of the Russian Civil Code concerning abuse of rights) could provide a basis for piercing the corporate veil between Gazprom International and the Russian Federation. Therefore, DTEK's claim was not deemed summarily without merit.

On the issue of sovereign immunity, the Court applied customary international law, as reflected in Article 19 of the UN Convention on Jurisdictional Immunities of States. It concluded that DTEK had provided sufficient evidence to establish that the attached shares were used for 'other than government non-commercial purposes' under Article 19(c). Furthermore, the Court reasoned that state immunity from execution could be restricted where the underlying liability stems from violations of *jus cogens* norms, referencing the context of Russia's actions in Ukraine which led to the arbitral award. Consequently, the appeal based on immunity failed. The Court also found that the balance of interests favored maintaining the attachment to secure DTEK's ability to enforce its award.

Operative Part

The Court of Appeal affirmed the first-instance judgment, thereby upholding the attachment. Gazprom International was ordered to pay the costs of the appeal proceedings.