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U.S.
Supreme Court Limits Judicial Review
of Arbitration Awards for Errors of
Law—Strategies for Drafting
Arbitration Agreements in the
Aftermath of
Hall Street
Reprinted with
permission from the November 3, 2008
edition of the
New York
Law Journal. © 2008 ALM Properties,
Inc, an Incisive Media Company. All
rights reserved. Further duplication
without permission is prohibited.
By GARY L. RUBIN
Whether the
challenge is adjudicating a pending
construction dispute or drafting
construction contracts for projects
yet to begin, no subject is more
critical to experienced construction
lawyers than the choice of a dispute
resolution forum.
Courts and juries are
sometimes not a welcoming
environment for construction
disputes, given their factual
complexity and the extensive written
records generated by most
construction projects.
Arbitration offers a
potential for decision-making by
arbitrators who are more familiar
with construction issues.
But arbitration also involves
important tradeoffs, particularly
limited judicial review of
arbitration awards by a court system
that is all too happy to wash its
hands of construction disputes
covered by binding arbitration
agreements.
The 2008
decision of the U.S. Supreme Court
in
Hall Street
Associates, L.L.C. v.
Mattel, Inc.[1],
sharpens the issues for construction
lawyers trying to weigh the relative
merits of litigation and arbitration
(together with arbitration’s
non-binding cousin, mediation).
In conjunction with the 2005
decision of the New York Court of
Appeals in
Matter of Diamond Waterproofing
Systems, Inc. v.
55 Liberty Owners Corp.[2],
Hall Street establishes
that judicial review of arbitration
awards will be perhaps even more
limited than previously thought—and
that contract language should be
drafted accordingly.
Underlying
Dispute
Hall Street holds that
where arbitrations are governed by
the Federal Arbitration Act[3],
judicial review of arbitration
awards is limited to the narrow
statutory grounds established in 9
U.S.C. § 10[4]
or 9 U.S.C. § 11[5],
even where the parties have tried to
contractually establish a broader
scope of judicial review.
The case involved a dispute
between a landlord (Hall Street) and
a tenant (Mattel) concerning a lease
provision under which the tenant
agreed to indemnify the landlord for
any costs resulting from a failure
of the tenant or any of its
predecessor lessees to follow
federal, state, and local
environmental laws while using the
premises.
After environmental
pollutants were discovered on the
property, Mattel notified Hall Street that it intended to terminate
the lease, and
Hall Street
filed suit against Mattel in federal
court seeking, among other things,
to enforce the indemnification
provision.
Following a
bench trial and an unsuccessful
mediation, the parties entered into
an arbitration agreement which was
“so ordered” by the federal district
court.
The arbitration agreement
provided that the federal district
court “may enter judgment upon any
award, either by confirming the
award or by vacating, modifying or
correcting the award.
The Court shall vacate,
modify or correct any award:
(i) where the arbitrator’s
findings of fact are not supported
by substantial evidence, or (ii)
where the arbitrator’s conclusions
of law are erroneous.”
The arbitrator
held in favor of Mattel, finding it
had no duty to indemnify Hall Street
on the ground that the lease
obligation concerning federal,
state, and local environmental laws
did not include compliance with the
testing requirements of the Oregon
Drinking Water Quality Act (“Oregon
act”), which the arbitrator
characterized as dealing with human
health as distinct from
environmental contamination.
Hall Street
moved to vacate the arbitration
award, claiming that the arbitrator
had committed legal error in failing
to treat the Oregon act as an
applicable environmental law under
the terms of the lease, and that the
arbitration agreement authorized
vacatur or modification of the
arbitration award based on legal
error.
After a lengthy series of
procedural steps, the
U.S.
Supreme Court granted certiorari “to
decide whether the grounds for
vacatur and modification provided by
§§ 10 and 11 of the [Federal
Arbitration Act] are exclusive.”[6]
The Supreme
Court held that in cases governed by
the Federal Arbitration Act,
arbitration awards cannot be
reviewed by the courts for erroneous
conclusions of law even where the
parties provide for such judicial
review in their arbitration
agreements:
“Hall Street is
certainly right that the FAA lets
parties tailor some, even many
features of arbitration by contract,
including the way arbitrators are
chosen, what their qualifications
should be, which issues are
arbitrable, along with procedure and
choice of substantive law.
But to rest this case on the
general policy of treating
arbitration agreements as
enforceable as such would be to beg
the question, which is whether the
FAA has textual features at odds
with enforcing a contract to expand
judicial review following the
arbitration.
“To that
particular question we think the
answer is yes, that the text compels
a reading of the §§ 10 and 11
categories as exclusive….Sections 10
and 11, after all, address egregious
departures from the parties’
agreed-upon arbitration:
“corruption”, ‘fraud’,
‘evident partiality’, ‘misconduct’,
‘misbehavior’, ‘exceed[ing] powers’,
‘evident material miscalculation’,
‘evident material mistake’,
‘award[s] upon a matter not
submitted’; the only ground with any
softer focus is ‘imperfect[ions]’,
and a court may correct those only
if they go to ‘[a] matter of form
not affecting the merits.’…’Fraud’
and a mistake of law are not cut
from the same cloth.
“That aside,
expanding the detailed categories
would rub too much against the grain
of the § 9 language, where provision
for judicial confirmation carries no
hint of flexibility.
On application for an order
confirming the arbitration award,
the court ‘must grant’ the order
‘unless the award is vacated,
modified, or corrected as prescribed
in sections 10 and 11 of this
title.’
There is nothing malleable
about ‘must grant’, which
unequivocally tells courts to grant
confirmation in all cases, except
when one of the ‘prescribed’
exceptions applies….
“Instead of
fighting the text, it makes more
sense to see the three provisions,
§§ 9-11, as substantiating a
national policy favoring arbitration
with just the limited review needed
to maintain arbitration’s essential
virtue of resolving disputes
straightaway.
Any other reading opens the
door to the full-bore legal and
evidentiary appeals that can ‘rende[r]
informal arbitration merely a
prelude to a more cumbersome and
time-consuming judicial review
process’, and bring arbitration
theory to grief in post-arbitration
process.’”[7]
The Supreme
Court acknowledged that the
underlying dispute in
Hall Street was arguably
governed by the District Court’s
authority to manage its cases under
the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure
(rather than being governed by the
Federal Arbitration Act), since the
arbitration agreement was signed in
the context of a District Court
litigation and was adopted as an
order of the District Court after
being submitted as a proposed
deviation from standard trial
procedure.
However, after “noting the
claim of relevant case management
authority independent of the
[Federal Arbitration Act]”, the
Supreme Court held that in cases
unambiguously governed by the FAA
the courts cannot enforce parties’
contractual agreements providing for
judicial review of arbitrators’
conclusions of law.[8]
New York Construction Projects
Whether
arbitration agreements contained in
New York
construction contracts are governed
by the FAA or Article 75 of the CPLR
was addressed by the
New York
State Court of Appeals in
Diamond Waterproofing.[9]
Diamond, a contractor,
entered into a contract with a
cooperative owner to repair and
reconstruct the entire façade and
roof of a residential building in
Manhattan.
The contract provided for
arbitration of “[a]ny controversy or
Claim arising out of or related to
the Contract”, and stated that the
contract “shall be governed by the
law of the place where the Project
is located.”
Even though the FAA was not
mentioned in the contract, the Court
of Appeals concluded that the
project “affected interstate
commerce, triggering application of
the FAA”[10]:
“Numerous
out-of-state entities were involved
in the transaction.
The project manual and the
engineer’s drawings were created in
a joint effort with a structural
engineering firm headquartered in Illinois.
Diamond Systems’ largest
supplier of materials for the
project, MJM Studios, Inc., was a
New Jersey
company, and project meetings and
visits were often scheduled at MJM’s
offices.
The largest supplier of
equipment for the project, Dunlop
Equipment, Inc., was a Massachusetts company.
Further, various additional
materials, equipment and services
for the project were obtained from
Oklahoma,
Maryland and Kansas.”[11]
Since the
involvement of out-of-state entities
described in
Diamond Waterproofing is
fairly typical of New York
construction projects,
Diamond Waterproofing
suggests that arbitration agreements
contained in most New York
construction contracts are governed
by the FAA, which means that, absent
contract language along the lines
discussed below,
Hall Street will
generally preclude parties to New
York construction contracts from
contractually providing for judicial
review of arbitrators’ errors of
law.
Drafting
Arbitration Agreements
Within the
narrow constraints imposed by
Hall Street,
there are opportunities for creative
draftsmanship on the part of
construction counsel (and their
clients) who are seeking the
advantages of alternative dispute
resolution while trying to establish
greater predictability concerning
the legal principles which will
govern project disputes.
One way of
enhancing legal predictability is to
include contractual limitations on
the arbitrators’ authority.
Sections 10 and 11 of the FAA
authorize vacatur of an arbitration
award where, among other things,
“the arbitrators exceeded their
powers” (§ 10) or “the arbitrators
have awarded upon a matter not
submitted to them” (§ 11).
This suggests a strategy of
including provisions in arbitration
agreements expressly limiting what
the arbitrators will be authorized
to do.
For example, if the parties
wish to impose limitations on the
arbitrators’ authority to award
damages due to delay (or similar
factors), the arbitration agreement
might include a provision stating:
“Nothing in this arbitration
agreement shall authorize the
arbitrator(s) to make an award of
damages resulting from
______________, and the
arbitrator(s) are expressly
prohibited from doing so.
No matter calling for such
award shall be deemed submitted to
the arbitrator(s) under the terms of
this arbitration agreement.”
On the other
hand, parties who oppose such
limitations on the arbitrators’
authority should try to negotiate
arbitration provisions reflecting
the legal principles that they
believe should govern (e.g.,
“Nothing in this arbitration
agreement shall preclude the
arbitrator(s) from making an award
of damages reasonably resulting from
______________, and the
arbitrator(s) are expressly
authorized to do so.”).
These
provisions would presumably
establish a basis to seek judicial
review of the arbitration award
(under the language of §§ 10 and 11)
if the arbitrators violate the
restrictions on their authority set
forth in the arbitration agreement.
Needless to say, such
provisions might also enhance
predictability by giving arbitrators
express guidance concerning the
limits of their authority and the
agreed principles they should apply.
It is
increasingly common for arbitration
clauses in construction contracts to
include provision for non-binding
mediation as a condition precedent
to arbitration.
For contracts requiring
mediation as a condition precedent
to arbitration, counsel should
consider whether mediation
provisions should limit the
mediator’s authority so as to be
parallel with any
Hall Street-inspired
limitations upon the arbitrators’
authority which would be applicable
if the mediation is unsuccessful.
Arguably such limitations
upon the mediator’s authority would
be counterproductive because a
mediator should have a free hand to
explore settlement options without
preconceived limitations.
So long as mediation
provisions are properly coordinated
with arbitration provisions to
clearly establish whether any
mediation-related condition
precedents to arbitration have been
satisfied, it should be unnecessary
to limit the mediator’s authority
even where arbitrators’ authority is
limited by the arbitration clause.
In short,
construction counsel should consider
replacing the traditional “all
disputes” arbitration clause with
legal provisions expressly tailored
as limitations upon the arbitrators’
authority—thereby triggering
potential protections under §§ 10
and 11 of the FAA.[12]
While it is, of course,
difficult to anticipate at the
drafting stage all potential
disputes which may arise in
connection with a construction
project, it appears that limiting
the arbitrators’ authority in the
language of an arbitration agreement
might be an effective means of
imposing legal standards in the
aftermath of
Hall Street.
Gary L. Rubin
is a partner at MazurCarp Rubin &
Schulman, practicing construction
law and construction claims
resolution.
His e-mail address is
grubin@MazurCarp.com.
[1]
552 U.S., 128 S.Ct.
1396, 170 L.Ed.2d 254 (March
25, 2008).
[2]
4 N.Y.3d 247, 793 NYS2d
831(2005).
[3]
9 U.S.C. §§ 1
et seq.
[4]
Section 10(a) of the FAA (9
U.S.C. § 10(a)) provides:
“In any of
the following cases the
United States court in and
for the district wherein the
award was made may make an
order vacating the award
upon the application of any
party to the arbitration—(1)
where the award was procured
by corruption, fraud, or
undue means; (2) where there
was evident partiality or
corruption in the
arbitrators, or either of
them; (3) where the
arbitrators were guilty of
misconduct in refusing to
postpone the hearing, upon
sufficient cause shown, or
in refusing to hear evidence
pertinent and material to
the controversy; or of any
misbehavior by which the
rights of any party have
been prejudiced; or (4)
where the arbitrators
exceeded their powers, or so
imperfectly executed them
that a mutual, final, and
definite award upon the
subject matter submitted was
not made.”
[5]
Section 11 of the FAA (9
U.S.C. § 11) provides:
“In either of the
following cases the United
States court in and for the
district wherein the award
was made may make an order
vacating the award upon the
application of any party to
the arbitration—(a) Where
there was an evident
material miscalculation of
figures or an evident
material mistake in the
description of any person,
thing, or property referred
to in the award. (b) Where
the arbitrators have awarded
upon a matter not submitted
to them, unless it is a
matter not affecting the
merits of the decision upon
the matter submitted.
(c) Where the award
is imperfect in matter of
form not affecting the
merits of the controversy.
The order
may modify and correct the
award, so as to effect the
intent thereof and promote
justice between the
parties.”
[7]
128 S.Ct. at 1404-1405
(citations omitted).
[10]
Section 2 of the FAA (9
U.S.C. § 2) states that a
written arbitration
provision in “a contract
evidencing a transaction
involving commerce…shall be
valid, irrevocable, and
enforceable, save upon such
grounds as exist at law or
in equity for the revocation
of any contract.”
[11]
4 NY3d at 252, 793 NYS2d at
834.
[12]
See 7B McKinney’s CPLR
Practice Commentaries,
C7501:13:
“Mastrobuono
[v. Shearson Lehman Hutton,
Inc., 514 U.S. 52, 115
S.Ct. 1212, 131 L.Ed.2d 76
(1995)]
suggests that any
circumscription of the
authority of an arbitrator
in an FAA-governed contract
must be clearly expressed,
whether the matter concerns
the arbitrator’s power to
award particular remedies or
to decide the timeliness of
a party’s claim….The
evolving case law suggests
that any party to an
FAA-governed contract who
wishes to preclude an
arbitrator from deciding
certain issues must
explicitly delineate any
such restrictions in the
arbitration clause itself.”
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