MOTION TO COMPEL ARBITRATION DENIED AS TO NON-SIGNATORIES TO AGREEMENT

In a recent case involving an unsuccessful aquatic ecosystem restoration project in Clearwater, Florida, the Middle District of Florida applied the Federal Arbitration Act to resolve an arbitrability dispute, which involved a marine and dredging construction company, its performance bond sureties, and a dredging contractor. First granting a motion to compel arbitration with respect to the construction company and the contractor, both of which had signed the arbitration agreement, the court then reviewed common law contract and agency principles to determine whether the non-signatory sureties could also be bound by the agreement on some other theory, ultimately holding that they could not be because there existed no (1) incorporation by reference of another contract to which the sureties were signatories, (2) assumption by the sureties, (3) agency relationship, (4) veil-piercing/alter-ego, or (5) estoppel. Additionally, the court found that the arbitration agreement unambiguously limited its reach only to claims or disputes between the signatories because it listed those parties – and only those parties – regardless of the fact that it did not expressly exclude application to others. The court next determined that those claims found to be proper for arbitration – breach of contract and indemnity – did not predominate the nonarbitrable claims. Rather, the nonarbitrable claims – fraud in the inducement, negligent misrepresentation, rescission, personal liability, civil theft, and conversion – could be resolved in independent litigation without resulting in either duplicative proceedings or preclusive effect on the arbitrable claims. The court also denied the individual defendant’s motion to dismiss. U.S. Surety Company v. Edgar, Case No. 8:13-cv-1207-T-33TGW (M.D. Fla. Dec. 5, 2013).

This post written by Kyle Whitehead.

See our disclaimer.

Share

Comments are closed.