Hewlett-Packard v. Berg ( 1995 )


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    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
    ____________________

    No. 94-2251

    HEWLETT-PACKARD COMPANY, INC.,

    Plaintiff, Appellant,

    v.

    HELGE BERG, ETC., ET AL.

    Defendants, Appellees.

    ____________________

    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

    [Hon. Joseph L. Tauro, U.S. District Judge] ___________________

    ____________________

    Before

    Boudin, Circuit Judge, _____________

    Bownes, Senior Circuit Judge, ____________________

    and Stahl, Circuit Judge. _____________

    ____________________

    Richard Allan Horning with whom Horning, Janin & Harvey, Kevin P. _____________________ ________________________ ________
    Light, Choate, Hall & Stewart and Robert W. Sutis were on brief for _____ _______________________ _______________
    appellant.
    David A. Burman for appellees. _______________


    ____________________

    August 3, 1995
    ____________________


















    BOUDIN, Circuit Judge. Hewlett-Packard appeals from an _____________

    order of the district court confirming an arbitration award

    rendered in a business dispute with appellees Helge Berg and

    Lars Skoog and rejecting Hewlett-Packard's requests for a

    stay of the confirmation proceeding or a declaration that it

    is entitled to a set-off for the award. The case presents

    several difficult legal issues which can be understood only

    after a brief description of the facts and prior proceedings.

    I. BACKGROUND I. BACKGROUND

    In March 1982, Apollo Computer, now owned by Hewlett-

    Packard, entered into a two-year distributorship contract

    with a Swedish company called Dicoscan Distributed Computer

    Scandinavia to sell Hewlett-Packard products in several

    Nordic countries. The 1982 contract included an agreement to

    submit any dispute under the contract to binding arbitration.

    In March 1984, the parties executed a new distributorship

    contract, which also contained an arbitration clause.

    In the meantime, during 1983 and 1984, Dicoscan

    experienced financial problems. In mid-1984, Apollo claimed

    that Dicoscan was far behind in its payments. In September,

    Apollo terminated the 1984 agreement. The following month,

    Dicoscan filed for bankruptcy. The bankruptcy court assigned

    to Berg and Skoog, directors and officers of Dicoscan, the

    right to bring claims against Apollo based on the contracts.





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    Berg and Skoog filed a request for arbitration with the

    International Chamber of Commerce Court of Arbitration,

    claiming millions of dollars of damages arising out of

    Apollo's unilateral termination of the 1984 agreement.

    Apollo counterclaimed in the arbitration by asserting that

    the Swedish company had failed to pay about $10,000 due on

    the 1984 contract and about $207,000 due under the 1982

    contract. After a dispute about Berg and Skoog's right to

    invoke arbitration, see Apollo Computer, Inc. v. Berg, 886 ___ _____________________ ____

    F.2d 469, 473 (1st Cir. 1989), an arbitration proceeding was

    begun.

    The arbitrators were required by the parties' contracts

    to apply Massachusetts law. Ultimately, the arbitrators

    awarded around $700,000 plus interest to Berg and Skoog, but

    allowed a set-off for the $10,000 that Dicoscan still owed

    Apollo under the 1984 contract. To both parties' surprise,

    the tribunal held that it was without jurisdiction to decide

    Apollo's more substantial claim based on the 1982 contract,

    ruling that the 1982 contract was not within the Terms of

    Reference issued by the arbitrators at the beginning of the

    proceeding.

    As a result, Apollo was left with a sizable obligation

    to Berg and Skoog on the 1984 contract without a

    determination of its claim for more than $207,000 on the 1982

    contract. Apollo unilaterally decided to pay the arbitration



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    award amount but subtracted the $207,000 plus interest

    (together, about $300,000) as a "setoff in recoupment,"

    which, it said, is a time-honored common law doctrine

    embraced in Massachusetts courts. Apollo also filed a

    request with the tribunal for a second arbitration regarding

    the 1982 contract. That tribunal has indicated that it will

    hear the arbitration.

    In January 1993, Apollo (later succeeded as the

    plaintiff by Hewlett-Packard) filed the complaint in this

    action with the Massachusetts district court. Hewlett-

    Packard requested that the district court (1) declare that

    Hewlett-Packard was entitled to the $207,000 set-off and that

    the arbitration award is fully satisfied, and (2) vacate the

    tribunal's award and correct it. Hewlett-Packard later

    withdrew its second claim for relief.

    Berg and Skoog moved to dismiss the complaint, arguing

    that such declaratory relief is unavailable as to foreign

    arbitration awards. Later, Berg and Skoog moved for

    confirmation of the arbitration award. Hewlett-Packard

    opposed confirmation of the award on the ground that, by

    failing to include its 1982 set-off, the award was contrary

    to public policy. In the alternative, Hewlett-Packard moved

    to stay confirmation, pending the outcome of the second

    arbitration. Hewlett-Packard also asked the court to compel

    arbitration as to its 1982 claim.



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    On November 7, 1994, the district judge filed a

    memorandum, together with a separate order, disposing of all

    of these motions. The court's order compelled arbitration

    under the 1982 contract but it confirmed the award previously

    made by the tribunal on the 1984 contract. The court said

    that it was without power to stay the confirmation

    proceeding, as Hewlett-Packard had requested, and that the

    request for a set-off was an improper attempt to modify the

    tribunal's award.

    Apparently ready to enforce the now-confirmed

    arbitration award, Berg and Skoog moved the court for entry

    of final judgment, and proffered a detailed judgment

    specifying the award, interest and attorney's fees. Four

    days later, Hewlett-Packard filed its notice of appeal and

    thereafter filed a response disputing certain aspects of the

    proposed judgment. The district court has not acted on the

    motion for entry of final judgment; and no such judgment has

    been entered.

    II. DISCUSSION II. DISCUSSION

    Hewlett-Packard purports to appeal all three of the

    district court's adverse actions: the confirmation of the

    arbitration award, the refusal to stay that confirmation

    proceeding pending the outcome of the second arbitration; and

    the rejection of Hewlett-Packard's set-off claim declaration.

    Commendably, Hewlett-Packard has alerted us to a possible



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    jurisdiction problem, which this court is obliged to

    consider. We do so but caution future panels that the

    jurisdictional problems have not been briefed in this case.

    Nothing in the record in this case purports to be a

    "final judgment," set forth in a separate document as

    required by Fed. R. Civ. P. 58, disposing of all claims.

    Thus, in formal terms there is no basis for appeal of a

    "final decision" under 28 U.S.C. 1291, even if the court

    actually resolved all of the claims before it. Indeed, as

    already noted, the defendants have pending a motion that

    requests entry of a "final judgment."

    Nevertheless, the November 7 order, insofar as it

    confirms the arbitration award, is appealable now because

    Congress directed in the statute governing arbitration-

    related appeals that such an "order" confirming an award

    should be immediately appealable. 9 U.S.C. 16(a)(1)(D).

    The reason is a pro-arbitration policy designed to expedite

    confirmation of arbitration awards. This is clear from

    precedent and scholarly commentary. See, e.g., 15B C. __________

    Wright, A. Miller & E. Cooper, Federal Practice and Procedure ______________________________

    3914.17, at 9-12, 32-34 (2d ed. 1992).

    There is one technical hitch. Seemingly, the order

    confirming the award is not itself a judgment that can be

    collected through court processes until it is entered on the

    docket as a judgment. See 9 U.S.C. 13. This has nothing ___



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    to do with the final judgment rule; rather, the statute that

    governs confirmations provides that after a confirmation is

    ordered, a separate "entry of judgment" must be made pursuant

    to that order, and it is only at that stage that "[t]he

    judgment so entered . . . may be enforced as if it had been

    rendered in an action in the court in which it is entered."

    Id. ___

    Nevertheless, the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure do

    not say that appeals can only be taken from judgments; on the

    contrary, they contemplate that, subject to the complex rules

    that determine what is immediately appealable, there may be

    such a thing as an "appealable order" that is not a judgment.

    Fed. R. Civ. P. 79(b). And, as already noted, Congress has

    designated as immediately appealable "an order . . .

    confirming . . . an [arbitration] award." 9 U.S.C.

    16(a)(1)(D).

    Our position is not at odds with Middleby Corp. v. _______________

    Hussmann Corp., 962 F.2d 614 (7th Cir. 1992). Middleby held _______________ ________

    that no immediate appeal could be taken where the district

    court issued an order of confirmation but declined to enter

    judgment after making a specific determination to delay

    giving effect to the confirmation order until further

    proceedings were concluded. Here, by contrast, the district

    court denied the requested stay, and the confirmation order

    is immediately effective, requiring only the filing of



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    specified papers with the clerk to permit "the entry of

    judgment thereon." 9 U.S.C. 13.

    Because the confirmation order is appealable, we think

    that there is also before us Hewlett-Packard's claim that the

    confirmation proceeding should have been stayed. The reason

    is simply that the underlying argument for a stay is also an

    objection to the confirmation order itself. To this extent,

    it is effectively an interlocutory ruling made in the process

    of approving the confirmation request and like any other such

    interlocutory ruling it is reviewable at the time that the

    confirmation order itself is brought up on appeal. Cf. ___

    Stringfellow v. Concerned Neighbors in Action, 480 U.S. 370, ____________ ______________________________

    375 (1987); 15A Wright, Miller & Cooper, supra, 3905.1, at _____

    249-63.

    A similar argument might also be made to justify an

    appeal now based on the district court's refusal to declare

    Hewlett-Packard's right to the set-off it asserted. The

    problem is complicated, but we see no need to resolve the

    complexities. Whether or not the refusal to allow the set-

    off is an appealable issue, the refusal at this time turns

    out not to be a legal error, so the jurisdictional issue need

    not be decided. See Norton v. Matthews, 427 U.S. 524, 530-32 ___ ______ ________

    (1976); In re Pioneer Ford Sales, 729 F.2d 27, 31 (1st Cir. ________________________

    1984).





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    We turn now to the merits. Hewlett-Packard does not

    object to the confirmation of the award in all respects; it

    says it has paid the award except the disputed amount

    including interest. But Hewlett-Packard says that the

    district court erred by confirming the award in full instead

    of either allowing a set-off or granting a stay of the

    confirmation pending the results of the new arbitration.

    We agree with the district court's rejection at this

    time of the first alternative. Whether Hewlett-Packard has a

    valid claim under the 1982 contract is subject to

    arbitration; we agree with the district court--and Hewlett-

    Packard--that the tribunal has never resolved the merits of

    that claim. Whatever the Massachusetts law on set-offs, the

    district court could not allow the set-off at present without

    determining that Hewlett-Packard had a valid claim, which is

    the very subject of the arbitration.

    It is hard to imagine a step that would be more

    offensive to the pro-arbitration policies reflected in

    Congress' endorsement of the 1958 Convention on the

    Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards, often

    called the New York Convention. The New York Convention was

    approved by Congress, and implementing legislation was

    codified at 9 U.S.C. 201-08. The statute enlists the aid

    of federal courts to compel arbitration. 9 U.S.C. 206. By

    contrast, the judicial set-off requested here would



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    circumvent the 1982 contract to arbitrate and the now-pending

    arbitration under that contract.

    The request to defer confirmation of the award under the

    1984 contract stands on a different footing. However the

    case might stand absent the bankruptcy, Dicoscan's bankruptcy

    gives Hewlett-Packard a very substantial prudential argument.

    If the existing award were confirmed in full and reduced to

    judgment, Hewlett-Packard would have to pay the full award to

    the defendants as successors-in-interest of an insolvent

    company. If in due course Hewlett-Packard then prevailed on

    its claims against the insolvent company on a closely related

    transaction, it would have no assurance of collecting

    anything.

    Further, Hewlett-Packard cannot be blamed for the

    discrepant timing in the resolution of its claim, or at least

    no argument to that effect has been made. After it was told

    that the defendants did have arbitration rights despite an

    anti-assignment clause in the contracts, Hewlett-Packard

    apparently made a reasonable effort to have both the

    defendants' claim and its own counterclaim resolved in one

    proceeding at the same time. Only the arbitrators'

    surprising interpretation of their mandate frustrated this

    attempt.

    Under these circumstances, the seemingly fair solution

    would be to confirm the award in its uncontested part,



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    reserving confirmation of the balance until the 1982 contract

    dispute is arbitrated. The district court refused to

    consider a stay of confirmation on the ground that it was

    without power to do so. We fully understand the basis for

    the district court's doubt about its authority, but we

    conclude that it does have the power to issue a stay in the

    peculiar circumstances of this case.

    Ordinarily there could be no doubt that a court,

    although obliged to decide a claim, would retain discretion

    to defer proceedings for prudential reasons. Indeed, a

    typical reason is the pendency of a related proceeding in

    another tribunal. "[T]he power to stay proceedings is

    incidental to the power inherent in every court to control

    the disposition of the causes on its docket with economy of

    time and effort for itself, for counsel, and for litigants."

    Landis v. North Amer. Co., 299 U.S. 248, 254 (1936). ______ _______________

    The question here is whether this traditional authority

    is curtailed by the New York Convention and its implementing

    legislation. The statute provides that, upon a petition for

    confirmation, a district court "shall confirm the award _____

    unless it finds one of the grounds for refusal or deferral of

    recognition or enforcement of the award specified in the said

    Convention." 9 U.S.C. 207 (emphasis added). Article VI of

    the Convention is the only provision that deals with staying

    confirmation. Article VI states:



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    If an application for the setting aside or
    suspension of the award has been made to a
    competent authority [in the country where the award
    has been made], the authority before which the
    award is sought to be relied upon may, if it
    considers it proper, adjourn the decision on the
    enforcement of the award [and require a security].

    The circumstances outlined in Article VI do not appear to

    exist in this case. The question is whether a district court

    may grant a stay in circumstances other than those authorized

    in Article VI.

    The fact that section 207 uses the word "shall" is not

    decisive, because a stay is a deferral rather than refusal.

    But the fact that the statute refers to the Convention and

    the Convention lists a single ground for a stay could be

    taken to exclude all other grounds under the principle of

    expressio unius est exclusio alterius. That was, in __________________________________________

    substance, the reasoning of the district court. However,

    expressio unius is an aid to construction and not an ________________

    inflexible rule. See, e.g., United States v. Massachusetts _________ ______________ _____________

    Bay Transport. Auth., 614 F.2d 27, 28 (1st Cir. 1980). ______________________

    Whatever we might think if the question were entirely open,

    precedent informs our decision in this case. Domestic

    arbitrations are governed by the United States Arbitration

    Act (chapter 1 of Title 9) but not by the Convention (chapter

    2 of Title 9). The Act states that, upon application, "the

    court must grant [a confirmation] order unless the award is ____

    vacated, modified, or corrected as prescribed in sections 10



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    and 11 of this title." 9 U.S.C. 9 (emphasis added). But

    courts routinely grant stays in such cases for prudential

    reasons not listed in sections 10 and 11. E.g., Middleby, ____ ________

    962 F.2d at 615-16.

    Similarly, this court has held that district courts have

    discretion to stay an action to compel arbitration pending ______

    the outcome of related litigation, even though the Act states

    that on a motion to compel the court "shall hear the parties"

    and "shall proceed summarily to trial." 9 U.S.C. 4; see ___

    Acton Corp. v. Borden, Inc., 670 F.2d 377, 383 (1st Cir. ____________ ____________

    1982). In Acton, then-Judge Breyer held that, in drafting _____

    the statute, Congress did not "intend[] a major departure

    from the ordinary rule allowing one federal court to stay

    litigation when another federal court is on the process of

    deciding the same issue." We take the same view of Congress'

    intentions in implementing the Convention.

    Of course, a stay of confirmation should not be lightly

    granted. A central purpose of the Convention--an

    international agreement to which the United States is only

    one of approximately one hundred signatories--was to expedite

    the recognition of foreign arbitral awards with a minimum of

    judicial interference. But the risk that the power to stay

    could be abused by disgruntled litigants--real though that

    risk is, see Spier v. Calzaturificio, 663 F. Supp. 871, 875 ___ _____ ______________





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    (S.D.N.Y. 1987)--argues more for a cautious and prudent

    exercise of the power than for its elimination.

    Because the district court acted under a misapprehension

    of its authority, we vacate the confirmation order and remand

    for further proceedings. Whether confirmation or collection

    of the award should be partially deferred pending the

    resolution of the 1982 contract arbitration is a matter for

    the district court to determine in the first instance.

    Still, we think it would require some explanation if, in the

    face of the equities of this case, the district court

    concluded that the full award should be confirmed and

    collected now.

    The confirmation order is vacated and the matter is _______

    remanded to the district court for further proceedings ________

    consistent with this opinion.























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