McCarthy v. Citigroup Global ( 2006 )


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  •             United States Court of Appeals
    For the First Circuit
    No. 06-1001
    JAMES W. MCCARTHY,
    Plaintiff, Appellee.,
    v.
    CITIGROUP GLOBAL MARKETS INC.,
    Defendant, Appellant.
    ON APPEAL FROM A JUDGMENT OF THE UNITED STATES
    DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE
    [Hon. Joseph A. DiClerico, Jr., U.S. District Judge]
    Before
    Lipez and Howard, Circuit Judges,
    and Gorton,* U.S. District Judge.
    John R. Skelton, with whom John F. Adkins, Carol E. Head, and
    Bingham McCutchen LLP, were on brief for appellant.
    Stacey P. Nakasian, with whom William A. Jacobson, Shanna L.
    Pitts, and the Law Offices of William A. Jacobson, Inc., were on
    brief for appellee.
    September 19, 2006
    *
    Of the District of Massachusetts, sitting by designation
    LIPEZ, Circuit Judge. In this appeal, we must review the
    district court's decision to vacate an arbitration award and remand
    on the ground that the award was in manifest disregard of the law.
    In an unusual circumstance, this is the second time in this case
    that the district court has vacated an arbitration award in favor
    of the appellee and remanded on that ground.
    The award of the arbitration panel was not in manifest
    disregard of the law.     Instead, the district court engaged in an
    analysis of the merits of the arbitration panel's award and found
    legal error.    Such an analysis is proscribed by the standards of
    review that apply in this circuit to a district court's review of
    arbitration awards. Therefore, we must vacate the district court's
    ruling and direct the district court to enter a judgment confirming
    the arbitration award.
    I.
    A.   Factual Background
    Plaintiff James W. McCarthy ("McCarthy") was a financial
    consultant at Smith Barney, predecessor of Defendant Citigroup
    Global Markets Inc. ("CGMI"), from 1985 until his resignation in
    May 2003.    As of 1993, he worked in the Manchester, New Hampshire
    office of CGMI.   CGMI is an investment bank and brokerage firm with
    its principal place of business in New York City.          It is a
    subsidiary of Citigroup Inc., one of the world's largest financial
    services companies.
    -2-
    While an employee, McCarthy participated in the Capital
    Accumulation Plan ("CAP Plan"), which was sponsored by CGMI's
    parent company, Traveler's Group, Inc.                The CAP Plan is a program
    designed to retain employees by giving them the opportunity to
    purchase restricted shares of Citigroup, either in the form of
    Citigroup restricted stock at discounted prices on a tax-deferred
    basis, or as grants of non-qualified stock options for Citigroup
    common stock.     An eligible employee must sign, at least annually,
    a form electing to participate in the CAP Plan, wherein the
    employee designates the amount of earnings he wants deducted from
    his paychecks and used in the CAP Plan.
    Under     the    CAP   Plan     restricted        stock   program,    the
    restricted   stock    is    acquired     at     a    twenty-five     percent    (25%)
    discount from market value and is purchased with wage deductions
    from payroll checks.        However, the stock purchases are subject to
    a vesting period of two years.             When the restricted shares vest,
    the participant pays ordinary income taxes and payroll taxes based
    on the market value of the shares on the vesting date, unless the
    participant has elected to pay taxes at the time of the payroll
    deduction.      McCarthy had paid income and payroll taxes on many of
    the shares at issue here.             If a participant in the CAP Plan
    resigns,   as    McCarthy    did,    the    participant       forfeits    both   the
    unvested   restricted       shares   and       the   wages    deducted   from    the
    paychecks.       The unvested restricted shares are cancelled, the
    -3-
    underlying restricted Citigroup stock reverts to Citigroup, and
    CGMI does not return the wages to the participant.    Under the CAP
    Plan stock option program, a participant can choose to receive up
    to one-third of the restricted shares in the form of non-qualified
    stock options on Citigroup common stock.   If employment terminates
    voluntarily, unvested options may not be exercised.     As with the
    restricted stock program, when an option is exercised, income and
    payroll taxes are withheld.
    McCarthy resigned on May 9, 2003.    From 1993 until his
    resignation, McCarthy voluntarily elected in writing to direct the
    equivalent of 20-25% of his compensation to be invested through the
    CAP Plan. He participated mostly in the restricted stock plan, but
    at times also purchased stock options under the CAP Plan. McCarthy
    sought to recover his contributions to the CAP Plan that had
    resulted in the purchase of unvested shares, as well as funds that
    had not been used to purchase shares.   Pursuant to the terms of the
    CAP Plan, these contributions had been forfeited.
    B.   Procedural Background
    Pursuant to the parties' arbitration agreement and the
    regulatory framework of the securities industry, McCarthy commenced
    arbitration proceedings against CGMI with the National Association
    of Securities Dealers ("NASD") on December 29, 2003.1      McCarthy
    1
    The NASD is the primary self-regulatory organization
    responsible for the regulation of persons and companies involved in
    the securities industry in the United States, with delegated
    -4-
    asserted statutory claims under the New Hampshire wage laws (the
    "Wage Law") and equitable claims.
    A hearing was held on November 18, 2004 (the "First
    Hearing").   The arbitrators in the First Hearing (the "First
    Panel") ruled in favor of CGMI and dismissed McCarthy's claims (the
    "First Award"):2
    [McCarthy's] request for relief is denied. The evidence
    and documents presented in evidence at the hearing
    demonstrated that [McCarthy] knowingly and willingly
    participated in the [CAP Plan] by signing the election
    forms twice a year for several years.         [McCarthy]
    benefitted financially from participation in the [CAP
    Plan] to a substantial degree over the years.       While
    [McCarthy] invoked New Hampshire wage law to support his
    case, the Panel considered it irrelevant because the
    Panel considered the case to be a contract dispute
    regarding an inventive compensation plan commonly used at
    the firm and commonly used in the securities industry.
    On December 16, 2004, McCarthy asked the district court to vacate
    the First Award.   CGMI cross-moved to confirm it.   Focusing on the
    language above, the district court remanded the matter to the NASD
    for further arbitration proceedings ("First Remand Order"):
    authority from the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. See
    "About NASD", http://www.nasd.com/AboutNASD/index.htm (last visited
    August 15, 2006).
    2
    In the context of arbitration, an "award" can denote both
    the decision an arbitration panel reaches and the authenticated
    document containing the decision. See 2 Martin Domke, Domke on
    Commercial Arbitration, Appx. B-1 § 19(a) (3d. ed. 2003)("An
    arbitrator shall make a record of an award. The record must be
    signed or otherwise authenticated by any arbitrator who concurs
    with the award. The arbitrator or the arbitration organization
    shall give notice of the award, including a copy of the award, to
    each party to the arbitration proceeding.").
    -5-
    The [arbitration] panel does not appear to have intended
    "irrelevant" to have its usual meaning.     Instead, the
    panel concluded that McCarthy was not protected by the
    wage laws because he had profited from the CAP in the
    past and had voluntarily agreed to its terms. As such,
    the panel acknowledged the applicability of the wage laws
    but decided not to apply them because of the
    circumstances attending McCarthy's claim. The panel also
    decided not to consider the wage laws because plans like
    the CAP are commonly used in the securities industry. In
    doing so, the panel set aside the governing law in favor
    of its perception of an equitable result and industry
    practices. The panel's decision not to consider the New
    Hampshire wage laws demonstrates its disregard for the
    governing law.
    The district court concluded that "the case must be remanded to
    have McCarthy's claim decided under the New Hampshire wage laws
    through arbitration." Although CGMI filed an appeal from the First
    Remand Order (the "First Appeal"), it never pursued that First
    Appeal. Instead, CGMI voluntarily withdrew it. On March 18, 2005,
    we entered a judgment dismissing the First Appeal and sending the
    case back to the district court.
    McCarthy re-filed his claim with the NASD, which convened
    a second arbitration panel comprised of three new arbitrators (the
    "Second Panel").     McCarthy withdrew all of his equitable claims,
    moving forward with only his claims based on New Hampshire law.
    The parties submitted briefs to the Second Panel, along with copies
    of the Wage Law, case law, the district court's First Remand Order,
    the   CAP   Plan   documents,   and    exhibits   reflecting   McCarthy's
    participation in the CAP Plan. The Second Panel heard argument and
    testimony from several witnesses on August 2, 2005 (the "Second
    -6-
    Hearing").       CGMI argued that the CAP Plan did not violate the Wage
    Law and, in the alternative, that McCarthy was not entitled to any
    damages regardless of the status of the CAP Plan under the Wage
    Law.3       McCarthy asserted that the First Remand Order required the
    Second Panel to apply the Wage Law to his claims, and under the
    Wage Law the CAP Plan was illegal.         On August 18, 2005, the Second
    Panel issued its award denying McCarthy's claims with prejudice
    (the "Modified Award"):
    [McCarthy] requested that the panel . . . declare that
    the CAP Plan is illegal under New Hampshire law, to the
    extent the CAP Plan is implemented (i) through wage
    deductions, which are not actually used to purchase stock
    in Citigroup, or (ii) so as to cause employees to forfeit
    wages.
    . . .
    The Panel heard testimony from [McCarthy] and witnesses
    of both parties and considered the documentary evidence
    from each side as well. The Arbitrators fully considered
    all claims and defenses, including the applicability of
    the New Hampshire Wage Laws, which were heavily argued on
    both sides . . . .     After full consideration of the
    matter, the panel decided to deny all claims with
    prejudice.
    On September 8, 2005, McCarthy filed with the district
    court a motion to vacate the Modified Award, asserting again that
    the     arbitrators    had   manifestly    disregarded   controlling   law.
    McCarthy also claimed that the award should be vacated because CGMI
    3
    CGMI asserted that "McCarthy is not entitled to any damages
    because, if he held all his vested shares, McCarthy netted over one
    million dollars from voluntarily participating in the CAP Plan, and
    CGMI is entitled to recover those shares or their market value in
    excess of McCarthy's cost of any unvested stock."
    -7-
    improperly     encouraged      the    arbitrators    to     ignore   the     district
    court's legal findings as they were set forth in the First Remand
    Order, and because the arbitrators refused to be polled as to
    whether they would follow the law. CGMI again filed a cross-motion
    for confirmation of the award.
    In a Second Remand Order dated December 15, 2005, the
    district     court   vacated    the    Modified     Award    because    it    was   in
    manifest disregard of the law, denied CGMI's cross-motion for
    confirmation of the award, and remanded the case for a third
    arbitration proceeding, if necessary (the court urged the parties
    to settle).4
    II.
    A.   Standard of review
    We review a district court's decision to vacate or
    confirm an arbitration award de novo.             See Bull HN Info. Sys., Inc.
    v. Hutson, 
    229 F.3d 321
    , 330 (1st Cir. 2000).                 The touchstone for
    review of arbitration awards is 
    9 U.S.C. § 10.5
                            "Section 10
    4
    In the Second Remand Order, the district court rejected
    McCarthy's "polling" argument, stating that McCarthy had "cited no
    case or any other legal authority supporting his request for a
    poll." McCarthy did not renew this argument on appeal and we do
    not address it.
    5
    In relevant part, 
    9 U.S.C. § 10
     states:
    (a) 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 --
    -8-
    authorizes vacatur of an award in cases of specified misconduct or
    misbehavior on the arbitrators' part, actions in excess of arbitral
    powers, or failures to consummate the award."               Advest, Inc., v.
    McCarthy, 
    914 F.2d 6
    , 8 (1st Cir. 1990); see also Nat'l Cas. Co. v.
    First State Ins. Group, 
    430 F.3d 492
    , 497 n.4 (1st Cir. 2005).
    "Courts    do,    however,   retain    a   very   limited   power   to   review
    arbitration awards outside of section 10."           Advest, 
    914 F.2d at 8
    .
    As we have put it:
    In the main, a successful challenge to an arbitration
    award, apart from section 10, depends upon the
    challenger's ability to show that the award is (1)
    unfounded in reason and fact; (2) based on reasoning so
    palpably faulty that no judge, or group of judges, ever
    could conceivably have made such a ruling; or (3)
    mistakenly based on a crucial assumption that is
    concededly a non-fact.
    
    Id. at 8-9
     (quoting Local 1445, United Food & Commercial Workers v.
    Stop   &   Shop   Cos.,   
    776 F.2d 19
    ,   21   (1st   Cir.   1985)(internal
    quotation marks omitted).        In some of our cases, we have referred
    to this non-statutory standard of review as "manifest disregard of
    (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 other 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.
    -9-
    the law."   Wonderland Greyhound Park, Inc. v. Autotote Sys., Inc.,
    
    274 F.3d 34
    , 35 (1st Cir. 2001).6       We have elaborated that we mean
    by "manifest disregard of the law" a situation "where it is clear
    from the record that the arbitrator recognized the applicable law
    -- and then ignored it."     Advest, 
    914 F.2d at 9
    .     To succeed under
    this standard "there must be some showing in the record, other than
    the   result   obtained,   that   the   arbitrators   knew   the   law   and
    expressly disregarded it."        Advest, 
    914 F.2d at 10
     (quoting O.R.
    Securities, Inc. v. Prof'l Planning Assoc., Inc., 
    857 F.2d 742
    , 747
    (11th Cir. 1988).     "'[D]isregard' implies that the arbitrators
    appreciated the existence of a governing legal rule but wilfully
    decided not to apply it."     
    Id.
     (emphasis added).7
    6
    In P.R. Tel. Co., Inc. v. U.S. Phone Mfg. Corp., 
    427 F.3d 21
    (1st Cir. 2005), we stated that "[u]nder the FAA, an award may be
    vacated for legal error only when in 'manifest disregard of the
    law.'" 
    Id. at 25
    . Insofar as this statement means that the FAA
    does not foreclose extra-statutory judicial review of arbitration
    awards on a limited basis, e.g. the "manifest disregard of the law"
    standard, this statement is correct.     However, insofar as this
    statement means that the "manifest disregard of the law standard"
    is a part of the FAA itself, it would be mistaken. Nowhere in 
    9 U.S.C. § 10
     does the phrase "manifest disregard of the law" appear.
    See Advest, 
    914 F.2d at
    9 n.5 ("The lane of review that has opened
    out of this language is a judicially created one, not to be found
    in 
    9 U.S.C. § 10
    .").
    7
    See also Domke, § 38:9 ("Although subject to slight
    variations in wording, courts generally apply the following two
    part test in determining if the award should be vacated for
    manifest disregard of the law: (1) Did the arbitrator know of the
    governing legal principal yet refused to apply it or ignored it all
    together? and (2) Was the law ignored by the arbitrators well
    defined, explicit and clearly applicable to the case? Only if the
    court determines that both prongs of this test are satisfied will
    it overturn an award for manifest disregard of the law.").
    -10-
    B.   The district court's reasoning
    On     appeal,    CGMI       maintains      that   the    Second    Panel's
    Modified Award was improperly vacated under the manifest disregard
    of the law standard.               McCarthy, inter alia, asserts that the
    district court's Second Remand Order was correct.
    1.     The First Remand Order
    Although not the subject of this appeal, the court's
    First Remand Order provides a useful insight into its reasoning in
    this case.       As noted above, the First Panel explained the First
    Award against McCarthy in these terms:
    While [McCarthy] invoked New Hampshire wage law to
    support his case, the Panel considered it irrelevant
    because the Panel considered the case to be a contract
    dispute regarding an inventive compensation plan commonly
    used at the firm and commonly used in the securities
    industry.
    (Emphasis       added.)      Focusing      on   the     Panel's   use   of     the   word
    "irrelevant", the district court concluded that "the panel set
    aside the governing law in favor of its perception of an equitable
    result    and    industry     practices.          The   panel's      decision    not    to
    consider the New Hampshire wage laws demonstrates its disregard for
    the governing law."          The court saw the First Panel's reasoning as
    an   instance      "where     it    is    clear    from    the    record     that      the
    arbitrator[s] recognized the applicable law -- and then ignored
    it."     Advest, 
    914 F.2d at 9
    .            Lest there be any doubt about this
    point, the court explained again in the Second Remand Order the
    problem with the First Award: "In the first award, the panel stated
    -11-
    that the New Hampshire wage laws were irrelevant.          As such, the
    panel explicitly disregarded the governing law." The court's First
    Remand Order, given the court's interpretation of the First Award,
    was a conventional application of the manifest disregard of the law
    standard.
    2.    The Second Remand Order
    The    district   court's   application   of   the   manifest
    disregard of the law standard to the Modified Award presents a
    different story.     We again quote the reasoning of the Second Panel
    in the Modified Award:
    The Panel heard testimony from [McCarthy] and witnesses
    of both parties and considered documentary evidence from
    each side as well. The Arbitrators fully considered all
    claims and defenses, including the applicability of the
    New Hampshire Wage Laws, which were heavily argued by
    both sides. After full consideration of the matter, the
    Panel decided to deny all claims with prejudice.
    The district court focused on the Second Panel's statement that it
    had "fully considered all claims and defenses, including the
    applicability of the New Hampshire Wage Laws," and found in that
    statement a troubling ambiguity.          As the court explained in its
    Second Remand Order:
    [t]he [Second] panel did not say whether it concluded
    that the wage laws were applicable or not applicable or
    whether it had applied that law in making its decision.
    Therefore, while the second panel's statement did not
    clearly demonstrate a manifest disregard of the governing
    law, as the first panel did, the second panel left open
    the possibility that, contrary to the court's direction
    in the [First] remand order, the panel concluded that the
    New Hampshire wage laws do not apply.
    -12-
    The       district   court   acknowledged         that   the   mere
    "possibility that . . . the panel concluded that the New Hampshire
    wage laws do not apply" is not itself a manifest disregard of the
    law.8       As   the   district   court   put   it:   "[T]he    second   panel's
    statement did not clearly demonstrate a manifest disregard of the
    governing law, as the first panel did."           In the absence of such an
    expression of manifest disregard of the law in the Modified Award
    itself, the district court decided to pursue a further inquiry:
    In the first award, the panel stated that the New
    Hampshire wage laws were irrelevant. As such, the panel
    explicitly disregarded the governing law so that it was
    not necessary to look behind that decision to determine
    its basis.
    (Emphasis added.)
    There is authority in our precedents for a court to go
    behind the award of an arbitration panel to the record itself in
    8
    We disagree with the district court that the Modified Award
    of the Second Panel can be read as a possible statement that the
    New Hampshire wage law is irrelevant, particularly in light of the
    explicit statement by the Second Panel that it "fully considered
    all claims and defenses, including the applicability of the New
    Hampshire Wage Laws, which were heavily argued by both sides." If
    the court had vacated the award of the Second Panel on this basis
    alone, we would have simply vacated its judgment on this misreading
    of the Modified Award. However, as we explain below, the district
    court also identified a second possibility in the Modified Award –
    namely, that the Second Panel had applied the New Hampshire wage
    law and still found the CAP lawful. In looking behind the award of
    the Second Panel to determine its basis, the court explained in its
    decision why this second possibility would also be a manifest
    disregard of the law. Focusing on that explanation in the balance
    of our opinion, we explain its incompatibility with the narrow
    scope of review that a court must observe in reviewing the decision
    of an arbitration panel.
    -13-
    conducting a manifest disregard of the law inquiry.            For example,
    we have said that "there must be some showing in the record, other
    than the result obtained, that the arbitrators knew the law and
    expressly disregarded it."        Advest, 
    914 F.2d at 10
     (emphasis
    added).    But   resorting   to   the   record   in   search   of   manifest
    disregard of the law is constrained by the narrow scope of the
    manifest disregard of the law standard itself. To repeat, manifest
    disregard of the law means, at its core, that "arbitrators knew the
    law and explicitly disregarded it."         P.R. Tel. Co., 
    427 F.3d at 32
    (internal quotation marks omitted).          "Put differently, disregard
    implies   that   the   arbitrators    appreciated     the   existence   of   a
    governing legal rule but wilfully decided not to apply it."               
    Id.
    (internal citation and quotation marks omitted).
    The manifest disregard of the law inquiry must not run
    afoul of the well-established principle that courts "do not sit to
    hear claims of factual or legal error by an arbitrator as an
    appellate court does in reviewing decisions of lower courts."
    United Paperworkers Int'l Union v. Misco, Inc., 
    484 U.S. 29
    , 38
    (1987); see also Poland Spring Corp. v. United Food & Commercial
    Int'l Union, 
    314 F.3d 29
    , 33 (1st Cir. 2002) (a court does not
    conduct appellate review "to hear claims of factual or legal error
    by an arbitrator or to consider the merits of an award").               "Even
    where such error is painfully clear, courts are not authorized to
    -14-
    reconsider the merits of arbitration awards."        Advest, 
    914 F.2d at 8
     (internal quotation marks and citation omitted).
    The district court did not observe this limitation on its
    authority to review an arbitration award.            Instead of finding
    manifest disregard of the law by the Second Panel, it found an
    application   of   the   Wage   Law   with   which   it   disagreed.   To
    demonstrate this point, we quote several excerpts from the court's
    Second Remand Order:
    CGMI's arguments to the arbitration panel, that the CAP
    was lawful because McCarthy's compensation, paid in cash
    and restricted stock, conferred a benefit to him, because
    McCarthy had agreed to participate in the CAP and was a
    sophisticated and intelligent financial consultant, and
    because McCarthy had benefitted in the past from the CAP,
    are not pertinent to the principles of New Hampshire law.
    Instead, CGMI's argument is based on the reasoning of the
    Court of Appeals of New York . . . . CGMI represented to
    the arbitration panel that the New Hampshire wage laws
    allowed deductions as long as they accrued 'to the
    benefit of the employee,' . . . that the New Hampshire
    laws, like the New York law, allowed [such] a deduction
    . . . .
    [But] under New Hampshire law, unlike New York law, a
    deduction is not lawful simply because it accrues to the
    benefit of an employee . . . .
    CGMI also argued that the CAP was a lawful deduction as
    a payment into a savings fund held by someone other than
    the employer and that it was empowered by the federal tax
    treatment of similar plans to offer the CAP . . . .
    Neither argument is persuasive.
    Nevertheless, it is perhaps arguable that the panel was
    sufficiently confused or misled by CGMI's arguments to
    conclude that the CAP deductions comported with New
    Hampshire law.   Even assuming that the CAP deductions
    were lawful, however, CGMI did not offer the arbitration
    panel any justification under New Hampshire law for its
    failure to pay McCarthy the compensation that he had
    -15-
    earned before he resigned. CGMI's oft-repeated theory .
    . . does not comport with New Hampshire law.
    After this extensive merits review, the district court
    concluded:
    In the absence of any explanation, there appears to be no
    arguable or plausible basis for the [Second] panel to
    have ruled either that the New Hampshire wage laws did
    not apply to McCarthy's claims or that CGMI's failure to
    pay McCarthy earned compensation, based on the forfeiture
    provision in the CAP, was lawful. In either case, the
    panel's decision necessarily was made in manifest
    disregard of the law.
    To make its meaning unmistakable, the district court added in a
    footnote to its decision that "[b]ecause neither alternative basis
    for the decision is reasonable, given the governing law, a remand
    for clarification would not be beneficial here."                  Therefore, if
    there were to be a third arbitration proceeding, the district court
    directed that a new panel be convened.             In that circumstance, the
    court said the parties were "to request that the arbitration panel
    provide   an   explanation    or    reasons   for    its     decision    to   allow
    meaningful judicial review."
    Although the district court's legal analysis of the
    relationship between the Wage Law and the CAP Plan was thoughtful
    (indeed, the court was thoughtful about this case throughout the
    lengthy proceedings), there are several errors in the district
    court's Second Remand Order.         First, with its insistence that the
    next   arbitration   panel,    if    one    were    constituted,      provide   an
    explanation    or   reasons   for    its    decision    to    allow     meaningful
    -16-
    judicial   review,   the   court   ignored   the    basic   principle   that
    "arbitrators need not explain their award" at all.          P.R. Tel. Co.,
    
    427 F.3d at 32
     (internal citation omitted).           Second, although it
    theoretically left open the possibility that a third arbitration
    panel could explain why McCarthy's claim failed under New Hampshire
    law, the court's elaborate rejection of that possibility in its
    Second Remand Order delivered an unmistakable message to a third
    panel -- such a decision would be difficult to justify.             Courts
    should avoid such messages when remanding cases to arbitration
    panels. See Domke, § 30:6 ("[C]areful consideration should also be
    given that remanding the case does not make the court itself decide
    the issue in controversy or instruct the arbitration in such
    direction.").
    Third, in looking behind the Modified Award, the court
    did not examine the record of proceedings before the panel for
    manifest disregard of the law -- that is, "some showing in the
    record, other than the result obtained, that the arbitrators knew
    the law and expressly disregarded it."             Advest, 
    914 F.2d at 10
    (internal citation omitted).       Instead, the court conducted its own
    analysis of the compatibility of the CAP Plan with the Wage Law and
    concluded that the Modified Award in favor of CGMI, absent some
    further explanation, was wrong. Moreover, in conducting that legal
    analysis, the court did not find that "rare" instance of manifest
    disregard we described in Advest, where "the governing law may have
    -17-
    such widespread familiarity, pristine clarity, and irrefutable
    applicability that a court could assume the arbitrators knew the
    rule and, notwithstanding, swept it under the rug."            
    914 F.2d at 10
    . Instead, the court's analysis reveals a legal landscape devoid
    of statutory language or a decision of the New Hampshire Supreme
    Court that irrefutably proscribes the CAP Plan under the Wage Law.
    At most, after a merits analysis of the Modified Award, the
    district   court   arguably   found   a   legal   error   in   its   result.
    However, our precedents forbid a district court from conducting
    such a review of an arbitration award.        See Poland Spring Corp.,
    
    314 F.3d at 33
     (a court does not conduct appellate review "to hear
    claims of factual or legal error by an arbitrator or to consider
    the merits of an award").      We must therefore vacate the district
    court's Second Remand Order and direct the court to enter a
    judgment confirming the Second Panel's Modified Award.9 Each party
    is to bear its own costs.
    So ordered.
    9
    Relying on Montes v. Shearson Lehman Bros., Inc., 
    128 F.3d 1456
     (11th Cir. 1997), where the court found an award in manifest
    disregard of the law, McCarthy also asserts that CGMI "undermined
    the integrity of the Second Hearing" by "repeatedly urg[ing] the
    Second Panel during oral argument to disregard the law," and that
    this conduct constitutes an independent basis for vacating the
    Modified Award. The district court rejected that argument: "the
    circumstances in this case are not sufficiently similar to those in
    Montes to permit application here of that narrowly limited
    decision." We see no reason to disturb this ruling.
    -18-