Gulfstream Aerospace Corporation v. Oceltip Aviation 1 PTY LTD ( 2022 )


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  • USCA11 Case: 20-11080     Date Filed: 04/18/2022   Page: 1 of 18
    [PUBLISH]
    In the
    United States Court of Appeals
    For the Eleventh Circuit
    ____________________
    No. 20-11080
    ____________________
    GULFSTREAM AEROSPACE CORPORATION,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    versus
    OCELTIP AVIATION 1 PTY LTD,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    ____________________
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Southern District of Georgia
    D.C. Docket No. 4:16-cv-00127-WTM-CLR
    ____________________
    Before WILSON, ROSENBAUM, and ED CARNES, Circuit Judges.
    USCA11 Case: 20-11080        Date Filed: 04/18/2022     Page: 2 of 18
    2                      Opinion of the Court                 20-11080
    PER CURIAM:
    Long story, short: if you want certain rules to apply to the
    handling of your arbitration, the contract must say so clearly and
    unmistakably. Otherwise, the Federal Arbitration Act (“FAA”) will
    apply.
    The parties here did not do that. So the FAA’s arbitral-award
    standards for review govern. And because Defendant-Appellant
    Oceltip Aviation 1 Pty Ltd. waived any argument under the FAA’s
    arbitral-award standards that the arbitral award here should be va-
    cated, the district court properly denied Oceltip’s application to va-
    cate the award and granted Plaintiff-Appellee Gulfstream Aero-
    space Corporation’s application to confirm the award. We there-
    fore affirm the judgment of the district court.
    I.
    Gulfstream is a Georgia corporation based in Savannah, and
    Oceltip is an Australian limited liability company. They entered
    into a sales agreement (“Agreement”). Under that Agreement,
    Gulfstream was to manufacture and sell a new G550 business jet
    aircraft to Tinkler Gulfstream 650 Pty Ltd, Oceltip’s former name.
    The Agreement, as amended, required Oceltip to pay $27.15 mil-
    lion by January 15, 2013.
    Though Oceltip paid Gulfstream about $7 million, it failed
    to make the full $27.15 million payment on time. Nor did it pay
    the required amount within the ten-day cure period allowed under
    the Agreement. So Gulfstream terminated the Agreement.
    USCA11 Case: 20-11080        Date Filed: 04/18/2022     Page: 3 of 18
    20-11080               Opinion of the Court                         3
    Not pleased with this result, Oceltip considered its options
    under the Agreement. Within that contract, under the subheading
    “Arbitration,” two clauses relevant to this appeal appear. The
    first—Section 4.3.1—requires arbitration “by the American Arbi-
    tration Association (“AAA”) in accordance with the provisions of
    its Commercial Arbitration Rules . . . .” and specifies that “judg-
    ment on the award rendered by the arbitrator(s) may be entered by
    any court having jurisdiction thereof.” The second—Section
    4.3.3—directs that the contract “shall be governed by the laws of
    the State of Georgia, and the U.N. Convention on Contracts for the
    International Sale of Goods . . . shall not apply, without reference
    to rules regarding conflicts of law.”
    In accordance with Section 4.3.1, Oceltip submitted a de-
    mand for arbitration to the AAA. It sought a finding that Gulf-
    stream had anticipatorily repudiated the Agreement, and that this
    conduct suspended Oceltip’s duties, allowed Oceltip to recoup the
    $7 million it had paid, and entitled Oceltip to damages. Oceltip also
    sought a finding that the contract’s liquidated-damages provision—
    Section 3.3.2—was a penalty and therefore unenforceable.
    The liquidated-damages provision states that “[i]n the Event
    of Default by [Oceltip], Gulfstream shall be entitled to [as relevant
    here] . . . retain or collect, as liquidated damages and not as a pen-
    alty,” $8 million. The amended Agreement reaffirms this under-
    standing, specifying that “Gulfstream’s damages in the Event of
    Default by Buyer will be difficult to ascertain, that the amounts
    USCA11 Case: 20-11080       Date Filed: 04/18/2022     Page: 4 of 18
    4                      Opinion of the Court                20-11080
    agreed to as liquidated damages are a reasonable pre-estimate of
    the probable loss, and that the Parties intend to provide for reason-
    able liquidated damages and not a penalty.”
    For its part, Gulfstream sought $8 million in liquidated dam-
    ages under that provision, plus attorney’s fees and costs, from the
    arbitration.
    The arbitration hearing occurred in Savannah, Georgia. Fol-
    lowing it, the three-member arbitration tribunal awarded Gulf-
    stream liquidated damages totaling $8 million, plus attorney’s fees,
    costs, and unreimbursed arbitration expenses. The panel denied
    relief to Oceltip.
    Gulfstream applied in the United States District Court for
    the Southern District of Georgia to confirm the arbitration award.
    Meanwhile, in the Superior Court of Chatham County, Georgia,
    Oceltip sought to vacate the arbitration award.
    Gulfstream removed Oceltip’s state-court proceeding to the
    Southern District of Georgia. On Gulfstream’s motion, the district
    court ordered the two cases consolidated.
    Oceltip moved to remand, challenging the district court’s
    subject-matter jurisdiction. It argued that, based on the choice-of-
    law clause in Section 4.3.3, the Agreement incorporated the Geor-
    gia Arbitration Code, and that provided for exclusive jurisdiction
    USCA11 Case: 20-11080          Date Filed: 04/18/2022       Page: 5 of 18
    20-11080                 Opinion of the Court                            5
    in the Georgia state courts. In opposition, Gulfstream contended
    that the FAA authorized federal jurisdiction.
    The parties also briefed their respective applications to con-
    firm and vacate the arbitration award. In their briefing, the parties
    disputed whether federal law (the FAA) or state law (the Georgia
    Arbitration Code) supplied the standards governing whether the
    arbitrators’ decision should be vacated or confirmed. And if the
    Georgia Arbitration Code governed the standards, the parties disa-
    greed over whether the arbitrators had manifestly disregarded the
    law.
    The district court denied Oceltip’s motion to remand,
    granted Gulfstream’s application to confirm the arbitration award,
    and denied Oceltip’s application to vacate it. After holding that it
    had jurisdiction over the dispute, the court determined that the
    FAA’s standards for vacatur applied to its decision. But even as-
    suming the Georgia Arbitration Code’s standards applied, the court
    concluded, Oceltip had not shown that the arbitrators manifestly
    disregarded the law.
    Oceltip timely appealed. 1 On appeal, Oceltip again asserts
    that federal jurisdiction is lacking. It also argues that the district
    court erred in confirming the arbitration award and denying
    1 Although this case was originally scheduled for oral argument, Oceltip
    moved to submit it on the briefs, and Gulfstream did not oppose. We granted
    that motion.
    USCA11 Case: 20-11080       Date Filed: 04/18/2022     Page: 6 of 18
    6                      Opinion of the Court                20-11080
    vacatur because, in Oceltip’s view, the Georgia Arbitration Code’s
    standards for vacatur—not the FAA’s—govern, and the arbitrators
    manifestly disregarded the law.
    II.
    We begin with jurisdiction—because if we lack that, of
    course, we cannot consider the merits and must dismiss the appeal.
    We review our subject-matter jurisdiction de novo. Inversiones y
    Procesadora Tropical INPROTSA, S.A. v. Del Monte Int’l GmbH,
    
    921 F.3d 1291
    , 1298 n.8 (11th Cir. 2019).
    On appeal, Oceltip does not suggest that this matter does
    not satisfy the requirements for federal-court jurisdiction. Nor
    could it do so successfully. As we describe below, we have juris-
    diction under Chapter 2 of the FAA.
    To explain our jurisdiction, we start with a little back-
    ground. In 1970, the United States acceded to the Convention on
    the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards, also
    called the “New York Convention.” Indus. Risk Insurers v. M.A.N.
    Gutehoffnungshutte GmbH, 
    141 F.3d 1434
    , 1440 (11th Cir. 1998).
    The Convention’s purpose “is to encourage the recognition and
    enforcement of international arbitral awards to relieve congestion
    in the courts and to provide parties with an alternative method for
    dispute resolution that is speedier and less costly than litigation.”
    
    Id.
     (cleaned up).
    USCA11 Case: 20-11080         Date Filed: 04/18/2022     Page: 7 of 18
    20-11080                Opinion of the Court                          7
    The same year that the United States acceded to the Con-
    vention, Congress enacted Chapter 2 of the FAA, codified at 
    9 U.S.C. §§ 201
    –208. That chapter incorporates the Convention into
    federal law, “mandat[ing] the enforcement of the New York Con-
    vention in United States courts.” Indus. Risk, 141 F.3d at 1440. To
    facilitate that, Chapter 2 creates “original subject-matter jurisdic-
    tion over any action arising under the Convention.” Id. Indeed, 
    9 U.S.C. § 203
     states that “[a]n action or proceeding falling under the
    convention shall be deemed to arise under the laws and treaties of
    the United States.” And it directs that “[t]he district courts of the
    United States . . . shall have original jurisdiction over such an action
    or proceeding, regardless of the amount in controversy.” 
    9 U.S.C. § 203
    .
    We have construed Chapter 2 as extending to all arbitral
    awards not “entirely between citizens of the United States.” Indus.
    Risk, 141 F.3d at 1440–41; see also 
    9 U.S.C. § 202
     (stating that arbi-
    tral awards “arising out of [a commercial] relationship which is en-
    tirely between citizens of the United States” fall outside the Con-
    vention). The arbitral award here—which concerns a contract for
    the sale of an aircraft—arises out of the commercial relationship
    between Gulfstream and Oceltip. As we have mentioned, Oceltip
    is an Australian company, and Gulfstream is a United States corpo-
    ration. So their relationship is not “entirely between citizens of the
    United States,” and the exception to Convention jurisdiction does
    not apply.
    USCA11 Case: 20-11080        Date Filed: 04/18/2022      Page: 8 of 18
    8                       Opinion of the Court                 20-11080
    We have also held that §§ 203 and 205 confer subject-matter
    jurisdiction over arbitration vacatur actions removed from state
    court, Inversiones, 921 F.3d at 1299–1300, and § 203 endows federal
    courts with jurisdiction over actions to confirm an arbitral award,
    see Escobar Celebration Cruise Operator, Inc., 
    805 F.3d 1279
    , 1286
    (11th Cir. 2015); see also 
    9 U.S.C. § 207
    . So there’s really no dispute
    that federal law provides for jurisdiction over this action.
    Perhaps for that reason, Oceltip argues instead that the
    Agreement’s choice-of-law provision eradicates our otherwise-ex-
    isting jurisdiction. Oceltip relies on Sections 4.3.1 and 4.3.3 of the
    Agreement in support of this position. As a reminder, Section 4.3.1
    states that “judgment on the award rendered by the arbitrator(s)
    may be entered by any court having jurisdiction thereof.” And Sec-
    tion 4.3.3 provides that “[t]his contract shall be governed by the
    laws of the State of Georgia, . . . without reference to rules regard-
    ing conflicts of law.” Oceltip reads these two provisions together
    to deprive the federal courts of jurisdiction. In Oceltip’s view, un-
    der the contract, the Georgia Arbitration Code governs jurisdic-
    tion, and under it, “only state superior courts have jurisdiction to
    confirm and vacate arbitration awards.”
    We disagree. Even assuming without deciding (at this
    point) that the Agreement’s choice-of-law clause incorporates the
    Georgia Arbitration Code, state law cannot strip a federal court of
    federal jurisdiction. Barrow S.S. Co. v. Kane, 
    170 U.S. 100
    , 111
    (1898) (“The jurisdiction so conferred upon the national courts
    USCA11 Case: 20-11080            Date Filed: 04/18/2022         Page: 9 of 18
    20-11080                   Opinion of the Court                               9
    cannot be abridged or impaired by any statute of a state.”). As
    Oceltip’s mistaken argument is the only basis for its contention that
    we lack jurisdiction, and we have otherwise established our juris-
    diction under § 203 of the FAA, we proceed to the merits.
    III.
    Next, Oceltip argues that the district court wrongly refused
    to vacate and incorrectly confirmed the arbitral award. We review
    the court’s underlying legal conclusions de novo and its findings of
    fact for clear error. Bamberger Rosenheim, Ltd., (Israel) v. OA
    Dev., Inc., (United States), 
    862 F.3d 1284
    , 1286 (11th Cir. 2017).
    More specifically, Oceltip contends that the Agreement’s
    choice-of-law provision incorporated all Georgia law—including
    the Georgia Arbitration Code and its standards. In contrast, Gulf-
    stream argues that while Georgia law governs resolution of the
    merits of the dispute, the federal standards (meaning the FAA’s
    standards) control our review of the arbitral award.
    Resolution of this disagreement determines whether arbitra-
    tors’ “manifest disregard of the law” supplies a basis for vacating
    the award. 2 
    Ga. Code Ann. § 9-9-13
    (b)(5). Under the Georgia
    2 Because it makes no difference to the outcome here (and the parties did not
    brief the issue), we assume without deciding that parties can agree to standards
    for review of the arbitral award that differ from federal standards (meaning
    the standards that the FAA imposes). But see Bowen v. Amoco Pipeline Co.,
    USCA11 Case: 20-11080           Date Filed: 04/18/2022        Page: 10 of 18
    10                        Opinion of the Court                      20-11080
    Arbitration Code, it does. But federal law—the New York Conven-
    tion and its implementing statute (Chapter 2 of the FAA)—sets
    forth seven exclusive grounds for vacatur. Indus. Risk, 141 F.3d at
    1446; see Inversiones, 921 F.3d at 1302. They do not include “man-
    ifest disregard of the law.” See M & C Corp. v. Erwin Behr GmbH
    & Co., KG, 
    87 F.3d 844
    , 848 (6th Cir. 1996).
    Before the district court, and now on appeal, Oceltip has not
    argued that any of the New York Convention’s enumerated
    grounds for vacatur apply. So if the Agreement’s choice-of-law
    clause does not displace the federal standards, then without further
    analysis, we will confirm the award. See Sapuppo v. Allstate Flo-
    ridian Ins. Co., 
    739 F.3d 678
    , 680 (11th Cir. 2014) (holding that is-
    sues not raised in briefing on appeal are abandoned and therefore
    waived or forfeited). Alternatively, if the Georgia Arbitration
    Code’s standards do apply, then the parties dispute whether the ar-
    bitrators manifestly disregarded the law in analyzing the Agree-
    ment’s liquidated damages clause. As it turns out, we need not
    reach the alternative issue because we conclude that the Agree-
    ment’s choice-of-law provision does not supplant federal standards
    for confirmation or vacatur of an arbitral award.
    The Supreme Court has described Section 2 of the FAA, 
    9 U.S.C. § 2
    , as “a congressional declaration of a liberal federal policy
    
    254 F.3d 925
    , 934–36 (10th Cir. 2001) (holding that parties cannot agree to ex-
    panded judicial review, beyond what the FAA permits, of an arbitral award).
    USCA11 Case: 20-11080       Date Filed: 04/18/2022     Page: 11 of 18
    20-11080               Opinion of the Court                        11
    favoring arbitration agreements, notwithstanding any state sub-
    stantive or procedural policies to the contrary.” Moses H. Cone
    Mem’l Hosp. v. Mercury Constr. Corp., 
    460 U.S. 1
    , 24 (1983). But
    the Supreme Court has recognized that this policy is grounded in a
    theory of consent. See Volt Info. Scis., Inc. v. Bd. of Trs. of Leland
    Stanford Jr. Univ., 
    489 U.S. 468
    , 479 (1989). So parties may “specify
    by contract the rules under which [an agreed] arbitration will be
    conducted.” 
    Id.
    We look first to the plain meaning of the contractual lan-
    guage to ascertain the parties’ intent about whether the FAA or the
    Georgia Arbitration Code standards of review govern. See Inter-
    naves de Mex. s.a. de C.V. v. Andromeda Steamship Corp., 
    898 F.3d 1087
    , 1093 (11th Cir. 2018) (stating general common law of
    contracts). Here, despite Oceltip’s insistence to the contrary, the
    plain language of the Agreement does not support Oceltip’s posi-
    tion.
    Oceltip points to the language that “[t]his contract shall be
    governed by the laws of the State of Georgia, . . . without reference
    to rules regarding conflicts of law.” It notes that these words ap-
    pear in the portion of the Agreement labeled “Arbitration” and
    urges that this text necessarily means that the parties agreed that
    the Georgia Arbitration Code governs the standards of review of
    the arbitral award (as opposed to Georgia law’s application to only
    the merits of the arbitration).
    USCA11 Case: 20-11080       Date Filed: 04/18/2022    Page: 12 of 18
    12                     Opinion of the Court                20-11080
    We disagree. The context in which the quoted language ap-
    pears is important. Restored to its relevant context, the quoted
    sentence says, “This contract shall be governed by the laws of the
    State of Georgia, and the U.N. Convention on Contracts for the
    International Sale of Goods [“CISG”] . . . shall not apply, without
    reference to rules regarding conflicts of law.”
    First, this passage indicates that “without reference to rules
    regarding conflicts of law” refers to any decision between the ap-
    plicability of the CISG, on the one hand, and another body of law—
    such as Georgia law—on the other, that might have been required
    in the absence of the provision. In other words, the parties chose
    for Georgia law, not the CISG, to govern the contract, regardless
    of whether conflicts-of-law analysis would have favored applica-
    tion of the CISG.
    Second, the provision’s comparison of Georgia law to the
    CISG is instructive. The CISG does not establish standards for the
    review of arbitral awards; it is a set of “uniform rules which govern
    contracts for the international sale of goods,” see CISG, at Pream-
    ble. So if the CISG had applied instead, it couldn’t have supplied
    standards for review of the arbitral award. And the Agreement’s
    contrast of the CISG with the laws of the State of Georgia indicates
    that the parties viewed Georgia law and the CISG to serve the same
    function in construing the Agreement. To put a finer point on it,
    because the CISG could not have provided standards for the review
    of the arbitral award, the clause suggests that the parties did not
    USCA11 Case: 20-11080       Date Filed: 04/18/2022    Page: 13 of 18
    20-11080               Opinion of the Court                       13
    intend for Georgia law to supply standards for review of the arbitral
    award.
    Third, Section 4.3.1 of the Agreement requires arbitration
    “by the American Arbitration Association (“AAA”) in accordance
    with the provisions of its Commercial Arbitration Rules.” So the
    parties at least implicitly chose not to have the Georgia Arbitration
    Code cover the arbitration itself. Indeed, the Georgia Arbitration
    Code is not mentioned once in the Agreement. Given that the par-
    ties specified arbitration rules—and those rules weren’t the Geor-
    gia Arbitration Code—it makes little sense that the parties would
    have intended and expected that the Georgia Arbitration Code
    nonetheless would govern review of any award resulting from ar-
    bitration.
    So Oceltip next urges that Volt, 
    489 U.S. 468
    , as “affirm[ed]”
    by Mastrobuono v. Shearson Lehman Hutton, 
    514 U.S. 52
     (1995),
    Appellant’s Br. at 39, requires us to conclude that the Agreement
    demonstrates that the parties chose to be governed by the Georgia
    Arbitration Code in the conducting of the arbitration. We are not
    persuaded.
    In Volt, Volt and Stanford University entered into a con-
    struction contract. 
    489 U.S. at 470
    . The contract specified that it
    would be governed by “the law of the place where the project is
    located,” 
    id. at 472
    , and it included an agreement to arbitrate all
    disputes between the parties “arising out of or relating to this con-
    tract or the breach thereof,” 
    id. at 470
    . When a dispute between
    USCA11 Case: 20-11080        Date Filed: 04/18/2022      Page: 14 of 18
    14                      Opinion of the Court                  20-11080
    the parties arose, Volt made a formal demand for arbitration. 
    Id.
    In response, Stanford filed suit against Volt in California state court,
    alleging breach of contract and fraud. 
    Id.
     at 470–71. Stanford also
    sought indemnity from other companies involved in the construc-
    tion project, with whom they had no arbitration agreements. 
    Id. at 471
    . Faced with Stanford’s suit, Volt sought for the California
    court to compel arbitration. 
    Id.
     And Stanford responded by mov-
    ing to stay arbitration under California law, which provided for a
    party to do so pending resolution of related litigation between a
    party to the arbitration agreement and third parties not bound by
    it, under circumstances applicable there. 
    Id.
    The California trial court denied Volt’s motion to compel
    and stayed the arbitration proceedings until resolution of the litiga-
    tion. 
    Id.
     And the California appellate court affirmed. 
    Id.
     It held
    that, by stating that the contract would be governed by “the law of
    the place where the project is located,” the parties had incorporated
    the California rules of arbitration into their arbitration agreement.
    
    Id. at 472
    . The Supreme Court affirmed. 
    Id. at 473
    .
    Oceltip suggests that the Agreement’s Georgia-law provi-
    sion, similarly to how the contract clause in Volt permitted state
    arbitration procedural rules to be applied, requires application of
    state arbitration review standards instead of FAA review standards.
    Oceltip is mistaken.
    First, as the Supreme Court explained six years later in Mas-
    trobuono,Volt’s procedural posture was integral to the Court’s
    USCA11 Case: 20-11080       Date Filed: 04/18/2022    Page: 15 of 18
    20-11080               Opinion of the Court                       15
    decision there. Mastrobuono, 
    514 U.S. at
    60 n.4. In Volt, the Su-
    preme Court received the case on review from the California Su-
    preme Court, which had already construed its own state law. See
    
    id.
     So the Court deferred to the state court’s construction of its
    own state law and did not interpret the contract there de novo. 
    Id.
    But here, as in Mastrobuono, see 
    id.,
     we review a federal court’s
    interpretation of the governing contract. And as we have ex-
    plained, our de novo review of the choice-of-law provision here
    does not support the notion that the parties agreed that the Georgia
    Arbitration Code would govern the standards of review of the ar-
    bitral award.
    Second, we disagree with Oceltip that Mastrobuono some-
    how suggests that Volt’s rule applies here. Just the opposite.
    In Mastrobuono, Shearson Lehman and the Mastrobuonos
    entered into a contract for the Mastrobuonos to trade securities.
    See 
    514 U.S. at 54
    . The contract included an arbitration clause and
    a choice-of-law provision, which stated that the contract “shall be
    governed by the laws of the State of New York.” 
    Id.
     at 58–59. The
    next sentence stated that “any controversy” arising out of the trans-
    actions between the parties “shall be settled by arbitration” in ac-
    cordance with the rules of the National Association of Securities
    Dealers (“NASD”), or the Boards of Directors of the New York
    Stock Exchange, or the American Stock Exchange. 
    Id. at 59
    .
    When things went south and the parties arbitrated, the arbi-
    tration panel there awarded the Mastrobuonos, among other relief,
    USCA11 Case: 20-11080       Date Filed: 04/18/2022     Page: 16 of 18
    16                     Opinion of the Court                 20-11080
    punitive damages. 
    Id. at 54
    . But Shearson Lehman contended that
    the choice-of-law provision precluded the award of punitive dam-
    ages under New York arbitration rules (because arbitration panels
    in New York could not award punitive damages), so it sought in
    federal district court to vacate that aspect of the award. 
    Id.
     at 54–
    55. Based on their mistaken understanding of Volt, the district and
    circuit courts in Mastrobuono concluded that New York’s arbitra-
    tion rules governed the arbitration. See Mastrobuono v. Shearson
    Lehman Hutton, Inc., 
    812 F. Supp. 845
    , 848 (N.D. Ill. 1993); Mas-
    trobuono v. Shearson Lehman Hutton, Inc., 
    20 F.3d 713
    , 717 (7th
    Cir. 1994).
    The Supreme Court reversed. 
    514 U.S. at 55
    . It first re-
    viewed the choice-of-law provision. See 
    id.
     at 59–60. After consid-
    ering the plain meaning of that provision, the Supreme Court de-
    termined that the clause was “not, in itself, an unequivocal exclu-
    sion of punitive damages claims.” 
    Id. at 60
    . Then it turned to the
    arbitration provision. See 
    id.
     The Court concluded that, rather
    than support Shearson Lehman’s position that New York arbitra-
    tion rules applied, the arbitration clause “strongly implie[d] that an
    arbitral award of punitive damages [wa]s appropriate [because] [i]t
    explicitly authorize[d] arbitration in accordance with NASD rules,”
    and “NASD’s Code of Arbitration Procedure indicate[d] that arbi-
    trators may award ‘damages and other relief.’” 
    Id.
     at 60–61. Ulti-
    mately, the Court reasoned that, “[a]t most, the choice-of-law
    clause introduce[d] an ambiguity into an arbitration agreement
    that would otherwise allow punitive damages awards.” 
    Id. at 62
    .
    USCA11 Case: 20-11080          Date Filed: 04/18/2022       Page: 17 of 18
    20-11080                 Opinion of the Court                            17
    But that was not enough for the Court to conclude that New York
    arbitration rules governed. See 
    id.
    The Court also concluded that “the best way to harmonize
    the choice-of-law provision with the arbitration provision [was] to
    read ‘the laws of the State of New York’ to encompass substantive
    principles that New York courts would apply, but not to include
    special rules limiting the authority of arbitrators.” 3 
    Id.
     at 63–64.
    Mastrobuono is not materially distinguishable from
    Oceltip’s case. Indeed, the Agreement’s clause stating that it “shall
    be governed by the laws of the State of Georgia” is distinguishable
    from the provision in Mastrobuono that said that the contract there
    “shall be governed by the State of New York” only in that the clause
    in the Agreement further specifies that the CISG shall not control
    the Agreement. But as we have explained, that distinction makes
    the case stronger for application of federal standards of arbitral-
    award review. And as with the arbitration provision in Mastro-
    buono, the arbitration clause here can be harmonized with the
    choice-of-law provision to give effect to both: “the choice-of-law
    provision covers the rights and duties of the parties, while the arbi-
    tration clause covers arbitration; neither sentence intrudes upon
    the other.” 
    Id. at 64
    . In sum, then, the Agreement does not evi-
    dence a clear intent by the parties that the Georgia Arbitration
    3 In addition, the Court explained that Shearson Lehman had drafted the con-
    tract, so ambiguities were to be construed against it. Mastrobuono, 
    514 U.S. at 62
    . But that served as a separate rationale for the Court’s decision.
    USCA11 Case: 20-11080       Date Filed: 04/18/2022     Page: 18 of 18
    18                     Opinion of the Court                 20-11080
    Code—as opposed to federal arbitral-award vacatur standards—
    control.
    One final note: our decision today puts us in good company.
    All eight other Circuits that have opined on the proper reading of
    Volt and Mastrobuono have concluded, as we do, that Volt has no
    application when, as here, a federal court reviews contractual lan-
    guage de novo. See, e.g., PaineWebber, Inc. v. Elahi, 
    87 F.3d 589
    ,
    594 n.5 (1st Cir. 1996); Nat’l Union Fire Ins. Co. v. Belco Petroleum
    Corp., 
    88 F.3d 129
    , 134 (2d Cir. 1996); Roadway Package Sys., Inc.
    v. Kayser, 
    257 F.3d 287
    , 295 (3d Cir. 2001), abrogated on other
    grounds by Hall Street Assocs., L.L.C. v. Mattel, Inc., 
    552 U.S. 576
    (2008); Porter Hayden Co. v. Century Indem. Co., 
    136 F.3d 380
    ,
    383 n.6 (4th Cir. 1998); Action Indus., Inc. v. U.S. Fid. & Guar. Co.,
    
    358 F.3d 337
    , 342 n.15 (5th Cir. 2004); Ferro Corp. v. Garrison In-
    dus., Inc., 
    142 F.3d 926
    , 936 (6th Cir.1998); UHC Mgmt. Co., Inc. v.
    Comput. Scis. Corp., 
    148 F.3d 992
    , 996 (8th Cir. 1998); Wolsey, Ltd.
    v. Foodmaker, Inc., 
    144 F.3d 1205
    , 1212–13 (9th Cir. 1998). In
    short, the district court correctly determined that the FAA’s review
    standards govern here.
    IV.
    For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment of the
    district court.
    AFFIRMED.