Kenneth Segal v. Strausser Enterprises Inc , 486 F. App'x 240 ( 2012 )


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  •                                                            NOT PRECEDENTIAL
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
    __________
    Nos. 09-4710 and 11-3447
    __________
    KENNETH SEGAL;
    ADAM SEGAL, as trustee for and on behalf of the
    Karen and Kenneth Segal Descendants Trust;
    SEGAL AND MOREL, INC.,
    v.
    STRAUSSER ENTERPRISES, INC.;
    GARY STRAUSSER;
    LEONARD MELLON,
    Leonard Mellon,
    Appellant
    __________
    On Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania
    (D.C. No. 2:07-cv-04647)
    District Judge: Hon. James Knoll Gardner
    __________
    Submitted under Third Circuit LAR 34.1(a)
    June 22, 2012
    Before: AMBRO, VANASKIE and ALDISERT, Circuit Judges
    (Filed: June 28, 2012)
    ____________
    OPINION OF THE COURT
    ____________
    ALDISERT, Circuit Judge.
    This interlocutory appeal from the District Court for the Eastern District of
    Pennsylvania presents a single question: whether that court exceeded its discretion when,
    based on Appellant’s arguments during arbitration and the principles of equitable
    estoppel, it denied Appellant Leonard Mellon’s motion to compel arbitration. We hold
    that the District Court acted well within its discretion, and we will affirm its judgment.
    I.
    Because we write primarily for the parties, who are familiar with the facts and
    proceedings in this case, we will revisit them only briefly.
    Appellees (collectively, “Segal”) entered a real estate deal with Strausser
    Enterprises, Inc. (“SEI”) that contained a mandatory arbitration clause. After the parties
    entered the contract, SEI believed that one of Segal’s impending commercial transactions
    violated the deal and, through its attorney, Mellon, sued to enjoin Segal’s actions in
    Pennsylvania state court. The Northampton County Court of Common Pleas held that
    SEI’s claims fell under the mandatory arbitration clause and, accordingly, dismissed the
    suit. SEI unsuccessfully appealed to the Pennsylvania Superior Court.
    SEI commenced arbitration against Segal, during which Mellon continued to serve
    as SEI’s lead counsel. In the arbitration, Segal raised its own claims against SEI and
    Mellon, seeking damages and legal fees stemming from Mellon’s allegedly frivolous
    state court filings and appeals. SEI objected to these claims being arbitrated. In its letter
    to the Court of Common Pleas advising that the dispute had been submitted to arbitration,
    for example, SEI contended that the arbitration panel did not have jurisdiction over the
    issue of Segal’s attorneys’ fees. See App. 00201. During arbitration, moreover, SEI
    repeatedly argued to the arbitration panel that the issue of legal fees was not properly
    subject to arbitration and should be submitted to a court. After some negotiation, Segal
    2
    agreed to withdraw its fees claims from arbitration and raise them, instead, in court. The
    parties verbally memorialized this agreement before the arbitration panel, and the panel
    accepted the withdrawal. See App. 00219.
    While the arbitration continued, Segal asserted its fees claims, as promised, in a
    complaint filed in the District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania on
    November 5, 2007. The complaint alleged tortious interference with contract, tortious
    interference with prospective relations, malicious prosecution, and abuse of process, all
    arising from Mellon’s (on SEI’s behalf) allegedly improper legal filings aimed at
    thwarting Segal’s impending transaction. The complaint named as defendants SEI, Gary
    Strausser (SEI’s principal), and Mellon.
    On January 4, 2008, the defendants filed a motion to dismiss Segal’s complaint or,
    alternatively, to compel arbitration because Segal’s claims arose from a contract with a
    mandatory arbitration clause. In the motion, the defendants conceded that “the claims
    brought by Plaintiff[s] in the instant matter against SEI and Strausser [and Mellon] . . .
    were actually first brought by them in arbitration,” App. 00226, and “prior to filing
    Plaintiffs’ Complaint, [Segal] sought to assert the very same claims in the ongoing
    arbitration.” App. 00233 (emphasis added).
    This attempt by the defendants to return to arbitration “the very same claims” they
    had just successfully removed from arbitration led Segal to seek sanctions under Rule 11
    of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. Shortly before the hearing on that sanctions
    motion, defendants SEI and Strausser withdrew their support from the motion to compel
    arbitration for “strategic reasons.” App. 00375. Mellon, though, pressed on.
    The District Court converted Mellon’s motion into a motion for summary
    judgment, incorporated into the record all relevant evidence presented at the sanctions
    3
    hearing, and, on November 19, 2009, issued an order denying Mellon’s motion on the
    grounds of equitable estoppel. The Court held that Segal’s detrimental reliance on SEI’s
    earlier, anti-arbitration arguments equitably estopped Mellon from later adopting the
    position that the exact same claims should be returned to arbitration. As an aside, the
    Court noted that Mellon’s “fast and loose” tactics would likely run afoul of the doctrine
    of judicial estoppel as well. App. 00021.
    After unsuccessfully moving for reconsideration, Mellon timely appealed both the
    District Court’s original order and its denial of his motion for reconsideration. We have
    consolidated Mellon’s two appeals here.
    II.
    The District Court had jurisdiction under 
    28 U.S.C. § 1332
    . Because this is an
    interlocutory appeal of the District Court’s order refusing a stay under 
    9 U.S.C. § 3
     and
    arbitration under 
    9 U.S.C. § 4
    , we have jurisdiction pursuant to 
    9 U.S.C. § 16
    (a)(1).
    “We exercise plenary review over questions of law concerning the applicability
    and scope of arbitration agreements.” Nino v. Jewelry Exch., Inc., 
    609 F.3d 191
    , 200 (3d
    Cir. 2010) (quotation and citation omitted). We will reverse a district court’s application
    of equitable estoppel, however, only if it has exceeded its discretion. See Meyer v.
    CUNA Mut. Ins. Soc’y, 
    648 F.3d 154
    , 162 (3d Cir. 2011); Bechtel v. Robinson, 
    886 F.2d 644
    , 647 (3d Cir. 1989) (“[W]hen a trial court makes an equitable assessment after the
    operative facts are established, we review that assessment for abuse of discretion.”). 1
    1
    Appellant contends that we should review the District Court’s application of equitable
    estoppel under a plenary standard, citing Nino’s statement that a court should “exercise
    plenary review over the District Court’s determination of whether [a party], through its
    litigation conduct, waived its right to compel arbitration.” 
    609 F.3d at
    200 (citing Ehleiter
    v. Grapetree Shores, Inc., 
    482 F.3d 207
    , 215 (3d Cir. 2007)). Appellant misses the mark.
    The issues of whether a party has waived its right to arbitration, or even whether that
    party has been judicially estopped from taking a contrary position, are distinct from the
    4
    III.
    We hold that the District Court acted within the bounds of its discretion when it
    concluded that Segal’s detrimental reliance on Mellon’s previous anti-arbitration
    positions justified equitable estoppel.
    “[E]quitable estoppel serves to protect litigants from unscrupulous opponents who
    induce a litigant’s reliance on a position, then reverse themselves to argue that they win
    under the opposite scenario.” Teledyne Indus., Inc. v. NLRB, 
    911 F.2d 1214
    , 1220 (6th
    Cir. 1990) (emphasis removed); see Oneida Motor Freight, Inc. v. United Jersey Bank,
    
    848 F.2d 414
    , 419 (3d Cir. 1988) (“[E]quitable estoppel focuses on the relationship
    between the parties to the prior litigation.”(citations omitted)). As the District Court
    correctly explained, equitably estopping a litigant from taking a self-contradictory
    position is proper if: (1) the parties (or parties in privity with them) were adverse in a
    prior proceeding; (2) the party seeking estoppel detrimentally relied on its opponent’s
    prior position; and (3) the party seeking estoppel would be prejudiced if its opponent
    were allowed to assume a new position. See Montrose Med. Grp. Participating Sav. Plan
    v. Bulger, 
    243 F.3d 773
    , 779 n.3 (3d Cir. 2001); Teledyne, 
    911 F.2d at 1220
    ; Novelty
    Knitting Mills, Inc. v. Siskind, 
    457 A.2d 502
    , 503 (Pa. 1983) (“[E]quitable estoppel
    recognizes that an informal promise implied by one’s words, deeds or representations
    which leads another to rely justifiably thereon to his own injury or detriment, may be
    enforced in equity.”
    After extensively reviewing the record, the District Court found that the evidence
    satisfied these factors and, accordingly, warranted equitable estoppel. On appeal, Mellon
    issue of whether equitable estoppel precludes that party from inducing an opponent’s
    reliance on a particular argument and then reversing positions to the opponent’s
    detriment. Because this case concerns the latter, we review for abuse of discretion.
    5
    repeats his argument that, regardless of any past positions SEI may have taken, the
    “liberal federal policy favoring arbitration” requires the legal-fees claims to be sent back
    to arbitration, pursuant to the still-binding arbitration clause. See AT&T Mobility LLC v.
    Concepcion, 
    131 S. Ct. 1740
    , 1745 (2011). This outcome requires Mellon to undermine
    the District Court’s invocation of equitable estoppel; thus, he attacks the Court’s findings
    on each of the equitable estoppel factors. Mellon contends that he was not a “party” to the
    prior proceeding, both because he was absent from the arbitration hearing at which SEI’s
    other counsel objected to arbitrating the legal-fees claims and because he was not a
    named party in the arbitration. He argues that Segal cannot have detrimentally relied on
    SEI’s positions because any statements that were made about removing the legal-fees
    claims from arbitration were meant as “mere[] suggestions as to the proper forum” rather
    than factual representations on which Segal should have relied, Brief for Appellants 24,
    and because those statements “suggested” merely SEI’s wish that such claims be raised in
    state court, but not federal court. And he disputes whether Segal has shown how it will be
    prejudiced by a return to arbitration. Indeed, Mellon argues, the legal-fees claims were
    always properly subject to arbitration—SEI’s past arguments, notwithstanding. Because
    the claims Segal raised in federal court are broader than the legal-fees issues discussed in
    arbitration, moreover, Mellon contends that any anti-arbitration arguments SEI may have
    made about the earlier, narrower claims cannot have prejudiced Segal.
    For all of their bluster, these contentions fail to show how the District Court’s
    decision to apply equitable estoppel constituted an abuse of its discretion. The record
    reveals ample evidence to support the District Court’s finding of each of the equitable
    estoppel factors. First, although Mellon was not an expressly named “party” to the
    original arbitration claims and those who were—Strausser and SEI—have withdrawn
    6
    from the motion to compel arbitration, Mellon is nevertheless a “party” for equitable
    estoppel purposes. Mellon represented SEI during the arbitration. The District Court
    correctly concluded that, as SEI’s attorney and agent, Mellon is considered to be the same
    party as SEI while performing his duties within the scope of his representation. See
    Heffernan v. Hunter, 
    189 F.3d 405
    , 413 (3d Cir. 1999) (“[T]he mere fact that attorneys
    have ‘mixed motives,’ such as ‘enhancing’ their reputation by aggressive representation,
    does not remove their conduct from the scope of the agency.” (citation omitted)).
    Notwithstanding Mellon’s contention that he is not a “party” for equitable estoppel
    purposes, see Brief for Appellants 26, Mellon proudly claims that he is, in fact, “an agent
    of SEI” for the purposes of invoking SEI’s arbitration clause, see id. at 17. Mellon must
    accept the bitter of agency with the sweet, and may not claim a position as SEI’s agent
    when it serves him and disavow it when it does not.
    Second, Segal clearly relied upon SEI’s anti-arbitration positions. SEI repeatedly
    sought to remove the legal-fees issues from arbitration, and Segal agreed to withdraw
    those claims, expressly acquiescing to SEI’s requests. See App. 00219. SEI’s concession
    that the claims brought in District Court were identical to those in arbitration, moreover,
    lends credence to the District Court’s reasonable conclusion that Segal withdrew its
    claims from arbitration with the mutual understanding that Segal would reassert those
    claims in court. See App. 00233 (“[P]rior to filing Plaintiffs’ Complaint, [Segal] sought
    to assert the very same claims in the ongoing arbitration.” (emphasis added)).
    Third, this reliance would be both detrimental and prejudicial if Mellon could
    merely bounce Segal back to arbitration to bring its claims anew after already having
    borne the costs of raising these issues in arbitration, voluntarily withdrawing them, and
    then filing and briefing a case in District Court. On this point, Mellon insists that
    7
    requiring Segal to arbitrate claims that should always have been subject to a mandatory
    arbitration agreement cannot constitute prejudice. But Mellon’s perceived right to
    arbitrate these claims does not trump the protections that equitable estoppel affords
    litigants. Indeed, because equitable estoppel is meant to safeguard innocent parties
    against an opponent’s reprehensible behavior, it applies regardless of whatever
    legitimacy a misbehaving party’s estopped claim might have enjoyed ab initio. See
    Teledyne, 
    911 F.2d at 1220
    . Based on the extensive evidence at its disposal, the District
    Court’s conclusion that these facts warranted equitable estoppel falls within the bounds of
    its permissible discretion.
    *****
    We have considered all of the arguments advanced by the parties and conclude
    that no further discussion is necessary. The judgment of the District Court will be
    AFFIRMED.
    8