In re N.A. Rugby Union v. U.S. Rugby Football Union ( 2019 )


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    ADVANCE SHEET HEADNOTE
    June 17, 2019
    
    2019 CO 56
    No. 19SA22, In re N.A. Rugby Union v. U.S. Rugby Football Union—Nonsignatory to
    an Arbitration Agreement—Principal and Agent—Estoppel—Third-Party
    Beneficiary.
    In this original proceeding pursuant to C.A.R. 21, the supreme court is asked to
    decide whether the district court erred when it ordered petitioner, a nonsignatory to an
    agreement, to arbitrate claims brought against it by respondents pursuant to an
    arbitration provision in the agreement that covered the parties (including respondents)
    and their agents. The district court found that because the nonsignatory was an agent for
    a signatory of the agreement, the nonsignatory fell “squarely within the broad language
    of the arbitration provision” and thus it was required to arbitrate.
    The supreme court issued a rule to show cause and now makes the rule absolute.
    Although the court has not yet opined on the issue, the weight of authority nationally
    establishes that, subject to a number of recognized exceptions, only parties to an
    agreement containing an arbitration provision can compel or be subject to arbitration.
    The court adopts the general rule and its exceptions and concludes that, because the
    nonsignatory was never a party to the agreement at issue and because the respondents
    have not established that any of the recognized exceptions apply, the district court erred
    in determining that the nonsignatory is subject to arbitration under the agreement.
    The court therefore makes the rule to show cause absolute.
    The Supreme Court of the State of Colorado
    2 East 14th Avenue • Denver, Colorado 80203
    
    2019 CO 56
    Supreme Court Case No. 19SA22
    Original Proceeding Pursuant to C.A.R. 21
    Boulder County District Court Case No. 18CV30533
    Honorable Thomas Francis Mulvahill, Judge
    In Re
    Plaintiffs:
    N.A. Rugby Union LLC and Douglas Schoninger,
    v.
    Defendants:
    United States of America Rugby Football Union, Rugby International Marketing, Nigel
    Melville, Daniel Payne, and Robert Latham.
    Rule Made Absolute
    en banc
    June 17, 2019
    Formerly Represented by Counsel (Counsel Permitted to Withdraw after Briefing
    Complete):
    N.A. Rugby Union LLC
    Douglas Schoninger
    Attorneys for Defendant Rugby International Marketing:
    Hutchinson Black and Cook, LLC
    Daniel D. Williams
    Christopher W. Ford
    Lauren E. Groth
    Boulder, Colorado
    No appearance on behalf of United States of America Rugby Football Union, Nigel
    Melville, Daniel Payne, or Robert Latham.
    JUSTICE GABRIEL delivered the Opinion of the Court.
    2
    ¶1     In this original proceeding pursuant to C.A.R. 21, we must determine whether a
    nonsignatory to an arbitration agreement can be required to arbitrate under that
    agreement by virtue of the fact that it is a purported agent of a signatory to the agreement.
    Specifically, we are asked to decide whether the district court erred when it entered an
    order requiring petitioner Rugby International Marketing (“RIM”), which is a defendant
    below and a nonsignatory to a Professional Rugby Sanction Agreement (the “Sanction
    Agreement”), to arbitrate pursuant to an arbitration provision in that Agreement that
    covered the parties and their agents. The court found that because RIM was an agent for
    United States of America Rugby Football Union (“USAR”), a signatory of the Sanction
    Agreement, RIM fell “squarely within the broad language of the arbitration provision.”
    ¶2     We issued a rule to show cause and now make the rule absolute. Although we
    have not yet opined on the issue, the weight of authority nationally establishes that,
    subject to a number of recognized exceptions, only parties to an agreement containing an
    arbitration provision can compel or be subject to arbitration. Here, because RIM was not
    a party to the Sanction Agreement and because respondents N.A. Rugby Union LLC
    d/b/a Professional Rugby Organization (“PRO Rugby”) and Douglas Schoninger, who
    are the plaintiffs below, have not established that any of the recognized exceptions apply,
    we conclude that the district court erred in determining that RIM is subject to arbitration
    under the Sanction Agreement.
    I. Facts and Procedural History
    ¶3     Schoninger, a New York financier, was interested in launching a professional
    rugby league in the United States.       Toward that end, he formed PRO Rugby and
    3
    approached USAR, which was the national governing body for rugby in the United
    States.
    ¶4        Ultimately, PRO Rugby and USAR entered into the Sanction Agreement, which
    authorized PRO Rugby to establish a professional rugby league in the United States.
    ¶5        As pertinent here, section 2.1 of the Sanction Agreement provided:
    g. N.A. Rugby Union LLC agrees to appoint Rugby International
    Marketing as its exclusive Player Representation agency through which
    it will contract with all Players and Coaching staff on a to be agreed fee
    basis (it being understood that such agency shall be the subject of an
    agency agreement and shall not be effective until such agency
    agreement has been executed by N.A. Rugby Union LLC and Rugby
    International Marketing). . . .
    h. N.A. Rugby Union LLC agrees to appoint Rugby International
    Marketing as a non-exclusive agency to present the commercial rights
    of the Competition to potential sponsors on a to be agreed fee basis (it
    being understood that such agency shall be the subject of an agency
    agreement and shall not be effective until such agency agreement has
    been executed by N.A. Rugby Union LLC and Rugby International
    Marketing).
    ¶6        Notably, it appears undisputed that as of the date of this Agreement, RIM did not
    yet exist (it was not established until two months later).
    ¶7        The Sanction Agreement also contained an arbitration provision that stated, in
    part:
    [T]he parties agree that any claim or dispute between them or against any
    agent, employee, successor, or assign of the other, whether related to this
    Agreement or otherwise, and any claim or dispute related to this agreement
    or the relationship or duties contemplated under this Agreement, including
    the validity of this arbitration clause, shall be resolved by binding
    arbitration by the American Arbitration Association under the Commercial
    Arbitration Rules then in effect.
    4
    ¶8    RIM was not a party to the Sanction Agreement. Moreover, notwithstanding the
    fact that the Agreement states that PRO Rugby agreed to appoint RIM as its agent for
    player representation and commercial rights, no such agreement was ever executed.
    ¶9    After allegedly investing six million dollars of his personal funds, Schoninger
    folded the league after its first season. He and PRO Rugby then filed suit in Boulder
    County District Court, naming nine different defendants, including USAR and RIM, and
    alleging that the defendants had engaged in a concerted effort to force PRO Rugby out of
    business.
    ¶10   In their complaint, plaintiffs asserted an array of tort and contract claims, the latter
    arising out of alleged breaches of the Sanction Agreement.
    ¶11   RIM subsequently moved to dismiss plaintiffs’ breach of contract claims against it
    based on the undisputed fact that it was not a party to the contract. Plaintiffs responded
    that the above-quoted provisions of the Sanction Agreement demonstrated that USAR
    had assigned to RIM the obligations under that Agreement to act as PRO Rugby’s
    exclusive player representation agency and to be the nonexclusive agency to present the
    commercial rights of the competition to potential sponsors.          Based on this alleged
    assignment, plaintiffs contended that RIM was bound by the Agreement.
    ¶12   The district court disagreed with plaintiffs’ assertion, noting that (1) a party to a
    contract cannot delegate duties to a nonparty without the nonparty’s consent;
    (2) plaintiffs had conceded that RIM did not affirmatively agree to any promises in the
    Sanction Agreement; and (3) plaintiffs cited no evidence of any other agreement by RIM
    5
    to assume any of the Sanction Agreement’s obligations. The court thus dismissed
    plaintiffs’ contract claims against RIM.
    ¶13    After further pretrial proceedings resulted in orders compelling arbitration as to
    certain defendants and dismissing for lack of personal jurisdiction the claims against
    certain other defendants, RIM became the sole remaining defendant in the lawsuit.
    Plaintiffs then moved to stay the proceedings against RIM to allow plaintiffs to arbitrate
    their claims against it. In support of this motion, plaintiffs argued that the plain language
    of the Sanction Agreement’s arbitration provision, which bound the parties and agents of
    the other, bound RIM because it was allegedly USAR’s agent.               Plaintiffs further
    contended that, in any event, any dispute as to whether the claims at issue were arbitrable
    was to be decided by the arbitrator. RIM opposed the motion to stay, arguing that it was
    not a party to the Sanction Agreement and that it had never manifested an agreement to
    be bound by that Agreement’s terms, including the arbitration provision. In light of this
    position, RIM did not directly respond to plaintiffs’ assertion that RIM was bound by the
    arbitration provision because it was USAR’s agent.
    ¶14    Notwithstanding its prior order dismissing the contract claims against RIM on the
    ground that RIM was not a party to the Sanction Agreement, the district court granted
    plaintiffs’ motion to stay the case pending arbitration. In support of this ruling, the court
    did not rely on any claim that RIM was a party to the Sanction Agreement or that it had
    a prospective agency agreement with PRO Rugby. Instead, the court focused on the
    purported agency relationship between RIM and USAR. Specifically, the court found
    that the arbitration provision is phrased broadly and plainly subjects agents of both PRO
    6
    Rugby and USAR to resolution by arbitration of any disputes brought by the other that
    are related to the Sanction Agreement. The court further found that USAR’s control of
    and delegation of obligations to RIM (notwithstanding the court’s prior finding that
    USAR had not delegated any obligations to RIM) established that RIM was USAR’s agent
    “and thus squarely within the broad language of the arbitration provision.” The court
    therefore ordered a “full stay of this case pending the completion of arbitration.”
    ¶15   RIM then filed the present C.A.R. 21 petition, and we issued a rule to show cause.
    II. Analysis
    ¶16   We begin by discussing our jurisdiction to hear this matter. After setting forth our
    standard of review, we proceed to analyze whether and in what circumstances a
    signatory can compel a nonsignatory to arbitrate by virtue of an arbitration provision
    contained in an agreement to which the nonsignatory is not a party. We conclude that
    the district court erred in compelling RIM to arbitrate here because RIM was not a party
    to the Sanction Agreement and because plaintiffs have not established that RIM fell
    within any of the recognized principles under which a contract signatory may compel a
    nonsignatory to arbitrate.
    A. Original Jurisdiction
    ¶17   The exercise of our original jurisdiction under C.A.R. 21 rests within our sole
    discretion. Fognani v. Young, 
    115 P.3d 1268
    , 1271 (Colo. 2005). An original proceeding
    under C.A.R. 21 is an extraordinary remedy that is limited in purpose and availability.
    Wesp v. Everson, 
    33 P.3d 191
    , 194 (Colo. 2001). It provides a remedy when an appellate
    remedy would be inadequate. 
    Fognani, 115 P.3d at 1271
    .
    7
    ¶18    Here, we conclude that RIM lacks an adequate appellate remedy.                    Under
    prevailing statutory and case law, RIM has no right to file an interlocutory appeal from
    an order granting a motion to compel arbitration. See § 13-22-228(1)(a)–(b), C.R.S. (2018);
    see also Lane v. Urgitus, 
    145 P.3d 672
    , 679 (Colo. 2006) (“[A] trial court order granting a
    motion to stay the proceedings and to compel arbitration is an ‘interlocutory order’ that
    is not immediately appealable.”). Accordingly, absent our intervention, RIM could be
    required to expend significant resources completing arbitration and confirming any
    arbitration award before it would have the opportunity to appeal. Because requiring RIM
    to do so would effectively deny it the relief that it seeks, we deem it appropriate to
    exercise our original jurisdiction in this case. See Radil v. Nat’l Union Fire Ins. Co., 
    233 P.3d 688
    , 691–92 (Colo. 2010) (“Because a trial court order compelling arbitration is not
    immediately appealable, we may exercise our original jurisdiction to review such an
    order.”).
    B. Standard of Review and Applicable Law
    ¶19    The scope of an arbitration agreement is a question of law that we review de novo,
    applying principles governing contract interpretation. 
    Id. at 692.
    In construing an
    arbitration agreement, we look to the plain and ordinary meaning of the terms of that
    agreement, and we construe the agreement to effectuate the parties’ intent and the
    purposes of the agreement. 
    Id. In general,
    we will resolve ambiguities in favor of
    arbitration, which is a preferred method of dispute resolution in Colorado. 
    Id. ¶20 It
    is well-settled that “arbitration is a matter of contract and a party cannot be
    required to submit to arbitration any dispute which he has not agreed so to submit.”
    8
    United Steelworkers of Am. v. Warrior & Gulf Navigation Co., 
    363 U.S. 574
    , 582 (1960); accord
    
    Lane, 145 P.3d at 679
    ; see also Smith v. Multi-Fin. Sec. Corp., 
    171 P.3d 1267
    , 1272 (Colo. App.
    2007) (“Generally, when the requirement to arbitrate is created by an agreement, it can
    be invoked only by a signatory of the agreement, and only against another signatory.”).
    ¶21    Although we do not appear to have spoken on the issue, other courts, including
    divisions of our court of appeals, have recognized certain exceptions to this general rule.
    For example, courts have observed that ordinary principles of contract and agency law
    may apply to bind a nonsignatory to an arbitration agreement. See, e.g., Covington v. Aban
    Offshore Ltd., 
    650 F.3d 556
    , 558 (5th Cir. 2011); 
    Smith, 171 P.3d at 1272
    . Specifically, these
    courts have recognized the following theories for binding a nonsignatory to an arbitration
    agreement: (1) incorporation of an arbitration provision by reference in another
    agreement; (2) assumption of the arbitration obligation by the nonsignatory; (3) agency;
    (4) veil-piercing/alter ego; (5) estoppel; (6) successor-in-interest; and (7) third-party
    beneficiary. See Bridas S.A.P.I.C. v. Gov’t of Turkm., 
    345 F.3d 347
    , 356 (5th Cir. 2003);
    Thomson-CSF, S.A. v. Am. Arbitration Ass’n, 
    64 F.3d 773
    , 776 (2d Cir. 1995); 
    Smith, 171 P.3d at 1272
    .
    ¶22    We agree that the foregoing general rule and the above-described exceptions to it
    comport with settled principles of contract and agency law, and we now adopt that rule
    and those exceptions. Having done so, we turn to the merits of RIM’s contentions.
    C. Application
    ¶23    RIM contends that neither general contract principles nor any of the
    above-described exceptions apply to require it to arbitrate here.
    9
    ¶24    Plaintiffs respond that under the plain language of the Sanction Agreement, RIM
    is bound by the arbitration clause and that, in any event, the Agreement delegated all
    issues of arbitrability to the arbitrator. Based on this, plaintiffs contend that we should
    discharge our order to show cause without reaching the above-described exceptions.
    Plaintiffs argue in the alternative, however, that should we reach the exceptions, then
    RIM is still bound by the arbitration provision of the Sanction Agreement because it was
    a third-party beneficiary of that Agreement, it was USAR’s agent, and it is bound under
    a theory of equitable estoppel because it is seeking to enforce the rights and benefits that
    it received under the Agreement.
    ¶25    We view plaintiffs’ contentions as framing the issues now before us, and we
    address each of those contentions in turn.
    ¶26    Plaintiffs first contend that the Sanction Agreement clearly and unambiguously
    required arbitration of any claim or dispute between PRO Rugby and USAR or against
    “any agent, employee, successor, or assign of the other, whether related to [the Sanction]
    Agreement or otherwise.” Plaintiffs further contend that because RIM is USAR’s agent,
    it is bound by the arbitration provision’s above-quoted plain language. Plaintiffs never
    explain, however, how a party to a contract can bind a nonparty to the terms of that
    contract without establishing legal or equitable grounds for doing so (e.g., assumption by
    the nonsignatory of obligations under the agreement, applicable agency principles,
    veil-piercing, equitable estoppel, or the nonsignatory’s status as a successor-in-interest to
    a party to the contract or as a third-party beneficiary of the contract).
    10
    ¶27    Nor are we persuaded by plaintiffs’ reliance on our decision in Allen v. Pacheco,
    
    71 P.3d 375
    (Colo. 2003). Although we said in that case that “a non-party may be bound
    by the terms of an agreement if the parties so intend,” 
    id. at 379,
    that statement must be
    read in context. In that case, the plaintiff brought a wrongful death action against medical
    providers, including a health maintenance organization (“HMO”), arising out of the
    death of her husband. 
    Id. at 377.
    Her late husband’s agreement with the HMO contained
    an arbitration clause that applied to claims asserted by “a Member [i.e., of the HMO], or
    by a Member’s heir or personal representative, or by a person claiming that a duty to him
    or her arises from a Member’s relationship with [the HMO] incident to this Agreement.”
    
    Id. We were
    thus called on to decide, as pertinent here, whether the scope of the
    agreement included nonparty spouses. 
    Id. at 379.
    ¶28    It is in this context that we said that the agreement applied to nonparty spouses
    because “(a) a non-party may be bound by the terms of an agreement if the parties so
    intend and because (b) a spouse is an ‘heir’ under the meaning of the agreement.” 
    Id. In so
    stating, we emphasized, “So long as [the nonparty spouse] is within the category of
    heirs, personal representatives, or persons claiming special duties, she is bound by the
    arbitration agreement.” 
    Id. at 380.
    And we further pointed out that we were construing
    an arbitration provision that expressly purported to bind certain nonparties “who are in
    privity with the signatory, namely an ‘heir or personal representative or . . . a person
    claiming that a duty to him or her arises from a Member’s relationship with [the HMO].’”
    
    Id. at 380
    n.4.
    11
    ¶29    Accordingly, notwithstanding plaintiffs’ assertion to the contrary, Allen does not
    create a novel (and seemingly unlimited) principle that a nonsignatory to a contract can
    be bound to an arbitration clause whenever the signatories to the contract so intend. That
    broad a principle would lead to absurd results (e.g., applied literally, such a principle
    would allow a signatory to argue successfully that a complete stranger to the agreement
    and to the parties thereto was bound because the parties to the agreement intended to
    bind the stranger). Rather, our statements in Allen must be read in context. When thus
    construed, they are fully consistent with the settled contractual and equitable principles
    set forth above because the plaintiff in Allen (1) was asserting rights under her late
    husband’s agreement with the HMO and therefore was equitably estopped from
    disclaiming her obligations under that same agreement; (2) was in privity with her late
    husband; and (3) was an heir and thus a successor-in-interest and third-party beneficiary
    under the agreement.
    ¶30    The cases that we cited in 
    Allen, 71 P.3d at 379
    –80, in support of the proposition
    that a nonparty may fall within the scope of an agreement if the parties so intend confirm
    this point. For example, Jefferson County School District No. R-1 v. Shorey, 
    826 P.2d 830
    , 843
    (Colo. 1992), concerned whether an employee who was a third-party beneficiary to a
    collective bargaining agreement had standing to sue for benefits under that agreement
    (we said she did but concluded that her claim should be stayed pending exhaustion of
    the grievance process established by the collective bargaining agreement). Parker v.
    Center for Creative Leadership, 
    15 P.3d 297
    , 298 (Colo. App. 2000), concerned whether a
    third-party beneficiary who was seeking to enforce a contract was bound by the
    12
    arbitration provision of that same contract (the division said he was). And both Everett v.
    Dickinson & Co., 
    929 P.2d 10
    , 12 (Colo. App. 1996), and Eychner v. Van Vleet, 
    870 P.2d 486
    ,
    489 (Colo. App. 1993), concerned whether a nonsignatory to an arbitration agreement
    could compel a signatory to arbitrate, a scenario not at issue here. Notably, in Everett, the
    nonsignatory sought to enforce the arbitration provision at issue based on the very types
    of contract principles set forth above. See 
    Everett, 929 P.2d at 12
    –13 (concluding that the
    nonsignatory could not enforce an arbitration provision to which it was not a party
    because it was not a third-party beneficiary of that agreement).
    ¶31    In short, neither Allen nor the cases on which it relied support the proposition that
    a nonsignatory like RIM can be compelled to arbitrate merely because the signatories to
    an arbitration agreement, without more, intended to bind the nonsignatory. Rather, the
    signatory must establish one of the recognized legal or equitable bases to compel the
    nonsignatory to arbitrate.
    ¶32    For similar reasons, we reject plaintiffs’ contention that we should uphold the
    district court’s order requiring RIM to arbitrate because, even if there were a dispute as
    to whether plaintiffs’ claims against RIM are arbitrable, under the Sanction Agreement,
    issues of arbitrability are to be decided by the arbitrator. Although plaintiffs contend that
    when contracting parties empower an arbitrator to determine issues of arbitrability, this
    constitutes “clear and unmistakable evidence of intent to delegate those issues to the
    arbitrator,” Ahluwalia v. QFA Royalties, LLC, 
    226 P.3d 1093
    , 1098 (Colo. App. 2009),
    plaintiffs again do not explain how the contracting parties’ intent can bind a nonparty to
    a contract, absent a legal or equitable basis for doing so.
    13
    ¶33    We therefore must proceed to consider plaintiffs’ alternative arguments that RIM
    is bound by the arbitration provision at issue because (1) it was a third-party beneficiary
    of the Sanction Agreement; (2) it was USAR’s agent; and (3) it is equitably estopped from
    avoiding the arbitration provision because it is seeking to enforce rights and benefits
    conferred on it by the Sanction Agreement.         We address and reject each of these
    arguments in turn.
    ¶34    The “‘critical fact’ that determines whether a nonsignatory is a third-party
    beneficiary is whether the underlying agreement ‘manifest[s] an intent to confer specific
    legal rights upon [the nonsignatory].’” Ouadani v. TF Final Mile LLC, 
    876 F.3d 31
    , 39 (1st
    Cir. 2017) (quoting InterGen N.V. v. Grina, 
    344 F.3d 134
    , 147 (1st Cir. 2003)).
    Nonsignatories who are intended third-party beneficiaries of an agreement containing an
    arbitration clause are bound by that agreement. See id.; see also 
    Everett, 929 P.2d at 12
    (“A
    third-party beneficiary may enforce a contract only if the parties to that contract intended
    to confer a benefit on the third party when contracting; it is not enough that some benefit
    incidental to the performance of the contract may accrue to the third party.”).
    ¶35    Here, the Sanction Agreement did not confer—and could not have conferred—
    specific legal rights on RIM because at the time that Agreement was signed, RIM did not
    exist. Moreover, to the extent that the Sanction Agreement envisioned a future conferral
    of rights or benefits on RIM, those rights or benefits would have been bestowed by way
    of a separate agreement between RIM and PRO Rugby, not by way of the Sanction
    Agreement. Accordingly, the record does not support plaintiffs’ assertion that RIM was
    14
    a third-party beneficiary of the Sanction Agreement and therefore is bound by that
    Agreement’s arbitration provision.
    ¶36    Nor is RIM bound by the Sanction Agreement’s arbitration provision based on
    plaintiffs’ assertions that RIM was an agent of USAR’s and that USAR bound RIM to that
    provision. The agency exception to the general principle that a party cannot be required
    to arbitrate any dispute that it has not agreed to arbitrate is premised on traditional
    principles of agency law. 
    Thomson-CSF, 64 F.3d at 777
    . Under those principles, an agent
    may bind a principal to a contract. Great W. Fin. Co. v. Davis, 
    272 P. 11
    , 11 (Colo. 1928);
    accord 
    Covington, 650 F.3d at 559
    ; Walker v. Collyer, 
    9 N.E.3d 854
    , 864 (Mass. App. Ct. 2014);
    Restatement (Third) of Agency § 6.01 (Am. Law Inst. 2006). A principal, however, cannot
    bind an agent. Great W. Fin. 
    Co., 272 P. at 11
    ; accord 
    Covington, 650 F.3d at 559
    ; DK Joint
    Venture 1 v. Weyand, 
    649 F.3d 310
    , 317 (5th Cir. 2011); 
    Walker, 9 N.E.3d at 864
    ; Restatement
    (Third) of Agency, at § 6.01.
    ¶37    Here, assuming without deciding that RIM and USAR had an agency relationship,
    USAR was the principal and RIM was the agent. Accordingly, under the above-noted
    principles, USAR could not bind RIM to the Sanction Agreement’s arbitration provision,
    and thus, RIM is not bound by that provision.
    ¶38    Finally, with respect to plaintiffs’ assertion that RIM is equitably estopped from
    avoiding the arbitration provision at issue, we note that the principle of equitable
    estoppel can bind a nonsignatory to an arbitration provision in an agreement when the
    nonsignatory has knowingly exploited that agreement, as, for example, by claiming or
    accepting direct benefits of the agreement. See 
    Ouadani, 876 F.3d at 38
    (“Equitable
    15
    estoppel ‘precludes a party from enjoying rights and benefits under a contract while at
    the same time avoiding its burdens and obligations.’”) (quoting InterGen 
    N.V., 344 F.3d at 145
    ); 
    Smith, 171 P.3d at 1274
    (“We conclude that the beneficiaries are estopped from
    avoiding the arbitration provisions of the same agreements whose benefits they seek to
    enforce.”).
    ¶39    Here, although plaintiffs assert that RIM has received multiple benefits under the
    Sanction Agreement, plaintiffs again ignore the fact that at the time the Agreement was
    signed, RIM did not even exist. Moreover, as noted above, RIM received no benefits
    under the Sanction Agreement. Rather, it received a promise of a subsequent agreement
    that would have provided benefits, but PRO Rugby and RIM never consummated that
    agreement. And contrary to plaintiffs’ assertions, RIM is not seeking to enforce any right
    or benefit under the Sanction Agreement.          Indeed, it has asserted no claims or
    counterclaims under that Agreement. To the contrary, it successfully argued that the
    contract claims against it should be dismissed because it is not a party to the Agreement.
    Having asserted no claim for rights or benefits under the Agreement, the equitable
    estoppel doctrine does not apply to bind RIM to that Agreement’s arbitration provision.
    See 
    Ouadani, 876 F.3d at 38
    ; 
    Smith, 171 P.3d at 1274
    .
    ¶40    For all of these reasons, we conclude that RIM, as a nonsignatory to the Sanction
    Agreement, is not bound by that Agreement’s arbitration provision, and therefore, the
    trial court erred in concluding that RIM was required to arbitrate the claims against it.
    16
    III. Conclusion
    ¶41    In general, when a requirement to arbitrate is created by an agreement, it can only
    be invoked by and enforced against a signatory to that agreement. This general rule,
    however, is subject to certain exceptions, and a nonsignatory to an agreement containing
    an arbitration provision can be compelled to arbitrate when, as pertinent here, the
    nonsignatory is a third-party beneficiary of the agreement, traditional agency principles
    bind the nonsignatory to the arbitration provision, or the nonsignatory is equitably
    estopped from denying the applicability of the arbitration provision because, among
    other things, it is seeking to enforce rights or benefits conferred on it by the agreement
    containing the arbitration provision at issue.
    ¶42    Here, plaintiffs have not established that any of the foregoing exceptions apply.
    Accordingly, we conclude that the district court erred in determining that RIM is required
    to arbitrate the claims against it. We therefore make the rule to show cause absolute.
    17