Apache Bohai Corporation and Apache China Corporation (collectively “Apache”) appeal a judgment confirming an arbitration award in favor of Texaco China (“Texaco”). Apache argues that the arbitrator exceeded his powers by invalidating an exculpatory clause in the parties’ agreement and manifestly disregarded the law by awarding consequential and cost-of-drilling damages and by failing to apply mitigation principles to reduce the award. Because the arbitration clause granted the arbitrator sufficient authority to consider the validity of the exculpatory clause, and because the arbitrator did not ignore any plainly governing principles of applicable law, we affirm.
I.
In the mid-1990’s Texaco entered into production sharing contracts (“PSC’s”) with the Chinese National Offshore Oil Corporation (“CNOOC”) under which Texaco agreed to explore, develop, and produce petroleum from Blocks 9/18 and 11/19 in the Bohai Bay of China in exchange for a share of any petroleum produced. The PSC’s divided the exploration period into three phases, each of which required drilling commitments from Texaco. At the end of each phase, Texaco had to elect either to relinquish its entire interest in a block or to continue exploring and relinquish only a portion of its interest.
Texaco had until January 31, 1999, to make an election for Block 9/18 and until June 30, 1999, for Block 11/19. To help meet its drilling commitments, Texaco entered into two farm-in agreements with Apache Bohai’s predecessor-in-interest in which Apache agreed to assume Texaco’s drilling commitments in return for a 50% share of any future oil production. Apache committed to drill three exploration wells: one on each of Blocks 9/18 and 11/19 and a third on the block of Apache’s choice.
In January 1999 Apache and Texaco elected to enter the next phase of exploration on Block 9/18. In March, Apache proposed an area of Block 11/19 to be relinquished so that exploration on it could continue. On June 14, Apache informed Texaco that it was withdrawing from the agreements and would not drill any of the three wells. Texaco had only sixteen days remaining to make an election on Block 11/19 and was saddled with the recently acquired drilling commitment on Block 9/18. Apache tendered its 50% interest in the two blocks to Texaco, although Texaco demanded compliance and refused to accept the tender.
While searching without success for a replacement farm-in company, Texaco secured two three-month extensions of the election deadlines for Block 11/19. During the extensions, Texaco learned from CNOOC that oil had been discovered on a block adjacent to Block 11/19 and that seismic data indicated that the oilfield extended onto Block 11/19. In November 1999 Texaco and CNOOC negotiated a new deal with the following conditions: The exploration well for Block 9/18 could be shifted to Block 11/19; a portion of Block 9/18 containing the oil field was shifted to Block 11/19; a one-year extension was granted for Texaco to decide whether to continue exploring Block 11/19; Texaco released all remaining acreage of Block 9/18; if Texaco chose to continue exploring Block 11/19, it would not be forced to relinquish any further acreage. In December 1999 Texaco accepted Apache’s 50% interest in the blocks so it could complete the new deal.
*401 Texaco initiated arbitration proceedings against Apache as provided in the farm-in agreements. 1 The arbitrator determined that Apache had fundamentally breached its commitment to Texaco in reckless indifference to Texaco’s interests. He invalidated the Exculpatory Clause as void under New York law and awarded Texaco over $71 million dollars, of which about $20 million represented consequential damages for Texaco’s loss of a 50% interest in Block 9/18, and about $26 million represented direct damages for the cost of drilling the three wells Apache was obligated to drill. The arbitrator did not reduce Texaco’s recovery by any alleged gains Texaco had received from the renegotiated deal with CNOOC. The district court confirmed the award.
II.
We review a district court’s confirmation of an award
de novo,
but the review of the underlying award is “exceedingly deferential.”
Brabham v. A.G. Edwards & Sons, Inc.,
Apache raises two principal arguments for vacation of the award. First, it contends that the arbitrator exceeded his powers by vitiating the exculpatory clause under New York law and awarding consequential damages in the face of the parties’ clear contrary intentions. Second, it contends the arbitrator manifestly disregarded New York law by awarding consequential and cost-of-drilling damages and by failing to credit Apache for Texaco’s successful mitigation.
A.
“Arbitration is a matter of contract”: The powers of an arbitrator are “dependent on the provisions under which the arbitrators were appointed.”
Brook v. Peak Int'l
*402
Where limitations on the arbitrator’s authority are uncertain or ambiguous, however, “they will be construed narrowly.”
Action Indus., Inc. v. U.S. Fid. & Guar. Co.,
The farm-in contracts contain a broad arbitration clause covering “any dispute” arising out of the contract, including any questions of validity. Where parties have included broad arbitration clauses, we have upheld awards that invalidated contractual provisions.
See Dole Ocean Liner Express v. Ga. Vegetable Co.,
Apache argues that the first seven words of the Exculpatory Clause, “notwithstanding any other provision in this agreement,” take the awarding of consequential damages out of the jurisdiction of the arbitrator. Apache claims that this language creates a supremacy clause, meant to override all other contractual provisions, including the choice-of-law and arbitration clauses. Thus, the arbitrator has no jurisdiction to consider whether New York law would vitiate the effect of the Exculpatory Clause, and he exceeded his powers by considering the issue. 4
*403
Apache seeks support in
ASOMA Corp. v. M/V Seadaniel,
In ASOMA, the parties had signed a limitation of liability clause providing as follows:
Notwithstanding any other provision in this contract, any claims for damage or loss to cargo shall be governed by Hague-Visby Rules, and any other clause herein repugnant to the Hague-Visby Rules shall be null and void and of no force and effect as respect to cargo claims .... Any arbitration clause in this contract shall not apply to claims for cargo loss or damage but,such claims shall be brought in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, to which jurisdiction Owners hereby consent.
Id. at 142. The court observed that the provision removed the issue of cargo claims from the contract’s broad arbitration provision, so it refused to compel arbitration. Id. at 143. Notably, unlike the Exculpatory Clause under Apache’s characterization, the contractual provision at issue in ASOMA was not primarily a supremacy clause, but a forum-selection and choice-of-law clause. The parties in ASOMA carved out a set of claims and provided an alternative governing law and decisionmaker. ASOMA's holding, that parties can restrict arbitral jurisdiction by designating alternate decisionmakers for subsets of claims, is in accord with a line of our cases regarding labor contracts.
In
Delta Queen,
we confronted a collective bargaining agreement that provided the company with the sole responsibility to discipline and discharge for proper cause. Because the arbitrator had exceeded his mandate to determine whether the company had proper cause and had proposed to alter the disciplinary decision, we affirmed the district court’s vacation of that portion of the arbitrator’s decision.
Delta Queen,
In the Exculpatory Clause in the farm-in agreement there is no indication that the parties did not intend to arbitrate the validity of the Exculpatory Clause. 7 Texaco and Apache did not designate an alternate forum to determine the clause’s validity; there is no indication that the parties contemplated any judicial involvement in the contract; and neither party consented to any court’s jurisdiction. The farm-in agreement included a very broad arbitration clause covering “any dispute” arising from the agreement, including “any question regarding its ... validity.”
The face of the contract suggests that the parties intended to have the issue of the enforceability of the Exculpatory Clause handled by arbitration. Given the requirement that limitations on an arbitrator’s authority must be plain and unambiguous and that we resolve all doubts in favor of arbitration, we will not read a clause that refers neither to arbitration nor to any other method of dispute resolution as precluding arbitral jurisdiction to consider the validity of the clause. 8 The arbitrator did not exceed his powers by considering the validity of the Exculpatory Clause under New York law.
Contrary to Apache’s assertion that this reading renders the Exculpatory Clause meaningless, we interpret “notwithstanding any other provision” to control the substantive terms of the contract rather than to designate a decisionmaker for questions of validity. It is a strained interpretation to suggest that the Exculpatory Clause language was evidence of the parties’ intention to have a different deci-sionmaker rule on consequential damages.
Apache raises the alternative claim that the award of consequential damages fails to draw its “essence” from the contract. The “essence” test is an application of the inquiry into whether arbitrators have “exceeded their powers;” it requires that “the award must, in some logical way, be derived from the wording or purpose of the contract.”
Kergosien,
In section 14.05 of the farm-in contract, the parties contemplated that they would be entitled to all remedies arising by law. Once the arbitrator determined that the clause was unenforceable, there was no longer any barrier to awarding consequential damages where they are allowable under New York law. 9 This result is rationally inferable from the contract, so the award satisfies the “essence” test.
B.
Apache’s alternate ground for vacating the award is its claim that the arbitrator manifestly disregarded the law. We recognized “manifest disregard for the law” as a non-statutory ground for vacating an arbitrator’s decision in
Williams v. Cigna Fin. Advisors Inc.,
As the Supreme Court has explained, plenary review by a court on the merits would make meaningless the provisions that the arbitrator’s decision is final, for in reality it would almost never be final .... [I]t is the arbitrator’s construction which was bargained for; and so far as the arbitrator’s decision concerns construction of the contract, the courts have no business overruling him because their interpretation of the contract is different than his.
United Steelworkers of Am. v. Enter. Wheel & Car Corp.,
There are two steps in the manifest-disregard analysis. First, “the error must have been obvious and capable of being readily and instantly perceived by the average person qualified to serve as an arbitrator.”
Id.
at 355. Furthermore, “the term ‘disregard’ implies that the arbitrator appreciates the existence of a clearly governing principle but decides to ignore or pay no attention to it.”
Id.
The governing law must be “well-defined, explicit, and clearly applicable.”
Prestige Ford,
The parties agree that, in accordance with the choice-of-law provision in their contract, the arbitration is governed *406 by New York law. Apache argues that the arbitrator manifestly disregarded New York law by awarding consequential damages in light of the Exculpatory Clause. The arbitrator found that clause unenforceable as against public policy because Apache (1) acted with reckless disregard for Texaco’s rights; (2) intentionally abandoned the contract; and (3) breached a fundamental obligation of the contract. Apache argues that none of these reasons is sufficient under New York law to find .the Exculpatory Clause unenforceable.
“[P]arties to a contract have the power to specifically delineate the scope of their liability at the time the contract is formed,” and New York courts regularly enforce limitations on liability provisions.
Bd. of Educ. v. Sargent, Webster, Crenshaw & Folley,
In
Sommer v. Fed. Signal Corp.,
It is the public policy of this state ... that a party may not insulate itself from damages caused by grossly negligent conduct.Gross negligence, when invoked to pierce an agreed upon limitation of liability in a commercial contract, must “smack[] of intentional wrongdoing.” It is conduct that evinces a reckless indifference to the rights of others
[The Exculpatory clause] cannot restrict Holmes’ liability for conduct evincing a reckless disregard for its customers’ rights.
[P]ublic policy precludes enforcement of contract clauses exonerating a party from its reckless indifference to the rights of others, whether or not termed gross negligence.
Id.
at 1371 & n. 3 (citing
Kalisch-Jarcho,
Two years later, the court revisited the issue. The contract limited defendant’s liability for nonperformance but exempted “willful acts or gross negligence.”
Metro. Life Ins. Co. v. Noble Lowndes Int’l, Inc.,
the phrase “willful acts” should be interpreted here as referring to conduct similar in nature to the “intentional misrepresentation” and “gross negligence” with which it was joined as exceptions to defendant’s general immunity from liability for consequential damages. We, therefore, conclude that the term willful acts as used in this contract was intended by the parties to subsume conduct which is tortious in nature i.e., wrongful conduct in which defendant willfully intends to inflict harm on plaintiff at least in part through the means of breaching the contract between the parties. As thus defined, limiting defendant’s liability for consequential damages to injuries to plaintiff caused by intentional misrepresentations, willful acts and gross negligence does not offend public policy. As we said in Sommer, the conduct necessary to pierce an agreed-upon limitation of liability in a commercial contract, must smack of intentional wrongdoing.
Id.
at 508-09,
The arbitrator in the instant case, interpreting these decisions, drew support from Sommer and concluded that “acting with ‘reckless disregard’ is sufficient under New York law to vitiate the effect of an exemption clause.” Further, he interpreted Metropolitan Life as continuing to recognize gross negligence, including reckless disregard, as a ground for voiding a limitation on liability. The prominent positive citation of Sommer in Metropolitan Life suggests that the court in the later case agreed with the earlier opinion’s reasoning.
The arbitrator’s interpretation is not so plainly incorrect as to be “obvious and capable of being readily and instantly perceived by the average person qualified to serve as an arbitrator.” The arbitrator, whose factual findings are unreviewable, 12 determined that Apache withdrew from the contract in reckless indifference to the interests of Texaco; the arbitrator concluded that finding sufficient to vitiate the *408 Exculpatory Clause. He did not manifestly disregard the law by failing to enforce the Exculpatory Clause and awarding consequential damages to Texaco.
C.
Apache argues that the arbitrator manifestly disregarded New York law by awarding Texaco cost-of-drilling damages: the cost that Apache would have spent drilling three exploratory wells. Apache claims that the proper measure of Texaco’s expectancy damages is the value of the information the wells would have yielded.
In
Chamberlain v. Parker,
The arbitrator in the present case concluded that this matter is distinguishable from
Chamberlain,
noting that Texaco would have had a continued interest in the three wells and that Apache’s receipt of a 50% interest in the blocks was payment for drilling the wells. The arbitrator then looked to other jurisdictions for guidance.
13
Finding a Louisiana case that he believed was directly on point, the arbitrator elected to adopt that case’s measure of damages. In
Fite v. Miller,
The facts of Fite are distinguishable; there the plaintiff never accepted the return of defendant’s interest in the land. Id. at 289. The Fite court implied, and we have held, that if a plaintiff has accepted the return of his consideration he cannot sue for damages. 14 Under the manifest disregard standard, Apache must point to *409 a controlling case with a clear rule ignored by the arbitrator. Chamberlain is sufficiently distinguishable that it is not on point, and caselaw from other jurisdictions, even if squarely on point, is not controlling but only persuasive. The arbitrator did not manifestly disregard the- law in awarding eost-of-drilling damages.
D.
Apache urges that the arbitrator manifestly disregarded New York law by failing to apply mitigation principles to reduce Texaco’s award. The arbitrator did not reduce the award by the value of any of the following: the knowledge of a discovery extending onto Block 11/19 that Texaco gained from the data provided by CNOOC; the renegotiated deal with CNOOC, which would not have been possible had Apache not reassigned its interests to Texaco; or the interest in the blocks Apache returned. Apache maintains that it should have received credit for each of these items.
The arbitrator acknowledged that under New York law, if any benefit accrues “to the plaintiff because of the breach, a balance must be struck between benefit and loss, and the defendant is only chargeable with the net loss.”
See Stern v. Satra Corp.,
Apache cites no New York authority that conclusively shows that G&R is contrary to New York law. Apache has not demonstrated that the arbitrator manifestly disregarded New York law in refusing to reduce Texaco’s award by the value of Texaco’s mitigation.
The arbitrator refused to reduce the award in light of the return of Apache’s interest in the blocks, because he found that the interest had no inherent worth at the time it was returned.
15
An arbitrator’s finding of fact must be accepted as true.
Manville Forest Prods. Corp. v. United Paperworkers Int’l Union, AFL-CIO,
The judgment confirming the arbitration award is AFFIRMED.
Notes
.The agreements contained the following relevant provisions:
§ 4.03 — “Notwithstanding any other provision of the Agreement, neither party shall in any circumstance be liable to the other Party under, arising out of or in any way connected with this Agreement or the Deed of Assignment for any consequential loss or damage whether arising in contract or tort (including negligence).” [the "Exculpatory Clause”]
§ 15.01- — This Agreement shall be governed by and construed in accordance with the laws of the State of New York, United States of America, [the "Choice of Law Clause”].
§ 15.02 — Any dispute arising out of or relating to this Agreement, including any question regarding its existence, validity, or termination, which cannot be amicably resolved between the Parties shall be settled in New York, New York in accordance with the American Arbitration Association arbitration procedures. [the "Arbitration Clause”]
.
See, e.g., Kergosien v. Ocean Energy, Inc.,
.
See Smith v. Transp. Workers Union of Am.,
. The jurisdiction of an arbitrator is a question for the court in the first instance,
Gen. Motors Corp. v. Pamela Equities Corp.,
"If a litigant desires to preserve an argument for appeal, the litigant must press and not merely intimate the argument during the proceedings before the district court. If an argument is not raised to such a degree that the district court has an opportunity to rule on it, we will not address it on appeal.”
Belt v. EmCare, Inc.,
Apache's cryptic references to its jurisdictional argument in its motion to vacate in district court are more troubling, however. Although Apache did present broad allegations that the arbitrator "exceeded his pow *403 ers” and that the award "failed to draw its essence from the agreement,” Apache never specifically alleged that the Exculpatory Clause overrode the Arbitration and Choice-of-Law Clauses, thereby stripping the arbitrator of jurisdiction to award consequential damages. See Magistrate Judge’s Memorandum and Recommendation, at 48 (“Nothing suggests that [the arbitrator] exceeded his powers or failed to rationally infer the essence of the contract.”). Although Apache's conduct in this litigation has made it a close issue, we conclude that Apache has sufficiently preserved the argument that we will address it on the merits.
.
See E.I. DuPont de Nemours & Co. v. Local 900 of the Int’l Chem. Workers Union, 968
F.2d 456, 459 (5th Cir.1992) (holding arbitrator exceeded authority where submission limited issue to finding proper cause);
Am. Eagle Airlines, Inc. v. Air Line Pilots Ass’n, Int’l,
. New York, like most states, is an at-will employment regime providing no public policy against terminating an employee for any reason or no reason at all.
Murphy v. Am. Home Prods. Corp.,
. Apache properly admitted at argument that a state court or district court reviewing this contract would have the authority to consider the validity of the Exculpatory Clause. Absent plain contractual limitations, arbitrators have the authority to grant any relief that can be given by a court.
See Mastrobuono v. Shearson Lehman Hutton, Inc.,
. Cf. Buckeye Check Cashing, Inc. v. Cardegna,
.
See Jacada (Europe), Ltd. v. Int’l Mktg. Strategies, Inc.,
.
Kalisch-Jarcho, Inc. v. New York,
.
See id.
at 416;
Corinno Civetta Constr. Corp. v. City of New York,
.
See Major League Baseball Players Ass’n v. Garvey,
. Apache also argues that the arbitrator exceeded his powers by relying on law outside the state of New York in contravention of the Choice of Law Clause. The arbitrator looked to caselaw outside New York as persuasive authority after concluding that no New York case squarely controlled. Courts are generally free to look to the decisions of other jurisdictions in determining uncertain or ambiguous questions of New York law.
Elliott Assocs., LP v. Banco de la Nacion,
.
Fite,
. Apache argues that this finding creates a logical impossibility in the award. It claims that if Texaco is entitled to $20 million in consequential damages for the loss of its 50% interest in Block 9/18, then Apache's 50% interest should also be valued at $20 million, and Texaco’s damages should be offset by that amount.
This contention is flawed: The sum of $20 million is the value of the interest had Apache performed; it is therefore a measure of Texaco's loss. By the time it was returned, the interest was worthless; there is no logical impossibility.
Apache also makes the catch-all argument that the award left Texaco in a better position than it would have been in had Apache performed. Apache avers that Texaco should not be able to recover restitution as well as direct and consequential damages. Again, Apache’s reasoning rests on the assumption that Apache's interest in the blocks had the same value when Apache received it as it did when Apache reassigned it. The arbitrator, however, found that the interest in the blocks was worthless by the time Apache reassigned it. Texaco did not receive restitution by accepting the reassignment of the blocks, and Apache therefore has failed to demonstrate that Texaco was left in a better position than it would have been in had Apache performed.
