Plaintiffs-Appellants Baker
&
Taylor, Inc. and Baker & Taylor Fulfillment, Inc. (together, “Baker & Taylor”) appeal from an August 6, 2008 decision and order of the United States District Court for the District of Connecticut (Bryant,
J.)
dismissing their claims against Defendants
BACKGROUND
This appeal does not require us to review the district court’s decision on a dis-positive motion, but rather presents the question whether the district court correctly held that Baker
&
Taylor’s claims should be heard in an arbitral forum. “Properly considered, this question takes no account of the merits of claims asserted in the complaint.”
Ragone v. Atl. Video at the Manhattan Ctr.,
AlphaCraze is an online retailer. Baker & Taylor is in the Internet “fulfillment” business in that it supplies goods and services for companies like AlphaCraze by filling these companies’ customer orders for items such as books, calendars, audio products, and video games. Baker & Taylor, Inc. and AlphaCraze began their relationship as relevant to this dispute on February 1, 1999 when they entered into a Drop Ship agreement pursuant to which Baker & Taylor, Inc. filled customer orders on behalf of AlphaCraze.. On July 14, 1999, AlphaCraze and Baker & Taylor, Inc. executed a Distribution Agreement that replaced the Drop Ship Agreement and contained many of the same provisions. Neither agreement contains an arbitration claused
According to allegations in Baker & Taylor’s First Amended Verified Complaint (the “Complaint”), including the attached exhibits, after execution of the Distribution Agreement, Baker & Taylor, Inc. obtained guaranties from officers, directors and affiliates of AlphaCraze to protect Baker
&
Taylor, Inc. “in the event that AlphaCraze did not honor its obligations.” Miguel Jaime, AlphaCraze’s Chief of Operations, executed a personal guaranty without a monetary cap on July 16, 1999. Allan Avery, one of Alpha-Craze’s directors, executed three personal guaranties on or before August 23, 2000, on May 17, 2001, and on December 5, 2001 in the amounts of $250,000, $350,000, and
The Complaint alleges that Baker & Taylor, Inc. established a wholly — owned subsidiary, Baker & Taylor Fulfillment, in 2002, partly for the purpose of affording “lawful sales tax advantages to customers such as AlphaCraze.” Baker and Taylor, Inc. next allegedly assigned “[a]ll prior Agreements between AlphaCraze and Baker & Taylor, Inc.” to Baker & Taylor Fulfillment. On September 22, 2004, Baker & Taylor Fulfillment and AlphaCraze executed the Fulfillment Agreement pursuant to which Baker & Taylor, Inc. thereafter provided goods and services to fulfill AlphaCraze’s online transactions, but provided those goods and services through its subsidiary, Baker & Taylor Fulfillment.
The Fulfillment Agreement contains terms and conditions governing the relationship between Baker & Taylor Fulfillment and AlphaCraze. Relevant to this dispute, the Fulfillment Agreement contains an arbitration provision stating, in relevant part, as follows:
The parties agree to submit to mediation in Charlotte, North Carolina any dispute, controversy or claim arising out of this Agreement or the matters provided for in this Agreement and which has not been resolved by the parties through an informal process within fifteen (15) days after either party notifies the other that a matter is in dispute. If the matter is not resolved through mediation, within 45 days thereafter the parties will submit the matter for arbitration and settlement in Charlotte, North Carolina in accordance with the Rules of the American Arbitration Association (the “Rules”).
The Fulfillment Agreement annexes two additional guaranties' — a corporate guaranty signed by AlphaCraze and a personal guaranty signed by Michael Shelton, AlphaCraze’s President and Chief Executive Officer. Neither of these guaranties, both drawn in favor of Baker & Taylor Fulfillment, has a monetary cap and both provide that if AlphaCraze fails to pay any sums due to Baker & Taylor Fulfillment, “Guarantor will pay the same ... together with interest on any overdue Obligation at the annual rate of eighteen percent (18%).” Like the other guaranties, neither of these new guaranties contains any arbitration provision.
According to the Complaint, AlphaCraze became delinquent in its payments under the Fulfillment Agreement, and allegedly owes Baker & Taylor $2.7 million for the goods and services provided by Baker & Taylor Fulfillment between March 2006 and May 2007. Baker
&
Taylor filed a complaint in district court on December 14, 2007, alleging claims of: (1) breach of the Fulfillment Agreement by AlphaCraze; (2) breach of the Fulfillment Agreement by AlphaCraze at the expense of third-party beneficiary Baker & Taylor, Inc.; (3) breach of AlphaCraze’s guaranty; (4) unjust enrichment against AlphaCraze; (5)
On February 5, 2008, a default entered against AlphaCraze. The Avery defendants filed a motion to dismiss later that month, followed shortly by a substantially similar motion filed by Jaime. An amended complaint thereafter added creditor derivative claims for breach of fiduciary duty against AlphaCraze directors Allen Avery and Matthew Foy.
The Averys and Jaime made numerous arguments in their motions to dismiss. They argued that Baker & Taylor had failed to state a claim, that their guaranties had lapsed, did not apply to Alpha-Craze’s performance under the Fulfillment Agreement, or were void for lack of consideration, and that Baker & Taylor had waived any right to enforce the guaranties. The motions did not seek to compel arbitration of the breach of guaranty claims— indeed, the Averys explicitly noted in their papers that they were not parties to the arbitration provision in the Fulfillment Agreement and could not be compelled to arbitrate. Instead, the Defendants-Appellees argued — as their final point — that the Fulfillment Agreement required Baker & Taylor to arbitrate with AlphaCraze and that the claims against the Avery defendants and Jaime should be dismissed or stayed in favor of that arbitration.
The district court concluded, notwithstanding that neither AlphaCraze nor Baker & Taylor nor, indeed, any other party sought arbitration, that the Fulfillment Agreement’s arbitration provision required dismissal of all of Baker & Taylor’s claims. The court concluded that these claims all “stem from the same debt allegedly owed under the Fulfillment Agreement” and that the claims are therefore barred by the Fulfillment Agreement’s arbitration clause.
Baker & Taylor, Inc. v. AlphaCraze.com Corp.,
DISCUSSION
It is well-accepted that although the presumption in favor of arbitration is strong, “the obligation to arbitrate nevertheless remains a creature of contract.”
Louis Dreyfus Negoce S.A. v. Blystad Shipping & Trading Inc.,
The instant matter differs from typical disputes regarding the arbitrability of claims. This case does not involve one party to an arbitration agreement who demands to arbitrate with another based on that agreement, and who seeks judicial enforcement of that demand.
See, e.g.,
Here, although Baker & Taylor Fulfillment and AlphaCraze agreed by contract to submit to arbitration disputes arising under the Fulfillment Agreement, Baker & Taylor brought the instant suit, seeking to have its claims against Alpha-Craze adjudicated in the district court. Rather than moving to compel arbitration, AlphaCraze instead defaulted. It is only the Avery defendants and Jaime who espouse arbitration even though the only agreements signed by them — the guaranties — predate the Fulfillment Agreement and, unlike that Agreement, do not provide for arbitration. Moreover, although the Avery defendants and Jaime espouse arbitration between Baker & Taylor and AlphaCraze, they themselves have expressly declined to participate in any such arbitration, and view themselves as under no contractual obligation to participate. We know of no authority holding that two parties can be forced to arbitrate against their present wishes, even if they originally signed a contract agreeing to arbitrate, when the only parties espousing arbitration are nonsignatory parties who refuse to participate therein.
The Avery defendants argue that a non-signatory may enforce an arbitration agreement. The cases on which they rely, however, involve situations in which the nonsignatory has sought to compel a signatory to arbitrate in a proceeding in which the nonsignatory intends to participate— where, as we put it in
JLM Indus., Inc. v. Stolt-Nielsen-SA,
“a careful review of the relationship among the parties, the contracts they signed ..., and the issues that had arisen among them discloses that the issues the nonsignatory is seeking to resolve in arbitration are intertwined with the [arbitration] agreement that [an] es-topped [signatory] has signed.”
We conclude, in addition, that AlphaCraze has waived any right to compel arbitration with Baker & Taylor. This case has proceeded in the district court for nearly eight months, during which time Baker
&
Taylor sought and received discovery from other defendants and the parties engaged in motions practice going to the merits. AlphaCraze, which has not appeared or sought to defend itself in any way, never moved to compel arbitration, but instead defaulted. Baker & Taylor thereafter sought the entry of a default judgment, which AlphaCraze has in no way resisted. In such circumstances, Alpha-Craze has waived its right to arbitrate both pursuant to this Court’s case law,
see Louis Dreyfus Negoce S.A.,
The district court determined that the arbitration clause in the Fulfillment Agreement prevented it “from entering judgment against
any
defendants appearing in this case,
in default, or in absentia.
”
Baker & Taylor, Inc.,
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we vacate the judgment of the district court and remand for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. Prior to the district court’s decision dismissing the complaint, the Shelton defendants filed a Chapter 7 bankruptcy petition, which remains pending. Although the district court’s decision stated that ”[a]ll claims against all defendants must be dismissed,” and the final judgment stated that the claim of Baker & Taylor against the Avery defendants "and ... all Remaining Claims” were dismissed, the court's decision noted that, because of the bankruptcy proceeding, ”[a]ny action to collect a debt from the Sheltons is stayed.” Baker & Taylor correctly acknowledges that it cannot pursue its claims against the Sheltons in this appeal in light of the bankruptcy proceeding.
See, e.g., Commerzanstalt v. Telewide Systems, Inc.,
