An entity called 1109580 Ontario, Inc. (“Ontario”) appeals from a judgment entered in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Stein, /.), confirming an arbitration award against Ontario and denying Ontario’s motion to vacate the award on the ground that the arbitrators’ refusal to enforce col
I
In February 1997, Ontario instituted an arbitration before the National Association of Securities Dealers, Inc. (“NASD”) against Bear Stearns & Co., Inc., Bear Stearns Seсurities Corp., and Richard Harriton, a Bear Stearns Securities Corp. executive
1
(collectively “Bear Stearns”). The arbitration arose out of a massive securities fraud perpetrated by A.R. Baron
&
Co. (“Baron”) in the 1990s; Bear Stearns was Baron’s clearing broker. The facts involvеd in the underlying fraud, and Bear Stearns’ involvement, have been litigated at length and need not be repeated here.
See, e.g., McDaniel v. Bear, Stearns & Co.,
The only claim implicated by this appeal is that Bear Stearns aided and abetted Baron. Ontariо’s sole argument on appeal is that Bear Stearns was collaterally es-topped from denying liability because it had lost another arbitration conducted before another NASD panel, and that the arbitrators’ ruling otherwise amounted to manifest disregard of the law.
Ontariо’s arbitration against Bear Stearns was commenced on February 18, 1997. • Soon afterward, it was stayed (along with others like it) pending investigation by the New York County District Attorney and the United States Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) into Bear Stearns’ role in the Baron fraud. After Bear Stearns reaсhed a settlement with the SEC regarding its role as Baron’s broker, the Ontario arbitration resumed.
In July, 2001 (while the Ontario arbitration was pending), another NASD panel ruled in the case of
McDaniel v. Davis
that Bear Stearns had rendered “active participation, substantial assistance and aiding and abetting” to Bаron’s fraud, and that Bear Stearns breached its duty of good faith by failing to honor McDaniel’s request to transfer the McDaniel account to a broker other than Baron. This arbi-tral award was reluctantly approved by the district court: “If I had that authority, I might indeed have decided the cаse differently. However the court’s review of an arbitration award is rigidly narrow.”
McDaniel v. Bear Stearns & Co., Inc.,
In August 2001, Ontario gave the, arbitrators a copy of the McDaniel panel decision and argued:
[ T]he McDaniel case arises out of or is predicated upon the same set of operative facts at issue in the subject arbitration and involves the same Respondents (or at least certain of them), the sаme or substantially similar causes of action and the same defenses.
Ontario requested that the
McDaniel
findings “be adopted, in whole or in part, by the Panel in this case.” That request was
In January 2002, shortly following the district court’s enforcement of the McDaniel panel decision and just before hearings began in the Ontario arbitration, Ontаrio again asked the panel to adopt the McDaniel findings of fact, noting that the district court opinion in McDaniel, “principally [the] discussion and repudiation of the defenses asserted by the respondents, may likewise be sufficient to collaterally estop [Bear Stearns] from relying upon those very same defenses in the course of this arbitration.” Ontario expressed willingness to brief the issue if “the panel deemfed] it necessary or appropriate.” In April 2002, the panel ruled that “[t]he McDaniel decision should be delivered to the Panel as an attachment to a brief and not as documentary evidence.”
Evidently dissatisfied with thе arbitration, Ontario filed an action in federal court in September 2002. The arbitration was again stayed. In February 2003, the district court granted Bear Stearns’ motion to dismiss the action pending resolution of the arbitration.
1109580 Ontario, Inc. v. Bear, Stearns & Co.,
On April 15, 2003, Ontario made a detailed motion, relying on McDaniel, to collaterаlly estop Bear Stearns on its liability for “(a) having aided and abetted Baron’s massive criminal fraud and (b) for having breached the Customer Agreement with Ontario.” In June 2003, the panel denied the motion.
In arbitration and in the district court, Bear Stearns argued against collateral es-toppеl by McDaniel on the ground (among others) that two other NASD panel decisions arising out of the Baron scandal were resolved in favor of Bear Stearns. As Ontario emphasizes, both those decisions were rendered after McDaniel. The first, Holubowich, was decided in March 2002, several months after Ontario first asked the arbitrators to adopt McDaniel’s factual findings, and two months after Ontario first spoke the word “estop” to the arbitrators, but (notably) before Ontario’s collateral estoppel motion. The second, Meere, was decided in early April 2003, at about the same time as Ontario’s collateral estop-pel motion. 2 The panel was made aware of both decisions in April 2003 by Bear Stearns’ answer to Ontario’s estoppel motion.
After the estoppel motion was denied, Ontario ended its active contest in the arbitration, and quickly rested, in order (Ontario explains) to avoid a
de minimis
award that would have рrecluded a court challenge. Blue 13-15. The arbitrators ruled in favor of Bear Stearns in December 2003. The district court affirmed the award in May 2004 by written opinion.
Bear Stearns & Co. v. 1109580 Ontario, Inc.,
II
Arbitration awards are reviewed for “manifest disregard of the law.”
Greenberg v. Bear, Stearns & Co.,
An arbitration decision may effect collateral estoppel in a later litigation or arbitration if the proponent can show “with clarity and certainty” that the same issues were resolved.
Postlewaite v. McGraw-Hill, Inc.,
These four factors are required but not sufficient. In addition, a court must satisfy itself thаt application of the doctrine is fair.
Parklane Hosiery Co. v. Shore,
This court has been careful to assure that collateral estoppel is not employed unfairly.
See Remington Rand Corp. v. Amsterdam-Rotterdam Bank, N.V.,
Manifest disregard occurs only when arbitrators have ignored well defined and clearly applicable law; it is not enough to demonstrate that the arbitrators have erred.
See DiRussa,
The district court concluded as to the aiding and abеtting claim that the four necessary
Interoceánica
factors were present, but that the arbitrators’ decision to deny the motion for collateral estoppel was supportable as a matter of fairness.
See Bear Stearns & Co. v. 1109580 Ontario, Inc.,
Thе panel’s denial of Ontario’s motion for collateral estoppel did not amount to manifest disregard of the law. In view of differing results reached by different panels, the arbitrators had discretion to apply collateral estoppel or not. Further, courts generally look to the more recent of inconsistent results,
see Metromedia Co. v. Fugazy,
Ontario urges that the Holubwich and Meere decisions are so vague that no conflict with McDaniel can be appаrent. Each arbitration raised similar claims arising out of the same Baron fraud, and each award recited the claims of the parties and the outcome of the arbitration without prolonged explication. The Holubwich panel expressly considered and rejected an аiding and abetting claim, and discussed the prior ruling in McDaniel. The Meere decision is less informative, and does not appear on its face to involve an aiding and abetting claim.
Ontario argues therefore that the
Ho-lubwich
and
Meere
awards are insufficient to support offensive estoppel. That may be so as far as it goes. But it does not follow, as Ontariо contends, that the two awards are insufficient to defeat collateral estoppel based on
McDaniel
as a matter of fairness. The Ontario case is close enough to
Holubwich
and
Meere
— and to
McDaniel
— that an arbitration panel could in its discretion decide (without manifest disregard) that Bear Stearns was not definitely the loser in the controversy and that given the course and outcome of prior cases it would be unfair to rule on the basis of collateral estoppel rather than consideration of the merits.
See Parklane Hosiery,
Ontario contends that even if
Holubo-wich
and
Meere
are deemed favorable to Bear Stearns (and therefore “inconsistent” with
McDaniel),
they are not “previous judgments” because they were decided subsequent to
McDaniel,
and because they were decided months after Ontario alerted the panel to the
McDaniel
decision. We disagree. First, as noted earlier, the
Only after a panel has been presented with binding authority in a way that compels relief can it be said that the panel exhibited manifest disregard of the law.
See DiRussa,
By the time Ontario sought relief and invoked controlling law on collateral estop-pel, Holubowich and Meere had been added to McDaniel as “previous judgments” within the meaning of Parklane.
Even assuming that an arbitral panel can manifestly disregard the law by denying a motion that is addressed to its discretion and that is subject to considerations of fairnеss, the panel here did not offend the law. The judgment of the district court enforcing the arbitration award is affirmed.
Notes
. As the only issue on appeal is the estoppel effect of a given case involving only Bear Stearns & Co., Inc. and Bear Stearns Securities Corp., Richard Harriton, though named, is not properly implicated in this appeal.
. The dates the arbitrators signed the decision are all prior to the filing of Ontario’s motion to estop; the date of service on the decision is after.
. It is not clear that federal law on collateral estoppel is controlling, because it appears likely that New York law should have governed the arbitration. However, both parties cited federal law to the arbitrators as controlling precedent; both parties rely on federal law on appeal; and no onе argues that the application of state law would have made a difference. Therefore, we need not decide what would happen if a panel ignored non-controlling law on which both parties nevertheless agreed.
. The record does not support Ontario's contention that the panel was so hostile that it in effect suppressed a prompt motion for relief.
