OPINION OF THE COURT
Plaintiffs Bellevue Drug Co., Robert Schreiber, Inc., and Rehn-Huerbinger Drug Co. (collectively “Plaintiffs”) appeal the District Court’s order granting Defendant AdvancePCS’s motion to compel arbitration. Plaintiffs argue that the District Court erred in ordering them to arbitrate their antitrust claims because: (1) AdvancePCS waived its right to arbitrate by actively litigating the case in federal court for more than ten months prior to demanding arbitration; and (2) the arbitration clause is unenforceable because it limits the remedies that Plaintiffs can receive under the Sherman Act, and contains a fee-shifting provision that deters Plaintiffs from proceeding in arbitration. Because we agree with Plaintiffs that AdvancePCS waived its right to arbitrate, we will reverse the order of the District Court compelling arbitration, and need not reach those issues addressed to the clause itself.
I. Background
The factual and procedural background underlying this case was extensively summarized in this Court’s precedential decision disposing of an earlier appeal, In re Pharmacy Benefit Managers Antitrust Litigation,
AdvancePCS is a prescription benefits manager (“PBM”) for drug benefit plans sponsored by employers, unions, government agencies, insurance plans and others (“Plan Sponsors”). PBMs are retained by Plan Sponsors to efficiently manage their benefit plans and to achieve cost savings for Plan Sponsors and plan members. PBMs achieve efficiencies and cost savings in a variety of ways, including negotiating discounts or rebates from drug manufacturers, providing mail order prescription service to plan members, contracting with retail pharmacies for reimbursement when prescriptions are filled for plan members, and electronic processing and paying of claims.
Plaintiffs are retail pharmacy businesses that entered into written Pharmacy Provider Agreements (“the Agreements” or “PPA”) with AdvancePCS to provide prescription drugs and related pharmacy services to persons covered by drug benefit plans administered by AdvancePCS. The PPA establishes the terms and conditions under which the Plaintiffs were to provide prescription drugs and services to plan members, and sets forth an agreed reimbursement rate that AdvancePCS will pay to the pharmacies. The PPA also contains an arbitration clause which provides:
Arbitration. Any and all controversies in connection with or arising out of this Agreement will be exclusively settled by arbitration before a single arbitrator in accordance with the Rules of the American Arbitration Association. The arbitrator must follow the rule of law, and may only award remedies provided in this Agreement. The award of the arbitrator will be final and binding on the parties, and judgment upon such award may be entered in any court having jurisdiction thereof. Arbitration under this provision will be conducted in Scottsdale, Arizona, and Provider hereby agrees to such jurisdiction, unless otherwise agreed to by the parties in writing or mandated by Law, and the expenses of the arbitration, including attorneys’ fees, will be paid by the party against whom the award of the arbitrator is rendered. This Section 9.5 and the parties’ rights hereunder shall be governed by the Federal Arbitration Act, 9 U.S.C. § 1 et seq.
(App.381-82.) The PPA also includes a severability clause, which provides:
Lawful Interpretation. Whenever possible, each provision of this Agreement will be interpreted so as to be effective and valid under applicable Law, but if any provision of this Agreement should be rendered unenforceable or invalid under applicable Law, that provision will be ineffective to the extent of such unenforceability or invalidity without invalidating the remaining provisions of this Agreement.
(App.381.)
On August 15, 2003, Plaintiffs filed a putative class action lawsuit on behalf of themselves and all other similarly-situated pharmacies that contracted with AdvancePCS to sell drugs for a prescription drug benefit plan. The complaint asserted an antitrust claim against AdvancePCS, alleging that it had engaged in an unlawful conspiracy with its Plan Sponsors to restrain competition in violation of the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1. In particular, Plaintiffs alleged that AdvancePCS used the combined economic power of its Plan Sponsors to reduce the contractual amount it pays to retail pharmacies below the levels that would prevail in a competitive marketplace. Plaintiffs also alleged that the Agreements impose certain limitations on drug refills and co-payment charges to plan members. The complaint sought treble damages, injunctive relief, attorneys’ fees, and costs. The case was initially assigned to Judge Eduardo C. Robreno.
As noted at the outset, for more than ten months following the filing of the complaint, AdvancePCS actively — and, indeed, aggressively — litigated the case without mentioning arbitration, much less filing a motion to compel arbitration. On September 25, 2003, more than a month after the complaint was filed, AdvancePCS filed a nineteen-page motion to dismiss the complaint under Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6), arguing that Plaintiffs suffered no antitrust injury, failed to allege a per se price-fixing agreement, and failed to allege any rule of reason price-fixing agreement. With the motion, AdvancePCS submitted a binder of allegedly judicially-noticeable exhibits — as “thick as the yellow pages,” we are told, including three lengthy government-sponsored studies of the efficiency enhancing effects of PBMs, as well as AdvancePCS’s own annual report to the SEC (Form 10-K), and other materials. Plaintiffs submitted a thirty-one page response brief, and AdvancePCS filed a seventeen-page reply brief, expanding upon its earlier presentation as it argued that no antitrust injury had been alleged; that no per se price-fixing agreement had been alleged because the complaint lacked allegations of horizontal conspiracy, monopsony power, and supra-competitive output pricing; that Plaintiffs incorrectly interpreted materials of the U.S. Department of Justice and Federal Trade Commission (“FTC”); that price-fixing agreements by sellers should be treated differently; that Plaintiffs’ authorities on monopsony power were inadequate; that buyer cartel cases were inap
On February 5, 2004, Judge Robreno held a hearing on the motion to dismiss, and on March 2, 2004, denied the motion in a detailed sixteen-page opinion, rejecting each of AdvancePCS’s substantive antitrust arguments- — Plaintiffs, the Court concluded, had standing and had alleged facts sufficient to state an antitrust claim. Two weeks later, on March 16, 2004, AdvancePCS filed a twelve-page motion to reconsider the denial of its motion to dismiss, or to certify it for interlocutory appeal pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b). The motion to reconsider again urged dismissal based on the results of a recent FTC investigation into the acquisition of AdvancePCS by Caremark, Inc. Plaintiffs filed a fifteen-page response brief, and AdvancePCS replied.
At the same time in March 2004 as it filed its motion for reconsideration, AdvancePCS filed an answer to the complaint, and asserted a host of affirmative defenses, including failure to state a claim, lack of standing, lack of antitrust injury, laches, estoppel, waiver, failure to mitigate, failure to plead with particularity, and failure to join necessary and indispensable parties. On April 20, 2004, new counsel for AdvancePCS entered their appearances. A hearing was subsequently held on the motion for reconsideration, and on May 14, 2004, the motion was denied. Also on May 14, 2004, Judge Robreno ordered the parties to submit a discovery plan and a proposed case management order, and scheduled a pretrial conference for June 15, 2004. On consent, the conference was rescheduled to July 6, 2004.
Five weeks after Judge Robreno’s latest order, and after more than ten months of active and wholly unsuccessful litigation, on June 21, 2004, AdvancePCS filed a motion to compel arbitration asking the District Court, for the first time, to enforce the arbitration clause in the PPA and enter an order compelling arbitration of the case. Plaintiffs opposed the motion, arguing that AdvancePCS waived any right to arbitrate by actively litigating the case in federal court for as long as it did, and that the arbitration agreement was unenforceable for various reasons.
On August 24, 2004, Judge Robreno granted the motion to compel arbitration and stayed the District Court action. He concluded that Plaintiffs had entered into enforceable arbitration agreements that encompassed the antitrust claims, and that AdvancePCS had not waived its right to seek arbitration. Plaintiffs filed a motion for reconsideration or, in the alternative, for certification of an interlocutory appeal pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b). Judge Robreno denied reconsideration and certification, and ordered that the case remain stayed in accordance with the Federal Arbitration Act (“FAA”).
Plaintiffs, however, did not thereafter initiate arbitration proceedings. Rather, on May 19, 2006, Plaintiffs filed a motion to lift the stay and dismiss the complaint. In the motion, Plaintiffs represented that they did not intend to arbitrate their claims, and instead wished to dismiss the complaint so that they could pursue an appeal of the decision to compel arbitration. While this motion was pending, the case was transferred by the Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation to Judge John P. Fullam for consolidated pretrial proceedings with five other similar antitrust actions against PBMs.
On December 7, 2006, Judge Fullam convened a status conference in the MDL proceedings and heard argument on the motion to lift the stay and dismiss the complaint. Following the conference, Judge Fullam sua sponte issued an order vacating Judge Robreno’s order compel
AdvancePCS filed an immediate appeal to this Court pursuant to 9 U.S.C. § 16(a)(1)(A) & (B). Concluding that Judge Fullam’s order violated the law of the case doctrine, we vacated that order, and remanded with directions to reinstate Judge Robreno’s order compelling arbitration.
On November 5, 2009, following remand, Plaintiffs renewed their motion to dismiss their complaint to permit an immediate appeal of Judge Robreno’s reinstated order compelling arbitration. While this motion was pending, the case was reassigned to Judge C. Darnell Jones. The parties were ordered to submit supplemental briefs, and oral argument was held. On January 27, 2012, Judge Jones granted Plaintiffs’ motion and dismissed their claims with prejudice. Plaintiffs appealed.
II. Jurisdiction
AdvancePCS questions our jurisdiction to hear this appeal. Under the FAA, a party may generally not appeal from an interlocutory order “compelling arbitration” or “granting a stay” pending arbitration. 9 U.S.C. § 16(b)(1) & (b)(3). Thus, Judge Robreno’s order compelling arbitration was, at least initially, non-reviewable. In an effort to circumvent the nonappealability of Judge Robreno’s order, Plaintiffs sought several times, and eventually obtained, an order lifting the stay and dismissing their complaint with prejudice.
The FAA provides that an “appeal may be taken from ... a final decision with respect to an arbitration that is subject to this title.” Id. § 16(a)(3). Where a district court compels arbitration and dismisses the federal lawsuit (rather than staying it), the Supreme Court has held that is a “final decision with respect to an arbitration,” and an appeal may then be taken challenging the order compelling arbitration. Green Tree Fin. Corp.-Alabama v. Randolph,
AdvancePCS attempts to distinguish Randolph and Blair, arguing that those cases involved involuntary dismissals of the plaintiffs’ claims simultaneous with the order compelling arbitration, whereas Plaintiffs sought a voluntary dismissal of their complaint after the fact. AdvancePCS contends that Plaintiffs are thus seeking an “end run” around the nonappealability of Judge Robreno’s order. If Judge Robreno had dismissed Plaintiffs’ claims at the same time he compelled arbitration, there would be no doubt as to our jurisdiction under Randolph and Blair.
III. Discussion
Congress enacted the FAA in 1925 to counteract “the traditional judicial hostility to the enforcement of arbitration agreements.” Alexander v. Anthony Intern., L.P.,
Plaintiffs concede that the PPA contains a broadly-worded arbitration clause that applies to “[a]ny and all controversies in connection with or arising out of th[e] Agreement.” Moreover, Plaintiffs do not seriously dispute that their antitrust claim against AdvancePCS is a controversy arising out of the PPA and thus falls within the scope of the arbitration clause.
Plaintiffs’ primary argument on appeal is that Judge Robreno erred in compelling arbitration because AdvancePCS waived its right to arbitrate by actively litigating the case in federal court for more than ten months while remaining silent about arbitration. Judge Robreno concluded that the issue of waiver was for the arbitrator (not the Court) to decide and that, in any case, Plaintiffs had failed to show prejudice resulting from AdvancePCS’s delay in asserting the arbitration clause. We exercise plenary review over the question of “whether a party through its litigation conduct, waived its right to compel arbitration.” Gray Holdco, Inc. v. Cassady,
At the time Judge Robreno issued his order compelling arbitration, the law was unclear as to whether waiver was an issue that should be decided by the district court or the arbitrator. Several years after that order, however, we made clear that “waiver of the right to arbitrate based on litigation conduct remains presumptively an issue for the court to decide.” Ehleiter v. Grapetree Shores, Inc.,
A. Legal Standard for Assessing Waiver
“ ‘Consistent with the strong preference for arbitration in federal courts, waiver is not to be lightly inferred,’ ” and “ ‘will normally be found only where the demand for arbitration came long after the suit commenced and when both parties had engaged in extensive discovery.’ ” Nino v. Jewelry Exch., Inc.,
“[Pjrejudice is the touchstone for determining whether the right to arbitrate has been waived by litigation conduct.” Zimmer v. CooperNeff Advisors, Inc.,
(1) timeliness or lack thereof of the motion to arbitrate; (2) extent to which the party seeking arbitration has contested the merits of the opposing party’s claims; (3) whether the party seeking arbitration informed its adversary of its intent to pursue arbitration prior to seeking to enjoin the court proceedings; (4) the extent to which a party seeking arbitration engaged in non-merits motion practice; (5) the party’s acquiescence to the court’s pretrial orders; and (6) the extent to which the parties have engaged in discovery.
Gray Holdco,
B. Application of the Hoxworth Factors
This first Hoxworth factor to consider is the timeliness of the motion to arbitrate. In this case, AdvancePCS filed its motion to compel arbitration on June 21, 2004, over ten months after Plaintiffs filed their complaint in federal court. A ten month delay is significantly longer than the cases in which we have found no waiver, see Palcko v. Airborne Express, Inc.,
The second Hoxworth factor is the extent to which the party seeking arbitration has contested the merits of the opposing party’s claims. In this case, prior to seeking arbitration, AdvancePCS filed thirty-eight pages of briefing on its motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim — a motion which directly addressed the merits of Plaintiffs antitrust claims — and supported that briefing with a binder of materials and studies. After a hearing was held and the motion to dismiss was denied, AdvancePCS next filed a twelve-page motion for reconsideration, essentially re-urging dismissal based on the results of a recent FTC investigation. After holding a second hearing, the District Court denied the motion.
In sum, AdvancePCS directly contested the merits of Plaintiffs’ case through what was, in essence, two motions to dismiss, with ample briefing and supporting documentation, and raised issues outside of the scope of the pleadings. This is significantly more activity on the merits than in cases in which we found no waiver, see Palcko,
The third factor is whether the party seeking arbitration informed its adversary of its intent to pursue arbitration prior to filing the motion to compel. Here, Advan
The fourth Hoxworth factor is the extent to which the party seeking arbitration engaged in non-merits motion practice. AdvancePCS’s non-merits motions dealt mostly with administrative and scheduling matters, such as motions for admission pro hac vice, for leave to file a reply brief, and to continue the pretrial conference. These motions were not contested. In addition, however, AdvancePCS also filed (together with its motion for reconsideration) a motion for certification of an interlocutory appeal pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b) seeking immediate appellate relief that likely would not have been available to it in the arbitral forum. These facts are stronger than the facts in those cases in which we have found no waiver, see Palcko,
The fifth factor is the party’s acquiescence in a court’s pretrial orders. Judge Robreno entered orders setting hearings on AdvancePCS’s motion to dismiss and motion for reconsideration. AdvancePCS attended and participated in these hearings. It also entered orders setting dates for the pretrial conference, and instructing the parties to submit a discovery plan and proposed case management order. Prior to filing its motion to compel arbitration, AdvancePCS did not object to any of these orders. Cases in which we have found no waiver generally were not litigated long enough to feature any acquiescence in pretrial orders, see PaineWebber,
The sixth and final factor is the extent to which the parties have engaged in discovery. Plaintiffs concede that no discovery took place, which is identical to those cases in which no waiver was found. See Palcko,
On the whole, there is significantly more to support waiver here than in our cases in which the argument was rejected, but less overall to support waiver than in those cases in which waiver was found. In rejecting Plaintiffs’ waiver argument, Judge Robreno relied heavily on the fact that no discovery had taken place. It is true that we have arguably placed special emphasis on this factor in the past. See, e.g., PaineWebber,
Moreover, Judge Robreno gave little weight to AdvancePCS’s motion to dismiss the case (and motion for reconsideration), concluding that “the Court’s ruling on [those motions] dealt only with pleading
‘[Wjhere a party fails to demand arbitration during pretrial proceedings, and, in the meantime, engages in pretrial activity inconsistent with an intent to arbitrate, the party later opposing ... arbitration may more easily show that its position has been compromised, ie., prejudiced,’ because under these circumstances we can readily infer that the party claiming waiver has already invested considerable time and expense in litigating the case in court, and would be required to duplicate its efforts, to at least some degree, if the case were now to proceed in the arbitral forum. Prejudice of this sort is not mitigated by the absence of substantive prejudice to the legal position of the party claiming waiver.
Ehleiter,
In sum, aside from the lack of discovery, this case bears little resemblance to the cases in which we have found no waiver, and shares substantial similarity to the cases in which waiver was found. Plaintiffs made a showing on five of the six Hoxworth factors, and most notably demonstrated a delay approaching one year during which AdvancePCS aggressively sought a resolution on the merits. Ehleiter,
IV. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, we conclude that AdvancePCS waived its right to arbitrate, and we thus will reverse the order of the District Court compelling arbitration.
Notes
. Plaintiffs do argue that ''[t]he express terms of the [arbitration] clause demonstrate that the parties did not intend to arbitrate antitrust claims.” (Appellants' Br. at 48.) To the extent this is intended as an argument that the antitrust claims do not fall within the plain language of the arbitration clause, that argument has been waived because it was not raised before the District Court. (App. 120-46, arguing only waiver & unenforceability).
. Plaintiffs cite South Broward Hosp. Dist. v. Medquist, Inc.,
. AdvancePCS seems to contend that the conclusion that Plaintiffs had suffered no prejudice is a factual finding that should be reviewed under the clear error standard. (Appellee’s Br. at 24.) While a district court's factual findings on any one of the individual Hoxworth factors are reviewed for clear error, the question of whether the factors in the aggregate amount to prejudice (and therefore waiver) is properly reviewed de novo. Gray Holdco,
