MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
Via the motion now pending before this Court, Defendants move to dismiss the plaintiff’s complaint pursuant to Fed. R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6) and on the grounds that it is barred by the principles of res judica-ta and/or collateral estoppel. For the reasons outlined below, the motion shall be granted.
Factual Background
This case arises out of three real estate partnerships in which the plaintiffs had purchased limited partnership interests in 1983. Those partnerships, Han Mar Associates XIV, XVIII and XXI, were formed by the defendant Mark Hankin, who was also the president, vice president and secretary of the general partner for each partnership, Industrial Real Estate Management, Inc. (“IREM”) and the co-owner of the rental properties which were the subject of the real estate partnerships. (Complaint, ¶ s 6,7). In addition, pursuant to a management and leasing agreement between Mr. Hankin and the HanMar Partnerships, Mr. Hankin oversaw the management and leasing of the subject real estate. (Complaint, ¶ 18).
Under the terms of the offering memorandum and subscription agreements for the partnerships, investors such as the plaintiffs were to pay for them ownership units by making a down payment and signing an investor note requiring annual payments to the HanMar partnership over a six-year period and in exchange, inter alia, the limited partners were to receive certain “preferred distributions,” defined as
“an amount equal to an annualized 8% return on cash contributed to the Partnership by the Investors. This return is cumulative and shall be paid prior to the payment of all obligations except the principal payments due under the First Note and the minimum payments due under the Second Note.”
(Complaint, ¶ s 11, 12). Plaintiffs further aver that under § 5.3 of the limited partnership agreements, Mr. Hankin and IREM agreed that payment of the preferred distributions was to be made prior to nine other obligations and that Mr. Hankin personally guaranteed the 8% payments regardless of whether there was sufficient cash flow. (Complaint, ¶ s 19-23).
In October, 1987, IREM and Hankin sent to plaintiffs and other limited partners a proposal to consolidate the three partnerships in which the plaintiffs had ownership interests together with four other HanMar partnerships into a single HanMar Master Limited Partnership and to make various other changes in the operation of the limited partnerships. According to the plaintiffs, while there were seven distinct purposes for the proposed exchange, not one of them included subordination of the preferred distributions, modification of § 11.7 of the partnership agreements (which until then required 100% of the investors to approve changes in the amendment process), vesting the General Partner with absolute discretion *457 to alter the order and priority of disbursements or creating a definition of “cash receipts” that would permit Mark Hankin to collect interest accruals and other monies at real estate settlements prior to paying overdue preferred distributions. (Complaint, ¶ s 26, 27). Despite the fact that plaintiffs and other limited partners did not consent to the proposed change, some 75% of the limited partners did and all seven HanMar entities were consolidated into a single HanMar Master Limited Partnership, the Manager was changed to Hankin Management Company, Inc. (of which Mark Hankin is the president and secretary), and various other changes were made affecting the priority of payment of the preferred distributions, the definition of “cash receipts” and altering the provisions of sections 5.3 and 11.7 of the previous limited partnership agreements. Complaint, ¶ s 31-34. 1
In 1991, Hankin advised plaintiffs that there had been an economic downturn in the real estate market that was worsening and not expected to turn around anytime soon. From that point on, the 8% preferred distributions were not made, despite the fact that IREM sent a letter advising that the market had recently turned upward, the vacancy rate had diminished and that the partnership had received an infusion of cash from refinanc-ings and sales of various properties. (Complaint, ¶ 38). By letter dated October 3, 2000, Mr. Hankin advised Martin Brody that the 8% preferred distribution would only be payable after all other obligations of the partnerships were paid. Plaintiffs later learned that under an amendment to the master limited partnership agreement dated January 2, 1991, executed by Mark Hankin alone in his capacity as president and secretary of IREM, the preferred distributions were subordinated to virtually all other payments. (Complaint, ¶ s44-47).
In February, 2001, Martin and Florence Brody filed a Demand for Arbitration with the American Arbitration Association against HanMar Associates, XIV, XVIII and XXI, IREM and Mark Hankin pursuant to § 11.5 of the Limited Partnership articles. Specifically, the Brodys contended that the HanMar partnerships, IREM and Hankin breached the partnership agreements and violated their fiduciary duties by failing to make any of the cumulative preferred 8% distributions to them since 1991 and instead making payments to other, subordinate claimants in this same time frame. The Brodys also claimed that the amendments to the partnership agreements permitting the general partner to unilaterally make future amendments to the master limited partnership agreement was null and void. Following pre-arbitration discovery, the arbitrator held four days of hearings on June 3 and 4, 2002, October 18, 2002 and May 1, 2003 and issued an Award on June 13, 2003. A Petition to Confirm the Award was filed with the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County on September 25, 2003 and remains pending. It is on the basis of this arbitration award that the defendants here base their claims of res judicata and/or collateral estoppel. Alternatively, Defendants assert that the plaintiffs’ claims are barred by the statute of limitations and that the complaint fails to plead any cause of action upon which relief may be granted.
Applicable Standards to Buie 12(b)(6) Motions
It has long been the rule that in considering motions to dismiss pursuant to Fed. R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6), the district courts must
*458
“accept as true the factual allegations in the complaint and all reasonable inferences that can be drawn therefrom.”
Allah v. Seiverling,
Discussion
Application of the doctrine of
res judicata
is central to the purpose for which civil courts have been established, the conclusive resolution of disputes within their jurisdiction.
Montana v. U.S.,
The doctrine of
res judicata
is often analyzed to consist of two preclusion concepts: issue preclusion and claim preclusion.
E.E.O.C. v. U.S. Steel Corp.,
In this case of course, we are additionally faced with the question of whether an arbitration award should be given the same preclusive effect as a state court judgment. Generally,
res judicata
rules must sometimes be adapted to fit the arbitration context.
In re Kaplan,
As the attachments to the defendant’s motion to dismiss reflect, the “nature of the dispute” heard by the arbitrator upon demand by the plaintiffs here was whether the HanMar partnerships, IREM and Hankin breached the partnership agreements and violated their fiduciary duties by failing to make any of the cumulative preferred 8% distributions to them since 1991 and instead making payments to other, subordinate claimants in this same time frame and whether the amendments to the partnership agreements permitting the general partner to unilaterally make future amendments to the master limited partnership agreement were null and void. 2 In this action, plain *460 tiffs again bring claims for breach of fiduciary duty and breach of contract and again seek compensatory damages in the amount of the unpaid 8% preferred distributions and declaratory and equitable relief such as to compel defendants to cease their allegedly unlawful practices. In addition, however, plaintiffs also seek relief under the theories of unjust enrichment, conversion and civil RICO, but these claims likewise arose out of the same facts and series of transactions as did the claims for breach of contract and breach of fiduciary duty. 3 After four full days of hearings at which Martin Brody, Mark Hankin and various other witnesses testified and numerous exhibits were admitted, the arbitrator entered an Award on June 13, 2000, denying in large part the Brodys’ requests for relief and finding that the actions taken by Hankin and the General Partner, IREM were generally appropriate except as to the $86,189 difference between the Third Note payment in 2000 and the mandatory payment on the Second Note which should have been applied to payment of accrued but unpaid Preferred Distributions and the payment of life insurance premiums on Mark Hankin’s life from cash receipts from MLP and not from advances from the General Partner during calendar years 1995, 1996 and 1997. Thus, the arbitrator awarded to plaintiffs their percentage interest of the $86,189 plus their percentage interest of the life insurance payments made in or for the years 1995-1997 by HanMar Associates XIV, XVIII and XXI. Neither IREM nor the Brodys challenged or sought modification of the arbitrator’s award and the defendants filed a petition to confirm the award with the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County on September 25, 2003. Under 42 Pa.C.S. § 7341, governing common law arbitration,
The award of an arbitrator in a nonjudicial arbitration which is not subject to *461 Subchapter A (relating to statutory arbitration) or a similar statute regulating nonjudicial arbitration proceedings is binding and may not be vacated or modified unless it is clearly shown that a party was denied a hearing or that fraud, misconduct, corruption or other irregularity caused the rendition of an unjust, inequitable or unconscionable award.
Further,
“[o]n application of a party made more than 30 days after an award is made by an arbitrator under section 7341 (relating to common law arbitration) the Court shall enter an order confirming the award and shall enter a judgment or decree in conformity with the order ...”
42 Pa.C.S. § 7342(b). Given that this statute dictates that an arbitrator’s award is binding and cannot be vacated or modified unless a showing of fraud, misconduct, corruption or other irregularity can be made and that an order confirming an arbitration award shall be entered upon a party’s application where more than 30 days has elapsed without challenge, we find that whether or not the Common Pleas Court has yet to formally confirm the award, it must do so to comply with the foregoing provisions of the Pennsylvania Uniform Arbitration Act. Thus, we believe that the arbitration award rendered in this case constitutes a final judgment on the merits in a prior suit based on the same causes of action.
Although Mr. Hankin was dismissed as a party in the proceedings before the arbitrator because he was not a signatory in his individual capacity to the partnership agreements, he was at all relevant times the president, vice president and secretary of IREM and testified as the corporate representative on its behalf at the arbitration hearings. Privity is said to exist where a party adequately represented the nonparties’ interests in the prior proceeding.
Inofast,
Notes
. These alterations effectively allowed the general partner to unilaterally make amend-meats to the master limited partnership agreement.
. Specifically, the Amended Supplemental Description of Nature of Claim gave the following "more complete description of the 'Nature of the Dispute' in the Demand for Arbitration:
Defendants breached the Agreement entitled "Amendment and Restatement of Ar- *460 tides of Limited Partnership of Hanmar Associates XVIII,” including the required order of priority of cash distribution payments under Article V thereof and in paragraph 2 of the Managing and Leasing Agreement referenced in said Article V by, inter alia, failing to make any of the cumulative preferred 8 percent distributions in that same time period and having also made, out of sales proceeds and refinancing proceeds, payments to subordinated payees when such preferred distributions were in arrears. In doing so, respondents also violated their fiduciary obligations to claimants.
Claimants make the identical claims in regard to the Agreements entitled Amendment and Restatement of Articles of Limited Partnership of Hanmar Associates XIV, and Amendment and Restatement of Articles of Limited Partnership of Hanmar Associates XXI.
If it is determined that the aforesaid agreements were validly amended in 1988, claimants make the same claims in regard to the 1988 HanMar XIV, XVIII, XXI and MLP agreements.
Claimants claim that the recently produced (December 12, 2001) 1991 amendments to the aforesaid agreements are null and void, were adopted at some unknown date in violation of respondents’ fiduciary obligations to claimants purportedly pursuant to amendment clauses in the 1988 agreements, which in turn were void for having been adopted in violation of the amendment clauses in the 1983 agreements. Claimants seek an accounting, money damages, and declaratory relief in respect of future entitlements.”
. A determination of whether two lawsuits are based on the same cause of action turns on the essential similarity of the underlying events giving rise to the various legal claims.
Churchill v. Star Enterprises,
