Lead Opinion
Opinion by Judge KORMAN; Dissent by Judge CALLAHAN.
OPINION
This appeal from an order pursuant to the Federal Arbitration Act granting a
On September 23, 2010, the Rabellinos met with Tommaso Lambert, a representative of Caffe Vergnano, in Italy. During the course of tlieir three-hour meeting, the parties signed two agreements. The first—dated September 23, 2010 and which the parties refer to as the Commercial Contract—appears to be a franchise agreément setting forth the rights and responsibilities- of the parties. That agreement contains an arbitration clause providing that:
Any dispute^ controversy or claim arising out of or in connection with this Agreement, or the breach, termination or validity thereof, which is not [resolved] directly between the Parties, shall be settled by final.and binding arbitration in accordance with the UN-CITRAL Arbitration Rules as presently in force.
Per the terms set forth, the contract was to be construed аccording to Italian law with arbitration to be held in Geneva, Switzerland.
A Second Agreement—which the parties refer to as the Hold Harmless Agreement—was also signed that day. Although this agreement is dated September 24, 2010, neither party disputes that it was signed on September 23 during the same three-hour meeting as the Commercial Contract. The Hold Harmless Agreement provides in relevant part:
At . the express request of Mr. Hector Rabellino, as the legal representative of the. company Italflavors LLC, with registered offices in Greenwhich [sic; Greenwich] CT 06831 USA, Casa del Caffe Vergnano S.P.A. has prepared and herewith delivers a copy of the contract denominated “Commercial Contract” dated September 23,2010.
The above-mentioned contract does not have any validity or effectiveness between the parties, as it was prepared and delivered by Casa del Caffe Vergna-no S.p.A. solely for the purpose of allowing Mr! Hector Rabellino to submit a copy of it to the pertinent international agencies in order to obtain an entry visa to work in the United States of Amer-ica____ • "
This contract does not produce any effect between the parties, who as agreed will sign a future contract which will regulate their commercial relationship as soon as it is prepared in accordance with the federal and national laws of the United States of America.
According to the Rabellinos, the parties entered into the Hold Harmless Agreement because Caffe Vergnano had concerns that the Commercial Contract did not conform to U.S. franchise law and so sought to shield itself from liability by making-the contract void-while, at the same time, allowing Hector to use the Contract to obtain his visa. They contend that the parties intended to sign a binding contract at a later date. According to Lambert, the representative from Caffe Vergnano, the purpose of the Hold Harmless Agreеment was not to render the Commercial Contract void, but rather to protect Caffe Vergnano from any liability
ItalFlavors then began the process of opening a Caffe Vergnano franchise location in San Diego. This included signing an agreement with Caffe Vergnano regarding website domain registratiоn and purchasing furniture, equipment, and coffee from Caffe Vergnano. ItalFlavors opened its franchise branch on April 20, 2011, but after months of struggles and financial failures, the store closed on December 20, 2011.
Blaming the failure of the venture on Caffe Vergnano’s alleged failure to offer promised support, ItalFlavors filed suit in California, alleging a series of violations of California’s Franсhise Investment Law and Business and Professions Code. Subsequently, that action was stayed after Caffe Vergnano filed the petition to compel arbitration in the district court. The jurisdiction of the district court was properly invoked under 28 U.S.C. § 1381 and 9 U.S.C. § 203 (the Federal Arbitration Act) because the case arose under the Convention on the Recognition of Foreign Arbitral Awards. The district court ultimately held that “thе issue of whether the broad arbitration clause contained in the Commercial Contract survives after the September 24, 2010 agreement took effect should be submitted to the arbitrator.” Thus, it granted Caffe Vergnano’s petition and issued an order compelling arbitration. This appeal followed.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review a district judge’s order to compel arbitration de novo. In re Eber,
DISCUSSION
Starting with first principles, we reiterate the Supreme Court’s repeated admonition that “[arbitration is strictly a matter of consent.” Granite Rock Co. v. Int’l Bhd. of Teamsters,
Because this case arises under Chapter 2 of the Federal Arbitration Act, the issue of whether the Commercial Cоntract constituted a binding, agreement is governed by federal common law, Certain Underwriters at Lloyd’s London v. Argonaut Ins. Co.,
Under these principles, “the formation of a contract requires a bargain in which there is a manifestation of mutual assent to the exchange and a consideration.” Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 17 (1981); see also Bowsher v. Merck & Co., Inc.,
Thus, under federal common law— or, indeed, under any law of which we are aware—where the parties to a “contract” have not mutually consented to be bound by their agreement, they have not formed a true contract. “[M]utual consent is gathered from the reasonable meaning of the words and acts of the parties, and not from their unexpressed intentions or understanding.” Reigelsperger v. Siller,
Looking to their external expression of intent, the parties did not manifest their intent to be bound by the Commercial Contract containing the arbitration clause. Reading the Commercial Contract and the contemporanеously executed Hold Harmless Agreement side by side, it is plain that the Commercial Contract was nothing more than a sham agreement designed as a ploy to aid Hector Rabellino’s visa application. Notwithstanding Lambert’s declaration that he understood the Hold Harmless Agreement to mean something other than it said,-we look to the external indications of intent, not a party’s undisclоsed intentions. Here, the objective evidence contradicts Lambert’s gloss on events. Indeed, even apart from the language in the Hold Harmless Agreement expressly declaring the Commercial Contract was not a binding agreement, the provision that the parties “will sign a future contract which. will regulate their commercial relationship as soon as it is prepared in acсordance with the federal and national laws of the United States of
Moreover, it is appropriate to read the Commercial Contract and the Hold Harmless Agreement together because
[w]hat appears to be a complete and binding integrated agreement may be a forgery, a joke, a sham, or an agreement without consideration, or it may be voidable for fraud, duress, mistake, or the like, or it may be illegal. Such invalidating causes need not and commonly do not appear on the face of the writing.
Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 214 cmt. c. The parol evidence rule, which generally bars consideration of oral or written evidence altering the terms of a written, integrated contract, does not prohibit us from considering the Hold Harmless Agreement because that agreement goes to the issue of whether the parties entered into a binding contract. Jinro Am. Inc. v. Secure Invs., Inc.,
Nor is there any merit to Caffe Vergnano’s argument that ItalFlavors is bound by a judicial admission as. to the existence of a contract in California court. We need not tarry long with the details of the dispute between the parties as to whether ItalFlavors either implicitly or explicitly conceded validity of the Commercial Contract in the complaint that it filed in Californiа. Although Caffe Vergnano presents the issue as one of binding judicial admission, that doctrine is inapplicable because the alleged admissiop was made in a separate case from the present action. See Universal Am. Barge Corp. v. JChem, Inc.,
In sum, the declaration in the Hold Harmless Agreement signed, contempora
CONCLUSION
Because we find that the document the parties described аs the Commercial Contract was a sham, the arbitration clause is no more enforceable than any other provision in that document. Under these circumstances, the district judge erred in compelling the parties. to arbitrate their dispute.
Thus, the order of the district judge is REVERSED.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
My colleagues cite the correct applicable law, but in. my opinion they come to an incorrect factual coneltision. They conclude that the parties “did not manifest their intent to be bound by the Commercial Contract containing the arbitration clause.” Op. at 1212.1, on the other hand, agree with the district court that the parties did initially agree, to be bound by the Commercial Contract. Accordingly, I would affirm the. district court’s order referring the question of whether and when the. Commercial Contract was terminated to arbitration. .
The Commercial Contract, which all admit was the first agreement to be signed, is an 18-page document that details the parties’ agreement and obligations. However, it appears that the parties had misgivings about the Commercial Contract. They were concerned that the Commercial Contract would not conform to California’s Franchise Investment Law and Business and Professions Code, but they also wanted to allow Hector to use the Commercial Contract to obtain a visa to work in the United States.
Their “solution” was a curious second agreement, the Hold Harmless Agreement. This single-page document states that the Commercial Contract “does not have any validity or effectiveness between the parties” and provides that they “will sign a future contract which will regulate their commercial relationship.” But they never signed the envisioned contract. Instead, they proceeded to act as contractually related parties for over a year, from September 23, 2010 until at least December 20, 2011, when Italflavors closed its store in San Diego.
The majority, by treating the Commercial Contract and Hold Harmless Agreement as a single dоcument, concludes that the parties “have not mutually consented to be bound by their agreement, they have not formed a true contract.” Op. at 1212. Based on this factual finding, the majority, applying the applicable law, .determines that it is for the court, not an arbitrator to determine whether a contract ever existed.
I disagree with the majority’s factual premise.
Italflavors, however, argued that the Hold Harmless Agreement terminated the Commercial Contract. For example, Italf-lavors alleges that it was Caffe Vergnano that “wanted to enter into a second agreement cancelling the Sept. 23 Agreement.”
Because the Commercial Contract was entered into before the Hold Harmless Agrеement was signed, the district court, properly applying our law, determined that the dispute over whether and .when the Commercial Contract was terminated should be referred to arbitration. See McKinney v. Emery Air Freight Corp.,
Finally, I agree with the majority that Italflavors is not “bound by a judicial admission as to the existence of a contract in California court.” Op. at 1213. Italfla-vors’ complaint in the state court asserted “[i]n September 2010, the parties executed at least two commercial contracts, based on Italian law, purporting to create a franchise relationship.” Although this assertion may not be binding, it does reflect that Italflavors knew and accepted that it had signed the Commercial .Contract before the Hold Harmless Agreement was formulated. Thus, the record supports the district court’s factual determination that the parties agreed to contract with a broad arbitration clause, but might thereafter have terminated the Commercial Contract through the Hold Harmless Agreement. The district court thus properly referred the question of whether and- when the Commercial Contract terminated to arbitratioN. I respectfully dissent and would affirm the district court’s order.
Notes
. In determining whether an arbitration provision is subject to the Convention, the district court first asked whether. there was “an agreement in writing to arbitrate the dispute.” See Chloe Z Fishing Co., Inc. v. Odyssey Re, Ltd.,
. The assertion that the parties entered into a second agreement is, of course, inconsistent with the position that the two agreements were considered or should be considered one.
