On June 19, 1964, appellant Fertex Steamship Corporation entered into a charter, in New York City, with Tsakalotos Navigation Corporation “as Agents for Owners of the Liberian steamer ‘Athenoula T.,’ Owners’ option substi7227 gross tute, of-tons-Register,” for 4442 net the carriage of a cargo of phosphate from Tampa, Florida, to Cartagena, Colombia. The charter provided that “should any dispute arise between Owners and the Charterers,” the matter should be referred to arbitration in New York by three commercial men. The owner of the Athenoula T, Warwick Corporation, designated a Greek steamer, the General Tsakalotos, to perform the charter. After delivery of the cargo and partial payment of the freight, a dispute arose as to non-payment of the *293 balance, damage to the vessel, and other matters.
There ensued, in the District Court for the Southern District of New York, a Pickwickian series of moves that has already accumulated more than two printed pages of docket entries without any approach to the merits. It began, in December 1964, with the filing of a libel by Tsakalotos Navigation Corporation, the agent, seeking damages against Fertex. The latter excepted on the ground that Tsakalotos Navigation was not the real party in interest. Thereupon a second libel was filed in which the agent was joined by Warwick Corporation, owner of the Athenoula T, and Chatham Shipping Company, owner of the General Tsakalotos. This libel invoked the arbitration clause in the charter, and stated “that by this action the libelants seek to compel the respondent to submit to arbitration and demands [sic] security to insure payment and satisfaction of an arbitration award, pursuant to 9 U.S.C. § 8.” Tsakalotos Navigation Corporation then made a motion to have the first libel dismissed without prejudice, which Judge Metzner granted. Later the agent and the two shipowners served a petition which generally repeated the allegations of the second libel, asserted that they had appointed an arbitrator but that Fertex had declined to do so, and asked that judgment be entered unless Fertex proceeded to arbitration. Fertex excepted to the second libel and opposed the petition on the ground that by the first libel, filed by Tsakalotos Navigation, all three libelants had waived their right to arbitration. Apparently Fertex also argued that libelants had improperly relied on § 8 of the Arbitration Act, which indeed was not here applicable, whereas they should have filed a petition under § 4. Properly seeking to cut through the paper maze created by the rather bumbling efforts of petitioners’ proctors and to place petitioners where they desired and deserved to be, Judge Metzner, on March 2, 1965, dismissed the second libel but granted the motion to direct Fertex to proceed with arbitration as properly made under § 4 of the Federal Arbitration Act.
On March 15, 1965, Fertex filed a notice of appeal from Judge Metzner’s order. Some days later it submitted in the District Court an order to show cause why it should not be granted a variety of relief, including reargument on the allegedly new discovery of what it was later to characterize as “the startling fact, previously obscured by procedural movements, that Fertex Steamship Corporation has never agreed to arbitrate any disputes under the charter party, with Chatham Shipping Company, the owner of the ‘General Tsakalotos.’ ” Judge Metzner, pointing out that reargument had not been sought within the ten-day limit provided by General Rule 9(m) of the District Court, denied the motion save insofar as it sought to stay arbitration pending this appeal.
Fertex’s points on appeal are wholly devoid of merit. The cases are altogether clear that the mere filing of an action for damages on a contract does not preclude a subsequent change of mind in favor of arbitration therein provided, see Richard Nathan Corp. v. Dacon-Zadeh,
In view of the frivolous nature of Fertex’s objections, we would have affirmed from the bench had we not wished to give further consideration to appellees’ argument that the order should be held not to constitute a “final” decision appealable under 28 U.S.C. § 1291. The suggestion has strong practical attraction in this not atypical instance of an unworthy effort to escape or delay arbitration, whether voluntarily accepted or, as here, dictated by the custom of the trade, see Gilmore & Black, Admiralty 173 (1957) — -particularly since, if such orders are deemed interlocutory, 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b) would now permit review in a truly meritorious case. If the slate were clean, a good deal might be said for the position that even though an order directing arbitration seems “final” in the formal sense that it is the last thing the court is then being asked to direct, it should be realistically viewed as an intermediate step in a proceeding that will not result in a truly final decision until an award has been rendered by the arbitrators and an order has been made to enforce it. See the remarks of Judge Clark on a related problem in Stathatos v. Arnold Bernstein S.S. Corp.,
This does not mean, however, that appellate courts must sit by, while wholly unmeritorious appeals frustrate the purpose of arbitration clauses to provide a speedy and economical solution of business or labor disputes. Appelleees are entitled to move promptly to *295 dismiss such appeals as frivolous, a procedure which, because the relevant facts are often so few, should frequently be practicable even in advance of the filing of the record by the appellant. See our Rule 11(c). Although motions to dismiss as frivolous are not favored by this court where disposition requires examination of a trial transcript, better done with the aid of briefs, this is generally not the situation in appeals from orders directing arbitration.
The order is affirmed; the mandate will issue forthwith.
