This appeal from an order enforcing an award by a commercial arbitrator raises the question whether a person against whom such an award is made can be barred from challenging the validity of the original agreement to arbitrate if he delays his challenge until the person in whose favor the award was made sues to enforce it. The Rudells signed a contract with Comprehensive Accounting Corporation to acquire an accounting franchise. The contract, which both Rudells signed (Mrs. Ru-dell attesting the validity of her husband’s signature), contained a standard arbitration clause, which Comprehensive later invoked after terminating the Rudells’ franchise. Although notified of the arbitration, the Rudells refused to participate. Mr. Rudell wrote the arbitrator, “I can’t afford to go to Chicago [for the arbitration] and can’t see that there is anything left to arbitrate.” But the arbitration went forward anyway, and resulted in an award to Comprehensive of both damages and equitable relief. Pursuant to the arbitration clause, Comprehensive moved for confirmation by a federal district court in this circuit under section 9 of the United States Arbitration Act, 9 U.S.C. § 9 — that is, moved for a judicial order that the Rudells comply with the arbitrator’s award. The Rudells opposed confirmation on a variety of grounds, all of which the district court rejected. On appeal the Rudells argue only that the court should not have rejected, as too late, their offer to prove that they did not actually know about the arbitration clause. The basis of the offer is a letter to them from Comprehensive’s counsel, acknowledging that he had not sent them a copy of the executed contract and that they might therefore not be “fully aware of all the nuances” of certain restrictions (restrictions not related to the arbitration clause) in the contract.
If a party refuses to arbitrate a dispute, and an order that he arbitrate it is sought in federal district court under section 4 of the Arbitration Act, the issue whether there was an agreement to arbitrate is for the court to decide.
Prima Paint Corp. v. Flood & Conklin Mfg. Co.,
They now say they did not agree to the arbitration clause, which seems hard to believe, given the evidence of their signatures. In the absence of fraud or duress, a person who signs a contract cannot avoid his obligations under it by showing that he did not read what he signed. See, e.g.,
Bunge Corp. v. Williams,
The difference between section 4 and section 10 makes perfectly good sense. No one should be forced into arbitration without an opportunity to show that he never agreed to arbitrate the dispute that is the subject of the arbitration. The Ru-dells had that opportunity when they were notified of the arbitration, and they let it pass by. It was then too late for them to sit back and allow the arbitration to go forward, and only after it was all done, and enforcement was sought, say: oh by the way, we never agreed to the arbitration clause. That is a tactic that the law of arbitration, with its commitment to speed, will not tolerate.
This would be clear enough if the Rudells had actually participated in the arbitration without challenging the arbitrator’s authority till the arbitration was completed and they had lost.
See Fortune, Alsweet & Eldridge, Inc. v. Daniel,
They point out that objections to subject-matter jurisdiction cannot be waived by tardiness in asserting them, at least till a final judgment is entered (after all appeal possibilities have been exhausted). But there is no question of the district court’s jurisdiction over this confirmation action. Although section 9 does not refer to any jurisdictional requirements for enforcing arbitration awards, other than the award itself, we may assume, following Wright and Miller, that the jurisdictional requirements for other proceedings under the Arbitration Act, see, e.g., 9 U.S.C. § 4, are applicable to section 9 proceedings too. See 13B Wright, Miller & Cooper, Federal Practice and Procedure § 3569, at pp. 171-72 (2d ed. 1984). But they are satisfied here.
Affirmed.
