Case Information
*1 In the
United States Court of Appeals
For the Seventh Circuit
Nos. 99-4085 & 99-4106
Connecticut General Life Insurance Company, et al.,
Petitioners/Cross-Respondents/Appellees, v.
Sun Life Assurance Company of Canada, et al., Respondents/Cross-Petitioners/Appellants, v.
Unicover Managers, Inc., et al., Third-Party Respondents/Appellees.
Appeals from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division. Nos. 99 C 6491 & 6512--William J. Hibbler, Judge. Argued March 27, 2000--Decided April 27, 2000 Before Posner, Chief Judge, and Flaum and Williams, Circuit Judges.
Posner, Chief Judge. These consolidated appeals ask: When does a federal district court have the power to order the consolidation of arbitration proceedings before a single arbitral panel? The question grows out of a reinsurance contract between two (overlapping) sets of insurance companies. One set, the three "retrocessionaires" (Sun, Phoenix, and Cologne), agreed to reinsure workers’ compensation reinsurance policies issued by the other set, the seven "retrocedents." (Two of the retrocessionaires, Phoenix and Cologne, are also retrocedents.) For clarity we’ll call the retrocessionaires the "reinsurers," and the retrocedents the "insurers," though in fact both sets of companies are reinsurers, there being many layers of reinsurance in the workers’ compensation insurance market.
The contract was negotiated on behalf of the insurers by Unicover Managers, Inc., described in the contract as their "manager." Unicover is a *2 middleman in the workers’ compensation reinsurance market. Although not technically an insurance company, it issues reinsurance contracts to insurance companies (the retrocedents in this case) and then in effect assigns these contracts to other insurance companies (the retrocessionaires), who then bear the risk created by the contracts and reap the premiums that the contracts specify.
The contract contains an arbitration provision pursuant to which Sun and Phoenix served a demand for arbitration on Unicover and its insurers.
Four of the latter responded by filing their own
demands, each seeking a separate arbitration
between itself, on the one hand, and Sun and
Phoenix, on the other. Each of the six companies
filed a motion in the federal district court in
Chicago (the venue prescribed by the arbitration
provision of the contract) pursuant to section 4
of the Federal Arbitration Act, 9 U.S.C. sec. 4,
to compel arbitration. The district court denied
the reinsurers’ motion for a single arbitration
and granted the insurers’ motions for separate
arbitrations; its order, which wound up the
proceedings in the district court, is appealable
under 9 U.S.C. sec. 16(a)(3). See Iowa Grain Co.
v. Brown,
1997). (Whether our test for the appealability of
such orders is too demanding is at present before
the Supreme Court. See Randolph v. Green Tree
Financial Corp.-Alabama,
None of the parties contends that the issue of
one versus many arbitrations is for the
arbitrators rather than the court to decide. The
arbitration provision in the contract does not
address the question of who decides, cf. First
Options of Chicago, Inc. v. Kaplan,
In defending the district court’s refusal to
order the single arbitration sought by their
opponents, the insurers press upon us a series of
cases in this and other courts that, they say,
hold that a federal district court cannot grant a
motion to consolidate separate arbitration
proceedings unless the contract on which the
arbitration is founded expressly authorizes
consolidation. Champ v. Siegel Trading Co., 55
F.3d 269, 275-77 (7th Cir. 1995); Glencore, Ltd.
v. Schnitzer Steel Products Co.,
Boeing Co.,
A court can in appropriate circumstances consolidate cases before it (just as we have consolidated the three separate appeals taken from the district court’s order), whether or not the parties want the cases consolidated, e.g., Fed. R. Civ. P. 42(a), or stay or transfer a case in order to enable the consolidated or otherwise *4 orderly disposition of multiple proceedings.
E.g., 28 U.S.C. sec. 1404; Finova Capital Corp.
v. Ryan Helicopters U.S.A., Inc.,
Scullin Steel Co.,
arbitration proceedings in defiance of the
parties’ wishes or contractual undertakings. The
arbitration of contractual disputes pursuant to
an arbitration clause in the contract is not a
stage in a judicial proceeding but an alternative
to such a proceeding, and the court cannot mess
in the arbitrators’ procedures beyond the very
limited extent permitted by sections 9 and 10 of
the Federal Arbitration Act (the provisions
governing judicial review of arbitration awards).
E.g., Baravati v. Josephthal, Lyon & Ross, Inc.,
The arbitration provision in this case neither clearly permits nor clearly forbids consolidation. In fact, it’s a muddle, suggesting that the parties did not think about the issue. So far as bears on the question of consolidation, the provision reads as follows: Any dispute arising out of the interpretation, performance or breach of this Agreement, including the formation or validity thereof, will be submitted for decision to a panel of three arbitrators. . . . One arbitrator will be chosen *5 by each party [and the party-designated arbitrators will then choose a third, a neutral to preside over the panel and presumably cast the deciding vote in a close case] . . . . Unless otherwise mutually agreed by the parties, arbitration will take place in Chicago . . . . If more than one Retrocessionaire is involved in arbitration where there are common questions of law or fact and a possibility of conflicting awards or inconsistent results, all such Retrocessionaires will constitute and act as one party for purposes of this Article [the arbitration provision] . . . .
The insurers argue that since each of them is a party to the contract, it is impossible that each could have a right to select one arbitrator if a panel of three arbitrators is to decide a dispute involving more than one party on the insurers’ side. There is no problem if there is more than one party on the reinsurers’ side, by virtue of the last sentence we quoted, whereby all the reinsurers are to constitute a single party. But that does not solve the problem of multiple parties on the insurers’ side, because there is no corresponding clause authorizing them to be treated as one. The insurers argue that this asymmetry is powerful evidence against such treatment.
But this leaves out of account that any dispute is to be referred to a panel of three arbitrators, not just a dispute between the reinsurers and a single insurer. As normally understood, the word "dispute" (a word not defined in the contract) does not exclude a dispute involving multiple parties. So far as can be inferred from the parties’ demands for arbitration--which are our only clue to the nature of the fight between the parties--there is indeed a single dispute between the reinsurers on the one hand and the insurers on the other, arising out of the conduct of Unicover in negotiating and administering the reinsurance contract.
If "dispute" is taken in its ordinary sense and
"party" in the sense in which each of the
insurers is a separate party to these appeals
(the sense in which we used the word earlier in
this opinion), then the first two sentences that
we quoted from the arbitration provision are in
hopeless conflict. What to do? As a semantic
matter, it is easier to dissolve the conflict by
reading "party" to mean "side," a common usage,
than it is to read "dispute" to mean a dispute
with only one party on each side, an uncommon
usage. But what then of the fact that the
arbitration provision expressly makes the
reinsurers one party for purposes of arbitration
yet is silent about the insurers? The sensible
*6
answer--which incidentally demonstrates the
limited utility, see, e.g., In re Continental
Casualty Co.,
We cannot say that these textual inferences are conclusive in favor of consolidation, but they support it, as do practical considerations, which are relevant to disambiguating a contract, because parties to a contract generally aim at obtaining sensible results in a sensible way.
See, e.g., Bratton v. Roadway Package System,
Inc.,
Laser,
Olick,
The insurers have some practical arguments of their own, two related ones in fact. They ask: What if the insurers disagree about the choice of an arbitrator? Standing alone this is a very weak argument; the arbitration clause expressly requires the reinsurers to act as one party and thus agree on a single arbitrator, so apparently the parties thought this a feasible requirement to impose. The insurers seek to strengthen the argument by pointing out that two of the reinsurers are also insurers, and so are on both sides of the dispute. One of them, however, Phoenix, has thrown in its lot with the reinsurers, and does not claim--and obviously does not have--any right to participate in the choice of the insurers’ arbitrator. The status of the other, Cologne, is unclear, but obviously it will have to decide which side it’s on before the arbitrators are chosen.
We conclude that the balance of both the textual and the practical arguments favor the reinsurers, and we therefore reverse the judgment of the district court and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
