This case originated when Contec Corporation filed suit to compel Remote Solution Co., Ltd. (“Remote Solution”) to arbitrate an indemnification dispute. Remote Solution argued that it could not be compelled to participate in arbitration because Contec Corporation was a non-signatory to the arbitration agreement Remote Solution had signed with Contec L.P. in 1999. The United States District Court for the Northern District of New York, David N. Hurd, Judge, dismissed the suit, finding that whether a valid arbitration agreement existed between Remote Solution and Con-tec Corporation was an issue to be decided by the arbitrator. We agree with the district court that Remote Solution is compelled under the agreement it signed with Contec L.P. to arbitrate the question of arbitration with Contec Corporation. Accordingly, we affirm.
BACKGROUND
In 1999, Contec L.P. and Hango Electronics, a Korean electronics company that subsequently changed its name to Remote Solution, entered into an agreement for the manufacturing and purchase of remote control devices (“the 1999 Agreement”). Later in 1999, Contec L.P. was converted to Contec LLC and then, in 2001, merged with Contec Corporation, leaving Contec Corporation as the surviving entity. These changes in corporate form did not alter Contec’s address or ownership and allegedly did not impact its business relationship with Remote Solution.
In 2000 and 2002, Contec Corporation was sued for alleged patent infringement. Under an indemnification provision of the 1999 Agreement, Remote Solution was required to defend Contec L.P. in any patent infringement suit and pay any and all costs or damages awarded. Remote Solution did not make any indemnification payments to Contec Corporation for costs Contec Corporation incurred in connection with the suit. Contec Corporation therefore withheld payment on a shipment of remote control units as a setoff against amounts it believed it was owed by Remote Solution.
In June 2003, Remote Solution filed suit against Contec Corporation in Korea. Relying on Paragraph 19 of the 1999 Agreement, which required' that all' disputes arising under the agreement be arbitrated, Contec Corporation filed a demand for arbitration with the American Arbitration Association. Additionally, it filed suit in the district court seeking to compel arbitration and an order to dismiss or stay Remote Solution’s lawsuit in Korea.
In the district court proceedings, Remote Solution contended that Contec Corporation was not a signatory to the 1999 Agreement and was therefore barred from seeking its enforcement. In response, Contec Corporation argued that arbitration, not the court, was the proper forum for determining whether a valid arbitration agreement existed between itself and Remote Solution.
In December 2003, the district court dismissed the suit, finding that “all claims set forth in the complaint and counterclaim are, subject to arbitration.” The district court explained its reasoning as follows:
[T]he threshold question is whether Contec Corp.’s purported right to enforce the agreement falls within the scope of the arbitration clause. The agreement clearly provides that any dispute arising under the agreement will be resolved by arbitration in accordance with the Commercial -Arbitration Rules of the American Arbitration Association. The Commercial Arbitration Rules provide that issues of jurisdiction, including objections regarding the scope or validity of the arbitration agreement, are sub *208 ject to arbitration. This is the agreement that Remote Solution ... agreed to.
This appeal followed.
DISCUSSION
Our review of “whether the issue of arbitrability is for the court or for the arbitrator” is
de novo. Bell v. Cendant Corp.,
The 1999 Agreement, as a contract involving international commerce, is governed by the Federal Arbitration Act (“FAA”).
See
9 U.S.C. §§ 1, 2 (2004);
David L. Threlkeld & Co. v. Metallgesellschaft Ltd.,
The arbitration clause at issue here appears in paragraph 19 of the 1999 Agreement and provides:
In the event of any controversy arising with respect to this Agreement, both parties shall use its best efforts to resolve the controversy. In the event the parties are unable to arrive at a resolution, such controversy shall be determined by arbitration held in the City of Albany, New York in accordance with the Commercial Arbitration Rules of the American Arbitration Association (the “AAA”) or any organization that is the successor thereto ....
Rule 7 of the AAA Commercial Arbitration Rules states with respect to jurisdiction that “[t]he arbitrator shall have the power to rule on his or her own jurisdiction, including any objections with respect to the existence, scope or validity of the arbitration agreement.” AAA Rule R-7(a).
We have held that when, as here, parties explicitly incorporate rules that empower an arbitrator to decide issues of arbitrability, the incorporation serves as clear and unmistakable evidence of the parties’ intent to delegate such issues to an arbitrator.
See Shaw Group,
Remote Solution argues that it cannot be compelled to arbitrate with a stranger to the 1999 Agreement because the contractual language is effective only between the contracting parties. It contends that the 1999 Agreement included both a prohibition on the assignment of rights under the Agreement and an exclusion of third party rights, and that, therefore, there is no contractual evidence of Remote Solution’s intent to grant third parties the right to seek arbitration. According to Remote Solution, Contec Corporation’s rights under the 1999 Agreement; if any, fall outside the arbitration clause and thus cannot be an issue pertaining to the “existence, scope or validity of the arbitration agreement.”
As an initial ■ matter, we recognize that just because a signatory has agreed to arbitrate issues of arbitrability with another party does not mean that it must arbitrate with any non-signatory. In order to decide whether arbitration of arbitrability is appropriate, a court must first determine whether the parties have a sufficient relationship to each other and to the rights created under the agreement.
See First Options,
In the present case, neither we nor the district court must reach the question whether Remote Solution is estopped from avoiding arbitration with Contec Corporation because, under the 1999 Agreement, the circumstances indicate that arbitration of the issue of arbitrability is appropriate. First, there is or was an undisputed relationship between each corporate form of Contec and Remote Solution. Secondly, Remote Solution signed the 1999 Agreement. Finally, the dispute at issue arose because the parties apparently continued to conduct themselves as subject to the 1999 Agreement regardless of change in corporate form. These factors demonstrate that a sufficient relationship existed between Contec Corporation and Remote Solution to permit Contec Corporation to compel arbitration even if, in the end, an arbitrator were to determine that the dispute itself is not arbitrable because Contec Corporation cannot claim rights under the 1999 Agreement.
Having determined that a sufficient relationship exists between the parties, we must now address the more precise question presented here: whether a non-signatory can compel a signatory to arbitrate under an agreement where the question of arbitrability is itself subject to arbitration. Although our circuit has not previously considered this question, we are not without guidance in federal law.
*210
In
Apollo Computer, Inc. v. Berg,
The relevant agreement here is the one between Apollo and Dico. The defendants claim that Dico’s right to compel arbitration under that agreement has been assigned to them.... Whether the right to compel arbitration ... was validly assigned to the defendants and whether it can be enforced by them against Apollo are issues relating to the continued existence and validity of the agreement.
Id. at 473. Similarly, the relevant agreement here is the one Remote Solution signed with Contec L.P., in which Remote Solution agreed to submit all disputes to arbitration. Under the reasoning of Apollo, whether the arbitration rights under the 1999 Agreement were validly assigned by Contec L.P. to Contec Corporation is an issue that pertains directly to the continued “existence, scope or validity” of the Agreement. As such, it is within the jurisdiction of the arbitrator pursuant to AAA Rule R-7(a) as incorporated into the 1999 Agreement.
In direct contrast to the holding in
Apollo,
the Federal Circuit held recently in a very similar case that “the question of whether the parties agreed to arbitrate is to be decided by the court, not the arbitrator.”
Microchip Tech. Inc. v. U.S. Philips Corp.,
After review of
Apollo
and
Microchip,
we find the reasoning of
Apollo
to be more persuasive and explicitly adopt it here. In
Apollo,
the court recognized that the question of arbitrability would ordinarily be subject to judicial determination rather than arbitration.
Id.
(citing
Am. Safety Equip. Corp. v. J.P. Maguire & Co.,
We agree with the district court that Contec Corporation’s purported right to enforce the 1999 Agreement is a matter of the Agreement’s continued existence, validity and scope, and is therefore subject to arbitration under the terms of the arbitration clause. Accordingly, we hold that Remote Solution is compelled under the 1999 Agreement to arbitrate the question of arbitrability with Contec Corporation.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the decision of the district court to dismiss this case in favor of arbitration is affirmed.
Notes
. The 1999 Agreement is governed by New York law, which follows the same standard as federal law with respect to who determines arbitrability: generally, it is a question for the court unless there is "a 'clear and unmistakable’ agreement to arbitrate arbitrability.”
Shaw Group,
. We have previously cited
Apollo
with approval for the proposition that parties who contract for arbitration in accordance with arbitration rules such as the AAA Commercial Arbitration Rules have "thereby agreed to submit questions of arbitrability to the arbitrator.”
Shaw Group,
