The question before us is whether the district court’s lengthy memorandum and order determining that the parties’ dispute is arbitrable is a final appealable order. We conclude that it is not. We turn to the background.
I.
Plaintiff Corion Corporation discharged defendant Gih-Horng Chen. Chen then in- *56 yoked a provision in Corion’s Personnel Policies Manual which provided that “[i]n situations involving ... termination ..., an aggrieved employee who is dissatisfied with top management’s decision will be permitted to have the grievance arbitrated by an impartial third party” and demanded arbitration. Corion did not agree to arbitration and instead filed the instant action seeking 1) a declaration that Chen was not entitled to arbitrate the discharge decision (count 1) and 2) a declaration that plaintiff was entitled to discharge Chen (count 2). Corion maintained that the personnel handbook had no contractual force, but, even if it did, Chen had waived any right to arbitrate by failing to attend hearings Corion had scheduled to obtain Chen’s input.
Chen responded with two motions. The first asked the court to dismiss count two (Corion’s request for a declaration that Corion was entitled to discharge Chen). The second sought both a stay of all court proceedings (including filing an answer) pending arbitration and an order compelling arbitration.
After briefing and argument, the district court issued an opinion concluding that the arbitration provision in the manual was contractually enforceable and applied to termination decisions. As for Corion’s argument that Chen had waived any right to arbitrate, the district court ruled that the arbitrator was the one to decide that issue. The court’s twenty-one page memorandum and order concluded with the following paragraph:
For the foregoing reasons, Chen’s motion to stay and compel arbitration is ALLOWED. For the same reasons, this Court has determined that an enforceable agreement to arbitrate exists. Chen’s Motion to Dismiss Count II of the Complaint is ALLOWED. The case is ordered administratively closed pending the outcome of the arbitration.
No separate document embodying the order has entered.
II.
Corion has appealed from the memorandum and order. Corion argues that the memorandum and order is a final decision appealable under 28 U.S.C. § 1291 because Corion’s entire lawsuit has been adjudicated. Count 2 (for a declaration that plaintiff was entitled to discharge Chen) has been dismissed, and count 1 (for a declaration that Chen is not entitled to arbitrate the discharge decision) has been effectively resolved against plaintiff by granting the motion to compel arbitration, Corion contends. We disagree that the order is final.
A
First, the district court has not entered a judgment on a piece of paper separate from the underlying opinion as required by Fed.R.Civ.P. 58. Were the absence of a separate document a mere formality, the omission might be overlooked.
See Fiore v. Washington County Community Mental Health Center,
B
Here, however, we think more than informality is involved. The court did not enter a separate document labelled final judgment, which would have signalled its view that the case had concluded. Nor did it dismiss the entire action. Rather, it granted defendant’s motion to stay proceedings pending arbitration. This suggests that the district court itself did not intend to terminate its role or to enter a final judgment, but rather acted in a manner to retain jurisdiction pending the outcome of arbitration. To be sure, the district court directed that the case be “administratively closed” pending arbitration. In the circumstances of this case, however, we do not think this is equivalent to a final judgment of dismissal.
See Quinn v. CGR,
In previous cases where a district court has retained jurisdiction pending the outcome of arbitration, we have concluded that an order staying proceedings pending arbitration or directing arbitration is not final or immediately appealable.
De Fuertes v. Drexel, Burnham, Lambert, Inc.,
no judgment determining the entire controversy between the parties has entered. Contrary to appellant’s assertion, the litigation has not ended. Rather, it has moved to another forum with the expectation that it will return to the [district court] for entry of a final judgment.
Id. at 11. The opinion then went on to say that the arbitration order was not immediately appealable under any exception to the final judgment rule and dismissed the appeal.
Corion contends that
De Fuertes
is not controlling and relies on a different line of cases for appealability. It points out that most courts have accepted that an order adjudicating an action which seeks nothing more than an order to compel arbitration is a final appealable order.
See, e.g., Abernathy v. Southern California Edison,
We leave for another day the question whether, had Corion’s action been limited
*58
to the request in count one for a declaration that the dispute was not arbitrable, finality could be defeated by the district court’s purported retention of jurisdiction pending the outcome of arbitration,
see University Life Ins. Co. v. Unimarc Ltd.,
Corion points to several cases which, it says, support its position that the district court’s memorandum and order is final and appealable. We address two which are representative of Corion’s position. First is
County of Middlesex v. Gevyn Constr. Corp.,
Middlesex is distinguishable. The county in the Middlesex case did not ask the court to decide the merits of the parties’ underlying dispute as did Corion in the present case by requesting a declaration that it was entitled to discharge Chen. Hence, the arbitration order in Middlesex did dispose of the one substantive dispute — arbitrability—submitted to the court (albeit leaving unresolved the matter of ancillary injunctive relief). In contrast, in the present case, Corion has asked the district court to adjudicate the parties’ dispute, and the district court, by declining to enter a final judgment on a separate piece of paper, has left open the possibility that it may, depending upon the results of arbitration, do just that.
Second,
Corion
points to
Robbins v. George W. Prescott Pub. Co.,
C
In addition to the absence of a separate document and the wording of the final paragraph of the 21-page memorandum and order, policy considerations influence our conclusion that no final judgment has entered in the present action and our disinclination to analogize the present action to one seeking no more than a determination concerning arbitrability.
It is true that an order compelling arbitration entered in an action seeking only an arbitration order has been considered final and immediately appealable by the party resisting arbitration.
See, e.g., Graphic Communications Union, Local 2 v. Chicago Tribune Co.,
recognize that permitting direct appeals of such orders is inconsistent with the policies underlying the arbitration process. Nevertheless, until the Supreme Court or Congress acts, the final judgment cases require such an outcome.”);
Zosky v. Boyer,
The systemic delay and inefficiency caused by immediate appeals of arbitration orders will tend to predispose us, whenever possible consistent with the final judgment rule, to view an arbitration order as but an interlocutory order entered in an ongoing *60 lawsuit (and not immediately appealable), rather than as a final resolution of a discrete controversy. Here, for the reasons earlier explained, we think that the district court has not finally resolved the entire controversy before it, but rather has specifically left open the possibility of revisiting the decision to dismiss count two and that consequently the district court’s order allowing Chen’s motion to stay and compel arbitration is not a final appealable order.
Appeal dismissed.
