I. INTRODUCTION
Plаintiff Czarina, L.L.C., as assignee of Halvanon Insurance Co. Ltd., appeals the
*1289
district court’s denial of its application to confirm a foreign arbitration award. The district court denied Czarina’s application, concluding that it did not have subject matter jurisdiction to confirm the award.
Czarina, L.L.C. ex rel. Halvanon Ins. Co. Ltd. v. W.F. Poe Syndicate,
II. BACKGROUND AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Halvanon Insurance Company was an Isrаeli company. In 1984, Halvanon entered into an agreement with Defendant W.F. Poe Syndicate, a Florida reinsurance company and member of the Miami-based Insurance Exchange of the Americas (“IEA”), by the terms of which Poe and other IEA members agreed to reinsure some of Halvanon’s risks. As was common in the IEA’s reinsurance business, Halvanon and Poe agreed for Poe to rein-sure Halvanon before specifying all the details of the agreement. They agreed that their lead underwriters would come together later and flesh out the agreement by drafting a “wording,” or written contract, but their underwriters never did. Nonetheless, Halvanon later took the position that Poe was indebted to it under this reinsurance agreement.
In 1985, Halvanon became insolvent and was liquidated. In' the liquidation, Czarina purchased some of Halvanon’s accounts receivable, including the Poe account. After Poe refused to pay Czarina on that account, Czarina initiated an arbitration in London to collect the alleged indebtedness. Before the arbitrators, Czarina asserted that arbitration was the proper forum for deciding its dispute with Poe based on the following four items:
(1)a form dated December 22, 1983, sent by the IEA’s broker to Halva-non’s broker, stating that an IEA member would reinsure Halvanon, and that the terms of the reinsurance agreement would be negotiated with Halvanon later by the IEA’s lead underwriter;
(2) a form dated February 1, 1984, from Halvanon’s broker to Halvanon stating that twenty percent of Halva-non’s business would bе reinsured by IEA members;
(3) a “Confirmation of Cover” form, dated March 8, 1984, signed by Poe and other IEA members, confirming reinsurance coverage to Halvanon; and
(4) an unsigned, unexecuted sample wording, drafted in 1982, which Hal-vanon used in 1982 in its reinsurance relationships.
None of the first three forms, which were sent between Halvanon, its broker, Poe, and the IEA’s broker, contained any reference to arbitration. Only the fourth item, the 1982 Sample Wording, included an arbitration clause; it provided for arbitration before a two-member panel in London. The 1982 Sample Wording was simply a sample: it was not drafted for the Halva-non-Poe transaction.
Poe’s defense in the arbitration consisted of two short letters to the arbitration panel. Both letters began with the unequivocal assertion that Poe had never agreed to arbitrate this dispute. Specifically, Poe pointed out that it neither agreed to nor signed the 1982 Sample Wording. The letters also included various reasons why Poe should prevail on the merits of the dispute. Nevertheless, the arbitration panel concluded that Poe had agreed to submit to arbitration, and awarded Czarina over £150,000. The panel’s award noted that Poe’s position was that it never submitted this dispute to arbitration.
*1290 Czarina filed this award-confirmation action in the district court, invoking the court’s jurisdiction pursuant to article two of the Federal Arbitration Act, 9 U.S.C. §§ 201-208. 1 The court conducted a three-day bench trial on the issue of whether Halvanon and Poe had agreed to arbitrate, a question the court held was dispositive of its own subject matter jurisdiction in the confirmation action. The court found that there had been no agreement to arbitrate, and based on this, dismissed for lack of subject matter jurisdiction Czarina’s application to confirm the award. Czarina appeals this judgment.
III. CONTENTIONS OF THE PARTIES AND STANDARD OF REVIEW
Czarina contends that the district court erred in denying for lack of subject matter jurisdiction its application. Specifically, it contends that the court erred in holding that the Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards, June 10, 1958, reprinted, in 9 U.S.C. § 201 (historical and statutory notes) (hereinafter the Convention), requires a party invoking a federal court’s jurisdiction to confirm an award falling under the Convention to establish that the award was entered pursuant to а written arbitration agreement, signed by the parties. Alternatively, Czarina contends that even if it had to present a written, signed arbitration agreement, it satisfied this requirement by providing the unsigned 1982 Sample Wording which the arbitration panel found Halvanon and Poe had agreed to. Czarina contends that the district court was bound to accept this finding by the panel, and thus erred by not acсepting it and taking jurisdiction. As a second alternative, Czarina contends that it need not have met the signed-and-written-agreement requirement because Poe waived any objection to the arbitrability of the dispute by defending the arbitration on the merits. Thus, Czarina contends, the requirement was no bar to the court’s jurisdiction in this confirmation action. Poe contends that the district court properly concluded that it lacked subject matter jurisdiction because Czarina failed to comply with the requirements of the Convention.
These contentions present questions of law, which we review de novo.
Newell v. Prudential Ins. Co. of Am.,
IV. DISCUSSION
A. Does the Convention, as Incorporated into the Federal Arbitration Act, Require a Party Requesting a Federal District Court to Confirm a Foreign Arbitration Awаrd to Comply with Article IPs Agreement-in-Writing Requirement to Establish the Court’s Jurisdiction?
Czarina first contends that the Convention does not require the proponent of an arbitration award to meet Article II’s agreement-in-writing requirement for the court to have subject matter jurisdiction over the confirmation action. We disagree.
Article 2 of the Federal Arbitration Act (“FAA”) provides for enforсement of foreign arbitration agreements and awards, and to these ends, it ratifies and incorporates the Convention. 9 U.S.C. § 201 (historical and statutory notes). Under the FAA, federal district courts have original jurisdiction over actions “falling under the Convention.” 9 U.S.C. § 203. 2 The FAA provides two causes of *1291 action in federal district court for enforcing arbitration agreements' falling under the Convention: an action to compel arbitration pursuant to ah arbitration agreement falling under the Convention, 9 U.S.C. § 206, and an action to confirm an arbitration award made pursuant to an agreement falling under the Convention, 9 U.S.C. § 207.
To determine whether an award falls under the Convention, and thus, whether the district court has jurisdiction over the action to compel arbitration or to confirm an award, courts look to the language of the Convention.
See Sphere Drake Ins. PLC v. Marine Towing, Inc.,
Each Contracting State shall recognize arbitral awards as binding and enforce them in accordance with the rules -of procedure of the territory where the award is relied upon, under the conditions laid doim in the following articles.
Id. at art. Ill (emphasis added). Article IV imposes two conditions:
To obtain the recognition and enforcement mentioned in the preceding article, the party applying for recognition and enforcement shall, at the time of the application, supply:
(a) The duly authenticated original award or a duly certified copy thereof;
(b) The original agreement referred to in article II or a duly certified copy thereof.
Id. at art. IV, sec. 1.
Both articles II and IV explicitly refer to article II’s definition of an arbitration agreement in writing. That definition reads: “[t]he term ‘agreement in writing’ shall include an arbitral clause in a'contract or an arbitration agreement, signed by the parties or contained in an exchange of letters' or telegrams.” Id. at art. II, sec. 2.
Where a party has failed to satisfy the agreement-in-writing prerequisite, courts have dismissed the action for lack of jurisdiction.
See, e.g., Kahn,
The FAA provides:
[A]ny party to the arbitration may apply to any court having jurisdiction under this chapter for an order confirming the award [falling under the Convention] as against any other party to the arbitration. • The court shall confirm the award unless it finds one of the grounds for refusal or deferral of recognition or enforcement of the award specified in the said Convention.
9 U.S.C. § 207 (emphasis added). The failure of a party to satisfy article IV’s requirements qualifies as one of the “grounds for refusal or deferral ... specified in the said Convention,” id., because the Convention uses mandatory language in establishing the prerequisites: “[t]o obtain the recognition and enforcement mentioned in the preceding article, the party applying for recognition and enforcement shall, at the time of the application, supply ” a copy of the award and the arbitration agreement, Convention, supra, art. IV, sec. 1, 9 U.S.C. § 201 (historical and statutory notes) (emphasis added). This mandatory language also indicates that without these requirements being satisfied, the court is without power to confirm an award. Thus, we hold that the party seeking confirmation of an award falling under the Convention must meet article IV’s prerequisites to establish the district court’s subject matter jurisdiction to confirm the award 3 .
*1293 B. In Deciding Whether Czarina Had Met the Jurisdictional Prerequisites to a Confirmation Action, Was the District Court Bound by the Arbitration Panel’s Determination that the Parties Agreed to Arbitrate the Dispute?
As an alternative to its first contention,- Czarina argues that it satisfied the agreément-in-writing requirement by attаching the 1982 Sample Wording to its pleadings in this case. Czarina does not contend that the 1982 Sample Wording alone met the agreement-in-writing requirement. Instead, it contends that the district court was bound to accept the panel’s finding that Halvanon and Poe had agreed to the 1982 Sample Wording, and thus that the Wording, plus the finding, satisfied the requirement. We disagree with this contention because accepting it would eviscerate an important principle of United States and international arbitration law.
Recently, the Third Circuit, in
China Minmetals Materials Import and Export Co. v. Chi Mei Corp.,
Here, following an evidentiary hearing on whether the jurisdictional prerequisites of article IV had been met, the district court concluded that Czarina failed to establish that Halvanon and Poe had agreed to arbitrate.
Czarina,
*1294 C. Was Czarina Relieved of Its Burden to Establish the Article IV Jurisdictional Prerеquisites by Poe’s Arguing the Merits of Arbitration to the Arbitration Panel?
As a second alternative to its first two contentions, Czarina contends that it did not have to meet the article IV prerequisites because Poe argued the merits of the dispute to the arbitrators. Czarina relies on two award-confirmation cases which have bypassed article IV’s requirements, because the pаrties had proceeded in the arbitrations without sufficiently contesting the arbitrators’ jurisdiction.
See Slaney v. Int’l Amateur Athletic Fed’n,
Unlike the parties in those cases, Poe objected early and often, consistently maintaining that it had never agreed to arbitrate this dispute. The district court found this to be a fact,
Czarina,
V. CONCLUSION
Because Czarina failed to satisfy the requirements of article IV of the Convention, the district court’s judgment denying for lack of subject matter jurisdiction Czarina’s application for an order confirming the arbitration award is affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Czarina also invoked the court’s diversity jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1332, but on appeal has apparently abandoned diversity as а basis for jurisdiction.
. “An arbitration agreement or arbitral award *1291 arising out of a legal relationship, whether contractual or not, which is considered as commercial, including a transaction, contract, or agreement described in section 2 of this title, falls under the Convention.” 9 U.S.C. § 202.
. We must note that the jurisdictional prerequisites to an action confirming an award are different from the several affirmative defenses tо confirmation enumerated in article V of the Convention. Once the proponent of the award meets his article IV jurisdictional burden of providing a certified copy of the award and the arbitration agreement, he establishes a prima facie case for confirmation of the award.
See
Leonard Quigley,
Accession by the United States to the United Nations Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards,
70 Yale L.J. 1049, 1066 (1961) ("The proponent of the award is required only to supply the original or a certified copy of the award and the arbitral agreement. These establish a prima facie case, and the burden shifts to the defendant to establish the invalidity of the award on one of the grounds specified in Article V 1.”). That is, the award is presumed to be confirmable. The defendant to the confirmation action can overcome this presumption only by making one of the showings enumerated in the Convention. Convention,
supra,
art. V, 9 U.S.C. § 201 (historical and statutory notes) ("Recognition and enforcement of the award may be refused, at the request of the party against whom it is invoked, only if that party furnishes to the competent authority where the recognition and enforcement is sought, proof that” one of the seven enumerated defenses applies);
Industrial Risk Insurers v. M.A.N. Gutehoffnungshutte GmbH,
. Czarina argues that the district court erred by not applying English law, which Czarina says would have required the court to conclude that Poe had waived its objection to the arbitrators’ jurisdiction. But Czarina pre-vides no authority for why the district court was bound to apply English law when deciding the question of its subject matter jurisdiction pursuant to article IV.
