Gotham Holdings is a plaintiff, and Health Grades a plaintiff, and Health Grades a defendant, in litigation pending in the Southern District of New York. (Although there are multiple plaintiffs, we use one name to denote all.) Health Grades contends in the New York case that an arbitration award supports its view of the merits. It tendered the award and some of the documents exchanged in the arbitration. When Gotham Holdings asked to see related documents, Health Grades balked, observing that the parties to the arbitration (Health Grades and Hewitt Associates, LLC) had pledged confidentiality. Gotham Holdings rejoined that, by relying on the award, Health Grades had waived confidentiality. When Health Grades refused to budge from its position, Gotham Holdings served a subpoena on Hewitt Associates and moved to enforce it in the Northern District of Illinois, where Hewitt Associates’ principal offices are located. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 34(c), 45.
No one contends that the subpoena exceeds the bounds set by Fed.R.Civ.P. 26(b)(1), and the district court directed Hewitt Associates to produce the documents. Hewitt Associates is willing to hand them over. But the district court issued a stay pending Health Grades’ appeal. (Appellate jurisdiction rests on the doctrine of
Perlman v. United States,
We affirm the district court’s decision, for two reasons. First, ¶ 6 of the agreement between Health Grades and Hewitt Associates provides that materials from the arbitration may be disclosed in response to a subpoena. Second, even if the agreement had purported to block disclosure, such a provision would be ineffectual. Contracts bind only the parties. No one can “agree” with someone else that a stranger’s resort to discovery under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure will be cut off. We applied this principle in
Jepson, Inc. v. Makita Electric Works, Ltd.,
Health Grades and Hewitt Associates were entitled to agree that they would not
voluntarily
disclose any information related to the arbitration. See
ITT Educational Services, Inc. v. Arce,
According to Health Grades, access to the information would undermine the national policy favoring arbitration. There is no such policy. Arbitration agreements are optional and enforced just like other contracts. 9 U.S.C. § 2. The Federal Arbitration Act eliminates hostility to private dispute resolution; it does not create a preference for that process. “There is no federal policy favoring arbitration under a certain set of procedural rules; the federal policy is simply to ensure the enforceability, according to their terms, of private agreements to arbitrate.”
Volt Information Sciences, Inc. v. Stanford University,
The Federal Arbitration Act does not promote arbitration at the expense of strangers. Suppose Health Grades and Hewitt Associates had agreed between themselves that Gotham Holdings would pay the arbitrators’ fees. That would make arbitration more attractive, but no one would think the agreement enforceable; third parties’ rights may be affected only with their consent. Just so here. Gotham Holdings has an entitlement to material information in the hands of Hewitt Associates. Nothing that Health Grades and Hewitt Associates can do or say, separately or collectively, can affect that legal right. We concluded in
Teamsters Negotiating Committee v. Troha,
Hewitt Associates does not contend that the subpoena is unduly burdensome. No one contends that a recognized privilege applies to these documents. So the subpoena was properly enforced. The stay is lifted, and the judgment is affirmed. The mandate will issue today.
