OPINION
Peter Grain and Annette Barnes challenge the district court’s denial of their motion to confirm in part and modify in part a $1.6 million arbitration award. We affirm.
I.
Grain and Barnes, husband and wife, are medical doctors who once worked for Mercy Hospital. In 2003, they sued Mercy and the related defendants for taking a variety of “punitive actions” that allegedly interfered with their medical practices. JA 41. Grain complained that the defendants had violated 42 U.S.C. § 1981 by discriminating on the basis of race in contracting and by violating several state laws, while Barnes sought only state-law relief. After the defendants moved to compel arbitration, the district court dismissed the state-law claims that were subject to a pre-existing arbitration agreement and stayed the remaining claims pending arbitration.
Grain and Barnes prevailed in the arbitration proceeding and won $1,641,870.44. They then filed a motion in the district court, asking the court to confirm the merits of the arbitration decision and to increase the size of the award. The district court confirmed the award but refused to increase it.
Grain v. Trinity Health (Grain I),
No. 03-72486,
II.
The parties agree that we have jurisdiction over this appeal. But because the parties to a lawsuit cannot by consent create appellate jurisdiction that does not otherwise exist, we must determine for ourselves whether we have authority to resolve this appeal.
Arbaugh v. Y & H Corp.,
The traditional ground for appellate jurisdiction — the final-judgment rule, 28 U.S.C. § 1291 — does not give us authority to decide this appeal. Although the district court has done everything that can be done with respect to the arbitration and although it dismissed the other claims subject to the arbitration agreement, it retains jurisdiction over, and indeed continues to consider, the non-arbitrable claims filed by Grain and Barnes. Section 1291 generally does not permit piecemeal appeals but only permits an appeal once there is nothing left to do but enter the judgment and enforce it.
See Digital Equip. Corp. v. Desktop Direct, Inc.,
All of these rules, however, deal with general grounds for declining to adhere to the final-judgment rule established by § 1291. They do not preclude Congress from granting specific jurisdiction over appeals arising under certain federal laws, even appeals that do not resolve the rest of the claims pending in the district court.
See Livesay,
One such grant of specific appellate jurisdiction appears in the Federal Arbitration Act.
See Omni Tech Corp. v. MPC Solutions Sales, LLC,
Grain and Barnes filed this action under the Federal Arbitration Act, seeking to confirm the arbitrators’ decision in part (by upholding their liability ruling) and seeking to modify the arbitrators’ decision *378 in part (by increasing the award from $1.6 million to roughly $3.2 million). Although the Act permits a district court to grant both forms of relief, 9 U.S.C. §§ 9, 10, the court in this instance granted just one of them: It granted the couple’s request to confirm the liability ruling but denied their request to modify the damages award. All of this resulted in a district-court order “confirming ... an award,” which is precisely what § 16(a)(1)(D) permits a disappointed party, even a partly disappointed party, to appeal. Nothing about this provision of the Act, or anything else in the Act, indicates that a party to a district-court proceeding under the Act must challenge all of a district court’s confirmation decision, as opposed to just some of it, in order to file an appeal. The Act, it is true, directly authorizes appeals from district-court orders that “modify[]” arbitration awards, 9 U.S.C. § 16(a)(1)(E), and yet does not directly say that an unsuccessful party may appeal an “unmodified” award or a “denied modification request.” But this is of no moment because an “unmodified” award frequently will become a “confirm[ed]” award, as indeed happened here. Jurisdiction exists to review the district court’s decision.
III.
In attempting to vacate or modify an arbitration award governed by the Federal Arbitration Act, a disappointed party must look to sections 10 and 11 of Title 9, which “provide [the] exclusive regime[ ] for the review provided by the [Federal Arbitration Act].”
Hall St. Assocs. v. Mattel, Inc.,
— U.S. --,
(a) Where there was an evident material miscalculation of figures or an evident material mistake in the description of any person, thing, or property referred to in the award.
(b) Where the arbitrators have awarded upon a matter not submitted to them, unless it is a matter not affecting the merits of the decision upon the matter submitted.
(c) Where the award is imperfect in matter of form not affecting the merits of the controversy.
9 U.S.C. § 11.
A.
Grain and Barnes claim that the award must be modified because there was “an evident material miscalculation of figures.” 9 U.S.C. § 11(a). But because they failed to raise this argument in the district court, they have forfeited the argument on appeal.
See Enertech Elec., Inc. v. Mahoning County Comm’rs,
B.
Grain and Barnes face a similar problem in contending that the award was “imperfect in matter of form not affecting the merits of the controversy,” 9 U.S.C. § 11(c), on the theory that it did not include a sufficient amount of attorneys’ fees. Here, too, we have a complaint about a merits dispute, and here, too, we have a provision that deals with a process-driven problem. An award that is “imperfect in matter of form,” as these terms suggest, is one that suffers from a scrivener’s error or that otherwise does not deliver on the arbitrator’s stated purpose in granting relief.
See Atlantic Aviation, Inc. v. EBM Group, Inc.,
Grain and Barnes cite no case — and we can locate none — in which the outcome of an arbitrator’s reasoned decision regarding the appropriate amount of an attorneys’ fees award is viewed as a “matter of form.” The one case on which they rely in this portion of their argument cuts against them. It held that an award of attorneys’ fees was
“not
imperfect in matter of form with respect
to
the adjudication of attorney’s fees [because] [t]he issue of attorney’s fees was presented to the arbitrator, and he made a clear determination of the parties’ rights to attorney’s fees under [the arbitration agreement].”
Mantaline Corp. v. PPG Indus., Inc.,
No. 2:02CV269,
C.
Grain and Barnes principally argue that their award should be doubled, not because it implicates one of the enumerated grounds for modifying an award, but because it turned on a “manifest disregard of the law.” This theory, however, appears nowhere in § 11, and the Supreme Court has recently explained that the enumerated grounds in §§ 10 and 11 provide the “exclusive” grounds for obtaining relief from an arbitration decision.
Hall St.,
It is true that we have said that “manifest disregard of the law” may supply a basis for
vacating
an award, at times suggesting that such review is a “judicially created” supplement to the enumerated forms of FAA relief.
See, e.g., Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Inc. v. Jaros,
Grain and Barnes claim that we have repudiated the holding of
NCR,
but that is an overstatement. The two cited cases deal only with a court’s power to vacate awards based on the “manifest disregard” standard, and neither one contains even a kernel of dicta supporting this theory.
See Dawahare v. Spencer,
IV.
For these reasons, we affirm.
