OPINION OF THE COURT
I. INTRODUCTION
This matter comes on before this court on an appeal from orders the District Court
1
entered on November 10, 2010, denying appellant Gray Holdco, Inc.’s (Gray) Motion to Stay Proceedings in the District Court pending the outcome of a separate arbitration proceeding of its claims against appellee Randy Cassady (Cassady) and granting Cassady’s Motion to Enjoin the same arbitration proceedings. Gray made the arbitration demand more than ten months after it initiated this civil suit in the District Court on November 13, 2009, alleging that Cassady breached the employment contract between him and Gray and that Cassady and a new business venture that he established, RWLS, were interfering with Gray’s contractual relationships.
2
On September 17, 2010, Gray, pursuant to an arbitration provision in an agreement between it and
II. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
In June 2006, Cassady began work for Gray’s second-tier operating subsidiary, Gray Wireline Service, Inc. (Gray Wire-line), a cased-hole wireline business, as a manager of its facility in Granbury, Texas. Gray alleges that, as part of Cassad^s employment agreement with Gray Wire-line, he agreed to an “Option Agreement” with “certain restrictive covenants” which prohibited him from: (1) misusing Gray Wireline’s confidential information; (2) engaging in business while still an employee of Gray Wireline; (3) competing with Gray Wireline for two years after the end of his employment with Gray Wireline; and (4) soliciting Gray Wireline employees for one year following the end of his employment relationship with Gray Wireline. App. at 74-77. Gray Wireline also alleges that an additional agreement between Gray and Cassady, entitled the 2006 New Hire Stock Option Plan, contains the following arbitration provision:
SECTION IS. ARBITRATION. Any dispute or controversy between the Company and a Participant, arising out of or relating to this Plan or the Participant’s Option Agreement, the breach of this Plan or the Participant’s Option Agreement, or otherwise, shall be settled by arbitration in Wilmington, Delaware administered by the American Arbitration Association in accordance with its Commercial Rules then in effect and judgment on the award rendered by the arbitrator may be entered in any court having jurisdiction thereof.... [Ejither party may, without inconsistency with this arbitration provision, apply to any court having jurisdiction over such dispute or controversy and seek interim provisional, injunctive or other equitable relief until the arbitration award is rendered or the controversy is otherwise resolved.
Id. at 70-71. 4
In March 2009, Gray Wireline promoted Cassady to District Manager of its facility in New Kensington, Pennsylvania, and in July 2009, Cassady rose to the position of Region Manager of Gray Wireline’s operations in Pennsylvania, Louisiana, and Mississippi. According to Gray, on September
On November 13, 2009, Gray filed the complaint in this action in the District Court against Cassady and RWLS, asserting that Cassady breached the Option Agreement and tortiously interfered with Gray’s existing contractual relationships. The complaint also asserted claims of unjust enrichment and civil conspiracy based on Cassady and RWLS’s solicitation of Gray clients and employees. The complaint primarily requested injunctive relief although it also sought money damages. Significantly, the complaint did not mention the arbitration agreement in the New Hire Stock Option Plan or include any arbitration clause in the employment agreement labeled as “Exhibit A” which Gray attached to the complaint. On the same day that Gray filed the complaint, it filed a motion for a preliminary injunction against both defendants, requesting that the Court enjoin them from, among other things, soliciting Gray’s customers and employees.
On November 17, 2009, Gray filed a motion for expedited discovery which the District Court granted the next day. An attorney representing RWLS filed an appearance in the District Court on November 20, 2009, and a separate attorney representing Cassady filed an appearance on November 25, 2009. Cassady and RWLS then filed a joint motion opposing expedited discovery. On December 4, 2009, the Court conducted a discovery conference during which the parties agreed to a discovery schedule and the Court set the dates for hearing the application for a preliminary injunction as January 12-13, 2010.
The parties intensely litigated the preliminary injunction proceedings. In the discovery Gray served 15 requests for the production of documents and 11 interrogatories and deposed Cassady and a corporate representative of RWLS. Cassady propounded 118 requests for production of documents and RWLS propounded 15 requests for production of documents, 7 requests for admissions, and 13 interrogatories. The District Court conducted an evidentiary hearing on the preliminary injunction application and on January 13, 2010, following the conclusion of the hearing, the Court filed an opinion setting forth its conclusion that Gray did not meet its burden to establish that it was entitled to injunctive relief under Federal Rule Civil Procedure 65. In its conclusion, the Court,
inter alia,
held “as a matter of law, that the agreement entered into between Cassady and the plaintiff is not enforceable” and that “the plaintiff has not demonstrated that it will likely succeed on the merits.”
Gray Holdco, Inc. v. Cassady,
Civ. No. 2:09-cv-1519,
On March 2, 2010, the parties filed a Federal Rule Civil Procedure 26(f) discovery report and a proposed discovery plan. On March 9, 2010, the District Court conducted a status conference and set deadlines for mediation and for filing motions for judgment on the pleadings. On March 19, 2010, Cassady and RWLS separately moved for judgment on the pleadings pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(c) or, in the alternative, to dismiss the complaint under Fed. R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6), with Cassady asserting that the Court’s findings at the preliminary injunction hearing were “law of the
On September 17, 2010, after obtaining a new attorney, Gray filed a demand for arbitration against Cassady with the AAA in Delaware. Gray based the demand on the arbitration clause included in the New Hire Stock Option Plan that we already have quoted. Then, on September 21, 2010, Cassady filed a motion in the District Court to enjoin the arbitration and to impose sanctions under 28 U.S.C. § 1927. In the motion, Cassady argued that Gray waived its right to arbitrate by participating in substantial litigation and discovery in the District Court and by acting inconsistently with its later action seeking to enforce its right to arbitrate. The following day Gray filed a motion pursuant to the Federal Arbitration Act (FAA), 9 U.S.C. § 1 et seq., in the District Court to stay the judicial proceedings as to Cassady pending the outcome of the Delaware arbitration. Gray argued that the arbitration agreement was mutual and enforceable and that Cassady could not demonstrate the necessary prejudice arising from Gray’s participation in the litigation to justify the Court to hold that it waived its right to arbitrate. Cassady opposed the motion and renewed its argument that Gray waived its right to enforce the arbitration provision and also contended that the provision was not enforceable against him.
The District Court granted Cassady’s motion to enjoin the arbitration and denied Gray’s motion to stay the proceedings pending arbitration. It did not, however, impose sanctions against Gray. In its opinion accompanying its orders, the Court determined that three of the six non-exclusive factors we outlined in
Hoxworth v. Blinder, Robinson & Co.,
III. JURISDICTION AND STANDARD OF REVIEW
The District Court had jurisdiction over this diversity of citizenship action under 28 U.S.C. § 1332(a)(1). Although, generally, with exceptions not applicable here, we only have jurisdiction to hear appeals from district courts’ final orders, we have jurisdiction in this case under the FAA to hear an appeal from the District Court’s order denying a request to stay the proceedings pending arbitration and granting Cassady’s request to enjoin the arbitration proceedings.
See
9 U.S.C. § 16(a)(2);
Zimmer v. CooperNeff Advisors, Inc.,
We exercise plenary review over both “questions of law concerning the ap
IV. DISCUSSION
The FAA provides that:
A written provision in any ... contract evidencing a transaction involving commerce to settle by arbitration a controversy thereafter arising out of such contract ... shall be valid, irrevocable, and enforceable, save upon such grounds as exist at law or in equity for the revocation of any contract.
9 U.S.C. § 2. The Supreme Court has stated that this provision reflects a “ ‘liberal federal policy favoring arbitration.’ ”
AT&T Mobility LLC v. Concepcion,
— U.S. -,
We also have held that a party seeking arbitration may waive its right to arbitration when the party opposing the arbitration demonstrates sufficient prejudice arising from the delay of the party seeking arbitration in making its demand.
Ehleiter v. Grapetree Shores, Inc.,
The District Court determined that in a
Hoxworth
analysis the first and last fac
A. “No Waiver” Clause
The arbitration agreement on which Gray relies contains a disclaimer that “either party may, without inconsistency with this arbitration provision, apply to any court having jurisdiction over such dispute or controversy and seek interim provisional, injunctive or other equitable relief until the arbitration award is rendered or the controversy is otherwise resolved.” App. at 71. Gray argues that this provision precluded the District Court from considering its actions in pursuing litigation seeking a preliminary injunction in its analysis of the
Hoxworth
factors. The District Court disagreed and held that while Gray’s pursuit of injunctive relief did not waive its right to arbitrate, neither did the “no waiver” clause act as a shield against a possible finding that Gray waived that right.
Grray
II,
We agree with the District Court that the clause in the New Hire Stock Option Plan allowing either party to seek injunctive relief until the arbitration award is rendered does not override the applicability of the
Hoxworth
multipart analysis which examines whether a party, by its participation in litigation, has waived its right to invoke arbitration. Thus, we also agree with the holding in
S & R Co. of Kingston v. Latona Trucking, Inc.,
Gray distinguishes
Latona Trucking
by first arguing that the court in that case interpreted a “no waiver” clause
6
to allow a party seeking arbitration “to seek provisional remedies or other judicial proceedings that would not function to displace arbitration on the underlying dispute.” Appellant’s br. at 19 (quoting
Latona Trucking,
In
Ortho Pharmaceutical
we indicated “that a district court has the authority to grant injunctive relief in an arbitrable dispute, provided that the traditional prerequisites for such relief are satisfied.”
Id.
at 812. Yet we only were holding that a district court’s action in exercising its equitable powers to grant a preliminary injunction was not inconsistent with the FAA and that a party does not waive its right to seek a preliminary injunction by entering into an arbitration agreement.
Id.
We did not address the distinct question of whether a party’s conduct in pursuit of the preliminary injunction may establish prejudice in the context of an arbitration waiver inquiry. Moreover, while
Latona Trucking
did not involve a preliminary injunction, its rationale is applicable to this case: a party should not be allowed to delay its demand for arbitration and use federal court proceedings to “ ‘test[ ] the water before taking [a] swim.’ ”
We disagree with Gray’s argument that the District Court, through its consideration of the proceedings on the preliminary injunction application in its
Hoxworth
analysis, nullified the contractual provision allowing either party, without inconsistency with the arbitration provision, to pursue injunctive relief. To the contrary, the Court specifically recognized Gray’s contractual right to apply for injunctive relief and honored that provision by not weighing its participation in discovery related to the application in determining whether Gray waived the right to arbitration.
Gray
II,
Nevertheless, like the District Court, we think that the contractual no waiver provision does not require a court to disregard completely Gray’s conduct in pursuit of the preliminary injunction. Adopting Gray’s position that any conduct in pursuit of a preliminary injunction is exempt from a prejudice inquiry could allow a party, under the guise of seeking a preliminary injunction, to conduct discovery which would not be allowed in arbitration proceedings.
See, e.g., Zwitserse Maatschappij Van Levensverzekering En Lijfrente v. ABN Int’l Capital Mkts. Corp.,
More fundamentally, in addition to addressing the important question of whether the non-moving party suffers prejudice from the moving party’s delay in invoking an arbitration clause, a court, by finding that there has been a waiver of the right to arbitrate predicated on a party’s litigation conduct, effectuates the principle
Therefore, while Gray’s motion for a preliminary injunction in itself does not factor into the waiver inquiry, the question for purposes of finding an arbitration waiver remains whether Gray, through its litigation conduct, waived its right to compel arbitration because of the prejudice Cassady suffered attributable to Gray’s delay in invoking its right to arbitrate.
See Nino,
B. Timeliness
Gray filed its complaint and motion for preliminary injunctive relief against Cassady in the District Court on November 13, 2009, but did not file its demand for arbitration with the AAA until September 17, 2010. Though, at least insofar as we are aware, Gray did not explain to the District Court its reason for the delay, the Court nevertheless held that Gray’s ten-month delay, while “questionable,” neither weighed in favor of nor against finding that Gray waived its right to arbitrate.
Gray
II,
In considering the timeliness question we first reject Gray’s contention that the Court should have disregarded the time that Gray was seeking a preliminary injunction. In this regard, we point out that there was no reason why Gray could not have demanded arbitration while it was seeking the preliminary injunction as there is no rule precluding a party from simultaneously traveling on both procedural avenues. Indeed, Gray does not suggest that it could not have sought a preliminary injunction and demanded arbitration in parallel proceedings.
In any event, while we agree with the District Court that the ten-month period between Gray’s initiation of the lawsuit
The foregoing eases should be contrasted to eases in which, after a party delayed seeking arbitration, we have found that it waived its right to arbitrate. These cases in which we found a waiver featured delays which were closer to ten months, the period of delay here. Thus, in
Hoxworth
itself we found a waiver following a more than 11-month delay where the party seeking the finding that there had been a waiver participated in numerous pretrial proceedings and engaged in extensive discovery.
Overall, we are satisfied that while the length of the time between when a party initiates or first participates in litigation and when it seeks to enforce an arbitration clause is not dispositive in a waiver inquiry, in this case this factor weighs in favor of finding waiver.
C. Gray’s contesting of Cassady’s claims
The second
Hoxworth
factor is the degree to which the party seeking to compel arbitration has contested the merits
of
its opponent’s claims. The wording of this factor as usually set forth suggests that the factor is immaterial in this case because Cassady has not filed any counterclaims against Gray and thus there was no litigation in which Gray would have had
The District Court held that this factor weighed strongly in favor of waiver inasmuch as Gray “participated in considerable legal action, no matter its context, related to the substantive merits of the underlying lawsuit.” Id. Specifically, the Court pointed to the fact that in pursuit of a preliminary injunction motion Gray called four witnesses, cross-examined five witnesses, and introduced numerous exhibits into evidence. Moreover, the Court noted that Gray filed briefs opposing Cassady’s and RWLS’s motions to dismiss. 10 Gray argues that the District Court erred because it considered Gray’s conduct during the preliminary injunction proceedings, and because it erroneously considered its defense against Cassady’s motion to dismiss Gray’s allegations.
Gray first argues that the District Court’s consideration of its pursuit of a preliminary injunction will “eviscerate” our holding in
Ortho Pharmaceutical
because every preliminary injunction proceeding necessarily entails an inquiry into whether a “movant has shown a reasonable probability of success on the merits.” Appellant’s br. at 25 (citing
Am. Civil Liberties Union v. Ashcroft,
The District Court also properly considered Gray’s opposition to Cassady’s motion to dismiss in the waiver analysis. Gray argues that this
Hoxworth
factor should not apply to a moving party’s
defense
against a motion to dismiss because
Therefore, like the District Court, we find that this factor weighs in favor of finding waiver.
D. Gray’s Late Notification to Cassady of Its Intent to Arbitrate
The third factor in the
Hoxtvorth
balancing test asks whether Gray informed Cassady of its intent to seek arbitration before it filed its motion to stay the District Court proceedings.
We reject Gray’s argument that Cassady has not suffered any prejudice due to Gray’s failure to provide notice of its intent to arbitrate in this case. In the arbitration waiver context we have recognized two distinct types of prejudice: substantive legal prejudice and prejudice a party suffers due to the unnecessary delay and expense of having to litigate a case that an arbitrator later decides.
See Ehleiter,
Gray argues that the case was dormant and “there was literally no activity going on” for much of the ten months between Gray’s initiation of the proceedings in the District Court and its demand for arbitration. Appellant’s br. at 27. However, we have stated that “a party’s capacity to develop a litigation strategy with regard to the likelihood of arbitration diminishes the longer the case is litigated with no ... indication that a motion to compel arbitration is forthcoming.”
Nino,
609 F.3d at
Between the time the District Court denied preliminary injunctive relief and Gray filed its notice of arbitration, Cassady filed a motion to dismiss, 12 the parties set a discovery schedule and submitted a Rule 26(f) discovery plan, the District Court held status conferences, and the parties participated in mandatory mediation. Cassady argues that during these proceedings, it conducted its defense preparation “with the understanding and reasonable expectation ... that the parties’ entire dispute would be resolved by a jury in a single trial conducted in the District Court.” 13 Appellees’ br. at 39. Therefore, Gray’s failure to notify Cassady of its intent to seek arbitration substantively has prejudiced Cassady’s approach to this case.
In addition to substantive legal prejudice, Cassady also argues that he had to expend considerable time and money to educate his attorney to defend him in preparation for a trial in the District Court. Cassady further points out that the threat to his livelihood “likely will be outstanding ... in excess of two years— far longer than necessary if Gray Holdco had remained committed to its originally selected forum.... ” Appellee’s br. at 45. We agree that the time and expense that Cassady incurred in opposing Gray’s suit and the resulting delay weigh in favor of finding waiver.
In reaching our conclusion, we have no doubt that Cassady has expended considerable resources in defending against Gray’s lawsuit. Even setting aside the discovery during the preliminary injunction phase of the litigation, Cassady has had to retain counsel to represent him in this litigation for several months. While Gray argues that after the District Court denied its application for a preliminary injunction the case was “dormant” and there was “literally no activity going on,” (appellant’s br. at 27-28) a review of the record demonstrates that this characterization is inaccurate. As we have discussed, the District Court held three status conferences, and the parties filed a Rule 26(f) discovery report and attended a court ordered mediation hearing. At all of these proceedings the clock on Cassady’s legal bill undoubtedly was running and, as Cassady points out, should the dispute proceed to arbitration under the New Hire Stock Option Plan he will be responsible for one-half of the professional fees and costs of the arbitrators. App. at 71. Thus, we cannot ignore the legal expenses
Second, Cassady makes a compelling argument that Gray’s claims, which present a substantial threat to his livelihood, now have been outstanding for over two years (including during this appeal) due to Gray’s delay in invoking the arbitration clause. When Gray filed its motion to arbitrate, the end of discovery was in sight and the parties would have been ready to file dispositive motions or to proceed to trial. If the District Court had granted Gray’s motion to compel arbitration, the proceedings would have started again in a different forum, requiring the parties, at least to some degree, to duplicate the efforts they expended in the District Court and thus frustrating the fundamental purposes underlying arbitration:
[Ajrbitration is meant to streamline the proceedings, lower costs, and conserve private and judicial resources, and it furthers none of those purposes when a party actively litigates a case for an extended period only to belatedly assert that the dispute should have been arbitrated, not litigated, in the first place.
Nino,
Due to Gray’s delay in invoking the arbitration clause, this proceeding has not conserved private or judicial resources and it has been anything but streamlined. We thus agree that Gray’s failure to notify Cassady of its intent to arbitrate weighs heavily in favor of finding waiver.
E. Extent of Non-Merits Motion Practice
The District Court found that there had not been significant non-merits motion practice between Gray and Cassady and, therefore, this factor weighed against finding a waiver of Gray’s right to arbitrate. Neither Gray nor Cassady argues that the District Court erred in its analysis of this factor and, therefore, we adopt the District Court’s finding that this factor counsels against finding that Gray waived its right to arbitrate.
F. Gray’s Acquiescence to Pre-Trial Orders
The fifth
Hoxworth
factor asks to what extent a party “assent[ed] to the district court’s pretrial orders.”
Here, in addition to the three pre-trial conferences, the parties at the District Court’s direction, engaged in mediation and filed Rule 26(f) discovery reports. Gray at no point during any of these proceedings indicated that it intended to invoke the arbitration clause. Further, the absence of discovery between the proceedings on the preliminary injunction application and the motion to stay the arbitration does not alleviate the litigation expenses, which we discussed above, that Cassady incurred by participating in status conferences, the mediation, and the filing of a discovery report. In that regard, Gray’s argument that there would have been status conferences even if there had been arbitration because the litigation would have continued after the preliminary injunction hearing does not address the prejudice Cassady suffered inasmuch as Cassady and RWLS are separate entities represented by different attorneys in the District Court litigation. Thus, though the judicial proceedings may have continued following the denial of the preliminary injunction application, even if the Gray-Cassady dispute had been arbitrated, Cassady would not have needed to participate in them. Considering the factors that we have set forth we find that Gray’s acquiescence to the District Court’s pre-trial orders weighs heavily in favor of finding that Gray waived its right to arbitrate this dispute.
G. Extent to Which Both Parties Engaged in Discovery
The final Hoxworth factor focuses on the amount and scope of discovery in which the parties engaged prior to the request for arbitration. The District Court found that while the parties’ engaged in discovery during the preliminary injunction proceedings which was closely related to the merits of the underlying dispute, the arbitration clause authorized the parties to seek preliminary relief without jeopardizing their arbitration rights. Thus, inasmuch as the parties did not engage in any discovery after the preliminary injunction hearing, the District Court held that the last factor neither weighed in favor nor against finding a waiver of Gray’s right to arbitrate.
Gray argues that the lack of extensive discovery in this case should be a “powerful factor supporting enforcement of the arbitration provision in this case.” Appellant’s br. at 31. However, like the District Court, we are not prepared to discount completely the preliminary injunction discovery which, in this case, was quite extensive: the parties took the depositions of eight separate individuals; exchanged extensive written discovery responses, including 200 separate interrogatories, requests for admission and written document production requests; the parties exchanged more than 20,000 pages of documents and submitted to the District Court approximately 100 pages of Proposed
Y. CONCLUSION
In sum, we find that four of the Hoxworth factors weigh in favor of finding that Gray waived its right to arbitrate, one factor is neutral and one factor weighs in favor of finding that Gray did not waive its right to arbitrate. Moreover, it is clear that Cassady has suffered prejudice as a result of Gray’s delay in invoking the arbitration clause. If the arbitration goes ahead, the substantial time and expense that Cassady spent litigating the case in the District Court will to some degree need to be duplicated in the arbitration despite the fact that the dispute was close to proceeding to trial in the forum that Gray itself choose.
Moreover, we think that the overall circumstances of this case indicate that Gray, through its litigation conduct, has waived its right to arbitrate. From the beginning of this dispute, when Gray initiated the lawsuit without mentioning the arbitration provision in the New Hire Stock Option Plan to its compliance without objection to the District Court’s various orders for ten months and its participation in extensive discovery and status conferences, Gray indicated, through its conduct, that it was choosing to litigate its dispute with Cassady. It changed its strategy from pursuing litigation to demanding arbitration only after it substituted attorneys, and it did so without any advanced notification to Cassady. In the meantime, Cassady had prepared its litigation strategy in anticipation of a trial in the District Court, and in that preparation participated in the significant proceedings that we have described and thus incurred expenses that would not have been necessary if this case is arbitrated. Considering all that has transpired, whether we weigh the Hoxworth factors qualitatively or quantitatively, we agree with the District Court that Gray waived its right to enforce the arbitration provision contained in the New Hire Stock Option Plan. 15 Accordingly, we will affirm the District Court’s orders granting Cassady’s motion to enjoin the Delaware arbitration and denying Gray’s request to stay the judicial proceedings pending arbitration.
Notes
. A magistrate judge entered all the District Court orders that we discuss in this opinion inasmuch as the parties consented to proceed before a magistrate judge under 28 U.S.C. § 636(c), (i).
. In certain portions of the record and in appellant’s brief "RWLS” sometimes is referred to as "Renegade.”
. RWLS is not a party to the arbitration agreement and it and Cassady were distinct parties represented by different attorneys in the District Court. Moreover, Cassady's attorneys filed an appellee's brief on this appeal only on behalf of Cassady, and, although RWLS’s attorneys have filed an appearance on the appeal, RWLS is not participating in this appeal.
. We recognize that Cassady denies that the 2006 New Hire Stock Option Plan ever was enforceable against him, though we do not address that contention. We also note that the parties on this appeal make no distinction between Gray and Gray Wireline with respect either to the entity employing Cassady or to the party to their agreements with Cassady and thus, in effect, they treat Gray and Gray Wireline as a single entity. In these circumstances, we similarly are treating Gray and Gray Wireline as a single entity, as, indeed, did the District Court.
. Cassady disputes the characterization of the clause in the New Hire Stock Option Plan as a "no waiver” clause. We, however, do not find its characterization significant as we are concerned with the content of the clause rather than its characterization.
. The "no waiver” clause in
Latona Trucking
was an AAA rule incorporated into the parties’ contract stating that: “No judicial proceeding by a party relating to the subject matter of the arbitration shall be deemed a waiver of the party’s right to arbitrate.”
Latona Trucking,
. As Gray points out, Cassady does not claim that he was prejudiced in this manner. However, the cases above demonstrate why we will not adopt the position which Gray advocates.
. As we discuss below, we do not agree with Gray’s contention that, after the preliminary injunction hearing, the parties were not engaged actively in litigation.
. In his answering brief Cassady suggests that the explanation for Gray’s delay is that Gray made a "tactical decision” to seek arbitration after it failed in its attempt to secure preliminary injunctive relief and then switched attorneys. Appellee's br. at 27. Though it had the opportunity to do so when it filed its reply brief, Gray has not contended that Cassady's explanation was incorrect. Even though we will not speculate on why Gray waited ten months after filing this litigation to demand arbitration of its dispute with Cassady, we cannot help but note that it appears that Gray's complaint was significantly weakened after the District Court held in denying the preliminary injunction application that "as a matter of law ... the agreement entered into between Cassady and the plaintiff is not enforceable.”
Gray
I,
. Of course, Gray’s opposition to RWLS’s motion is immaterial inasmuch as the GrayRWLS dispute was not subject to arbitration.
. We point out that one might have expected that Gray would have moved to compel arbitration as soon as Cassady filed his motion to dismiss if Gray had an intent at that time to seek arbitration later. After all, if Gray had that intent at the time Cassady filed the motion to dismiss it would seem that it would have been almost reckless for it not to have demanded arbitration when it received the motion because if the District Court granted the motion and Gray later demanded arbitration Cassady undoubtedly would have raised the preclusive effect of the Court’s order in the arbitration proceedings.
. Of course, RWLS filed a similar motion but we are not considering it in our analysis.
. Notwithstanding Cassady's expectations, even if we disregard the possibility of a resolution of this case on a summary judgment motion, in which event there will not be a trial in this case, we can see two possible reasons why this case might not be resolved by a jury: (1) as a matter of law the District Court might hold that there is no right to a jury trial inasmuch as Gray in its complaint primarily was seeking injunctive relief; and (2) the District Court might rule that Cassady waived its right to a jury trial in its agreement with Gray. We have no need to address those possibilities now.
. Gray argues that Cassady served the majority of the document requests and took a majority of the depositions during the preliminary injunction proceedings. In considering the sixth
Hoxworth
factor, however, we look at "the extent to which
both
parties have engaged in discovery.”
Hoxworth,
. As an alternative argument for affirming the District Court’s order to enjoin the arbitration, Cassady argues that the arbitration clause is unenforceable. Inasmuch as we are affirming the District Court’s orders denying arbitration on a waiver basis, we need not address this argument.
