In this maritime action, the plaintiff appeals from the district court’s dismissal pursuant to a forum-selection clause. Because the district court correctly enforced the forum-selection clause, we affirm.
I. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
1. Facts
Hellenic Investment Fund, Inc. (“Hellenic”), a ship-owning consortium, purchased a ship, the MV MARIANNA, from another ship-owning company, Inlet Navigation Company (“Inlet”). At all relevant times, ie., before, during, and after the purchase, the MARIANNA was classed by Det Norske Veritas A/S (“DNV”), an internationally recognized classification society. 1 Before the purchase, Inlet had contracted with DNV to provide class-related inspections and certification; following the purchase, DNV continued to provide the same services to Hellenic.
Hellenic and Inlet entered into a Memorandum of Agreement (“MOA”) for the purchase of the MARIANNA. The MOA designated DNV as the classification soci
The DNV classification status report indicated that the MARIANNA was current with her inspections but that several inspections were coming due before the anticipated purchase date. The MOA provided that “[o]n delivery vessel will maintain her class, free of recommendations and average damages affecting class.” The MOA further provided that “[a]ll class trading certificates — national and international — are] to be on delivery clean and valid and unextended for at least six (6) months.” Accordingly, the soon-to-expire class inspections had to be performed as a condition of the MA-RIANNA’s sale. Before the scheduled delivery date, DNV conducted surveys on the MARIANNA and performed additional tests to ascertain the MARIANNA’s condition.
After completing the necessary inspections, DNV prepared a confirmation of class certificate. Inlet’s agent sent the certificate, by facsimile, to Hellenic’s agent with instructions to provide the certificate to Hellenic. The certificate verified the MARIANNA’s class as a 1A1 Bulk Carrier and provided that “[a]ceording to [DNV’s] records, neither overdue Periodical Surveys nor any outstanding Conditions of Class are recorded against the vessel at present.” In reliance upon DNV’s issuance of the clean class confirmation certificate, Hellenic purchased the MARIANNA from Inlet the same day the confirmation of class was issued. Hellenic renamed the vessel the M/V TRANQUILLITY, and DNV, as the classification society, amended her class certificates to reflect the new name and ownership structure.
On the day of the purchase, inspectors from Hellenic’s insurers (the “P&I Club”) inspected the MARIANNA as a precursor to coverage. The P&I Club’s inspection, Hellenic maintains, revealed several deficiencies, which should have been revealed by the DNV inspections. According to Hellenic, these deficiencies caused problems in obtaining coverage for an imminent voyage. Nevertheless, Hellenic operated the TRANQUILLITY on at least two voyages after the purchase. Additional concerns with the TRANQUILLITY’S condition were discovered upon a port-state control inspection in Montreal, Canada. As a result of the subsequent arrest by port-state authorities, Hellenic sold the TRANQUILLITY.
2. Proceedings
Hellenic, believing that the defects noted by the P&I Club inspectors and the port-state control authorities predated DNV’s confirmation of class certificate, brought suit against DNV for fraudulent misrepresentation pursuant to this court’s holding in
Otto Candies, L.L.C. v. Nippon Kaiji Kyokai Corp.,
DNV sought to enforce a forum-selection clause, contained in DNV’s Rules, and moved the district court to dismiss the action. The DNV forum-selection clause
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
When reviewing a district court’s ruling on whether the terms of forum selection bind a non-signatory, this court reviews findings of fact
for
dear error and conclusions of law de novo.
See Bridas S.A.P.I.C. v. Gov’t of Turkm.,
III. DISCUSSION
The parties do not dispute that, after the purchase of the MARIANNA, when DNV rendered documentation services, Hellenic was in a contractual relationship with DNV and bound by the forum-selection clause. Nor is there any question that, before the purchase, Hellenic had no written, binding agreement with DNV relating to the MA-RIANNA’s classification. Nevertheless, DNV contends that, although not a signatory to the DNV-Inlet contract, Hellenic should be bound by the contract’s forum-selection clause. Hellenic argues that enforcement of the forum-selection clause would be unreasonable under the circumstances.
1. Estoppel
This court has stated that “[arbitration agreements apply to nonsignatories only in rare circumstances.”
Bridas,
Nevertheless, federal courts have held that so long as there is some written agreement to arbitrate, a third party may be bound to submit to arbitration. Ordinary principles of contract and agency law may be called upon to bind a nonsignatory to an agreement whose terms have not clearly done so. Six theories for binding a nonsignatory to an arbitration agreement have been recognized: (a) incorporation by reference; (b) assumption; (c) agency; (d) veil-piercing/alter ego; (e) estoppel; and (f) third-party beneficiary.
Id. at 355-56 (internal citations omitted). Before the district court, DNV argued that Hellenic was bound by the forum-selection clause under the following theories: estop-pel, third-party beneficiary, and implied-in-fact contract. We hold that an estoppel theory, specifically direct-benefit estoppel, is sufficient to bind Hellenic to the forum-selection clause in the DNV-Inlet contract and, therefore, limit our discussion to that argument. 2
Direct-benefit estoppel “involve[s] non-signatories who, during the life of the contract, have embraced the contract despite their non-signatory status but then,
Hellenic argues that direct-benefit es-toppel is inapplicable because (1) Hellenic received no benefit from DNV’s services, and (2) Hellenic is advancing a negligent misrepresentation claim, not a contract-based claim. We disagree.
In
American Bureau of Shipping v. Tencara Shipyard S.P.A.,
the Second Circuit employed direct-benefit estoppel to bind non-signatory vessel owners to a forum-selection clause in a contract between a classification society and a shipyard.
The Second Circuit held that the owners and underwriters were bound by the arbitration clause under a theory of direct-benefit estoppel. Id. at 353. According to the Tencara court, that the owners were able to insure the vessel more cheaply and sail under a French flag were sufficient benefits, directly flowing from the performance of the contract between the shipyard and the classification society, to bind the non-signatory owners to the contract’s arbitration clause. Id. The situation in the instant case is no different.
2. Benefit from the contract
Despite Hellenic’s claim that it did not benefit from the contract between In
While Hellenic retrospectively maintains that DNV’s assurances and classification services ultimately proved to be of little benefit to Hellenic, there is no denying, indeed it is specifically admitted, that, at the critical moment of sale, DNV’s performance was essential to Hellenic’s decision to purchase the MARIANNA. Any lingering doubt whether Hellenic garnered a benefit from DNV’s performance of the DNV-Inlet contract is erased by Hellenic’s own statements in its complaint: “DNV knew, or should have known,” that its representations “were intended for [Hellenic]’s guidance and benefit in a business transaction.”
The very nature of the claim brought requires that DNV’s performance under the contract be for Hellenic’s benefit. An element of the cause of action under
Otto Candies
is the requirement that the classification society must have “in the course of its profession, supplied false information for [the vessel purchaser’s]
guidance
in a business transaction.”
Regardless of any benefit, Hellenic maintains that it cannot be bound by the forum-selection clause because it has not asserted contractual claims. Although sounding in tort, Hellenic’s claim is based upon DNV’s failure to follow its own Rules in classing the MARIANNA.
See Stolt Parcel Tankers Inc. v. Det Norske Veritas AS,
No. 00-CV-1335, slip op. at 8-9
&
n.4 (S.D.Tex. July 3, 2001), (enforcing an identical DNV forum-selection clause and noting that the “[non-signatory]’s action in this case is essentially founded upon its claims that DNV did not comply with its rules and should be liable to [the non-
S. DNV Rules
The DNV Rules establish the standards of classification, the method of inspection, and the procedure for certifying class; these Rules also contain the forum-selection clause. The duty owed by DNV to Hellenic based on DNV’s alleged misrepresentations arose from the DNV Rules. Hellenic’s claim based on DNV’s failure to perform in accord with its Rules is therefore subject to the Rules’ forum-selection clause. Hellenic cannot embrace the Rules by bringing a claim under
Otto Candies
alleging, in essence, a violation of the DNV Rules without accepting the consequence of those Rules.
See DuPont,
L Enforceability
Hellenic’s final argument is that the forum-selection clause is unenforceable. Hellenic looks to
M/S BREMEN v. Zapata Off-Shore Co.
for the proposition that, although forum-selection “clauses are prima facie valid,” they should not be enforced if “enforcement is shown by the resisting party to be ‘unreasonable’ under the circumstances.”
IV. CONCLUSION
The district court correctly enforced the forum-selection clause in dismissing the action. We
AFFIRM.
Notes
. The other defendants in the district court action were dismissed for other reasons; there is no appeal of those dismissals.
. Accordingly, we take no position on whether any other theory might bind Hellenic to the DNV forum-selection clause in these circumstances.
. DNV’s classification certificate plainly indicates that the MARIANNA had been inspected and approved according to the DNV Rules: "THIS IS TO CERTIFY that the [MARIANNA] has been surveyed by Det Norske Veritas according to the Society’s Rules and that ... the Society is satisfied that the condition of the [MARIANNA] was in compliance with the applicable Rule requirements.”
