MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
Babcock Borsig AG (“BBAG”), a German corporation, moves to compel Babcock Power Inc. (“BPI”), a corporation headquartered in Massachusetts, to produce documents and give testimony pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1782(a) for use in a potential arbitration between BBAG and Babcoek-Hitachi K.K. (“Hitachi”), a Japanese corporation, in the International Chamber of Commerce International Court of Arbitration (“ICC”). Hitachi and BPI both object to BBAG’s motion, claiming that: (1) BBAG’s settlement agreement with BPI from prior litigation precludes the discovery request, (2) § 1782(a) does not authorize discovery orders for proceedings before private arbitral bodies such as the ICC, and (3) even if discovery is authorized, the court should exercise its discretion under § 1782(a) to deny BBAG’s motion. For the reasons discussed below, although I conclude that the settlement agreement does not bar BBAG’s discovery request and that § 1782(a) would permit discovery for proceedings before the ICC, I nevertheless will deny BBAG’s motion to compel without prejudice on discretionary grounds. I leave open the possibility of reconsidering this issue at some future time if the ICC indicates receptivity to the requested discovery materials.
I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND
A. The parties
BBAG is a German stock corporation and the ultimate holding company of the Babcock Borsig Group, an international supplier of power and environmental engineering. In 2002, in connection with insolvency proceedings in the German courts, BBAG undertook reorganization measures to facilitate the sale of its assets. As part of these reorganization efforts, BBAG sold certain United States business operations to BPI, a Massachusetts corporation. In 2003, BBAG also sold business operations in the field of power engineering to Hitachi, a Japanese corporation.
B. Prior litigation between BBAG and BPI
In May 2003, BBAG and BPI became engaged in litigation in this court, docketed as 04-10825-RWZ, over conflicting interpretations of the Non-Competition Agreement that was part of their 2002 transaction. In particular, BBAG alleged that BPI, relying on an erroneous interpretation of the agreement, had interfered with BBAG’s sale of assets to Hitachi in April 2003. This litigation continued for nearly three years and involved numerous contentious discovery disputes that ultimately prompted the trial judge to appoint a Special Master to resolve them. In February 2006,- BBAG and BPI reached a settlement agreement which included a release by BBAG of BPI from “rights and demands of any nature whatsoever ... arising out of, in connection with, or related to the Litigation.”
*236 C. BBAG’s potential arbitration with Hitachi
BBAG now contends that Hitachi made material misrepresentations in order to achieve a price reduction in its 2003 purchase of BBAG’s business assets. In particular, BBAG claims that Hitachi actively misled BBAG regarding the substance of negotiations between Hitachi and BPI that occurred while BBAG’s sale to Hitachi was still pending. According to BBAG, it first became aware of Hitachi’s alleged misconduct in January 2006, while deposing BPI’s CEO in connection with the litigation between BBAG and BPI.
In August 2007, BBAG wrote to Hitachi, seeking compensation for alleged breach of contract and tort in connection with Hitachi’s misrepresentations. Hitachi rejected this demand. Under the terms of BBAG’s 2003 sale of assets to Hitachi, all disputes arising from the transaction were subject to arbitration in Dusseldorf, Germany, before a three-member panel of the ICC. BBAG has not yet commenced an ICC arbitration action against Hitachi but asserts that it “contemplate^” it will do so.
In April 2008, BBAG formally requested BPI’s cooperation in providing discovery materials related to the anticipated arbitration action. When BPI refused, BBAG filed an application in this court pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1782(a) for an order to issue subpoenas against BPI for the production of documents and the deposition of a corporate representative. I granted BBAG’s application. Thereafter, Hitachi filed a motion to intervene, which I granted, for the purpose of submitting a motion to quash the subpoenas served on BPI. Meanwhile, BPI sent a letter to BBAG objecting to the subpoenas. BBAG responded by filing the motion to compel discovery pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1782(a), which is now before me.
II. DISCUSSION
A. BBAG’s settlement agreement
Hitachi and BPI claim that BBAG’s settlement agreement with BPI from February 2006 forecloses BBAG’s discovery requests. In pertinent part, the agreement indicates that BBAG agreed to: “unconditionally, irrevocably and completely release remise and forever discharge BPI ... from any and all claims, actions, causes of action, suits, charges, debts, dues, obligations ... expenses, rights and demands of any nature whatsoever ... arising out of, in connection with, or related to the Litigation.” I find that this release does not bar BBAG’s discovery requests from BPI.
The interpretation of releases is governed by principles of contract law.
See Ismert & Assocs., Inc. v. New England Mut. Life Ins. Co.,
Courts applying the law of other jurisdictions have variously interpreted the effect of similar general releases on discovery rights. In
Dart Industries Co., Inc. v. Westwood Chemical Co., Inc.,
I find the reasoning of
Westwood Chemical
and
Isetts
— and the conclusion of
Sumner-Mack
— more persuasive than the approach of the
Dart Industries
majority. Although the release here purports to encompass “rights and demands of any nature whatsoever,” traditional rules of contract interpretation require such broad language to be read in relation to its context within the release.
See, e.g., Titan Holdings Syndicate, Inc. v. City of Keene,
B. Authority under § 1782(a) to order discovery in connection with a private arbitration
Section 1782(a) provides that “[t]he district court of the district in which a person resides or is found may order him to give his testimony or statement or to produce a document or other thing for use in a proceeding in a foreign or international tribunal.” The party seeking discovery must show that: 1) the discovery is sought from a person who resides or is found in
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the same district as the court to which the application is made, 2) the discovery is for use in a proceeding before a foreign tribunal, and 3) the applicant is a foreign or international tribunal or an “interested person.”
See Schmitz v. Bernstein Liebhard & Lifshitz, LLP,
The Supreme Court addressed the question of what constitutes a “tribunal” under § 1782(a) relatively recently in
Intel.
The Court held that the Commission of the European Communities (the “Commission”) was a “tribunal” for purposes of the statute.
Id.
at 257-58,
The Court in
Intel
did not directly address whether private arbitral bodies like the ICC qualify as “tribunals” under § 1782(a). But the Court’s reasoning and dicta strongly indicate that these types of adjudicative bodies also fall within the statute. The ICC, like the European Commission, is a “first-instance decision-maker” that conducts proceedings which lead to a dispositive ruling. The parties agree that the ICC has the authority to hear the dispute between BBAG and Hitachi, to weigh evidence, and to issue a decision that is binding on the parties. Furthermore, the term “tribunal,” which was added to § 1782(a) in 1964 to broaden the statute’s scope, is commonly used and understood to describe arbitral bodies.
See In re Roz Trading Ltd.,
Two district court cases decided after
Intel
followed similar reasoning to hold that private arbitral bodies are within the scope of § 1782(a). In
In re Roz Trading Ltd.,
the court held that a private arbitral panel of the International Arbitral Centre of the Austrian Federal Economic Chamber was a “tribunal” for purposes of § 1782(a).
Hitachi and BPI rely primarily on pre-
Intel
cases that concluded that private ar-bitral bodies were not “tribunals” under § 1782(a). In
National Broadcasting Co., Inc. v. Bear Steams & Co., Inc.,
I do not find the reasoning in
National Broadcasting Co.
and
Republic of Kazakhstan
to be persuasive, particularly in light of the subsequent Supreme Court decision in
Intel.
As described above, the Court in
Intel
emphasized Congress’s intent to expand the applicable scope of § 1782(a). The Court noted Congress’s use of the broad term “tribunal,” and it favorably quoted Professor Smit’s defini
*240
tion of the term, which expressly included “arbitral tribunals.”
Intel,
For these reasons, I conclude that the ICC is a “tribunal” within the meaning of § 1782(a), and that all of the required elements of the statute have been met. This is not, however, the end of the inquiry. Even if an applicant meets the statutory requirements of § 1782(a), the court may still deny the request for discovery on discretionary grounds.
C. Discretionary analysis under § 1782(a)
Section 1782 does not require a district court “to grant a § 1782(a) discovery application simply because it has the authority to do so.”
Id.
at 264,
1. Participant in the foreign proceedings
The Supreme Court has explained that “when the person from whom discovery is sought is a participant in the foreign proceeding ..., the need for § 1782(a) aid generally is not as apparent as it ordinarily is when evidence is sought from a nonparticipant in the matter arising abroad.”
Id.
at 264,
Hitachi and BPI have argued that the ICC would nonetheless have jurisdiction to compel discovery of the materials sought by BBAG because Hitachi has access to
*241
the very same materials and would be a participant in the arbitration. While there is no “exhaustion” requirement for seeking discovery under § 1782, the district court may, in its discretion, properly consider a party’s failure first to attempt discovery measures in the foreign jurisdiction.
See In re Application of Digitechnic,
No. C07-414-JCC,
2. Receptivity of the ICC
The court may also take into account “the nature of the foreign tribunal, the character of the proceedings underway abroad, and the receptivity of the foreign [tribunal] to U.S. federal-court judicial assistance.”
Intel,
3. Conclusion
Under the circumstances of this case, I find that I should exercise my discretion by denying BBAG’s discovery requests until if and when the ICC provides some affirmative indication of its receptivity to the requested materials. It is true that § 1782(a) authorizes me to permit discovery even in the face of uncertainty about the ICC’s position, because the ICC could in any event later determine on its own which materials, if any, it would consider in connection with the arbitration proceeding.
See Intel,
I find it material that the parties to this dispute have recently engaged in lengthy and highly contentious litigation with one another. Hitachi and BPI have accused BBAG of using this discovery request either as a means to circumvent the eviden-tiary restrictions of the ICC arbitration system, or effectively to open a new front to obtain materials from BPI they were unable to obtain in the prior litigation that they concluded before seeking court orders requiring production.
See id.
at 265,
If arbitration proceedings advance to the stage where the ICC indicates its receptivity to some or all of BBAG’s requested discovery materials, I stand ready and willing to reconsider this ruling. If and when that occurs, I will address any concerns about the extent to which the request is unduly burdensome, unduly invasive, or involves privileged material. For now, however, I exercise this court’s discretion under § 1782(a) to deny BBAG’s motion to compel without prejudice.
III. CONCLUSION
For the reasons set forth more fully above, I DENY BBAG’s motion to compel without prejudice.
Notes
. Under the release at issue in Sumner-Mack, the plaintiff released the defendants from "all actions, causes of action, suits, debts, dues controversies, agreements, promises, claims, charges, complaints and demands whatsoever of every name and nature....”
. The parties do not dispute that BPI resides in the District of Massachusetts or that BBAG is an "interested person” for purposes of § 1782(a).
. The applicant in
Intel
filed an antitrust complaint with the Directorate-General for Competition of the Commission, who serves as "the European Union's primary antitrust law enforcer.”
Intel Corp. v. Advanced Micro Devices, Inc.,
. As Justice Ginsburg, the author for the Supreme Court of
Intel,
observed earlier when sitting as a Court of Appeals judge, Professor Smit is "the dominant drafter of, and commentator on, the 1964 revision of 28 U.S.C. § 1782.”
In re Letter of Request from Crown Prosecution Service,
. Among the categorical limitations expressly rejected by the
Intel
Court were a requirement that the proceedings before the foreign tribunal be "pending” or "imminent,”
. The district court may also deny or narrow a discovery request that is unduly intrusive or burdensome.
Intel,
. The application in
In re Application of Digitechnic,
No. C07-414-JCC,
. It is not altogether clear whether the ICC arbitration contemplated in this case qualifies for even this low threshold. In
Intel,
the Supreme Court held that the proceedings were "within reasonable contemplation” where the applicant had filed a formal antitrust complaint with the Directorate-General of Competition of the European Commission and an investigation was ongoing.
Intel,
