Plаintiff Kerr-McGee Refining Corp. (Kerr-McGee) appeals from a judgment entered in accordance with an order of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, William C. Conner, J., dated July 10, 1990,
Background
Thе Charter was entered into in March 1984 by Kerr-McGee, as charterer, and Triumph, as owner of the vessel. Later that month, Triumph loaded 539,999 net barrels of crude oil at a terminal in Scotland, and this amount was incorporated into a bill of lading that showed Kerr-McGee as cоnsignee at Corpus Christi, Texas. When the vessel arrived at Corpus Christi and the oil was discharged, Kerr-McGee’s measurements showed that only 528,060.65 net barrels had been received from the vessel. Kerr-McGee accordingly alleged short delivery of cargo and withheld freight in the amount of $213,000 to cover the alleged shortage.
Triumph then sought arbitration to recover the balance of the freight withheld by Kerr-McGee, since the Charter required that “[a]ny and all differences and disputes of whatsoever nature arising out of this Charter shall be put to arbitration.” Kerr-McGee subsequently paid the freight balance, but counterclaimed in the arbitration for damages resulting from the alleged short delivery.
During the course of the arbitration, Kerr-McGee obtained information, including numerous detailed photographs of the *469 vessel taken while it was being dismantled for scrap metal in China, that showed that a permanent concealed tank had been built into one of the vessel’s cargo tanks. The vessel had been further modified to allow oil to be transferred from the cargo tank to the conceаled tank. In the words of the arbitration panel, “[w]hat appeared at first sight to be a fairly simple case of a short delivery developed over the seven hearings into a complex matter involving allegations of cargo stealing by this vessel, as well as other vеssels operated by the same managers, perjury by the vessel’s Chief Engineer, alterations to the Deck and Engine logs, etc.” Because of the alleged theft of cargo, Kerr-McGee amended its claim in arbitration to recompute its damages and to seek dаmages under RICO.
In September 1988, the three-person arbitration panel issued a Partial Final Award in favor of Kerr-McGee for the value of cargo short delivered, together with interest. The arbitrators deferred decision on a number of other issues, including Kerr-McGee’s RICO claim, its alternative claim for punitive damages and its claim for attorneys’ fees and costs.
In March 1990, the arbitration panel issued its Decision and Final Award, with one arbitrator dissenting. The majority found, among other things, that the modification to the vessel’s cargo tank existed at the time of the chartered voyage; that the modification was permanent and was designed to divert cargo on more than one occasion; that 7,497.4 net barrels of Kerr-McGee’s cargo were converted in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 659, which deals with theft from interstate or forеign shipments; that there was evidence of four other substantial shortages in crude oil cargo carried by the vessel over a two-year period; that the managing company of the chartered vessel also managed, but did not own, four other vessels in the same grouр as the chartered vessel; that one of the vessels was found to have converted crude oil cargo in a similar manner during a voyage; and that three of the vessels were suspected of doing so. The majority accordingly concluded that Triumph had converted Kerr-McGee’s cargo through a pattern of racketeering and awarded under RICO treble damages, costs and attorneys’ fees, all to-talling $512,520.10.
Kerr-McGee then moved in the district court to confirm the Partial Final and Final Arbitration Awards, and Triumph cross-moved to vacate the awards. The district court confirmed the Partial Final Award after finding that it was not time-barred, but vacated the Final Award on the ground that the arbitration panel exceeded its power when it relied upon occurrences on other voyages not covered by the Chаrter in order to find a “pattern” and “enterprise” as required by RICO. This appeal and cross-appeal followed.
Discussion
A. The Final Award
There is no longer any doubt that a RICO claim is arbitrable. See
Shearson/American Express Inc. v. McMahon,
The district court vacated the Final Award on the ground that because the parties agreed to arbitrate only those claims “arising out of” the Charter, the arbitration panel exceeded its authority when it relied on episodes occurring on voyages not covered by the Charter to establish the predicate acts necessary for a
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RICO violation. We believe that this was too restrictive a construction of the parties’ intent as expressed in the Charter thаt
“[a]ny and all differences and disputes of whatsoever nature
arising out of this Charter shall be put to arbitration” (emphasis added). The dispute here was directly based on a shortage in the fuel oil delivered at the end of the single voyage covered by the Charter. It is true that Kerr-McGee thereafter obtained evidence that the shortage was intentional and part of a prior practice. This evidence, however, did not alter the facts that the dispute arose “out of” the Charter and the damages were inflicted during Triumph’s performance under it. Even though the arbitration panel looked at other voyages, it did not determine the liability of a person not party to the contract, as was the case in
Orion Shipping & Trading Co. v. Eastern States Petroleum Corp. of Panama, S.A.,
Citing
Genesco, Inc. v. T. Kakiuchi & Co.,
We do not believe, however, that
Genesco
determines the result here, although, if anything, that decision supports the position taken by Kerr-McGee. The panel in that case did look to transactions under a number of sales agreements in determining that a RICO claim could be brought under them, even though each sales agreement provided only for arbitration of “[a]ll claims and disputes of whatevеr nature arising under
this contract.”
Similarly, the arbitrators here could treble the award if the misconduct was part of a RICO pattern. If Triumph’s argument that the arbitrators could not look to what happened on other voyages was carried to its logical extreme, a RICO claim could not be arbitrated except in the rare instancеs in which all the predicate acts occurred on a single voyage. In general, this court has hardly been overly receptive to civil RICO claims, see
Sedima, S.P.R.L. v. Imrex Co.,
Indeed, after the district court vacated the Final Award, Kerr-McGee filed a “precautionary” complaint in the district court in order to state its RICO claim in that forum. Such a splintering of actions is contrary to the broad language used in the arbitration provision of the Charter, and would undermine the benefits the parties sought to achieve by agreeing to arbitrate “any and all” of their differences under it. We have held that a court must accord “the narrowest of readings” to the “excess of powers” provision of 9 U.S.C. § 10(d), which the district court relied on in vacating the Final Award.
Andros Compania Maritima, S.A. v. Marc Rich & Co., A.G.,
Accordingly, we find that the arbitration panel acted within the scope of the Charter when it awarded Kerr-McGee treble damages under RICO for Triumph’s conversion of the chartered cargo, and that the district court еrred by not confirming the Final Award.
B. The Partial Final Award
Under the Arbitration Act, a party has one year to avail itself of summary proceedings for confirmation of an award. 9 U.S.C. § 9. An award that finally and conclusively disposes of a “separate independent claim” may be confirmed even if it does not dispose of all the claims that were submitted to arbitration. See
Metallgesellschaft A.G. v. M/V Capitan Constante,
When it issued the Partial Final Award, the arbitration panel expressly left open whether, as a result of Triumph’s breach, Kerr-McGee was also entitled to punitive or RICO damages, costs and attorneys’ fees. It is thus apparent, as the district court found, that this award merely decided the issue of liability and pаrtial damages on the shortage claim, which was a predicate act to the RICO claim, and did not finally dispose of an independent claim because it left open the question of damages. Cf.
Michaels v. Mariforum Shipping, S.A.,
For the above reasons, we reverse the district court’s judgment insofar as it vacates the Final Award and affirm its judgment insofar as it confirms the Partial Final Award. The district court is directed to enter judgment confirming the Final Award in its entirety.
