The plaintiff appeals from the dismissal under Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6) of her far-ranging challenge to standard arbitration procedure. She had made a contract to sell defendant Argenbright her controlling interest in the PIMMS Corporation for some $65 million. The contract provided that disputes under it would be resolved by arbitration in Chicago “in accordance with the rules and regulations of the American Arbitration Association” and that the contract was to be construed in accordance with the law of Minnesota, where PIMMS was located. Shortly after the sale, Argenbright gave notice to Smith that it believed that she had exaggerated PIMMS’s revenue potential, that the exaggeration constituted a breach of warranty, that Argenbright had sustained damages of $14 million, and that it wanted to arbitrate the claim. It filed the claim with the American Arbitration Association’s Chicago office, which responded by sending the parties a list of 15 arbitrators taken from the Association’s roster for “Large and Complex Commercial Cases.” The list contained 14 men and one woman. Pursuant to the Association’s rules, the parties were asked to strike the names of any of the persons on the list whom they did not want to have on the arbitration panel and to rank the remaining ones. One of the names struck by Argenbright was that of the woman on the list (whom Smith had listed as her first choice), and as a result a panel of three male arbitrators was selected — whereupon Smith brought this suit in federal district court against Argenbright and the Association, complaining primarily that the lack of gender diversity of the list, coupled with Argenbright’s action in excluding the only woman on it, was a breach of contract. Federal jurisdiction is thus based primarily on diversity of citizenship, see
Caudle v. American Arbitration Ass’n,
The district court rebuffed Smith’s effort to obtain a preliminary injunction against the arbitration and so the arbitration went forward before the all-male panel. The court then dismissed Smith’s suit for failure to state a claim. Her appeal asks us to order the arbitration rerun before a new panel that contains at least one woman. Shortly before the appeal was argued to us, the trial phase of the arbitration ended and the arbitrators announced that they would issue their decision shortly. (We have not been told whether they have yet done so.) Lest the pendency of the appeal influence the arbitration in any way, we accelerated our consideration and issued an order affirming the district court with a notation that the opinion would follow. This is the opinion.
Smith expresses concern that because she is a woman and her opponent is a corporation presumably controlled by men (though there is no allegation to that effect), an all-male panel will be unsympathetic to her. No effort to substantiate the suggestion that male judges or arbitrators are prejudiced against wealthy women who have purely commercial disputes with corporations has been made; nor has Smith pointed to any issue in this litigation to which a man might be insensitive. The relief sought, which seems premised on the belief that a female litigant is entitled to be judged by a panel that includes at least one woman, borders on the fantastic.
But we do not suppose that there is anything in the law that would forbid private parties to stipulate to a mode of private dispute resolution that specified a
Smith relies primarily on a “Guide to Mediation and Arbitration for Business People,” published by the American Arbitration Association. The guide states that the Association “monitors the integrity of the process, the quality of roster composition and balance in terms of gender, racial and ethnic diversity,” all aimed at a “bottom line” consisting of “a roster of neutrals crafted to meet the needs of the parties.” Another publication of the Association, “A Brief Overview of the American Arbitration Association,” states that the Association maintains “a national panel of experts, diverse in gender and ethnicity.”These statements alone cannot support a breach of contract suit against either the Association or Argenbright. The fact that the contract provides for arbitration in accordance with the Association’s rules and regulations no more made the Association a party to the contract than a building contract that specifies that the builder will install Kohler plumbing fixtures makes Kohler a party to the building contract. The Association, did agree to administer the arbitration between Smith and Argenbright in exchange for a fee, and by doing so it undertook to administer the arbitration in accordance with the Association’s rules. But the “Guide” and the “Brief Overview” are not a part of those rules, and the rules of the Association (which, remember, are incorporated in the stock purchase agreement) are explicit that the Association’s “authority and duties ... are prescribed in the agreement of the parties and in these rules.”
We doubt, moreover, that a “promise,” if that is how the statements we quoted should be read, to “monitor ... balance in terms of gender, racial and ethnic diversity” or maintain “a national panel of experts, diverse in gender and ethnicity,” is sufficiently definite to be enforceable in a suit for breach of contract.
Shields v. Local 705, International Brotherhood of Teamsters Pension Plan,
The breach of contract claim against Argenbright is, if anything, weaker than the claim against the AAA. Argenbright never undertook to exercise its discretion over arbitrator selection in a particular way. We do not know why Argenbright objected to the one woman on the AAA’s list; but even if it did so for precisely the reason that Smith suspects, this was not the breach of any express or implied contract between Smith and itself. We take it that Smith’s real complaint about Argenbright is that Argenbright took advantage of the Association’s having supplied a list that made it easy for a party to obtain an all-male panel. The argument in other words is that the panel composition was contaminated to Argenbright’s advantage and that having thus been the beneficiary of the Association’s breach Argenbright should, by principles of unjust enrichment, be forced to relinquish the unfair advantage that it obtained from that breach.
So viewed, however, Smith’s claim against Argenbright is premature. The time to challenge an arbitration, on whatever grounds, including bias, is when the arbitration is completed and an award rendered. E.g.,
Dean v. Sullivan,
The parties are of diverse citizenship, so Argenbright if it obtains an award in the arbitration will be able to seek confirmation (that is, enforcement) of the award in federal district court under the Federal Arbitration Act. 9 U.S.C. § 9;
International Union of Operating Engineers, Local No. 841 v. Murphy Co.,
We mentioned the principle of
Batson v. Kentucky,
Smith also appeals to a provision of Minnesota’s arbitration statute that if the method for appointing arbitrators agreed upon by the parties fails, the court shall appoint the arbitrators. Minn.Stat. § 572.10(1). Smith’s invocation of the Minnesota statute is frivolous, first, because the invocation is premature; second, because the choice of law provision in the stock purchase agreement does not appear in the arbitration clause but is instead a direction to the arbitrators as to what law to apply (and the arbitrators, we are told, have so interpreted it); and third because the agreed method of selection did not fail, since there was never an agreement that the list of possible arbitrators would contain a particular number or percentage of women.
Finally, Smith makes two statutory claims against the American Arbitration Association. The first is that the Association’s representations about gender balance violate Illinois’s Uniform Deceptive Trade Practices Act, 815 ILCS 510/2. The point we made earlier about the vagueness of the representations is equally applicable here. Laws forbidding deceptive advertising are inapplicable to “puffing,” which is to say to general quality claims too vague to create warranted reliance.
Totz v. Continental Du Page Acura,
The second statutory claim is of a violation of the prohibition against gender discrimination in Illinois’ Human Rights Act, 775 ILCS 5/5-102. Smith argues that the AAA is a “place of public accommodation” within the meaning of the act because it is a business whose services are “offered, sold or otherwise made available to the public.” But there is no allegation of discrimination by the AAA. Argenbright is accused of having taken advantage of the opportunity that the Association created for it to strike the woman from the list of possible arbitrators, and that action (depending on the company’s motive) could conceivably be a form of gender discrimination (by analogy to
Batson),
though that we need not decide since there is no suggestion that Argenbright is a place of public accommodation. The charge against the AAA is that it failed to maintain gender diversity or balance, but such a failure, while it might conceivably violate an undertaking by the AAA, is not discrimination. Efforts to achieve gender diversity can constitute reverse discrimination; but failure to achieve diversity, failure in other words to engage in affirmative action, cannot. The law permits affirmative action in some circumstances, but it does not require it except as a remedy for discrimination by the defendant. E.g.,
Texas Dept. of Community Affairs v. Burdine,
Affirmed.
