The recent proliferation of so-called “hedge-to-arrive” contracts for the sale of grain has pitted many American farmers against their counterparts in the grain storage and marketing industry. The case before us involves these contracts, and these players, but it also wends its way into questions of arbitration and attorney’s fees. A familiarity with hedge-to-arrive contracts will be helpful to understanding the issues in the case.
I. INTRODUCTION
Farmers often contract to sell grain to grain elevators at some specific time in the future. Such contracts guarantee farmers a buyer for them grain and guarantee grain elevators a supply of a commodity. The contracts generally specify the quantity and quality of grain to be sold, as well as a delivery date and a price for the grain. Both parties, by agreeing in advance to the grain price, take a risk that the market will move against them. The farmer’s risk is that grain prices will be higher at the time of delivery, thus causing him to forego profit by selling at too low a price; the elevator’s risk is that prices will drop, causing it to purchase unduly expensive grain. “Hedge-to-arrive” contracts (HTA contracts) attempt to alleviate these risks by introducing price flexibility.
See The Andersons, Inc. v. Horton Farms, Inc.,
The Commodity Exchange Act (CEA), codified at 7 U.S.C. § 1
et seq.,
and regulations promulgated under it, govern contracts for sale of a commodity for future delivery — futures contracts. The CEA specifically excludes from the definition of futures contracts — and thus from its reach — the sale of a cash commodity for deferred shipment or delivery' — cash forward contracts. See 7 U.S.C. § la(ll);
see also The Andersons,
II. Baciíground
Lowell Harter was, until his retirement, a corn farmer in Grant County, Indiana. “The Andersons” is a corporation that operates grain elevators around the Midwest. The Andersons was not, at the time of the transactions in question, a futures commission merchant (FCM) registered with the Commodity Futures Trading Commission. 3 In 1993, The Andersons began marketing HTA contracts. The Andersons solicited Harter, who entered into five such contracts in November 1994. Harter contends that an employee of The Andersons told him the contracts were “no risk” plays on the futures market. The Andersons counters that the contracts clearly stated that “the commodities represented under this contract will be tangibly exchanged.” Appellee’s Br. at 4. The Andersons implies that Harter understood that the contracts called for him to turn over corn or its cash equivalent at some point in the future, suggesting that the risk of loss was apparent.
Harter claims that a few months later, presumably at the delivery obligation date, The Andersons notified him that he owed them $16,941.69 (we assume — neither party specifies — that The Andersons requested and Harter refused delivery of the corn, thus giving rise to an obligation to furnish its cash equivalent). Harter was sur *549 prised, he says, because he thought the HTAs were “no risk.” Harter says that the parties agreed he would tender a check for the amount, and they would simultaneously enter into new HTA contracts designed to capitalize on the market and generate enough profit to cover the initial loss. See Appellant’s Br.I at 3. 4 The Andersons does not directly respond to this, but states that the parties agreed to extend the delivery periods for the contracts, or roll the contracts forward.
In May of 1995, apparently when the new delivery obligation date arrived, The Andersons sought delivery of the corn, which Harter again refused. The Andersons then told Harter he owed it approximately $50,000. The Andersons explains that this figure represents “the difference between the market price of corn and the price for the corn established by the contracts.” Appellee’s Br. at 6-7. Harter says that the figure represents the entire loss throughout the HTA contract period, less a $16,000 payment Harter made to cover the initial loss. Appellant’s Br.I at 3.
Harter filed a class action lawsuit in the Northern District of Illinois against The Andersons, its subsidiary AISC and introducing broker Iowa Grain. Appellant’s Supp.App.1 at 24-35
(Harter v. Iowa Grain Co.,
No. 96 C 2936 (N.D. Ill. July 26, 1999) (first amended complaint)). Har-ter later dropped Iowa Grain, which Har-ter had erroneously believed to be The Andersons’ principal, from the suit.
See
Appellant’s Supp. App.II at 218-225
(Harter v. Iowa Grain,
III. The ORDER Compelling Arbitration
The contracts at issue provide for the arbitration of “any disputes or controversies arising out of’ those contracts.
See, e.g.,
Appellant’s Supp.App.1 at 71-82 (duplicates of Harter HTA contracts). The Federal Arbitration Act provides that a court must stay its proceedings and compel arbitration if it is satisfied that an issue before it is arbitrable under the parties’ agreement.
See
9 U.S.C. § 3. The district court in the present case did just that, and Harter protests. We review the district court’s order compelling arbitration
*550
de novo. See Matthews v. Rollins Hudig Hall Co.,
Under section 4 of the Federal Arbitration Act, 9 U.S.C. § 4, a federal court must order arbitration “once it is satisfied that ‘the making of the agreement for arbitration or the failure to comply [with the arbitration agreement] is not in issue.’ ”
Prima Paint Corp. v. Flood & Conklin Mfg. Co.,
In this respect, Harter’s case is a duplicate of
Sweet Dreams Unlimited, Inc. v. Dial-A- Mattress Int’l, Ltd.,
We held in Sweet Dreams that where a dispute has its origins in an agreement that calls for arbitration, the court cannot decide the merits because the dispute “arises out of’ the agreement and is subject to arbitration. Id. at 642-43. Therefore, in Sweet Dreams, whether the marketer was the purchaser of a registered or unregistered franchise under state statute was, pursuant to'the Federal Arbitration Act, a matter for the arbitrator and not for *551 the court. See id. Just so here. 5 The Harter contracts say that any dispute “arising out of’ the contract will be arbitrated. See, e.g., Supp.App.I at 71-83 (duplicates of HTA contracts; attorney’s fee provision found at ¶ 5 in each). Harter, like the marketer in Sweet Dreams, makes a legal argument that he is protected by a statute that would invalidate the agreement. Because his contentions “arise out of’ his contract, they are matters for the arbitrator.
Next, Harter embarks down an alternate rhetorical route to arrive at his preferred destination — federal court. He suggests that even if the court cannot decide the merits of his claim, the court must
assume
that the claim is valid for the purpose of evaluating the motion to compel arbitration.
6
If we were to accept this sophistry, we would essentially be directing the case to the district court. For if, based on our assumption, the arbitrators have no power, who but the court may hear this case? Fortunately, the argument is meritless, and we need not tax the district court further. Harter marshals
Schacht v. Beacon Insurance Co.,
In
Schacht,
a reinsurance company contracted to cover the losses of an insurance company.
Not easily deterred, Harter makes an alternative effort to keep this dispute out of the arbitrators’ hands. He argues that even if the arbitration clauses
are
valid, a court is better suited to pass on the legal status of the contracts than is an arbitrator. This argument is not altogether fanciful. The Ninth Circuit has stated that questions of law regarding statutory rights are best left to judicial interpretation. Mar
chese v. Shearson Hayden Stone, Inc.,
Though
Marchese
nicely reflects Har-ter’s point of view, it does not persuade us. Why? First, the CEA claim at issue here— that Harter’s HTA contracts are futures instruments rather than cash market transactions—is not a pure question of law, but requires a fact-intensive inquiry. We have stated that “[a]lthough cash forward contracts and futures contracts are easily distinguishable in theory, it is frequently difficult in practice to tell whether a particular arrangement between two parties is a bona fide cash forward contract for the delivery of grain or whether it is a mechanism for price speculation on the futures
*553
market.”
Lachmund,
Harter takes a final swipe at the arbitration order. He rightly recounts that arbitration is a matter of contract, and that “a party cannot be required to submit to arbitration any dispute which he has not agreed so to submit.”
See United Steelworkers, 36
Equally implausible is Harter’s claim that The Andersons did not intend the NGFA to arbitrate the claim. He furnishes us records showing that the NGFA had not arbitrated claims of fraud or misrepresentation before the groundswell of HTA disputes. This evidence does not suggest that The Andersons did not intend NGFA to arbitrate such a dispute. In fact, if any inference can be drawn from the fact that the NGFA began hearing fraud and misrepresentation claims as soon as the HTA controversies arose, it is that the NGFA was the natural forum to which the parties to these disputes turned. We therefore affirm the district court’s grant of the motion to compel arbitration.
IV. StRütüRal Bias of the NGFA Arbitration Panel
The Andersons asked the district court to confirm the NGFA panel’s award, which it did. Harter now argues to us, as he did below, that this decision was erroneous because the NGFA panel was biased against him. When reviewing the district court’s confirmation of the arbitration award, we decide questions of law
de novo
and review findings of fact for clear error.
See Employers Ins. of Wausau v. Banco Be Seguros Del Estado,
Parties to an arbitration contract agree to trade procedural niceties for expeditious dispute resolution.
See Dean v. Sullivan,
Some notable jurists have harbored similar suspicions about the fate of customers appearing before arbitration panels populated by industry “insiders.” For instance, when the Second Circuit required a securities buyer to arbitrate a fraud claim under the 1933 Securities Act against his broker, Judge Clark dissented.
See Wilko v. Swan,
The Seventh Circuit adopted this reasoning in
Weissbuch v. Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Inc.,
However perceptive Judge Swygert and Judge Clark may have been, the opposing view favoring arbitration has firmly won out. In 1989, the Supreme Court explicitly overruled
Wilko,
stating that it had “fallen far out of step with our current strong endorsement of the federal statutes favoring [arbitration as a] method of resolving disputes.”
Rodriguez de Quijas v. Shearson/American Express, Inc.,
To avoid the arbitration pitfalls identified by Judges Swygert and Clark, we have required arbitrators to provide a “fundamentally fair hearing.”
See, e.g., Generica Ltd. v. Pharmaceutical Basics, Inc.,
Although as a matter of first impression we might sympathize with Harter’s frustration, we are in the mainstream in rejecting his “structural bias” argument.
11
The First Circuit recently rejected an argument that an arbitration panel comprising financial employers was so inclined to
*556
side with employers that it could not adjudicate the claim of a female worker alleging gender discrimination.
See Rosenberg v. Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Inc.,
Thus, we will vacate the arbitration award only if Harter can show that the NGFA panel had
direct
bias against him. This standard is difficult to meet. For instance, in one of the few cases vacating an award because of arbitral bias, the Second Circuit objected when a son served as arbitrator of a dispute involving a local unit of an international union of which his father was president.
See Morelite Constr. Corp. v. New York City Dist. Council Carpenters Benefit Funds,
Harter observes that the NGFA is an organization of grain merchandisers and their affiliates.
See
Appellant’s Br.I at 30-31. Apparently, however, a number of farmer-owned cooperatives are also NGFA members.
See Horton Farms,
Under NGFA arbitration rules, an aggrieved party must first file a complaint with the NGFA national secretary. The parties then fully brief the dispute, and either party may request oral argument, though the requesting party bears the cost. The NGFA national secretary then appoints a three-member arbitration committee selected from the membership. The individual arbitrators must have expertise in the industry sector at issue, but must be commercially disinterested in the particular dispute. See Amicus Br. at 12. Arbitrators must disclose any bias or financial interest that could influence their analysis; either party may object to any of the arbitrators. See id. The panel issues written opinions, and the parties may appeal. These facts suggest significant procedural safeguards for the parties.
Finally, -Harter argues that the panel demonstrated its bias by granting an unsubstantiated request by The Andersons for attorney’s fees, and delegating to the NGFA national secretary the task of verifying The Andersons’ expenditures. It is true that, when a party claims arbitral bias, we must “scan the record” for evidence of partiality.
See, e.g., Health Servs.,
V. ATTORNEY’S FEES
Harter finally complains that the district judge erred in finding that The Andersons was entitled to recover attorney’s fees incurred for proceedings following the arbitration. Harter protests the award on two grounds: the Federal Arbitration Act does not authorize post-arbitration awards of attorney’s fees and the contract authorizing fee shifting does not apply to proceedings ancillary to enforcement of the arbitration decision. We review the district court’s award of attorney’s fees for abuse of discretion.
See Connolly v. National Sch. Bus Serv., Inc.,
As for Harter’s first contention, he is correct that the Federal Arbitration Act does not authorize a district court to award attorney’s fees to a party who successfully confirmed an arbitration award in federal court.
See Menke v. Monchecourt,
In a similar ease in the Ninth Circuit, one party to an arbitral agreement moved to vacate the arbitral award, as Harter did here.
See Lafarge Conseils et Etudes v. Kaiser Cement & Gypsum Corp.,
Harter next argues that the trial judge erred in awarding fees for litigation ancillpry to The Andersons’ enforcement of the arbitral. award. This “collateral” litigation included:
• Harter’s unsuccessful interlocutory appeal from the district court order compelling arbitration. See Appellant’s Supp.App.II at 218-25 (Harter v. Iowa Grain Co., No. 96-3907 (7th Cir. July 15, 1998) (unpublished order)) (also found at1999 WL 754333 ).
• Harter’s appeal of Rule 11 sanctions against his attorneys, imposed for naming Iowa Grain as a defendant, when there was questionable proof that Iowa Grain was linked to The Andersons in such a way as to make it liable for any alleged wrongdoing. Apparently, The Andersons was involved in discovery related to the litigation, which focused on whether AISC or The Andersons was an agent of Iowa Grain. See Appellant’s Supp. App.II at 218-25 (Harter v. Iowa Grain Co., No. 97-2671 (7th Cir. July 15, 1998) (unpublished order reversing award of sanctions against Harter’s attorney)) (also found at1999 WL 754333 ).
• Harter’s appeal of the district court’s decision to dismiss as a defendant The Andersons’ subsidiary AISC. Harter .initially named AISC, The Andersons’ wholly owned subsidiary, apparently believing that AISC did business as The Andersons (they were in fact separate entities). The district court conditionally dismissed AISC, and we refused to review the dismissal, stating that until the conditions upon which AISC could be reinstated were moot, the dismissal was not a final, appealable order. See Appellant’s Supp. App.II at 218-25 (Harter v. Iowa Grain Co., No. 96-4074 (7th Cir. July 15, 1998) (unpublished order dismissing interlocutory appeal)) (also found at1999 WL 754333 ).
• The Andersons’ efforts 'to limit the scope of Harter’s subpoena of the NGFA, served after the NGFA arbitration award was announced. Harter requested from the NGFA information that would help it prove arbitral bias. See Appellant’s App.II at 4 (Harter v. Iowa Grain Co., No. 96 C 2936 (N.D.Ill. Oct. 28, 1998) (memorandum opinion and order regarding attorney’s fees)).
• The Andersons’ request for an injunction forcing Harter to place in escrow profits he received on the sale of farm assets. See id.
Harter urges that the fee-shifting provision in-the contract applies only to attorney’s fees required to pursue a breach of contract action against him. He contends that the proceedings listed above are unrelated to The Andersons’ breach of contract claim, and thus do not come within the
*559
ambit of the fee-shifting provision. The district judge disagreed, stating that “in each instance Andersons would not have been required to incur, but for Harter’s contractual breaches, Andersons’ attorney’s fees and related expenses....”
See
Appellant’s App.II at 3
(Harter v. Iowa Grain Co.,
No. 96 C 2936 (N.D. Ill. Oct. 28, 1998) (memorandum opinion and order regarding attorney’s fees)). We review this decision for abuse of discretion.
See, e.g., Kossman v. Calumet County,
Whether the contract’s fee-shifting provision covers satellite litigation is a question of contract interpretation. We interpret the contract with reference to Illinois law.
13
In Illinois, “[pjrovisions for attorney’s fees are to be construed strictly, and such fees cannot be recovered for any services, unless so provided by the [contract].”
Northern Trust Co. v. Sanford,
In a case that more closely resembles Harter’s, an auctioneer received a winning bid for farm equipment, but the purchaser’s check was returned for insufficient funds.
See Kruse v. Kuntz,
In this case, Harter’s contract states that “[f]ailure to fulfill this contract will result in minimum contract cancellation charges to the seller [Harter].... Seller shall also be liable for The Andersons’ attorney fees, cost of collection, plus interest.” Appellant’s Supp. App.I at 71-83 (duplicates of HTA contracts; attorney’s fee provision found at ¶ 5 in each). Following the example of Zimmerman and Arrington, we interpret this provision to limit The Andersons to fees incurred to collect its damages under the contract. Thus, applying the principles of Kruse and Helland, it seems that only actions necessary to The Andersons’ collection effort are covered by the attorney’s fee provision. Harter need not reimburse The Andersons for its discretionary litigation efforts unnecessary to the collection. Clearly, opposing Harter’s interlocutory appeal from the district court order compelling arbitration was necessary to collection of damages, These portions of the award are confirmed. Also necessary to The Andersons’ collection of damages was The Andersons’ request for an injunction forcing Harter to place in escrow profits he received on the sale of farm assets.
The district court, in approving attorney’s fees for other collateral litigation, stated that “but for” Harter’s actions, The Andersons would not have incurred legal bills. With respect, we believe that Illinois authorities require a more direct link between the losing party’s acts and the winning party’s attorney’s fees than a “but for” relation. At some point, Harter’s opponents must take responsibility for their own trial strategy. For instance, clearly
unnecessary
to the collection of damages was The Andersons’ involvement in a co-defendant’s effort to recover Rule 11 sanctions
from
Harter’s attorney. Although the district judge correctly stated that but for Harter’s legal complaint, co-defendant Iowa Grain would not have moved for Rule 11 sanctions against Harter, that conclusion does not justify attorney’s fees. Rather, we must ask whether Harter’s actions made the collateral litigation
necessary to
the collection of fees. We have previously held, in an unpublished opinion, that Harter’s lawyer did nothing so egregious that sanctions were warranted.
See Harter v. Iowa Grain Co.,
No. 96-3907 (7th Cir.1998) (unpublished order) (also found at
The most difficult question we address in terms of attorney’s fees is whether Har-ter should be required to repay The Andersons for its appellate defense of the district court’s decision to dismiss The Andersons’ subsidiary, AISC. Whether AISC was named as a defendant seems anything but crucial to The Andersons’ right to collect damages in this case. Further, the contract clearly states, “SeEer shall also be liable for The Andersons’ attorney fees ...” but not a subsidiary’s fees. These two factors militate against fee shifting in this case. But Harter initially named AISC as a defendant because he believed that AISC did business as The Andersons.
See Harter,
Harter’s last gasp is a series of complaints about the fees themselves: they were not properly documented, they are excessive, they cover non-legal work, they are duplicative and they were not billed contemporaneously.
See
AppeEant’s Br.II at 20-37. Again, a court’s award of attorney’s fees is reviewed for abuse of discretion.
See Ustrak v. Fairman,
The Andersons has provided billing records generated by its law firm, Foley & Lardner, which specify the task completed, the time (in 10- minute increments) spent on the task, and the identity of the attorney who completed the task. 14 Descriptions of conferences and phone conversations specify who participated, and descriptions of legal research and analysis specify the motion, hearing or document on which the attorney worked. See AppeEant’s App.II at 44-87. The Andersons has also submitted an affidavit stating that the bhling records accurately reflect Foley & Lardner’s work on behalf of The Andersons.
Relatedly, Harter argues that the fees must be unreasonable because together with the fees awarded in arbitration, The Andersons wiE have recovered $140,000 in order to enforce a $55,000 *562 claim. However, as the trial judge pointed out, Harter elected to bring a class action putting millions of dollars at stake. Further, Harter decided to take interlocutory appeals, thereby driving up the fees at issue. In short, Harter raised the stakes in this litigation, and now must pay for that strategy. 15
Harter argues that “excessive and duplicative” work has been charged. What is excessive is a matter of opinion, and under
Ustrak,
it is the district court’s opinion that matters.
See
VI. Conclusion
The district court correctly determined that under the parties’ contract, the legal status of the HTA contracts and the resulting resolution of claims was a matter for the arbitrators. We Affirm the district court’s order compelling arbitration. We also agree with the district court that the NGFA arbitration panel did not demonstrate direct bias—the only kind of bias sufficient to require vacation of an arbitral award—in its adjudication of this dispute. We AffiRM the district court’s confirmation of the arbitral award. We agree with the district court’s conclusion that Harter is responsible for attorney’s fees arising from litigation collateral to the arbitration, except for the fees The Andersons incurred in relation to the Rule 11 litigation and the opposition to the NGFA subpoena. We Reverse the district court’s award of attorney’s fees for these two matters, and Affirm the remainder of the award.
Notes
.
See, e.g., Lachmund v. ADM Investor Servs., Inc.,
.
See, e.g., In re Grain Land Coop.,
CFTC Docket No. 97-1 (Nov. 6, 1998);
In re Competitive Strategies for Agric. Ltd.,
CFTC Docket No. 98-4 (Aug. 24, 1998). One district court has refused to dismiss a claim similar to Harter’s on a Rule 12(b)(6) motion, reasoning that whether the HTAs in that case were futures contracts was a question of fact rather than of law.
See Gunderson v. ADM Investor Servs., Inc.,
. At that time, a subsidiary, Andersons Investment Services Corp. (AISC), cleared its transactions through FCM Iowa Grain. The same individual manages The Andersons’ facility and the AISC operation at the Dunkirk, Indiana, office with which Harter dealt.
. Harter originally brought two appeals, which have been consolidated, but he filed separate briefs and separate appendices. We will refer to the first brief, appendix and supplemental appendix, pertaining to the Commodity Exchange Act claims, as Br.I, App.I and Supp.App.1. We will refer to the second set of materials, pertaining to attorney’s fees, as Br.II, App.II and Supp. App.II.
. Harter implies that because the dispute here involves interpretation of a federal statute, rather than a common-law claim, the dictates of the Federal Arbitration Act are trumped by the Commodity Exchange Act. He is wrong. Numerous courts have held that claims under the CEA are arbitrable.
See, e.g., Tamari v. Bache & Co. (Lebanon) S.A.L., 565
F.2d 1194, 1200 (7th Cir.1977)
(Tamari II). See also Smoky Greenhaw Cotton Co., Inc. v. Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith,
. On the day we heard oral arguments in
Harter,
a separate Seventh Circuit panel spoke for the first time on the legality of HTA contracts.
See Lachmund v. ADM Investor Servs., Inc.,
. For the purposes of argument, the district court did indulge Harter’s legal contentions. The court assumed that the HTA contracts were futures contracts, but decided that that assumption did not take Harter as far as he would like. The court concluded that even if The Andersons was a futures commission merchant because it dealt in a "futures” contract, and even if it was therefore governed by CFTC ai'bitration regulations, this particular dispute was not susceptible to those regulations. The court hypothesized that Harter was not a "customer” protected by the regulations because The Andersons did not directly trade on the Chicago Board of Trade. See 17 C.F.R. § 180.1(b). The court found that the dispute was not a "claim or grievance” governed by the regulations because it required the testimony of third parties over whom the relevant contract market did not have jurisdiction. See 17 C.F.R. § 180.1(a). We do not necessarily agree. As Harter urges, if the HTAs were futures instruments, then The Andersons arguably might have traded on the Board of Trade, and arguably should have been registered with the Board of Trade. The Board may then have had jurisdiction over some of the key witnesses. But our disagreement with the district court on this point is of no moment. The court was not obliged to adopt Harter’s legal view of the contracts, and we are not obliged to apply legal results that follow from them. The status of the contracts was a matter for the arbitrators alone. No matter how Harter phrases his disagreement with the district court on this point, he will be rudely awakened by the holdings of Sweet Dreams and like precedents.
. Further, it seems to us
Mitsubishi Motors Corp. v. Soler Chrysler-Plymouth,
. About one thousand grain merchandising companies, which operate more than five thousand facilities, belong to the NGFA. Appellant's Br.I at 30 n. 28. Of the NGFA's grain elevator members, about 45% offer HTA contracts. Amicus Br. at 13 n. 10.
. Notably, the legislative and judicial enthusiasm for arbitration does not extend to arbitration clauses contained in contracts of adhesion. The Federal Arbitration Act explicitly allows the courts to give relief where the party opposing arbitration presents "well-supported claims that the agreement to arbitrate resulted from the sort of fraud or overwhelming economic power that would provide grounds 'for the revocation of any contract.’ ”
Mitsubishi,
. This position reflects the Supreme Court's admonition in
Mitsubishi Motors
that courts should presume the parties’ selected arbitrators are competent and impartial until presented with evidence to the contrary.
. Harter relies heavily on
Hoffman v. Cargill, Inc.,
But in the present case, the question whether the contracts were cash or futures instruments did not appear to require probing for internal information held by either party, meaning-that the NGFA’s discovery limits did not obviously hinder the panel's ability to decide the case. So even if we were somehow bound by the district court’s opinion in Hoffman, it would not change the outcome here.
. Harter is a citizen of Indiana; The Andersons is incorporated in Ohio. The Andersons maintains a post office box in Chicago, Illinois, and instructs farmers that payments should be made to that address. Moreover, Harter suggests that if the HTA contracts were futures contracts, they should have been traded on the Chicago Board of Trade; The Andersons’ relationship to the CBOT is also a factor in the resolution of the legal status of the contracts. Further, Iowa Grain, originally a defendant, is incorporated in Illinois, where the lawsuit was filed. The contract itself, which envisioned that all disputes would be resolved in arbitration, states that it is made "in accordance with the Grain Trade Rules” of the NGFA and that any disputes would be arbitrated by the NGFA, "pursuant to its arbitration rules.” Appellee’s App. at 213. Thus, the parties did not select a state law to apply to the contract. Ordinarily, this would require us to undertake a choice of law analysis. However, Harter assumes that Illinois law applies. See Appellant’s Br.II at 8-9. And The Andersons does not dispute this assumption; in fact, it cites two Illinois cases dealing with the proper method of billing for attorney’s fees. Appel-lee’s Br. at 44. Where the parties agree on the law that governs a dispute, and there is at least a "reasonable relation” between the dispute and the forum whose law has been selected by the parties, "we will forego an independent analysis of the choice-of-law issue and apply [the parties’ choice],”
Bird v. Centennial Ins. Co.,
. Some billing entries are attributed to unidentified timekeepers. Although this practice is not ideal, we recognize that in large law firms with numerous billing attorneys, it may occasionally be unavoidable. It does not vitiate this otherwise adequate fee petition. Similarly, billing separately for services other than attorney time is a well-accepted law firm practice. We agree with the district court that such non-legal billings were proper.
. Harter continues his aggressive tactics by representing to us that Foley & Lardner engaged in fraud. Foley & Lardner's billing records furnished to the NGFA include entries that read "Redact Anderson bills so they only reflect 'Harter v. Andersons.' " Harter contends that this redaction was intended to "dupe the NGFA into granting its full request [for fees.]” Unlike Harter, we are not at all sure what is meant by this entry; the firm could have been trying to make sure Harter was not billed for Andersons’ work unrelated to his claim. To conclude that the firm was engaging in fraud is unfounded and inflammatory. The district court had an opportunity to review the records, probe counsel for their meaning and entertain the "fraud” argument. We are satisfied that if it did not view this entry as fraud, it did not err.
