ORDER
The defendant, Colorado Interstate Gas Company (CIG), moves the Court under the Federal Arbitration Act to stay the proceedings on the plaintiffs’ fifth cause of action Generally, in the fifth cause of action, the plaintiffs allege that CIG is liable for breach of contract because CIG failed to adequately compensate the plaintiffs for deregulated gas under the pricing formula of two take-or-pay contracts. 1 As relief, the plaintiffs demand judgment against CIG for the deficiency under the two contracts. Alternatively, the plaintiffs request a declaratory judgment on certain issues that are largely determinative of their contractual rights to payment from CIG. For the reasons noted below, the Court grants the defendant’s motion.
I.
At the heart of this dispute are the arbitration provisions of two take-or-pay contracts between the defendant, CIG, and the plaintiffs. The parties executed the two contracts in 1978, one in December and the other in April. They generally provide for CIG’s purchase of certain quantities of natural gas from the plaintiffs. In identical language, the contracts anticipate the deregulation of natural gas prices. They specify that, in the event of deregulation, the sales price of the natural gas is to be the average of the “two highest prices” being paid by companies in the industry for gas of “substantially the same quality and comparable terms and conditions,” ninety days after deregulation in specified Oklahoma counties. 2
*1078 II.
As the foundation for its motion, the defendant directs the Court to the Federal Arbitration Act. 9 U.S.C. §§ 1-4 (1982). In part, the Act targets the problems of delay and expense that are generally associated with courtroom litigation by making arbitration agreements enforceable against contractual parties.
See In re Mercury Construc. Corp. v. Moses H. Cone Memorial Hosp.,
Section 3 of the Arbitration Act authorizes federal courts to stay judicial proceedings as to particular issues when the courts are satisfied that the issues are indeed “referable to arbitration,” and the applicants for stays are not in “default.” 9 U.S.C. § 3.
3
Therefore, in ruling on the defendant’s motion, the Court must focus on two issues: (1) arbitrability; and (2) waiver.
See C. Itoh & Co. v. Jordan International Co.,
A. Arbitrability
The plaintiffs contend that a stay of the fifth cause of action would be erroneous because the conditions for invoking the contractual arbitration clauses have not been satisfied. According to the plaintiffs, by their terms the arbitration provisions are only activated by a dispute between the parties over the “two highest prices” and the practical meaning of “substantially the same quality and comparable terms and conditions.” Here, argue the plaintiffs, the limited nature of the communication between the parties has not provided the basis for a dispute regarding these two factors. The defendant has not unilaterally attempted to redetermine the natural gas price, nor has the defendant communicated to the plaintiffs its understanding of the highest-price and substantially-the-same components of the price term. Thus, the plaintiffs contend that there is no ripe arbitrable dispute.
The Court finds, however, that the plaintiffs’ interpretation of the two arbitration clauses is overly narrow, given the potent bias of the Arbitration Act in favor of arbitration. To effectuate the Act’s policy, the courts generally give a “liberal reading to arbitration agreements.”
Moses H. Cone Memorial Hosp. v. Mercury Construc. Corp.,
Under the two arbitration clauses, the arbitrators’ task is to arrive at a determination regarding the “fair value” of the deregulated natural gas. The two central determinations that make up the “fair value” go to the highest-price and substantially-the-same factors. The clauses’ drafters recognized the importance of these two factors and chose to highlight them. Such contractual emphasis, however, does not suggest an intent to exclude other issues arising in connection with the determination of “fair value.” 4 Thus, the parties’ dispute need not be precisely phrased in terms of the highest-price and substantially-the-same factors to be covered by the arbitration clauses.
With this broader reading of the arbitration clauses in mind, the Court concludes that the price redetermination issue, raised by the averments of the plaintiffs’ fifth cause of action, is arbitrable. The alleged infrequency of contact between the parties is immaterial. Following the deregulation of the plaintiffs’ gas, CIG informed the plaintiffs that, absent a request by the plaintiffs for a price redetermination, CIG’s contractual obligation was to pay the plaintiffs only a commercially reasonable price for their natural gas. In response, the plaintiffs purported to exercise their rights to request a price redetermination by asking CIG to inform them of “the highest price CIG paid for gas.” As described, this dialogue between CIG and the plaintiffs on price redetermination clearly evidences a dispute as to the “fair value” of the plaintiffs’ deregulated gas. As such, the dispute is covered by the arbitration provisions of the two contracts.
With respect to the defendant’s motion to stay, however, the Court’s finding of arbitrability on the price redetermination issue does not end the analysis. The plaintiffs assert that there are “additional matters other than the proper price for Plaintiffs’ gas” raised in their fifth cause of action. Specifically, the plaintiffs contend that the additional issues for resolution include the following: (1) whether the plaintiffs have the sole contractual right to call for a price redetermination; (2) whether the properly redetermined price for the plaintiffs’ gas is less than the price otherwise applicable under the contract; and (3) what volume of gas is covered by the properly redetermined price.
Under the parties’ agreement, however, the extent to which these “additional matters” are nonarbitrable is open to serious question. For example, in varying degrees, the plaintiffs’ three examples of “additional matters” appear to fall within the scope of the parties’ dispute on price rede-termination. As such, the three issues may be arbitrable as necessary sub-issues, to be resolved by the arbitrators in their ruling on the price redetermination question.
See Prudential Lines,
Absent the bar of waiver, then, the plaintiffs’ fifth cause of action is subject to stay under the Arbitration Act. The Court thus proceeds to examine the waiver issue.
B. Waiver
The plaintiffs argue that CIG has waived its right to enforce the arbitration provisions of the take-or-pay contracts because CIG has engaged in litigation on the price redetermination issue. Principally, in support of their waiver contention, the plaintiffs note that CIG first raised the price redetermination issue in a judicial forum— not the plaintiffs — by instituting a declaratory judgment action in May 1987. However, under the modern law of waiver, the Court finds that the plaintiffs’ reliance on CIG’s prior litigation is misplaced.
Because of their “healthy regard” for the pro-arbitration policy of federal law, courts do not infer waiver lightly.
Moses H. Cone,
In
Demsey,
the Second Circuit observed that: “Merely answering on the merits, asserting a counterclaim (or cross-claim) or participating in discovery, without more, will not necessarily constitute waiver.”
To support a finding of substantial prejudice, the applicant must “substantially invok[e] the litigation machinery.”
E.C. Ernst, Inc. v. Manhattan Construc. Co.,
Under the substantial-prejudice standard, judicial findings of waiver are rare.
See Demsey,
Viewed in the light of
Demsey,
CIG’s conduct in connection with its declaratory judgment action is wholly inadequate to support a finding of waiver. As filed on 15 May 1987 in Colorado state court, CIG’s complaint does state a request for a declaration as to CIG’s deficiency obligations, if any, under the take-or-pay contracts at issue here.
5
However, during the interval between the filing of CIG’s complaint in Colorado state court and the dismissal of the action without prejudice before this Court, on 25 May 1988, the records of the litigation reveal little activity by the parties. In fact, during the life of the declaratory judgment action, the only major endeavor by CIG appears to have been its defense against the then-defendants’ motion to dismiss or, alternatively, to stay. As it relates to the declaratory judgment action, CIG’s conduct hardly amounts to a “substantial[ ] invok[ation] [of] the litigation machinery,” which would support a finding of waiver.
E.C. Ernst Inc.,
The plaintiffs’ specific attempt to identify potential prejudice does not alter the Court’s finding against waiver. The plaintiffs note that, because there are nonarbi-trable issues raised by their fifth cause of action, the plaintiffs will be forced to return to the Court following arbitration for the resolution of these issues. According to the plaintiffs, the additional expenses the plaintiffs will incur, as a product of the return trip to the Court, will result in prejudice, and may be negated by the Court’s resolution of the price redetermination issue, as well as the other nonarbitrable issues, now. The Court finds no indication that the plaintiffs’ anticipated litigation expenses will be “unusually burdensome.”
Masthead Mac Drilling Corp.,
III.
The plaintiffs raise an alternative contention for rejection of CIG’s motion to stay, based on their request for a declaratory judgment in their fifth cause of action. 6 Assuming a ruling by the Court in favor of CIG on arbitrability, the plaintiffs argue that the Court should, nevertheless, deny CIG’s motion to stay because the plaintiffs’ request for a declaratory judgment presents “prerequisite issues” that the *1082 Court should resolve before the start of any arbitration proceedings. The plaintiffs’ request for a declaratory judgment sets out contractual issues which are key determinants of their rights to payment from CIG. The plaintiffs contend that, because these contractual issues are nonarbi-trable, the Court’s ruling on their request for a declaratory judgment, prior to arbitration, “would more accurately define the issues which are outside the scope of arbitration” and, thus, presumably further the goal of efficient dispute resolution.
The plaintiffs’ alternative argument for the denial of CIG’s motion rests heavily on the reasoning of
Lehigh Coal & Navigation Co. v. Central Railroad,
In opposition to the defendant’s motion to dismiss, the Lehigh plaintiff argued that, “without a precise definition of the scope of the arbitration and of the issues involved,” arbitration of the parties’ dispute could result in a substantial waste of resources. Id. at 365. The plaintiff reasoned as follows: if the arbitrator erroneously ruled in favor of the defendant on the scope-of-liability issue and, ultimately, the plaintiff triumphed on that issue before a reviewing court, the parties would have needlessly incurred significant expense analyzing alleged violations before 1938. The Lehigh court accepted the plaintiff’s rationale, noting the possibility that “the parties will be needlessly subjected to tremendous expense and fruitless consumption of time.” Id. at 365. Consequently, the court ruled against the defendant’s motion to dismiss. Citing its power to review the arbitrator’s decision for excesses, the court summarized its decision-making posture as to the scope-of-liability issue: “it is a case of ‘Eventually — why not now?’ ” 7
The
Lehigh
decision appears misguided, however, for it fails to give arbitration the benefit of the doubt. Based solely on speculation regarding future events in the litigation, the
Lehigh
court delayed the operation of the arbitral machinery. Yet, the Supreme Court has noted that, in enacting the Arbitration Act, Congress’ manifest intent was “to move the parties to an arbi-trable dispute out of court and into arbitration as quickly as possible.”
Moses H. Cone,
The Fifth Circuit’s decision in
Tai Ping Ins. Co. v. M/V Warschau,
illustrates this point well. In
Tai Ping,
the district court stayed the arbitration proceedings on the applicant’s cross-claim pending the resolution of the main litigation, based on the opponent’s concerns regarding the duplication of efforts that might result from permitting the arbitral resolution of the cross-claim issues first. The Fifth Circuit reversed, noting that the trial court had abused its discretion in light of the federal policy favoring arbitration.
*1083 The Court, therefore, declines to adopt the reasoning of the Lehigh decision. If appropriate, the Court will address the plaintiffs’ request for declaratory relief at the conclusion of the arbitration proceedings on the price redetermination issue.
IV.
By way of summary, the Court finds that (1) the plaintiffs’ fifth cause of action states an arbitrable issue as to price rede-termination, and (2) the defendant, CIG, has not waived its right to apply for a stay pursuant to the Federal Arbitration Act. In the exercise of its discretion, the Court stays the plaintiffs’ fifth cause of action in its entirety.
It is so ordered.
Notes
. By order dated 4 November 1988, the Court dismissed the plaintiffs' claim of conversion and prayer for punitive damages, stated in their fifth cause of action, without prejudice.
. In full, the provisions state that:
(c) If at any time during the term hereof the FERC (or any successor agency having jurisdiction over the rates charged for gas sold hereunder) ceases to have jurisdiction over the price charged hereunder, Seller shall have the right to request a redetermination of the price at which gas is to be sold thereafter. Any such request shall be made at Seller's option following the effective date of such deregulation. The initial redetermined price shall be effective 90 days following the date of deregulation and shall be the average of the two highest prices being paid 90 days following the date of deregulation by an interstate or intrastate pipeline company for gas of substantially the same quality and under comparable terms and conditions produced in Beaver, Cimarron, Ellis, Harper, Texas, and *1078 Woodward Counties, Oklahoma, which said price, as so redetermined shall be redetermined on the same basis and shall be effective at the expiration of each 2-year period thereafter, following the effective date of such deregulation; provided, however, that no price determined as provided in this Paragraph (c) shall become effective if such redetermined price is lower than the price then otherwise being paid under this Agreement.
In event the parties hereto are unable to agree on which contracts contain the "two highest prices,” or on what constitutes "substantially the same quality and comparable terms and conditions," then the matter shall be determined by arbitration____"
. In full, section 3 provides that:
If any suit or proceeding be brought in any of the courts of the United States upon any issue referable to arbitration under an agreement in writing for such arbitration, the court in which such suit is pending, upon being satisfied that the issue involved in such suit or proceeding is referable to arbitration under such an agreement, shall on application of one of the parties stay the trial of the action until such arbitration has been had in accordance with the terms of the agreement, providing the applicant for the stay is not in default in proceeding with such arbitration.
. The central focus of arbitrability analysis is, of course, the parties' intent.
See Hanes,
. In their brief, the plaintiffs extensively trace the history of the parties’ litigation on the price redetermination issue, beginning with CIG’s institution of a declaratory judgment action in Colorado state court in May 1987.
See
Plain- . tiffs’ Brief In Opposition To Defendant’s Motion To Stay Proceeding, at 1-4. Because the history of this litigation is relevant to the issues presently before the Court
(e.g.,
waiver), the Court takes judicial notice of the records in its files regarding CIG’s declaratory judgment action.
See St. Louis Baptist Temple v. FDIC,
. The novel nature of declaratory judgment actions, alone, does not preclude the Court from granting the defendant’s motion to stay.
See Municipal Energy Agency v. Big Rivers Elec. Corp.,
.
See 9
U.S.C. § 10(d) (permitting judicial vacation of arbitration awards where "the arbitrators exceeded their powers"). Contrary to the apparent view in
Lehigh,
under Section 10, the scope of judicial discretion to vacate arbitration awards is narrowly defined, reflecting the federal policy favoring arbitration.
See Mobil Oil v. Asamera Oil,
