McDERMOTT INTERNATIONAL, INC., Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
LLOYDS UNDERWRITERS OF LONDON, John Richard Ludbrooke Youell
as rep of those Certain Underwriters Subscribing
to Memorandum of Insurance No. 104207,
Defendant-Appellant.
No. 91-3568.
United States Court of Appeals,
Fifth Circuit.
Oct. 3, 1991.
Rehearing and Rehearing En Banc
Denied Oct. 30, 1991.
Chuck D. Barlow, Carlton Reeves, Luther T. Munford, Phelps Dunbar, Marks, Claverie & Sims, Jackson, Miss., James H. Roussel, Danny G. Shaw, Harry S. Redmon, Jr., Bruce V. Schewe, Phelps Dunbar, New Orleans, La., for defendants-appellants.
John V. Baus, Bruce J. Brumfield, Nan Roberts Eitel, Jones, Walker, Waechter, Poitevent, Carrere & Denegre, New Orleans, La., Arden J. Lea, W. Clay McGehee, Lea, Plavnicky & Moseley, New Orleans, La., for plaintiff-appellee.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Louisiana.
Before REAVLEY, JONES and SMITH, Circuit Judges.
REAVLEY, Circuit Judge:
The district court remanded this case to state court on the ground that an insurance policy issued by underwriters at Lloyds, London (Underwriters) to McDermott International, Inc. (McDermott) gave McDermott the right to choose the forum where the policy's arbitration provision would be enforced. We consider the court's remand order appealable and vacate it.
I. BACKGROUND
McDermott bought an all risks installation floater policy from Underwriters every year from 1952 to 1989. This case concerns construction of the following two clauses in the 1989 policy:
8. Service of Suit Clause
It is agreed that in the event of the failurе of Underwriters hereon to pay any amount claimed to be due hereunder, Underwriters hereon, at the request of the Assured will submit to the jurisdiction of any court of competent jurisdiction within the United States and will comply with all requirements necessary to give such Court jurisdiction and all matters arising hereunder shall be determined in accordance with the law and practice of such court.
It is further agreed that service of process in such suit may be made upon Messrs. Mendes & Mount, Three Park Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10016 and that in any suit instituted against any one of them upon this contract, Underwriters will abide by the final decision of such Court or of any Appellate Court in the event of an appeal.
The above-named are authorized and directed to accept service of process on behalf of Underwriters in any such suit and/or upon the request of the Assured to give a written undertaking to the Assured that they will enter a general appearance upon Underwriters' behalf in the event such a suit shall be instituted.
. . . . .
9. Arbitration
All differences arising out of this contract shall be referred to the decision of any arbitrator to be appointed by the parties in difference, or if they cannot agree upon a single arbitrator to the decision of two arbitrators, one to be appointed in writing by each of the parties and in case of disagreement between the two arbitrators to the decision of any umpire to be appointed in writing by the arbitrators or by a court of competent jurisdiction within the limits of the United States of America. It is agreed that the place of arbitration shall be designated by the Assured and the expenses in connection with the arbitration shall be borne equally between the parties in difference.
McDermott's subsidiary, the Babcock and Wilcox Company (B & W), supplies utilities with electric power generation equipment and structures. In 1989, a chemical reaction irreparably damaged two air heat exchangers that B & W was installing for Baltimore Gas & Electric Company.
McDermott submitted a policy claim for its losses from the Baltimore incident, Underwriters denied coverage, and McDermott sued on the policy for $39,247,000 in Louisiana state court. Underwriters demanded that McDermott submit to arbitration of the issues in the state suit. The demand prompted McDermott to file a separate petition asking the Louisiana court to declare that McDermott had no obligation to arbitrate.
Underwriters removed both suits to federal district court under 9 U.S.C. § 205. McDermott filed a motion to remand the cases. The district court held that City of Rose City v. Nutmeg Ins. Co.,
McDermott asks us to review the district court's remand order either by appeal or writ of mandamus.
II. APPELLATE JURISDICTION
We hold that the district court's remand order is appealable, but this requires explanation. We begin with the proposition that the availability and means of appellate review for a district court's remand order depend entirely on the court's reason for issuing the order.1
A. UNREVIEWABLE REMAND ORDERS
Congress denies us authority to reviеw remand orders that district courts issue under 28 U.S.C. § 1447(c) for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction. 28 U.S.C. § 1447(d). And although the question is presently undecided, section 1447(d) may also preclude our review of a district court's granting of a timely motion to remand due to defects in removal procedure. In re Shell Oil Co.,
B. APPELLATE REVIEW BY APPEAL VERSUS MANDAMUS
The parties dispute whether review is appropriate by appeal or mandamus. These methods of review are mutually exclusive, Moses H. Cone Memorial Hosp. v. Mercury Construction Corp.,
In Thermtron, the Supreme Court held that remand is only allowed in accordance with section 1447(c) and a writ of mandamus under 28 U.S.C. § 1651 is the proper tool for securing a district judge's compliance with this rule. Id.
The Court next chose between direct appeal and mandamus in Moses H. Cone. Like this case, Moses H. Cone concerned the question of whether the arbitrability of a dispute between a hospital and a contractor would be decided in federal or state court. The hospital sued the contractor in state court for a declaration that their dispute was not subject to arbitration. The contractor then filed a separate action in federal court to resolve the same arbitrability question. The district court exercised its discretion under Colorado River Water Conservation District v. United States,
The Court last considered remand review in Carnegie-Mellon University v. Cohill,
Cohill is important to our resolution of this case because it expressly precludes our reading Thermtron to require statutory authorization for all remands. Id. at 621. However, Cohill does not address the issue of whether review of a district court's discretionary remand order should be by appeal under Moses H. Cone 's rationale4 or by mandamus. The Court simply affirmed the en banc court's final decision to refuse mandamus. Although the defendant employer could have put before the Supreme Court the panel decision to review the district court's remand order by mandamus rather than appeal, it did not do so. See Brief of Petitioners, Carnegie-Mellon University v. Cohill,
We read Thermtron, Moses H. Cone, and Cohill to instruct that we review the district court's remand order, which the court issued pursuant to the parties' contract, on appeal under Cohen's collateral order doctrine. Thermtron requires review by mandamus only when a district court has remanded a case without authority to do so. When the Court issued Thermtron, a district court's only authority for remanding a case was section 1447(c), and review of section 1447(c) remands is barred by section 1447(d). Then Cohill established that remand is appropriate when a district court has discretion to dismiss a case. This court has recognized a district court's authority to remand a case pursuant to the parties' contract. Nutmeg,
Thermtron and its progeny use mandamus to require district judges to decide issues of remand on proper grounds. In Moses H. Cone, however, the Court never questioned that it was within the district court's discretion to stay the federal proceeding pursuant to Colorado River. Moses H. Cone simply explained that the district court abused that discretion.
Our reasoning and decision as to the proper means of review of the district court's order accord with the four other courts of appeals that have considered this question. Foster v. Chesapeake Ins. Co., Ltd.,
This court has never before reviewed a district court's remand order and found that the court issued the order on a nonstatutory, yet permissible, basis. Our prior cases all concern courts' attempts to remand for reasons other than those allowed under federal statute, contract, or discretionary dismissal jurisprudence.8 See In re Shell Oil Co.,
To summarize, a district court may remand a case pursuant to a statute, a contract between the parties, or when it has discretion to dismiss the action. We review by mandamus allegations that the court has remanded for any other reason. Congress prohibits us from reviewing remand orders based on section 1447(c). We review contractual remand orders by direct appeal.
III. MERITS
Our resolution of this case is complicated by the fact that the parties by their contract, Congress by statute, and this court by precedent have all stated legal standards that we must apply to the issues now disputed. Our decision accords with these standards while respecting the legitimate concern of the international business community for prompt and predictable resolution of forum choice disputes.
A. THE PARTIES: CONTRACT AMBIGUITY
We review the district court's interpretation of the policy de novo, USX Corp. v. Tanenbaum,
1. Service-of-Suit as Alternate Forum Selection Clause
When a policy's service-of-suit clause applies, its probable effect is to waive the insurer's removal rights. See, e.g., Nutmeg,
If the service-of-suit clause is a forum selection clause, the arbitration clause is a co-equal forum selection clause. See Mitsubishi Motors Corp. v. Soler Chrysler-Plymouth, Inc.,
Underwriters executed the policy thinking that a subset of all disputes--those arising from the policy--would be determined by arbitration. The service-of-suit clause's "failure to pay a claim" provision could be interpreted consistent with the arbitration clause to apply to suits concerning enforcement of an arbitration award. See NECA Ins., Ltd. v. National Union Fire Ins. Co. of Pittsburgh, Pa.,
The parties did not consider in their contract that a court ordеr may be necessary to compel arbitration. It is just as likely that the parties did not provide for this contingency in their agreement as it is that they intended the service-of-suit clause to apply to all disputes not actually arbitrated. That the service-of-suit clause applies only when Underwriters refuses to pay, instead of "to all disputes not submitted to arbitration," increases the plausibility of the former interpretation. We also wonder why Underwriters would secure an almost infinitely broad arbitration clause and also permit McDermott to attack it in the court of its choice.
2. Service-of-Suit as Submission to Personal Jurisdiction
When McDermott first bought a Lloyds, London policy containing the service-of-suit clause in 1952, this court did not enforce agreements to waive removal rights. See Carbon Black Export, Inc. v. The SS Monrosa,
The service-of-suit clause does not explicitly waive Underwriters' removal rights. It requires Underwriters to "submit to the jurisdiction of any court [chosen by McDermott]," "comply with all requirements necessary to give such Court jurisdiction," and "abide by the final decision of such Court." It also decrees that "all matters arising hereunder shall be determined in accordance with the law and practice of [the court chosen by McDermott]." Underwriters' exercise of its federal removal right is not necessarily inconsistent with any of its obligations under the service-of-suit clause. Underwriters may remove a case after submitting to the jurisdiction of Louisiana's courts and complying with all necessary requirements to give Louisiana's courts power over the suit. There would be no final decision in that court for Underwriters to abide by if it exercised its removal right. All matters would be determined in accordance with the practice and law of the court chosen by McDermott in the sense that all state courts follow the removal law established by Congress. See Keaty v. Freeport Indonesia, Inc.,
At least one court has recognized that the same service-of-suit clause at issue here could be read to waive only objections to personal jurisdiction. In re Delta America Re Ins. Co.,
The existence of these alternate possible policy interpretations, in concert with the parties' stipulation that before this litigation, neither expressed an opinion as to the effect of the service-of-suit clause on removability or the relationship between the service-of-suit and arbitration clauses, requires us to look to another authoritative source in deciding this case.
B. THIS COURT: CITY OF ROSE CITY V. NUTMEG INS. CO.
McDermott urges us to follow Nutmeg, where this court held that policy language virtually identical to the service-of-suit clause in this case waived the insurer's removal rights. Seе
Nutmeg Insurance Company relied on diversity jurisdiction to remove a suit filed by its policyholder's assignee in Texas state court. Record at 2, City of Rose City v. Nutmeg Ins. Co. (No. 90-0373). The district court refused the assignee's remand motion and granted Nutmeg summary judgment. This court reversed, holding that the district court should have remanded the case in accordance with the service-of-suit clause in Nutmeg's policy. The Nutmeg court agreed with the reasoning of several district courts that applied the "principle that ambiguities in contracts of insurance are to be construed against the drafter of the policy" in prior cases interpreting service-of-suit clauses.
1. Lack of Ambiguity
The policy at issue in Nutmeg featured the service-of-suit clause as its only forum selection clause. As previously explained, the policy at issue here has two forum selection clauses that apply to different types of disputes. The arbitration clause's existence creates the possibility, not present in Nutmeg, that the parties would argue over arbitrability, and thus where arbitrability questions would be decided. The question presented to both courts in Nutmeg was whether Nutmeg was liable on its policy, a question that unmistakably invokes the service-of-suit clause's "failure ... to pаy" application language. But, as we have explained, the service-of-suit clause does not necessarily apply here because a suit to determine arbitrability is not necessarily a suit for failure to pay a claim.
Also, the Nutmeg court rejected the suggestion that the service-of-suit clause only concedes personal jurisdiction because Nutmeg is a domestic corporation with its principal place of business in the United States. But the court stated that it "made some sense" for the Delta court to read the service-of-suit clause there as only waiving objections to personal jurisdiction because it was possible that some of the Delta defendants "were foreign corporations not otherwise subject to the jurisdiction of any court in the United States...." Id. McDermott does not dispute the fact that at least some of their policy's underwriters are foreign citizens.
The existence of alternate possible meanings for the service-of-suit clause in the policy here at issuе distinguishes Nutmeg.
2. Drafter Principle
Also unlike Nutmeg, here the principle that policy ambiguities are construed against the drafter does not help McDermott. While Underwriters' agents originally drafted the language of the service-of-suit clause, McDermott chose the clause for their policy. A broker representing McDermott in 1989, J.H. Minet, Inc., prepared a "slip" for Underwriters' approval. This slip merely listed the standard Lloyds, London clauses that McDermott wanted in the policy, including the service-of-suit clause. After Underwriters approved the slip submitted by Minet, Minet prepared a policy based on the slip. Then Underwriters' agent, the Lloyds Policy Signing Office, checked the policy submitted by Minet against the slip approved by Underwriters and executed the policy.
By having its agent decide upon both the slip and the policy, McDermott forfeits any benefit from the policy drafter principle. See Eagle Leasing Corp. v. Hartford Fire Ins. Co.,
C. CONGRESS: THE CONVENTION ACT
In 1970, Congress ratified the Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards (the Convention) to secure for United States citizens predictable enforcement by foreign governments of certain arbitral contracts and awards made in this and other signatory nations. See 21 U.S.T. 2517, T.I.A.S. 6997, reprinted following 9 U.S.C.A. § 201 (West Supp.1991). To gain rights under the Convention, though, Congress had to guarantee enforcement of arbitral contracts and awards made pursuant to the Convention in United States courts. See Convention Art. XIV ("A Contracting State shall not be entitled to avail itself of the present convention against other Contracting States except to the extent that it is itself bound to apply the Convention."). So Congress promulgated the Convention Act in 1970 to establish procedures for our courts to implement the Convention. 9 U.S.C. § 201, et seq.
The Federal Arbitration Act (FAA), 9 U.S.C. § 1, et seq., is the approximate domestic equivalent of the Convention; it guarantees enforcement of domestic arbitral contracts and awards, but with slightly different rules of applicability. To avoid possible interference with the well-settled jurisprudence construing the FAA, Congress enacted new legislation in the Convention Act rather than amending the FAA. The Convention Act incorporates the FAA except where the FAA conflicts with the Convention Act's few specific provisions. SENATE COMM. ON FOREIGN RELATIONS, FOREIGN ARBITRAL AWARDS, S.REP. NO. 702, 91st Cong., 2d Sess. 5 (1970), U.S.Code Cong. & Admin.News 1970, p. 3601; 9 U.S.C. § 208.
The parties recognize that this suit concerns an arbitration agreement and is not entirely between United States citizens, so the Convention Act governs this case. 9 U.S.C. § 202. Underwriters removed this case pursuant to the Convention Act:
Where the subject matter of an action or proceeding pending in a State court relates to an arbitration agreement or award falling under the Convention, the defendant or the defendants may, at any time before the trial thereof, remove such action or proceeding to the district court of the United States for the district and division embracing the place where the action or proceeding is pending. The procedure for removal of causes otherwise provided by law shall apply, except that the ground for removal provided in this section need not appear on the face of the complaint but may be shown in the petition for removal. For the purposes of Chapter 1 of this title any action or proceeding removed under this section shall be deemed to have been brought in the district court to which it is removed.
9 U.S.C. § 205.
Underwriters argue that Congress enacted the last sentence of section 205 to confer on international litigants a nonwaivable right to a federal forum for the resolution of Convention disputes.12 We disagree. Underwriters focus only on the part of section 205's last sentence that says "any action or proceeding removed under this section shall be deemed to have been brought in the district court to which it is removed." Taken out of context, this imperative language seems to preclude remand of cases removed under section 205. But Underwriters reading of section 205 does not account for the introductory phrase to the last sentence: "[f]or the purposes of Chapter 1 of this title."
We read the last sentence of section 205 in conjunction with title nine's chapter one, the FAA, to perceive the sentence's meaning. The FAA's section 3 provides that "[i]f any suit or proceeding be brought in any of the courts of the United States upon any issue referable to arbitration" and the court concludes that the parties agreed in writing to arbitrate, the court must stay the trial of the action until after arbitration proceedings. 9 U.S.C. § 3. The phrase "courts of the United States" as used in section 3 encompasses only constitutional courts established under Title 28, Chapter 5 of the United States Code. Jos. L. Muscarelle, Inc. v. American Timber & Trading Co., Inc.,
Had Congress meant to provide defendants in Convention Act cases with an absolute removal right, it would not have qualified section 205's last sentence with "[f]or the purposes of Chapter 1 of this title." Moreover, Congress placed the sentence that Underwriters contend confers a significant and unique removal right at the end of section 205, after a technical, relatively insignificant rule that "the ground for removal provided in [section 205] need not appear on the face of the complaint but may be shown in the petition for removal." 9 U.S.C. § 205.
Also, there is nothing in the Convention Act's legislative history to suggest that Congress intended to accord a nonwaivable removal right to Convention defendants. Indeed, Ambassador Richаrd D. Kearney, Chairman of the Secretary of State's Advisory Committee on Private International Law, who explained the Convention Act's operation to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, testified that the Convention Act only effected "minor changes" in the FAA for Convention cases and that section 205 "take[s] care of certain technical problems arising out of differences between the [FAA] and the convention." S.REP. NO. 702 at 5, 7. He also testified that section 205 "clarif[ies] the removal issue [by] provid[ing] a right to remove an action [falling under the Convention]." Id. at 7, 10. But neither he nor anyone else whose comments are preserved in the Convention Act's legislative history used the word "absolute" or "nonwaivable" in conjunction with section 205's removal right.
D. THE EXPRESS WAIVER RULE
While neither Nutmeg nor section 205 dictates the legal result that obtains from this case's facts, we still find both authorities relevant. Together they suggest that although Congress made it easy for defendants in state-filed Convention cases to remove to federal court, defendants may cоntractually waive this privilege. That we enforce contractual forfeitures of removal rights, even in international arbitration cases, accords with the Convention's purpose of ensuring that parties to international business transactions can expect courts to enforce their specifications as to how their disputes will be resolved. See Mitsubishi,
But we still must specify the circumstances under which we will recognize a party's waiver of its Convention Act removal rights. There are four reasons why we will give effect only to explicit waivers of Convention Act removal rights.
1. Reciprocity
Our decision in this case could jeopardize the international arbitration agreements of United States citizens who are not parties to this case. Underwriters and McDermott executed an ambiguous contract and disavowed any expressed intent regarding waiver of Convention Act removal rights. Therefore, we adopt the express waiver rule here to afford maximum protection to all those who rely on the Convention while respecting their freedom to agree upon procedures for resolving their disputes.
If we held that a party could be deemed to have waived its Convention Act removal rights by any legal standard less stringent than our express waiver rule, state courts would rule on more Convention issues. A major reason for the United States' twelveyear hesitancy in ratifying the Convention after it became available for adoption in 1958 was that
[i]n the courts of a majority of the states of the United States, foreign arbitral agreements [would] not be recognized, stays of conflicting litigation [would] not be granted, and a foreign arbitral award [would] still be unenforceable if the agreement was revoked prior to the handing down of the award.
Leonard V. Quigley, Accession by the United States to the United Nations Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards, 70 YALE L.J. 1049, 1074 n. 108, 1081 (1961). Although a majority of states have abandoned the common law hostility to arbitration,13 see S.EXEC.REP. NO. 10, 90th Cong., 2d Sess. 7 (1968) (36 states enforce arbitration agreements), we are not certain that all states have done so or will not revert to the common law view of arbitration in the future. See, e.g., Sigal v. Three K's, Ltd.,
We are even more concerned that some states have adopted constitutionally valid arbitration laws that would undermine the Convention Act in proceedings held in the courts of those states. Volt Info. Sciences, Inc. v. Board of Trustees,
Volt is instructive here because the Court found "some merit" in the argument that sections 3 and 4 of the FAA do not apply to state court proceedings, and noted that the Court has
never held that [the FAA's] §§ 3 and 4, which by their terms appear to apply only to proceedings in federal court, see 9 U.S.C. § 3 (referring to proceedings "brought in any of the courts of the United States"); § 4 (referring to "any United States district court"), are nonetheless applicable in state court. See Southland Corp. v. Keating, [
Id. at 1254 & n. 6; but see id. at 1256 n. 2 (BRENNAN, J., dissenting) (citing statement in Moses H. Cone,
States could also employ purely procedural mechanisms to undermine federal accession to the Convention. A state hostile to arbitration could force parties to endure litigation before permitting review of a trial court's arbitrability decisions. See, e.g., General Elec. Supply Co. v. Warden Elec., Inc.,
If state courts refuse to promptly enforce arbitration agreements in Convention cases, other signatory nations could cite the Convention's reciprocity clause to justify departing from the Convention in cases involving citizens of states with recalcitrant courts. See Quigley, supra, 70 YALE L.J. at 1081-82. Our express waiver rule minimizes this danger by providing a bright-line standard for determining when parties surrender the full panoply of Convention Act rights. Because the Convention only permits other countries to reciprocally abrogate Convention covenants "to the extent" that our nation does, anomalous state court Convention decisions could only be raised against our citizens when they have expressly waived their Convention rights. See Convention Art. XIV.
2. Uniformity
As the Delta court recognized, a restrictive construction of a district court's authority to remand certain types of cases fosters uniformity in that area of law. In Delta, Kentucky's Insurance Commissioner (the Commissioner) brought a state-court action against several reinsurers, including Banco de Seguros del Estado (Seguros).
We find this reasoning persuasive and applicable to Convention Act cases.
The goal of the Convention, and the principal purpose underlying American adoption and implementation of it, was to ... unify the standards by which agreements to arbitrate are observed and arbitral awards are enforced in the signatory countries.
Scherk v. Alberto-Culver Co.,
McDermott argues that the district court's remand does not compromise Convention Act uniformity because state courts must abide by the Convention Act. See Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Inc. v. Haydu,
Desiring a unitary FSIA jurisprudence, " 'Congress deliberately sought to channel cases against foreign sovereigns away from the state courts and into federal courts....' " Proyecfin,
3. Precedent
Even in cases that do not involve the Convention or the FSIA, many federal courts have refused to find a contractual waiver of removal rights absent a "clear and unequivocal" expression of intent to waive those rights. Regis,
The Foster court criticizes all of these authorities as incоnsistent with "the fact that for 'approximately five score years' the federal courts 'have construed the removal statutes strictly and, on the whole, against the right of removal.' "
4. Speed
Where parties have executed valid arbitration agreements, judicial enforcement of arbitration agreements and awards ought to be "summary and speedy" out of respect for the parties' bargain to keep their disputes out of court. See Moses H. Cone,
IV. CONCLUSION
We VACATE the Remand Order and return the case to the district court.
Notes
In re Merrimack Mut. Fire Ins. Co.,
Section 1291 provides, "[t]he courts of appeals ... shall have jurisdiction of appeals from all final decisions of the district courts of the United States, ... except where a direct review may be had in the Supreme Court."
But see 15 WRIGHT, MILLER, AND COOPER, FEDERAL PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE § 3914 at 549-50 (1976) ("[i]f the [Thermtron ] Court had specifically foсused on the method of review, it would have been better advised to recognize the availability of appeal")
Cohill does not mention Moses H. Cone
McDermott wants us to review this case under mandamus standards which are more deferential to the district court's decision than appeal standards. See In Re First South Sav. Ass'n,
We think that Corcoran is wrongly decided. The Corcoran court felt obliged by Cohill to review the district court's discretionary remand order by mandamus. Id. at 35. But we have previously explained that Cohill did not address the proper means of review of a discretionary remand order. Moreover, the Corcoran court did not adequately distinguish Karl Koch Erecting Co. v. New York Convention Center Development Corp.,
Because the district court's remand order so closely parallels the stay order at issue in Moses H. Cone, it qualifies as a collateral order under this court's rendition of the collateral order doctrine's rеquisites:
(1) the order must finally dispose of a matter so that the district court's decision may not be characterized as tentative, informal or incomplete; (2) the question presented must be serious and unsettled; (3) the order must be separable from, and collateral to, rights asserted in the principal suit; and (4) there should generally be a risk of important and probably irreparable loss if an immediate appeal is not heard.
Acosta v. Tenneco Oil Co.,
Though the Court stated in Thermtron that remand orders are not final judgments reviewable by appeal, Moses H. Cone characterized the collateral order doctrine as an "exception to the finality rule."
In New Orleans Public Service, Inc. v. Majoue,
The policy also permits the parties to have "a court of competent jurisdiction within the limits of the United States of America" choose a neutral third umpire. Policy p 9
Consent to personal jurisdiction is of value especially with respect to defendants that are incorporated and have their principal place of business abroad. See Hart,
We need not here decide whether to apply the policy drafter principle in Underwriters' favor. Cf. 1 A. Parks, THE LAW AND PRACTICE OF MARINE INSURANCE AND AVERAGE, 123-24 (insured's broker who prepares slip should be policy offeror)
The district court held that the last sentence of section 205 does not vest exclusive jurisdiction over Convention cases in the federal courts. The court's holding is correct; the language and history of the Convention Act indicate nothing other than Congress' intent to grant federal courts concurrent jurisdiction over Convention cases and defendants a right to remove state-filed Convention cases to federal court. See 9 U.S.C. § 203 (federal district courts have "original jurisdiction" over Convention cases); 9 U.S.C. § 205 (removal right); S.REP. NO. 702; HOUSE COMM. ON THE JUDICIARY, FOREIGN ARBITRAL AWARDS CONVENTION, H.REP. NO. 1181, 91st Cong., 2d Sess. (1970), reprinted in 1970 U.S.C.C.A.N. 3601-04 (never mentioning exclusive federal jurisdiction); Gulf Offshore Co., Div. of Pool Co. v. Mobil Oil Corp.,
See Sedco,
The California court stayed arbitration to avoid the risk of conflicting rulings on common issues of fact between the arbitration proceeding and the state court action
The Econo-Car court explained the consequences of the FAA not applying to state courts:
a party may well defeat any attempt specifically to enforce an agreement to arbitrate in the [state court] since the party seeking arbitration would then be remitted to local law. There [would then be no arbitration wherе there] is no [state] statute providing for specific enforcement of arbitration agreements, [because] at common law such agreements are not specifically enforceable.
Id. at 1392 n. 2.
The Convention Act has its own arbitration compulsion provision:
A court having jurisdiction under this chapter may direct that arbitration be held in accordance with the agreement at any place therein provided for, whether that place is within or without the United States....
9 U.S.C. § 206. But the only courts "having jurisdiction under [the Convention Act]" are federal. See 9 U.S.C. § 203 (district courts have original jurisdiction of Convention cases); see also 115 Cong.Rec. 40141 (1970) ("Section 206 permits a court to direct that arbitration be held at the place provided for in the arbitration agreement. Since there may be circumstances in which it would be highly desirable to direct arbitration within the district in which the action is brought and inappropriate to direct arbitration abroad, section 206 is permissive...."). So section 206, like the FAA's section 4, arguably confers no authority on state courts to compel arbitration.
