The main issue on this appeal is whether a court or an arbitrator should determine whether the parties’ commercial dispute is arbitrable. Agreeing with the district court 1 that the contracting parties left that issue to the court, we affirm.
In 1984, McLaughlin Gormlеy King Company (“MGK”) agreed to supply fenvalerate, an insecticide, to Terminix International Company for repackaging and sale to exterminators. The written contract provided for arbitration of “[a]ny controversy arising out of, or rеlating to this Agreement or any modification or extension hereof.” In 1990, the Herb family sued Terminix, alleging personal injuries from exposure to fenvalerate. MGK refused to indemnify or defend Termi-nix against this claim.
Terminix settled the Herb lawsuit and filed a demand to аrbitrate its claim against MGK for indemnification and defense costs. MGK refused to arbitrate and filed this declaratory judgment aсtion, claiming that the dispute is not arbitrable because the 1984 contract expired before the events giving rise to the Herb lawsuit. MGK moved for a preliminary injunction prohibiting Terminix “from asserting or further asserting” its demand to arbitrate, and for partial summary judgment declaring the dispute non-arbitrable. Termi-nix responded with a motion to compel arbitration. When these motions came on for decision, the district court' concluded that it needed further discovery on the issue of arbi-trability. Therefore, it grаnted the requested preliminary injunction, denied Terminix’s motion to compel arbitration, and continued the motion for pаrtial summary judgment for ninety days. Terminix appeals..
I. Appealability.
Terminix argues that we have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a)(1) because of the order’s “injunctive effect.” However, appealability is governed by the specific appeal provisions added to the Federal Arbitration Act in the 1988 Judicial Improvements and Access to Justice Act. Those provisions permit an appeаl from an order “denying an application ... to compel arbitration,” 9 U.S.C. § 16(a)(1)(C), and from “an interlocutory order granting ... an injunction against an arbitration subject to [the Act],” § 16(a)(2).
In many cases, such as
Nordin v. Nutri/Sys., Inc.,
II. Who Decides Arbitrability.
The Supreme Court recently clarified the standard for deciding whether the court or the аrbitrator determines arbitrability. The issue, the Court explained, turns on whether the parties “agree[d] to submit the arbitrability question itself to arbitration.”
First Options of Chicago, Inc., v. Kaplan,
— U.S. -, -,
*1194 [cjourts should not assume that the parties agreed to arbitrate arbitrability unless there is ‘clea[r] and unmistakabl[e]’ evidence that they did so. In this manner the law treats silence or ambiguity about the question ‘who (primarily) should decide ar-bitrability’ differently from the way it treats silence or ambiguity about the question ‘whether a particular merits-related dispute is arbitrable because it is within the scope of a valid arbitration agreement.’
Id.
at -,
In this case, neither the arbitration clause nor
any
other provision in the 1984 contract between Terminix and MGK clearly and unmistakably evidenced the parties’ intеnt to give the arbitrator power to determine arbitrability. The arbitration clause made no mention of a “controvеrsy” over arbitrability. Terminix argues that the federal policy favoring arbitration requires that the arbitrator decide issues of аrbitrability if the arbitration clause is broadly worded. The Court in First
Options
rejected that contention, explaining that “the basic objective in this area is ... to ensure that commercial arbitration agreements, like other contracts, ‘are enforced according to their terms.’ ” — U.S. at -,
III. The Preliminary Injunction.
Terminix further argues that the order preliminarily enjoining it from pursuing arbitration was an abuse of the district court’s discretion under
Dataphase Systems, Inc. v. CL Systems, Inc.,
In this сase, our decision that the district court has properly undertaken to resolve the question of arbitrability makes this issue quitе easy to resolve. If a court has concluded that a dispute is wow-arbitrable, prior cases uniformly hold that the party urging arbitration may be enjoined from pursuing what would now be a futile arbitration, even if the threatened irreparable injury to thе other party is only the cost of defending the arbitration and having the court set aside any unfavorable award.
See PaineWebber Inc. v. Hartmann,
The order of the district court is affirmed.
Notes
. The HONORABLE PAUL A. MAGNUSON, Chief Judge of the United States District Court for the District of Minnesota.
. Terminix also urges us to leap ahead of the district court and decide the issue of arbitrability. We decline to do so. The issue properly before us is whether the district court erred in not referring the issue of arbitrability to the arbitrator.
