Paul Wolf traded commodities on the Chicago Board of Trade using Mike Widell as a broker. In 1993 Wolf asserted that Widell had made trades for his account despite instructions to stop. Wolf demanded arbitration of the dispute and prevailed; the arbitrators awarded him $57,500. Widell argued to the arbitrators that Wolf knew or should have known of the trading, which was reflected in regular account statements, and should be barred from recovery by his failure to protest promptly after receiving the statements; Wolf replied that Widell had told him that the statements were erroneous and should be disregarded — indeed, should not even be opened. The arbitrators apparently accepted Wolfs version of the events.
Instead of paying, Widell asked a state court to set the award aside. Wolf removed under the diversity jurisdiction, and the district court promptly dismissed Widell’s complaint, observing that none of the grounds for declining to enforce an arbitral award is
What public policy does the award offend? Surely damages to customers whose brokers trade without authorization do not violate any rule of law; protecting investors is itself an important public policy. Widell’s lawyer names as the pertinent “policy” the customer’s obligation, specified in the agreement, to read the statement and point out errors quickly. Cf.
Shappirio v. Goldberg,
The “public policy” defense to enforcement, on which Widell pins his ease, applies only when some rule of law takes matters out of the parties’ hands, and therefore out of the hands of their appointed agent, the arbitrator. The doctrine “derives from the basic notion that no court will lend its aid to one who founds a cause of action upon an immoral or illegal act, and is further justified by the observation that the public’s interests in confining the scope of private agreements to which it is not a party will go unrepresented unless the judiciary takes account of those interests when it considers whether to enforce such agreements.”
Misco,
Widell’s brief does not cite
Misco
or any of the Supreme Court’s many decisions spurning efforts to undermine the ability of arbitrators to resolve disputes quickly and finally. Over and over we have held that arbitrators’ errors — even clear or gross errors, see
Baravati v. Josephthal, Lyon & Ross, Inc.,
Arbitration is supposed to permit quick and cheap decision. Litigation like this defeats that purpose. We have remarked before that awards of attorneys’ fees are readily available when one side refuses to accept an arbitrator’s award and loses — for the American Rule requires each side to pay its fees in the first round of litigation but does
AFFIRMED.
