MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
Viа the motions now pending before this Court, Defendants BDO Seidman, LLP and Robert J. Dudzinsky (collectively, the “BDO Defendants”) and Defendants *327 Deutsche Bank AG, Deutsche Bank Securities, Inc. d/b/a Deutsche Bank Alex Brown, a division of Deutsche Bank Securities, Inc., and David Parse (collectively, the “Deutsche Bank Defendants”) move to compel arbitration and dismiss or stay this action; Defendants Raggi & Weinstein LLP and Bob Raggi (the “Raggi Defendants”) move to dismiss this action. For the reasons outlined below, the BDO Defendants’ motion shall be GRANTED, the Deutsche Bank Defendants’ motion shall be DENIED, and the Raggi Defendants’ motion shall be DENIED without prejudice. All proceedings shall be stayed pending resolution of arbitration between Plaintiffs and the BDO Defendants.
Factual Background
On July 24th, 2000, Plaintiff Amihai Mi-ron entered into a consulting agreement (the “BDO Agreement”) with Defendant BDO Seidman. The BDO Agreement included the following language:
WHEREAS, Client or its designee is interested in transferring, by sale, lease or otherwise, some of its assets and limiting its financial exposure. (Such business operations, the “Business” and such transfer, as further defined in Paragraph 2 below, the “Transaction”);
WHEREAS, BDO is in the business of providing accounting and consulting services; and
WHEREAS, Client desires BDO to provide certain tax and business consulting services in connection with the Transaction, and BDO desires to provide such services to Client, all upon the terms and conditions herein.
The BDO Agreement established that the BDO Defendants would provide “consulting services in conjunction with the sale of business assets including assistance in structuring the Transaction, [and] assisting Client and/or its advisors in determining a tax treatment for the Transaetion[.]” BDO Agreement, § 2(a). The Agreement also contained the following mandatory arbitration clause:
If any dispute, controversy or claim arises in connection with the performance or breach of this Agreement and cannot be resolved .... then such dispute, controversy or claim shall be settled by arbitration in accordance with the laws of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. .,” BDO Agreement, § 8(d).
The sale transaction referred to in the BDO Agreement had in fact been completed in May 2000, two months before the Agreement was signed, and the BDO Defendants admit they played no part in structuring this transaction.
The services that the BDO Defendants did in fact provide related to foreign exchange digital option contracts (FX Contracts), marketed as a tax shelter called Currency Options Bring Reward Alternatives (COBRA). According to Plaintiffs’ Complaint, the Raggi Defendants recommended the COBRA tax savings strategy to Plaintiffs once they became aware that Plaintiffs expected substantial gains from the May 2000 sale transaction. Complaint, ¶ 55, 56. Plaintiffs agreed to engage in the COBRA strategy based in large part on all of the Defendants’ representations regarding the likelihood of payout under this strategy, the legality of the tax strategy, the likelihood of potential challenges by the IRS, and the independence of Jenkens & Gilchrist, the law firm providing opinion letters to participating clients. Complaint, ¶ 37, 66.
In order to implement the COBRA tax strategy, and in connection with the formation of several entities through which Plaintiffs planned to engage in FX Contracts, Plaintiff Amihai Miron opened three brokerage accounts with Defendant Deutsche Bank Securities, Inc. On August 24, 2000, Mr. Miron executed three identi *328 cal account agreements (the “DB Agreements”), binding on all Plaintiffs and the Deutsche Bank Defendants, containing the following arbitration clause:
I agree to arbitrate with you any controversies which may arise, whether or not based on events occurring prior to the date of this agreement, including any controversy arising out of or relating to any aсcount with you, to the construction, performance, or breach of any agreement with you, or to transactions with or through you, only before the New York Stock Exchange or the National Association of Securities Dealers Regulation, Inc., at my election.
Plaintiffs, who claim financial losses as a result of the COBRA tax strategy, allege that Defendants defrauded them by misrepresenting the possibility of profit under the FX Contracts, failing to disclose that Defendants had “virtually unlimited discretion” to determine whether the FX Contracts would in fact pay out, misrepresenting the likelihood of IRS challenges, and failing to keep Plaintiffs apprised of IRS developments such that Plaintiffs could protect their financial and legal interests. Plaintiffs now bring claims against Defendants alleging RICO violations, civil conspiracy, breach of contract, breach of fiduciary duty, fraud, negligent misrepresentation, professional malpractice, unjust enrichment, excessive and illegal fees, and seek a declaratory judgment that thе BDO Agreement and the FX Contracts are unenforceable.
The BDO Defendants have moved to compel arbitration on the basis of the BDO Agreement § 8(d) arbitration clause. The Deutsche Bank Defendants have moved to compel arbitration on the basis of the arbitration clauses in both the DB Agreement and the BDO Agreement. The Raggi Defendants move to dismiss the claims against them on a variety of grounds.
Discussion
I. FAA Requirements for Arbitration
At its heart, arbitration is a matter of contract. “[A] party cannot be required to submit to arbitration any dispute which he has not agreed so to submit.”
AT & T Tech., Inc. v. Communications Workers of Am.,
Under the Federal Arbitration Act and Pennsylvania law, a district court must compel arbitration if it finds (1) that a valid arbitration agreement exists between the parties, and (2) that the dispute before it falls within the scope of this agreement.
McAlister v. Sentry Ins. Co.,
The Supreme Court has held that a presumption of arbitrability exists where a contract contains an arbitration clause, and that an order to arbitrate should not be denied “unless it may be said with positive assurance that the arbitration clause is not susceptible to an interpretation that covers the asserted dispute.”
AT & T,
The presumption of arbitrability is particularly strong when the arbitration clause in question is broad.
AT & T,
II. Arbitration of Plaintiffs’ Claims Against BDO
This Court finds that Plaintiffs’ claims against the BDO Defendants must be submitted to arbitration, because § 8(d) of the BDO Agreement is a valid arbitration agreement, and the claims against the BDO Defendants fall within the scope of this agreement.
A. Validity of the BDO Arbitration Agreement
As to the first part of the
McAlis-ter
test, we find that the BDO Agreement contains a “valid arbitration agreement” between Plaintiffs and the BDO Defendants.
McAlister,
Plaintiffs compare the facts of this case to those in
Denney v. Jenkens & Gilchrist,
While the language of the BDO Agreement in this case is indeed similar to the language of the consulting agreement in
Denney,
we find that the facts of the instant case are not similarly suggestive of mutual fraud. First, it is far from clear that the parties in this case “entered into agreements that described consulting work that was never performed.”
Id.
at 346,
Furthermore, the record in this case, unlike in Denney, includes no admissions suggestive of mutual fraud. The BDO Defendants affirm that the tax planning services actually provided to Plaintiffs in this case were closely tied to the services described in the BDO Agreement. Neither Plaintiffs nor the BDO Defendants have made any statements suggesting that they intеnded, respectively, to conceal the true nature of the services provided. Finally, both parties affirmatively deny that the BDO Agreement was a “wink and a nod” arrangement. Because the record in this case does not suggest a mutual intent to enter into a fraudulent agreement, we find that the arbitration clause within the BDO Agreement is valid and enforceable.
B. Scope of the BDO Arbitration Agreement
In light of the presumption of arbi-trability under the FAA, we find that Plaintiffs’ claims regarding the BDO Defendants’ tax planning and marketing activities fall within the scope of the BDO Agreement’s broad arbitration clause.
When an arbitration clause provides for arbitration of all matters “arising under” or “arising out of’ a particular agreement, the clause is typically construed broadly to suggest that a given dispute is arbitrable.
Medtronic Ave Inc. v. Cordis Corp.,
The BDO Agreement arbitration clause is broad on its face, governing “any dispute, controversy or claim aris[ing] in connection with the performance or breach of this Agreement.” While Plaintiffs contend that the inclusion of the limiting phrase “in connection with the performance or breach of this Agreement” supports a narrower reading of the clause, this position is consistent nеither with Third Circuit precedent nor with the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York’s second decision in
Denney,
upon which Plaintiffs rely.
Denney v. Jenkens & Gilchrist,
Plaintiffs will not succeed in rebutting the presumption of arbitrability in this case, as they have failed to present “the most forceful evidence” of an intent to exclude their claims from arbitration, such that this Court could find “with positive assurance” that no interpretation of the BDO Agreement arbitration clause would cover the claims.
See AT & T,
III. Arbitration of Plaintiffs’ Claims Against Deutsche Bank
The Deutsche Bank Defendants seek to compel arbitration of Plaintiffs’ claims against them based on the arbitration clauses in the DB Agreements, or, alternatively, based on the arbitration clause in the BDO Agreement. We find that neither the DB Agreements nor the BDO Agreement require that Plaintiffs’ claims against the Deutsche Bank Defendants be sent to arbitration at this time.
A. Arbitration under the DB Agreement
Both Plaintiffs and the Deutsche Bank Defendants admit that the DB Agreement contains a valid arbitration clause, and agree that this dispute would normally fall within the scope of that clause.
See McAlister,
(A) the class certification is denied; (B) the class is decertified; (C) the customer, other member or person associated with a member is excluded from the class by the court; or (D) the customer, other member or person associated with a member elects not to participate in the putative or certified class action or, if applicable, has complied with any conditions for withdrawing from the class prescribed by the court. NASD Code of Arbitration Procedure Rule 10301(d)(3).
Because Plaintiffs are members of .the putative Denney class as it is currently defined, the Deutsche Bank Defendants may *332 not seek to compel arbitration on the basis of the DB Agreement.
B. Arbitration Under the BDO Agreement
In the alternаtive, the Deutsche Bank Defendants move to compel arbitration of Plaintiffs’ claims against them pursuant to the arbitration clause within the BDO Agreement, which this Court has already-found to be valid as applied to Plaintiffs’ claims against the BDO Defendants. The issue yet to be resolved is whether Plaintiffs’ claims against the Deutsche Bank Defendants, non-signatories to the BDO Agreement, likewise fall within its scope. We find that they do not.
The Deutsche Bank Defendants offer three theories as to why the claims against them should be arbitrated pursuant to the BDO Agreement. First, they argue that because the BDO Agreement arbitration clause is broad, the presumption of arbi-trability should apply to all claims arising in connection with BDO’s performance under the agreement, even those claims asserted against non-signatories. However, the presumption of arbitrability has never been extended to claims by or against non-signatories.
See, e.g., Medtronic Ave Inc. v. Cordis Corp.,
Because arbitration is a matter of contract, exceptional circumstances must apply before a court will impose a contractual agreement to arbitrate on a non-contracting party.
Thomson-CSF, S.A. v. American Arbitration Ass’n,
Agency logic has been applied by the Third Circuit to bind non-signatories to arbitration agreements.
Pritzker v. Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith,
With respect to equitable estop-pel, there are two theories of estoppel under which the Deutsche Bank Defendants may be able to compel arbitration. The first and more traditional theory allows signatories to impose arbitration on non-signatories when the non-signatory knowingly embraces, exploits; or receives the benefits of the agreement containing the arbitration clause, despite having never signed it.
See E.I. DuPont de Nemours and Co. v. Rhone Poulenc Fiber and Resin Intermediates, S.A.S.,
The more appropriate theory of estoppel in this case is “alternative es-toppel,” which will bind a signatory to arbitrate at a non-signatory’s insistence where there is an “obvious and close nexus” between the non-signatories and the contract or the contracting parties.
Reib-stein,
We find the theory of alternative estoppel is inappropriate here because Plaintiffs’ claims against the Deutsche Bank Defendants are not “intimately founded in” or “intertwined with” the BDO Agreement.
Id.
The essential question in situations such as these is whether Plaintiffs would have an independent right to recover against the non-signatory Defendants even if the contract containing the arbitration clause were void.
Massen v. Cliff,
02-9282,
We find the Eleventh Circuit’s reasoning compelling. In the instant case, Plaintiffs’ *334 claims against the Deutsche Bank Defendants (specifically, claims of RICO violations, unjust enrichment, breach of contract, breach of fiduciary duty, unethical, excessive, and illegal fees, and civil conspiracy) are completely independent of the BDO Agreement. Nowhere in Plaintiffs’ Complaint are the allegations against the Deutsche Bank Defendants tied to any obligations these Defendants had or benefits they may have received under the terms of the BDO Agreement (which in fact makes no mention of Deutsche Bank). Were this Court to find the BDO Agreement void, invalid, or unenforceable, Plaintiffs would still have valid causes of action against the Deutsche Bank Defendants grounded both in common law and statutory remedies. Because Plaintiffs claims against thе Deutsche Bank Defendants do not depend on and are not intertwined with the BDO Agreement, these Defendants cannot enforce the BDO arbitration clause under a theory of alternative estop-pel.
IY. Disposition of the Present Action
This Court is required under the plain language of § 3 of the FAA to stay Plaintiffs’ claims against the BDO Defendants pending arbitration.
1
See Lloyd v. Hovensa,
We find that a stay is likewisе appropriate with respect to Plaintiffs remaining claims against the Raggi Defendants and the Deutsche Bank Defendants. Although these claims are not subject to arbitration, the FAA’s requirement that a court stay “the trial of the action” suggests that the proceedings must be stayed in their entirety, even when the action encompasses both arbitrable and non-arbitra-ble claims.
See Feinberg v. Ass’n of Trial Lawyers Assur.,
No. 01-6966,
An appropriate Order follows.
ORDER
AND NOW, this 20th day of October, 2004, upon consideration of the BDO Defendants’ Motion to Compel Arbitration and Dismiss or Stay this Action (Doc. No. *335 38) and all responses thereto (Docs. No. 44, 51, 59, 66), the Deutsche Bank Defendants’ Motion to Compel Arbitration and Dismiss or Stay this Action (Doc. No. 40) and all responses thereto (Docs. No. 45, 49, 53), and the Raggi Defendants’ Motiоn to Dismiss (Docs. No. 42, 43) and all responses thereto (Docs. No. 61, 68), it is hereby ORDERED that:
(1) The BDO Defendants’ Motion to Compel Arbitration is GRANTED;
(2) The Deutsche Bank Defendants’ Motion to Compel Arbitration is DENIED;
(3) The Raggi Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss is DENIED WITHOUT PREJUDICE.
Plaintiffs and the BDO Defendants are hereby DIRECTED to proceed with arbitration pursuant to the terms and conditions contractually agreed to by those parties in the Agreement dated July 24, 2000. It is further DECREED that the proceedings before this Court shall be STAYED pending resolution of arbitration.
Notes
. “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.” 9 U.S.C. § 3 (emphasis added)
