MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
On March 27, 1996, plaintiff Monisoff brought suit against the securities firm of American Eagle Investments, Inc. and its president Allen R. Rosenberg, alleging fraud in their management of her securities account. Defendants promptly moved to stay the action pending arbitration. Following receipt of written submissions, the Court heard argument on May 31, 1996. For the reasons that follow, the motion is denied.
“Whether or not a matter is arbitrable is a matter for judicial determination.”
Spear Leeds & Kellogg v. Central Life Assurance Company,
Here, the defendants contend that such an agreement exists in the form of a Customer Agreement signed by Ms. Monisoff and prepared by Ernst & Company, a securities broker used to clear Ms. Monisoffs trades. While the Customer Agreement, a printed standardized form, simply recites that it is an agreement between “customer” and “broker,” the only broker identified by name anywhere in the agreement is Ernst' & Company, on whose letterhead the agreement appears. American Eagle Investments is not named anywhere in the agreement.
Nonetheless, defendants argue that “broker” should be read to encompass not only the named, clearing broker, Ernst & Company, but also the unnamed, introducing broker, American Eagle Investments. While defendants’ counsel conceded at oral argument that ordinary canons of contractual interpretation would preclude such a stretch, defendants contend that “common law” principles of interpretation are “trumped” in this case by a strong federal policy favoring arbitration.
See generally Mitsubishi v. Soler Chrysler Plymouth,
This language, however, applies on its face only to the
scope
of the issues subject to arbitration, not to the threshold issue of whether there exists any agreement to arbitrate between the parties. “These two inquires are separate and independent.”
Spear Leeds & Kellogg, supra,
at 25. Moreover, the threshold requirement is “a straightforward question of contract law,”
Gould v. Sidel,
On its face, Ernst & Company’s Customer Agreement is a contract between Ernst & Company and its customer, and no one else. Hence, there exists no agreement to arbitrate between Ms. Monisoff and American Eagle Investments.
Defendants’ fallback claim is that American Eagle Investments is a third-party beneficiary of the Ernst & Company Customer Agreement and therefore of its arbitration provisions.
See Paine Webber Jackson & Curtis, Inc. v. Chase Manhattan Bank,
Defendants claim that the Customer Agreement evidences such intent when it states that “This agreement shall enure to the benefit of the broker’s present organization. ...” But there is nothing in the plain meaning of these words to suggest that an independent brokerage firm like American Eagle Investments is somehow encompassed in the definition of Ernst & Company’s “present organization.” Moreover, the quoted clause is part of a section of the Customer Agreement entitled “Successors,” and, more particularly, part of a sentence that reads: “This agreement shall enure to the benefit of the broker’s present organization, and any successor organization, irrespective of any
Accordingly, for the foregoing reasons, defendants’ motion to stay is denied. A Case Management Order shall issue separately, requiring this case to be ready for trial within six months.
SO ORDERED.
