On Dеcember 18, 1997, an arbitration panel convened by the National Association of Securities Dealers (NASD) ordered appellant Salvatore A. Fradella to pay ap-pellee Richard T. Petrieca $25,000 in compensatory damages. In subscribing the award the arbitrators purported to act pursuant to New York law. 1 One month later Fradella’s attorney wrote to NASD counsel, advising that the December 18 award was “imperfect as to form,” in that “it should reflect that the [arbitrators’] decision was made in accordance with Mаssachusetts, not New York, practice.”
On February 23, NASD counsel sent Fradella revised signature pages, which deleted the earlier references to New York law but continued to reflect the date of the arbitral award as December 18, 1997. Thereafter, Fradella’s attorney again wrote to NASD counsel, advising that the date of the “final” arbitral award should be February 23, 1998, rather than December 18, 1997. On February 27, NASD counsel notified Fradella that the earlier date remained in effect, and that Fradella should refer to it in any motion to vacate the award.
Fradella moved to vacate the award on March 25, 1998. See Federal Arbitration Act (FAA), 9 U.S.C. § 10(a). Petrieca responded by moving for summary judgment on the ground that the motion to vacate was seven days late. See id. § 12 (“Notice of a motion to vacate, modify, or correct an award must be served upon the adverse party оr his attorney within three months after the award is filed or delivered.”). *19 The district court entered summary judgment for Petricca after determining that the December 18 arbitral award was “final” because it had resolved all claims submitted in the demand for arbitration, and the arbitrators’ subsequent сorrection of the award as to mere “ministerial” or “uncontroversial” details (ie., the ambiguity concerning choice of law) did not impede the finality of the December 18 award.
On appeal, Fradella first contends that the December 18 award did not become final for FAA § 12 purposes, because, contrary to the district court’s characterization, the arbitrators’ February 23 amendment was both substantive and substantial, rather than “ministerial.” We do not agree. 2
The primary purpose served by the arbitration process is expeditious dispute resolution.
See United Paperworkers Int’l Union, AFL-CIO v. Misco, Inc.,
The one remaining question is whether either the erroneous signаture page and/or its subsequent amendment on February 23 cast doubt upon the arbitrators’ intention that the December 18 award resolved all “claims” submitted to arbitration. Since the choice-of-law issue itself in no sense constituted an arbitrable “claim,” as distinguished from a subsidiary determination regarding the legal regimen under which the securities “claim” was to be decided, we conclude that the December 18 arbitral award finally resolved the only “claim” Petricca submitted to arbitration — ie., the securities claim — because there is no suggestion that any cоunterclaim or affirmative defense remained undecided. 3
In all events the finality vet non of the arbitral award itself could not have been *20 affected by any mistaken indication as to the governing law. Were such alleged subsidiary “mistakes” sufficient to divest an arbitral award of its finality, the running of the limitations period prescribed in FAA § 12 could be postponed or suspended indefinitely. In the process, the “finality” test applicable to arbitral awards would be severely undermined, along with the central purpose served by arbitration proceedings.
That is to say, if the limitations period prescribed in FAA § 12 were subject to suspension simply because an arbitral award contained error, even though the arbitrators had intended to resolve all submitted “claims,” an unsuccessful party could preclude the commencement — or suspend the running — of the limitations period simply by alleging subsidiary errors in their FAA § 10 motions to vacate an adverse arbitral award. Thus, the сontention that mere error — whether ministerial, procedural or substantive — renders an ar-bitral award non-“final” is fatally flawed.
As the present appeal demonstrates,
see supra
note 3, the finality standard suggested by Fradella would immerse reviewing courts in highly subjective, ad hoc assessments as to which arbitral errors are sufficiently “important” to preclude or suspend the running of the limitations period under FAA § 12. Clearly, however, the parties to arbitration proceedings need reliable guidelines to enable timely compliance with the FAA § 12 limitations period.
See International Ass’n of Bridge, Structural and Ornamental Iron Workers v. Burtman Iron Works, Inc.,
Next, Fradella argues that even if the award became “final” upon entry, federal law conclusively establishes that an application to modify оr clarify an arbitral award tolls the FAA § 12 limitations period. We reject this contention as well, since the authorities cited in support are clearly inapposite. 4
*21
Finally, Fradella suggests that the filing deadline in FAA § 12 is subject to equitable or “due diligence” tolling. Normally, a statutory limitаtions period is tolled only if, for example, extraordinary circumstances beyond the claimant’s control prevented timely filing, or the claimant was materially misled into missing the deadline.
See, e.g., Alvarez-Machain v. United States,
Fradella was not victimized by fate or wile. No statutory or judicial authority supported his contention that the December 18 award was other than “final,” nor that his applicаtion to correct the award tolled the FAA § 12 limitations period.
See, e.g., International Ass’n,
AFFIRMED-, costs to defendant-ap-pellee.
Notes
. The arbitrators' signatures appear below the following language: "[the undersigned] hereby affirm, pursuant to Article 7505 of the New York Civil Practice Laws and Rules, that [we are] the individuals] described herein, and who executed this instrument which is [our] decision in the above-referenced matter." Article 7505 invests arbitrators with the powers to issue subpoenas and administer oaths, which powers are conferred by the NASD Code of Arbitration Procedure as well.
. Treating the evidence in the light most favorable to Fradella, we review the summary judgment ruling
de novo
in order to determine whether there existed a triable issue of material fact or Petricca was entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
See Brennan v. King,
. Simply as an aside, we note also that it is not possible to determine whether the arbitrators applied New York Law in their December 18 decision. The clause deleted on February 23 may have signified either that the arbitrators (1) mistakenly аpplied New York respon-deat superior principles in resolving the securities claim in the first instance; (2) correctly applied Massachusetts respondeat superior principles to the merits of the securities claim in the first instance, but merely treated New York procedural law as the source for their authоrity to issue subpoenas and administer oaths; or (3) decided the case under Massachusetts law only, but inadvertently included the reference to New York practice. Furthermore, Fradella neither suggests that Massachusetts and New York respondeat superior principles differ, nor that any choice-of-law issue would have been dispositive of the securities claim itself. Instead, Fradella conceded that the error was one of "form,” see supra, and that the arbitrators had applied Massachusetts law in the first instance.
.
In re Warner-Chappell Music, Inc.,
There is no comparable FAA рrovision. The only specified recourse for an aggrieved party under the FAA is to file a motion to vacate or modify the award in the district court,
see 9
U.S.C. § 10(a)(4) (The court “may make an order vacating the award ... (4)[w]here the arbitrators exceeded their powers, or so
imperfectly executed them
that a mutual, final, and definite award upon the subject matter submitted was not made.’’), which can only remand an ambiguous arbi-tral award for clarification.
See Olympia & York Fla. Equity Corp.
v.
Gould,
Fradella cites
Lanier v. Old Republic Ins. Co.,
Fradella cites
Taylor v. Nelson,
Lastly, in
Domino Group, Inc. v. Charlie Parker Mem'l Foundation,
. Fradella also offered a letter, from an unrelated arbitration proceeding, in which the NASD had stated that the thirty-day period within which an arbitral award must be paid would run from the date the arbitrators issued an amended award, correcting two typographical errors. This letter generated no trialworthy factual dispute as to the NASD’s interpretation of an entirely different FAA provision (viz., § 12), let alone overcame the NASD’s explicit warning to Fradella in this case.
