Opinion Per Curiam.
Appellant, Revere Copper and Brass Incorporated (Revere), seeks reversal of the district court’s denial of Revere’s motion to correct or vacate in part an arbitration award. The origin of the arbitration award in question is an insurance contract under which the appellee, Overseas Private Investment Corporation (OPIC), an agency of the United States, insured Revere against losses incurred by expropriation of Revere’s investment in its wholly-owned subsidiary’s aluminum mining and refinery complex in Jamaica. Section 10.01 of the contract provides that any disputes thereon “shall be settled by arbitration . . . [and] . [t]he award rendered by the arbitrator shall be final and binding upon the parties yy
Following a change in administration of the Jamaican government, Revere made claim upon OPIC for compensation, alleging that actions by the new government constituted an expropriation of Revere’s property. When OPIC denied the claim, Revere submitted the dispute to arbitration. The arbitrators determined that there was ex-propriatory action but awarded Revere $1,131,144, instead of the $64,131,000 that Revere had claimed.
Revere then filed its motion in the district court, seeking to correct or vacate the portions of the arbitrators’ award in which the amount of the award was determined. Judge Charles R. Richey concluded that “Revere’s claims amount to no more than the contention that the arbitrators misconstrued the contract. . . [which] ‘is not open to judicial review.’
Bernhardt v. Polygraphic Co. of America, Inc.,
Revere’s motion in the district court was made pursuant to sections 10 and 11 of the Federal Arbitration Act, 9 U.S.C. §§ 10-11 (1976). The Act was originally passed in 1925. Pub.L. No. 68—401, 43 Stat. 883. As stated in the Act’s preamble, Congress intended it to be “An Act To make valid and enforceable written provisions or agreements for arbitration of disputes arising out of contracts, maritime transactions, or commerce among the States or Territories or with foreign nations.”
Id.
In the ensuing years, “[t]he federal courts have recognized a strong federal policy in favor of voluntary commercial arbitration, as embodied in the [Act] . . . .”
Hanes Corp. v. Millard,
Seeking to avoid the restrictions upon our review of the award in question, Revere points to the rule that enforcement of arbitration awards is subject to public policy considerations. Revere misperceives the nature of the public policy exception to the enforcement of arbitration awards. It is not available for every party who man-, ages to find some generally accepted principle which is transgressed by the award. Rather, the award must be so misconceived that it “compels the violation of law or conduct contrary to accepted public policy.”
Union Employers Division of Printing Industry, Inc. v. Columbia Typographical Union No. 101,
While, in one sense, all rules of adjective and substantive law set forth the “public policy” of the state, there is a vast difference between the enforcement of a void contract and the mere misunderstanding or misapplication of rules of law involved in the application to a particular dispute of a [valid] contract .
There being no question as to the validity of the insurance contract between Revere and OPIC, or the legitimacy of the parties’ bargained-for performances, the public policy exception is inapplicable here. 2
If Congress wanted to exempt insurance contracts from the purview of the Federal Arbitration Act in the manner suggested by Revere, Congress could do so. In fact, the cases cited by Revere to demonstrate that arbitration of disputes between customer and broker is disfavored,
Wilko v. Swan,
We see no reason for holding that the failure of arbitrators to apply the rule of
contra proferentem
is sufficient cause for upsetting the award. In
Amicizia Societa Navegazione v. Chilean Nitrate & Iodine Sales Corp.,
Our disposition makes it clear that we do not find credence in Revere’s claim that it was compelled to accept the arbitration provision in its contract with OPIC. This allegation appears to have surfaced after the arbitration award was announced. 3 Revere is willing, on the other hand, to let stand the arbitrators’ majority decision in Revere’s favor that the Jamaican government expropriated Revere’s property. Such an after-the-fact, pick-and-choose approach to an arbitration award is hardly consonant with the underlying concept of arbitration or with Revere’s claim that it was forced to agree to arbitration in the first place.
As for Revere’s argument that the arbitrators “rewrote” the contract in excess of their authority, a cursory reading of the arbitration award indicates that it “draws its essence” from the Revere-OPIC contract.
United Steelworkers of America
v.
Enterprise Wheel & Car Corp.,
Affirmed.
Notes
. We do not agree with Revere’s contention that the formulation of the role of public policy in the judicial review of arbitration awards set forth in the
Union Employers
case is limited to the labor context. A looser standard in other settings would upset the basic goal sought by Congress in enacting the Federal Arbitration Act. Allowing undue challenges to arbitration awards would defeat the finality and speedy dispute resolution expected of the arbitration procedure.
Cf. Washington-Baltimore Newspaper Guild, Local 35 v. Washington Post Co.,
. Since the award here is not erroneous on its face, Revere’s citation of
Campbell v. Farmers Insurance Exchange,
. Revere was the party that requested arbitration of the dispute. Revere’s displeasure with the results is understandable, but the very purpose of the Federal Arbitration Act — to offer parties a mutually agreeable alternative to lengthy and costly litigation — would be defeated if this court upset the arbitrators’ decision.
