Lead Opinion
OPINION OF THE COURT
The significant issue on this appeal is the applicability of this court’s decision in Matter of Marlene Inds. Corp. (Carnac Textiles) (
Respondent Allen Snyder, Inc., a converter of yarn, had various dealings with petitioner Schubtex, Inc., a jobber, in connection with the sale and purchase of certain synthetic textiles. The orders were taken orally at petitioner’s place of business, typed at respondent’s office on its printed order/ contract form, and mailed to petitioner. The confirmation of order form used in all of these dealings, including the one in controversy, contained the statement that the "contract is subject to the terms on the * * * reverse side hereof, including the provisions for arbitration”.
Following trial, Supreme Court determined that a valid agreement to arbitrate was made. The court found that on the basis of the history of the parties’ relationships, petitioner was aware that the agreement to purchase textiles would be subject to the arbitration clause contained in the written confirmation of order and that petitioner "adopted it, accepted it and undertook to be bound by it with full knowledge of its provisions and with full knowledge of the obligations which it entailed.” As a result, Supreme Court vacated the previous stay of arbitration. On appeal, the Appellate Division unanimously affirmed the judgment of Supreme Court, without opinion, but granted leave to appeal to this court. We would reverse.
Although our scope of review is limited when issues of fact have been resolved by affirmance at the Appellate Division (see Matter of Hofbauer,
In Matter of Marlene Inds. Corp. (Carnac Textiles) (supra), we held that an arbitration clause printed on the back of a written acknowledgment of order was a material alteration of the proposed purchase order and that it, therefore, could not be binding upon the prospective purchaser merely by virtue of the prospective purchaser’s retention, without objection, of the acknowledgment of order form containing the clause. (See Uniform Commercial Code, § 2-207, subd [2], par [b].) The rationale underlying Marlene was that a litigant
Applying this rule to the case before us, we conclude that there has been no such showing. The trial court, in determining that a valid agreement to arbitrate was made, based its finding solely upon the prior dealings of the parties. Although evidence of a prior course of dealing is relevant in determining whether the parties have agreed to submit their dispute to arbitration and a determination that their oral agreement included a provision for arbitration could in a proper case be implied from a course of past conduct or the custom and practice in the industry, such a determination must be supported by evidence which affirmatively establishes that the parties expressly agreed to arbitrate their disputes. As the concurring members of the court concede, "evidence of a trade usage or of a prior course of dealings may normally be utilized to supplement the express terms of a contract for the sale of goods” (p 9). We would note also that this doctrine has been held to be applicable to arbitration agreements. (E.g., Matter of Acadia Co. [Edlitz],
Here, in each of the two prior dealings relied upon by the courts below, the only reference to arbitration appears in the written confirmation of order form sent to the buyer after the negotiation of an oral contract. There is no evidence that in their prior dealings the parties ever arbitrated any dispute pursuant to the arbitration clause or that the clause was material in their negotiations. In this situation, as our decision in Marlene clearly indicates, no binding agreement to arbitrate could have arisen. Moreover, inasmuch as the mere retention by the buyer of the form containing the arbitration clause failed to create such an agreement in the first instance,
Accordingly, the order of the Appellate Division should be reversed, with costs, and petitioner’s application for a stay of arbitration granted. The question certified is not answered as unnecessary.
Concurrence Opinion
(concurring). I concur in result, but am unable to join in the majority opinion because of the erroneous suggestion contained therein, in dicta, that a court may impose an agreement to arbitrate upon the parties to a contract, despite the absence of any express agreement, solely on the basis of past dealings or a trade custom. I consider such a rule to be an abrupt departure from prior settled law in this State, and am especially disturbed by the fact that the majority has apparently chosen to adopt this principle without any expressed justification.
Petitioner Schubtex, Inc. (Schubtex), appeals to this court, pursuant to leave granted by the Appellate Division, from an order of that court which affirmed a judgment of Supreme Court vacating a stay of arbitration. The order of the Appellate Division should be reversed, for there exists no agreement to arbitrate this dispute.
The controversy between these parties is based on an alleged breach by Schubtex of a contract to purchase fabrics from respondent Allen Snyder, Inc. (Snyder). Schubtex initiated the transaction by placing an oral order for fabrics with Snyder. Subsequently, Snyder mailed Schubtex a printed "confirmation of order” form containing an arbitration agreement. Schubtex simply retained that form and neither objected to its contents nor signed it. At no time did the parties discuss the inclusion of an arbitration agreement. When Schubtex subsequently refused to accept certain fabrics, Snyder sought to arbitrate the dispute. Schubtex then commenced this proceeding seeking to stay the arbitration, on the ground there was no agreement to arbitrate.
Upon the trial of this issue, Snyder presented evidence of several similar prior transactions between it and Schubtex. In each of those transactions, as here, Schubtex had verbally
The majority of this court has concluded that there must be a reversal because there is no evidence to support a finding either that the parties had entered into a consistent course of past dealings including the use of arbitration as their normal method of dispute resolution, or that arbitration is so prevalent in the textile industry as to constitute a trade usage. I agree that such evidence was lacking, but deem that largely irrelevant, since I strongly disagree with the majority’s suggestion that the existence of an arbitration agreement could "in a proper case be implied from a course of past conduct or the custom and practice in the industry” (p 6) despite the absence of an express agreement to arbitrate.
In Matter of Marlene Inds. Corp. (Carnac Textiles) (
It is true, of course, that evidence of a trade usage or of a prior course of dealings may normally be utilized to supplement the express terms of a contract for the sale of goods (Uniform Commercial Code, § 2-202, subd [a]; see, also, § 1-205). General rules of contract law, however, are not always applicable to arbitration clauses because of overriding policy considerations. A purported agreement to arbitrate is severable from the other provisions of a contract (Matter of Weinrott [Carp],
"It has long been the rule in this State that the parties to a commercial transaction 'will not be held to have chosen arbitration as the forum for the resolution of their disputes in the absence of an express, unequivocal agreement to that effect; absent such- an explicit commitment neither party may be compelled to arbitrate’ (Matter of Acting Supt. of Schools of Liverpool Cent. School Dist. [United Liverpool Faculty Assn.],
"Since an arbitration agreement in the context of a commercial transaction 'must be clear and direct, and must not depend upon implication, inveiglement or subtlety * * * [its] existence * * * should not depend solely upon the conflicting fine print of commercial forms which cross one another but never meet’ (Matter of Doughboy Inds. [Pantasote Co.],
It may be argued, that our decision in Marlene does not entirely and specifically control the instant case. In Marlene, we determined that the inclusion of an arbitration clause in a contract constitutes a material alteration of that contract as a matter of law. We were not then directly faced with the issue of the nature and quality of evidence necessary to prove the existence of an agreement to arbitrate. However, the rationale upon which a court rests its holding is as much a part of the law as the specific holding itself, and the same reasons which mandated the result reached in Marlene are equally applicable to this case.
This is especially true since there exists no prior decision by this court impelling such a result. In Matter of Acadia Co. (Edlitz) (
This is not to say, of course, that evidence of a trade usage or a prior course of dealings is irrelevant in determining whether the parties have agreed to submit their dispute to arbitration. For example, if there exists conflicting testimony as to whether the parties did in fact enter into an explicit agreement to arbitrate, evidence of the customs of the industry and the prior dealings of the parties might well be relevant in assessing that testimony. Such evidence alone, however, does not serve to prove the existence of an arbitration agreement where there simply exists no evidence or claim that an express agreement to arbitrate was in fact entered into.
Since the record in this case contains no evidence of an express agreement to arbitrate, I would reverse the order
Judges Jones, Fuchsberg and Meyer concur with Judge Jasen; Judge Gabrielli concurs in result in a separate opinion in which Chief Judge Cooke and Judge Wachtler concur.
Order reversed, etc.
Notes
. An agreement to arbitrate is enforceable only if it is in writing (CPLR 7501),
. It should be noted that the determinations in this case by both Supreme Court and the Appellate Division were made prior to our decision in Matter of Marlene Lids. Corp. (Carnac Textiles) (
