DECISION AND ORDER
Plаintiff Sea Spray Holdings, Ltd. (“Sea Spray”) commenced two proceedings in the New York State Supreme Court, New York County, against Pali Financial Group, Inc. (“Pali”) and Buyers United, Inc. (“Buyers”), seeking to recover obligations asserted pursuant to a promissory note. That court issued an order directing a stay of arbitration proceedings that Buyers had commenced in Salt Lake City, Utah before the American Arbitration Association (the “AAA”). Thereafter, invoking this Court’s diversity jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. §§ 1332(a)(2) and subject matter jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1331 and 9 U.S.C. § 203, Buyers removed the two actions to this Court pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1441 and 9 U.S.C. § 205, where they were subsequently consolidated. 1 Now before this Court are Buyers’s motions to vacate the stay of arbitration proceedings and to dismiss pursuant to Rules 12(b)(1) and (3) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and the Federal Arbitration Act (the “FAA”), 9 U.S.C. § 1 et seq. For the reasons discussed below, Buyers’s motions are GRANTED.
I. BACKGROUND
In August 2001, Sea Spray entered into a General Security Agreement dated August 2001 (the “Security Agreement”) with Infotopia, Inc. (“Infotopia”), by which Sea Spray received an interest in certain designated property securing a loan by Sea Spray to Infotopia. 2 Section 1 of the Security Agreement provides:
The Borrower [Infotopia] hereby collaterally pledges, assigns and grants to the Lender [Sea Spray] a continuing valid and perfected lien on and sеcurity interest in all of the Borrower’s right, title and interest in and to the collateral described in Section 2 hereof ... in order to secure the payment and performance of the Loan.
The Security Agreement further provides that “any dispute arising out of or in connection with this security agreement, whether sounding in contract, tort, equity or otherwise, shall be governed by the internal laws (as opposed to the conflicts of laws provisions) and decisions of the State of New York.” (Security Agreement, § 6(¿).) The Security Agreement also contains a forum selection clause designating jurisdiction in the “state and federal courts located in New York, New York.” {Id., § 6(m).)
On April 24, 2001, Buyers entered into a Loan Agreement By And Between Buyer-sonline.com, Inc., A Delaware Corporation, and Infotopia, Inc. dated April 24, 2001 (the “Loan Agreement”), attached as Exhibit A to Jarman Aff. Under this transaction, Buyers borrowed funds from Infoto-pia, by executing and selling to Infotopia a Buyersonline.com, Inc. Promissory Note dated April 24, 2001 (the “Note”)) attached as Exhibit B to Jarman Aff., reflecting a principal sum of $500,000.00 to be repaid with interest within 18 months of the execution date. The Note is included in the collateral identified as the subject of Sea Spray’s security interest pursuant to the Security Agreement with Infotopia. (Security Agreement, Schedule A.) The Loan Agreement contains an arbitration clause which provides:
Any controversy or claim between or among the parties, including but not limited to those arising out of or relating to this Agreement or any agreements or instruments relating hereto or delivered in connection herewith and based on or arising in contract or in tort, shall, at the request of any party be determined by arbitration. The arbitration shall be conducted in Salt Lake City, Utah, United States of America, in accordance with the United States Arbitration Act (Title 9, U.S.Code), notwithstanding any choice of law provision in this Agreement, and under ’ the Commerсial Rules of the American Arbitration Association (“AAA”), not later than sixty (60) days after appointment of an arbitrator. Any controversy concerning whether an issue is arbitrable shall be determined by the arbitrator.
(Loan Agreement, ¶ 14.)
Prior to the date when repayment of the loan under the Note was due, Buyers contracted and executed an Agreement Of Understanding dated December 12, 2001 (the “Agreement Of Understanding”), attached as Exhibit C to Jarman Aff., with Pali to pay or purchase the Note from Infotopia at a discount. Pursuant to the Agreement Of Understanding, Pali in fact purchased the Note from Infotopia and was redeeming or selling it for a discounted price of $120,000.00 plus 35,000 shares of Buyers’s common stock. The Agreement Of Understanding provides in relevant part that:
Upon execution of this Agreement and the payment of the purchase price (the “Purchase Price”), Pali agrees to sell, transfer, quitclaim and deliver the original Infotopia Note to Buyers, with the following written across the face of theInfotopia Note, signed and dated by Pali: THIS NOTE IS PAID IN FULL ON THIS 12TH DAY OF DECEMBER 2001. BY PALI FINANCIAL, INC.
(Agreement of Understanding, ¶ 2 (emphasis in original).) Buyers made the necessary payments and received the original Loan Agreement and Note, which had been signed by the president of Infotopia, dated December 13, 2001, and bearing the phrase, “obligatiоn paid in full.”
In a letter dated November 22, 2002 from Sea Spray to Buyers, Sea Spray alleged that Buyers’s payment or repurchase of the Note was ineffective as against the security interest Sea Spray had acquired in the Note pursuant to the Security Agreement, and Sea Spray asserted that Buyers was in default of its continuing undischarged obligations under the Note. Thereafter, Buyers commenced an arbitration proceeding in Salt Lake City, Utah by filing with the AAA a Demand For Arbitration And Statement . Of Claim dated February 18, 2003 (the “Demand For Arbitration”), attached as Exhibit E to the Petition To Stay Arbitration dated March 11, 2003, invoking the arbitration provision of the Loаn Agreement.
Sea Spray, in turn, initiated two proceedings in the New York State Supreme Court, an action to stay arbitration and a plenary action to recover damages. In the Order To Stay Arbitration, that court granted Sea Spray’s request for a stay of arbitration proceedings on March 11, 2003. On March 21, 2003, Buyers removed to this Court both proceedings, which were subsequently consolidated into a single action. Now before the Court lies Buyers’s motions to vacate the Order To Stay Arbitration and to dismiss pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P 12(b)(1) and (3) and the FAA. 3
II. DISCUSSION
A. BUYERS’S ARGUMENTS UNDER THE FAA
Buyers argues that the present litigation should be dismissed in light of the arbitration provision in ¶ 14 of the Loan Agreement aсcompanying the Note. Sea Spray opposes this claim, arguing that it has no interest, through its Security Agreement with Infotopia, in the Loan Agreement but, rather, only in the Note, and that, at any rate, to the extent that the Note and Loan Agreement together constitute a single, integrated tránsactibn or contract, Infoto-pia’s commitment to arbitrate does not pass to Sea Spray via the Security Agreement. 4 The Court agrees with Buyers.
Regarding Sea Spray’s contention that the Loan Agreement and Note represent independent obligation, rendering the Loan Agreement’s arbitration provision inapplicable to Sea Spray’s interest in thе Note, the Court finds no merit in this claim. New York law on this matter is clear and dictates that “ ‘where two or more written instruments between the same parties concerning the same subject matter are contemporaneously executed, they will be read and interpreted together.’ ”
Ameritrust Co. Nat’l Assoc, v. Chanslor,
Here, the Loan Agreement references the Note. (See, e.g., Loan Agreement, ¶¶ 1, 2 (“Pursuant to the ‘Promissory Note’ ... Lender has agreed to loan Debtor the aggregate principal amount of One Hundred Thousand Dollars ($500,000) [sic] (the ‘Loan’).... In consideration thereof, Debtor will issue, cause to be executed and deliver to Lender, concurrent with its execution hereof, a Note equal to the amount of the Loan, upon t^ie terms and conditions specified therein, and in the form attached hereto as Exhibit 1.”).) Likewise, the Note references the Loan Agreement. (See, e.g., Note, ¶ 9(e) (“... contained in that certain Loan and Security Agreement, by and between the Parties relating to this Note ....” (emphasis added)).) Both instruments were executed on the same date, both were executed between same parties, and the Note was attached to the Loan Agreement. Furthermore, both documents address the same subject matter, which lies at the core of the present dispute, namely, the making of a $500,000.00 loan to Buyers by Infotopia. Under these circumstances, the two documents represent a single, integrated transaction and must be taken together. Accordingly, Sea Spray’s argument that the Note stands apart from the Loan Agreement as regards Sea Spray’s asserted interest in the underlying loan, thus insulating Sea Spray from the Loan Agreement’s arbitration clause, must be rejected.
2. The FAA and the Arbitration Clause
The FAA creates a “body of federal substantive law of arbitrability, applicable to any arbitration agreement within the coverage of the [FAA].”
Moses H. Cone
In the present case, the arbitration provision contained in the Loan Agreement is broadly worded, providing in relevant part:
Any controversy or claim between or among the parties, including but not limited to those arising out of or relating to this Agreement or any agreements or instruments relating hereto or delivered in connection herewith and based on or arising in contract or in tort, shall, at the request of any party be determined by arbitration.
(Loan Agreement, ¶ 14 (emphasis added).) By the plain language of this arbitration clause, Sea Spray’s asserted interest in the Note falls within the scope of this term, as the Note is an “instrument ] relating” to the Loan Agreement and “delivered in connection [^herewith.” 5 The parties’ dispute concerns whether the commitmеnt to arbitrate itself is binding upon Sea Spray. Resolution of this question requires an examination of the rights, interests, and obligations of Infotopia conveyed to Sea Spray through the Security Agreement between them as regards the Note.
Under the Security Agreement, Infotopia conveyed a security interest in certain specified collateral. Section 1 of the Security Agreement provides:
The Borrower [Infotopia] hereby collaterally pledges, assigns and grants to the Lender [Sea Spray] a continuing valid and perfected lien on and security interest in all of the Borrower’s right, title and interest in and to the collateral described in Section 2 hereof ... in order to secure the pаyment and performance of the Loan.
(emphasis added.) The specified categories of collateral include the Note held by Infotopia that was the product of its Loan Agreement with Buyers. (Security Agreement, Schedule A.) In that Loan Agreement, Infotopia contractually bound itself to resolve disputes relating to that transaction via arbitration, in the process waiving its right to otherwise litigate any such claims. (Loan Agreement, ¶ 14.)
Through the Security Agreement, Sea Spray stands as an assignee of Infotopia’s interests in the specified collateral, which includes the Note.
See, e.g., Septembertide Publ’g, B.V. v. Stein and Dаy, Inc.,
This principle applies under New York law even when the restriction at issue is a commitment to arbitrate. New York’s adoption of the U.C.C., specifically, Article 9, “means that a finance assignee suing on an assigned contract is bound by that contraсt’s arbitration clause unless it secured a waiver from the signatory seeking to arbitrate.”
GMAC Commercial Credit LLC,
Buyers attempted to commence arbitration proceedings in Utah in accordance with the arbitration clause embodied in the Loan Agreement, which provides in relevant part that “[t]he arbitration shall be conducted in Salt Lake City, Utah, United States of America, in accordance with the United States Arbitration Act (Title 9, U.S.Code)....” (Loan Agreement, ¶ 14.) This Court, however, lacks the authority to compel the parties to proceed to arbitration in accordance with the terms of the arbitration agreement because that agreement provides for arbitration in Utah, but the Court’s authority to compel arbitration under FAA § 4 is restricted to arbitration proceedings that occur within this District. See 9 U.S.C. § 4 (“The hearing and proceedings, under such agreement, shall be within the district in which the petition for an order directing such arbitration is filed.”). However, under these circumstances, in the face of a clear and binding commitment to arbitrate and upon Buyers’s application, 6 the Court will stay the present litigation pursuant to § 3 of the FAA. Section 3 of the FAA provides:
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 hаs 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.
As this Court has previously explained,
[w]here a federal court lacks authority pursuant to 9 U.S.C. § 4 to compel arbitration outside its district, the court may still determine that the dispute nonetheless remains “referable to arbitration” elsewhere, if a forum is designated, and must then order a stay [pursuant to § 3] instead, thereby leaving the parties free to pursue their contractual rights and remedies in the appropriate venue.
DaPuzzo v. Globalvest Mgmnt. Co., L.P.,
The Court has already explained that Sea Spray’s asserted interest in the Note falls within the broad scope of the arbitration agreement as reflected in the plain language of ¶ 14 of the Loan Agreement, and, for this reason, the dispute is “referable to arbitration under such an agreement” within the meaning of § 3.
See, e.g., McCowan v. Sears, Roebuck and Co.,
In addition to the authority provided by § 3, the Court, having concluded that Sea Spray is bound by the arbitration provision of the Loan Agreement, may stay this litigation pursuant to its inherent authority to effectively manage its docket.
See Landis v. North Am. Co.,
The Court now having vacated the Order To Stay Arbitration and stayed the present litigation commenced by Sea Spray, the arbitration proceeding initiated by Buyers is free to proceed. Should subsequent events lead Buyers to conclude that it would benefit from an order compelling arbitration pursuant to FAA § 4, Buyers is free to commence such a proceeding in the appropriate federal district court in Utah empowered by § 4 to compel arbitration both within its district and in
B. SEA SPRAY’S CLAIMS AGAINST PALI
Pali, which was also named as a defendant in this consolidated action, served in some form as an intermediary between Infotopia and Buyers in the transaction in which Buyers repurchased or repaid its obligation under the Note. Pali was not a party to the original Loan Agreement containing the arbitration provision. In a Default Judgment dated June 9, 2003, prior to having considered the merits of Buyers’s present motions to dismiss and vacate the Order To Stay Arbitration, this Court granted Sea Spray’s application for default judgment against defendant Pah. In light of the Court’s findings and conclusions articulated above, however, the Court will vacate this judgment by default and stay Sea Spray’s claims against Pah as well.
As this Court has previously explained, “default judgment is generally less satisfactory than a resolution on the merits ... [and a] court should resolve all doubts in favor of a determination on the merits.”
David Peyser Sportswear, Inc. v. Tongkook Corp.,
No. 89 Civ. 8461,
The Court concludes that reason justifying relief from the June 9, 2003 default judgment against Pali exists under these circumstances. Having concluded in section II.A(2) infra that the present litigation should be stayed in consideration of the arbitration provision of the Loan Agreement, the Court further concludes that piecemeal adjudication of the present dispute is an inefficient expenditure of the Court’s and the parties’ rеsources, and could potentially yield inconsistent results and circumscribed determinations that might ultimately prove unfair to those involved.
Whether Pah is bound by the arbitration agreement in this case is uncertain on the facts currently available at this stage of the proceedings. Pali’s precise role in the present series of transactions remains somewhat unclear. Whether Pah was an independent intermediary purchasing the Note, or an agent of Buyers facilitating Buyers’s repayment or repurchase of the Note, or an agent of Infotopia facilitating its sale or redemption of the Note, are details that would impact this determination. If Pah is bound by the arbitration agreement, then the Court is empowered to stay this litigation as regards Pah pursuant to both § 3 of the FAA and its inherent power to manage and control its docket effectively for the same reasons
Furthermore, developing authority suggests that the coverage of § 3 itself might extend to encompass nonparties to arbitration agreements with relationships or interests in the arbitrable dispute, apparently in light of the district court’s inherent authority to otherwise achieve the same result.
See Citrus Mktg. Bd. of Israel,
C. DISMISSAL
For the reasons set forth above, the Court concludes that all of Sea Spray’s claims, as against both Pah and Buyers, must be stayed. When all of the issues raised in a litigation lie within the scope of an arbitration agreement, courts have the discretion to dismiss the action rather than issue an order directing a stay.
See Da-Puzzo,
D. ATTORNEYS’FEES
Buyers requests attorneys’ fees pursuant to ¶ 13 of the Loan Agreement, which, like the arbitration clause, extends to Sea Spray for the same reasons discussed in section II.A
infra.
Paragraph 13 provides: “In the event arbitration, suit or action is brought by any party under this Agreement to enforce any of its terms, and in any appeal therefrom, it is agreed that the prevailing party shall, be entitled to reasonable attorneys’ fees to be fixed by the arbitrator, trial court, or appellate court.” Buyers contends that should the Court — as it does here — dismiss this action in contemplation of arbitration, Buyers becomes a “prevailing party” because it will have successfully enforced its right to have the present dispute resolved through arbitration, and would thereby be entitled to reasonable attorneys’ fees pursuant tо the plain language of ¶ 13 of the Loan Agreement. Sea Spray offers no opposition to this argument. The Court agrees with Buyers.
See, e.g., Wang v. New York Transit, Inc.,
No 91 Civ. 8695,
III. CONCLUSION AND ORDER
For the reasons discussed above, it is hereby
ORDERED that the Order To Show Cause To Stay Arbitration dated March 11, 2003 issued by the Supreme Court of the State of New York, County of New York, ordering a stay of arbitration proceedings in this matter, is vacated; and it is further
ORDERED that the Default Judgment dated June 9, 2003 against defendant Pali Financial Group, Inc. is vacated; and it is further
• ORDERED that the motion to dismiss this action filed by defendant Buyers United, Inc. is granted; and it is further
ORDERED that defendant Buyers United, Inc. is entitled to reasonable attorneys’ fees, incurred in connection with this litigation; and it is further
ORDERED that defendant Buyers United, Inc. is directed to submit to the Court, by July 3, 2003, all the necessary affidavits and supporting documentation establishing the amount of its attorneys’ fees incurred in connection with this litigation.
The Clerk of Court is directed to close this case, subject to its reopening in the event Buyers United, Inc. submits a request fоr attorneys’ fees as authorized herein and any dispute arises with respect thereto requiring further consideration by this Court.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Sea Spray is a business entity organized under the laws of the British Virgin Islands with its principal place of business in Tortola, British Virgin Islands.
. This factual recitation derives primarily from the Affidavit of Paul Jarman dated April 16, 2003 (the "Jarman Aff.”) and accompanying exhibits, from the Affirmation of Martin I. Gold In Support Of Plaintiff’s Petition For A Stay Of Arbitration And In Opposition To Defendant Buyers United, Inc.’s Motion To Vacate The Stay And Dismiss The Plenary Action dated April 22, 2003 and accompanying exhibits, and from the Order To Show
. In its Notice Of Motion dated April 9, 2003, Buyers identifies Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(1) and (3) as bases for its motion to dismiss, and it accordingly asserts arguments addressing jurisdiction and venue in its Memorandum Of Law In Support Of Motion Of Defendant/Respondent Buyers United, Inc. To Dismiss Actions And To Vacate Stay Order dated April 9, 2003. In a section of this memorandum entitled “All Of Sea Spray's Claims Are Related To The Loan Agreement And Therefore Subject To Arbitration,” however, Buyers also invokes the FAA to argue for dismissal of this litigation; Buyers also invoked §§ 203 and 205 of the FAA as bases fоr jurisdiction in its Notice Of Removal dated March 20, 2003. Because this line of argument does not constitute a challenge to subject matter jurisdiction pursuant to Rule 12(b)(1) or venue pursuant to Rule 12(b)(3), the Court will construe it as a request for a stay of proceedings under FAA § 3 and to compel arbitration under § 4.
. At the outset, the Court notes that Sea , Spray relies on the Security Agreement as the basis for its asserted rights in the Note. Through §§ 6(e) and 6(1) of the Security Agreement, Sea Spray consented to resolve any disputes arising thereunder pursuant to the laws of the State of New York and the U.C.C., and, accordingly, Sea Spray invokes New York law in presenting its various arguments to the Court in opposition to Buyers’s present motions. Buyers, too, relies on New York law in asserting its arguments in support of its motions to dismiss and to vacate the
. Indeed, it is effectively undisputed that the subject matter of the present dispute falls within the scope of the arbitration clause. Sea Spray never challenges this point, instead arguing that the arbitration agreement itself is not binding on Sea Spray. In fact, Sea Spray appears to explicitly concedе the matter: "Even if Sea Spray concedes that it is broad, the threshold question is whether Sea Spray can enforce its rights under the Security Agreement — for if it can — Buyers’ argument falls apart.” (Plaintiff’s Memorandum Of Law In Support Of Its Petition To Stay Arbitration And In Opposition To Defendant Buyers United, Inc.’s Motion To Dismiss The Petition And The Plenary Action For Damages dated April 22, 2003, at 12 (emphasis added).) Under these circumstances — given this potential concession in the absence of any argument opposing the matter — the Court has been presented with no basis to identify a dispute with respect to whether Sea Spray’s claim falls within the scope of the arbitration agreement.
. See note 2 infra.
