Arbitration is often thought of as a quick and efficient method for determining controversies. Unfortunately, cases involving arbitration clauses sometimes are best remembered as monuments to delay because of the litigation and appeals antecedent to the actual arbitration. In any event, we shall deal with the incipient question — Is Judge Ryan’s order staying the action in the district court pending arbitration appealable?
I.
Because our answer is in the negative, it will suffice to state the facts briefly. In 1965, Standard Chlorine of Delaware, Inc. (“Standard”), a Delaware corporation with its principal office in New Jersey, entered into a written agreement with Jackson D. Leonard, a New York resident, whereby Leonard was to-pmvide the engineering skill and technical, “know-how” to build a plant contemplated by Standard for the manufacturing of monochlorobenzine and dichlorobenzine. The agreement provided, in relevant part, that “any controversy between the parties * * * with respect to any of the performance of the pa/ties under this Agreement” would be submitted to arbitration. 1 The plant was ultimately completed, but not to the satisfaction of Standard which charged that it was “inefficiently designed and constructed.” Leonard disagreed. While the ensuing controversy appeared on its face to relate to the performance of Leonard, Standard did not seek arbitration, instead, it sought recourse to litigation and instituted suit in the Southern District of New York. Leonard moved to have the suit stayed pending arbitration and Judge Ryan granted the motion.
*306 Even a cursory perusal of Standard’s complaint reveals that it was drawn with the objective of avoiding arbitration. Judge Ryan correctly characterized it as “a deliberate hodgepodge of contradictory charges.” The complaint couples a prayer for damages for breach of contract — a claim that is surely within the arbitration clause — with a request for damages for fraud and a demand that the entire contract (or alternatively the arbitration clause) be rescinded or reformed because of mutual mistake or because Standard was fraudulently induced to enter into the agreement. The experienced district court judge determined, however, that the charge of “fraudulent inducement” was a grasping for straws in the wind in order to escape arbitration. After stripping the complaint of its verbiage and argumentation, he found the alleged “fraud” was nothing more than a charge that Leonard had claimed he could perform his end of the bargain when it turned out he could not. 2 Judge Ryan, however, chose not to rule on the presence or absence of fraud, but based his decision on the narrow ground that the claim of fraud was insufficiently pleaded. In sum, he held that use by Standard of conclusory epithets such as “fraud” would avail it nothing when the facts revealed a simple action for damages based on poor performance. 3
II.
Consideration of the question of appealability must begin with the estab-
lished federal policy against piecemeal litigation. “Finality as a condition of review is an historic characteristic of federal appellate procedure. It was writ* ten into the first Judiciary Act and has been departed from only when observance of it would practically defeat the right to any review at all.” Cobbledick v. United States,
But, Judge Ryan’s order is appealable if it falls within a statutory exception to the finality requirement, 28 U.S.C. § 1292 (a) (1), which provides that “[i]nterlocutory orders * * * granting, continuing, modifying, refusing or dissolving injunctions, or refusing to dissolve or modify injunctions” are appealable. Were this question one of first impression we would find little difficulty in agreeing with Judge Learned Hand that “[arbitration is merely a form of trial, to be adopted in the action itself, in place of the trial at common law”. Murray Oil Products Co. v. Mitsui & Co.,
But we are not writing on a clean slate. In a series of severely criticized decisions
6
culminating in Baltimore Contractors v. Bodinger, supra,
7
the Supreme Court indicated that
under certain circumstances
an order staying a suit pending arbitration must be considered an interlocutory injunction under § 1292. The Court analogized such orders to those of a court of equity before the merger of law and equity. It reasoned that a stay of a law type action must be considered equivalent to an injunction staying litigation pending in another court; but, it added, a stay of an equity type proceeding is to be considered akin to an order within the action itself. The Court apparently recognized that troublesome distinctions would create a formidable task for lower courts: “The reliance on the analogy of equity power to enjoin proceedings in other courts has elements of fiction in this day of one form of action. The incongruity of taking jurisdiction from a stay in a law type and denying jurisdiction in an equity type proceeding springs from the persistence of outmoded procedural differentiations.”
III.
It remains for us only to apply that principle to the present case. Leonard tells us that because he pleaded no equitable defense or counterclaim, we need not decide whether Standard’s complaint sounded in law or in equity; that in either case the order is not appealable. But this argument ignores the full import of the Supreme Court’s holding, for the Court has held that “the special defense setting up the arbitration agreement is [itself] an equitable defense”. Shanferoke Coal & Supply Corp. v. Westchester Service Corp.,
Fortunately, the problem of classification is not overly difficult for we begin with the fact that Standard’s complaint, in its own words, characterized the requested relief of reformation or rescission as
equitable.
But we need not stop with Standard’s own description of its complaint, for it is clear that requests for reformation and rescission have traditionally been considered equitable in nature. Cf. Smith v. Bear,
While we recognize that we are compounding technical distinctions given us by a higher court in applying them to this case, we believe it preferable to adopting the alternatives of either glossing over differences deemed important by the Supreme Court, or accepting extensive delays in cases such as this.
13
Justice Jackson stated it well in another context, “To pull one misshapen stone out of the grotesque structure is more likely simply to upset its present balance between adverse interests than to establish a rational edifice.” Michelson v. United States,
The appeal is dismissed. 14
Notes
. The arbitration clause was drafted by Standard with the advice of counsel.
. In addition to the complaint itself, Judge Ryan based his conclusion on a series of letters written by Standard to Leonard prior to the filing of the complaint but several months after Standard allegedly discovered that the plant did not operate satisfactorily. In these letters Standard complained of Leonard’s “complete disregard of obligations under the contract” and his “inability to put the plant in operation” as promised; not a word was said about fraud or fraudulent inducement until 8 months later. Cf. In re Kinoshita & Co.,
. Because of the narrow basis of decision the District Court found it unnecessary to decide whether the question of fraudulent inducement should be determined under federal or state law. See Robert Lawrence Co. v. Devonshire Fabrics, Inc.,
. We note that such an order does not fall within one of the judicially created exceptions intended to soften the rigor of the
*307
finality requirement. Unlike Cohen v. Beneficial Industrial Loan Corp.,
. In this connection we note that following the decision of the District Court, Leonard served notice of arbitration and bas incurred substantial expense attempting to bring the matter before the American Arbitration Association.
. See, e. g., Wright, Federal Courts § 102 (1963) ; 7A Moore’s Federal Practice, pp. JC 424-27.
. See also City of Morgantown v. Royal Ins. Co.,
. Compare Travel Consultants, Inc. v. Travel Management Corp.,
. Section 4 of the Federal Arbitration Act, 9 U.S.O. § 4, provides that in appropriate cases a special suit can be instituted to compel arbitration.
. But see Prima Paint Corp. v. Flood & Conklin Mfg. Co.,
. See, e. g., Korody Marine Corp. v. Minerals and Chem. Philipp Corp.,
. Standard cites 3 instances in which it claims this Court has entertained appeals involving precisely the same facts as those now before us. It is true that in Prima Paint Corp. v. Flood & Conklin Mfg. Co., supra, we heard an appeal from an order staying a suit pending arbitration although the suit was brought for the equitable relief of rescission. But the question of appealability was not before the court and the appeal was dismissed as frivolous. In Robert Lawrence Co. v. Devonshire Fabrics, Inc.,
. Although we have stressed the technical nature of our decision, it is well to note that the result is not inappropriate on the facts before us. For to the extent Standard’s complaint sets forth a cause of action at law for damages for breach of contract, it should clearly go to arbitration under the arbitration clause of the agreement. We also note that the doctrine of
Baltimore Contractors
has compelled other courts to reach results they have recognized as anomalous, Travel Consultants, Inc. v. Travel Management Corp.,
. This does not mean that stay orders in circumstances such as those before us are immune from review by this court. We recognize that we have the power to issue a writ of mandamus that would reach the District Judge’s order. Nevertheless, mandamus is not a substitute for appeal, Bankers Life & Cas. Co. v. Holland,
