¶ 1. Plaintiff, the State of Vermont, appeals a judgment of the Chittenden Superior Court compelling arbitration and dismissing this declaratory judgment suit. The State sought a ruling concerning the amount of money to be paid to the State in accordance with the 1998 Master Settlement Agreement (MSA) entered into by the State, fifty-one other states and territories (settling states), and the major domestic cigarette manufacturers. The superior court ruled that the dispute was subject to an arbitration clause in the MSA, and dismissed the case. We affirm.
¶2. In reviewing an order of dismissal, “we assume that all factual allegations pleaded by plaintiff, and reasonable inferences therefrom, are true, and that all contrary allegations are false.”
Town of Brattleboro v. Garfield,
¶ 3. The MSA was a settlement of state claims against tobacco manufacturers for recovery of health-care costs attributed to smoking-related illnesses. In exchange for the release of those claims, participating cigarette manufacturers (PMs)
1
¶ 4. The calculations for payment allocations are performed by an independent auditor. Section XI provides that the auditor:
shall calculate and determine the amount of all payments owed pursuant to [the MSA], the adjustments, reductions and offsets thereto (and all resulting carryforwards, if any), the allocation of such payments, adjustments, reductions, offsets and carry-forwards among the Participating Manufacturers and among the Settling States, and shall perform all other calculations in connection with the foregoing. . . . The Independent Auditor shall promptly collect all information necessary to make such calculations and determinations.
¶ 5. Section VII(a) acknowledges that state courts have general jurisdiction to implement and enforce the parties’ agreement: “Each [PM] and each Settling State acknowledge that the Court . . . shall retain exclusive jurisdiction for the purposes of implementing and enforcing this Agreement and the Consent Decree as to such Settling State.” Section XI(c), however, states that:
Any dispute, controversy or claim arising out of or relating to calculations performed by, or any determinations made by, the Independent Auditor . . . shall be submitted to binding arbitration before a panel of three neutral arbitrators .... The arbitration shall be governed by the United States Federal Arbitration Act.
¶ 6. In 2006, the auditor determined that the PMs experienced a market share loss for the year 2003. Pursuant to § IX, a separate consulting firm concluded that the market share loss was a result of the MSA. Accordingly, the PMs requested that their payments be reduced. The settling states responded by asking that the auditor continue its past practice of presuming diligent enforcement for states that had enacted qualifying statutes. The auditor granted the states’ request and continued to presume diligent enforcement for 2003. Several of the PMs, believing the auditor’s presumption to be in error, made their 2006 payments into the MSA’s escrow account for disputed payments. The State of Vermont and thirty-six other states then filed suits in courts in their own jurisdictions for declaratory judgments that they had diligently enforced their qualifying NPM escrow-payment laws in 2003.
¶ 7. The trial court found the language of the MSA to be “very clear” with regard to arbitration of payment disputes. The auditor is required to calculate all payments owed to the settling states. Any NPM adjustment is included in those calculations. Therefore, the court reasoned, any dispute about application of an NPM adjustment is covered by §XI(c)’s arbitration clause. The court noted that, at the time of its decision, courts in six other states had addressed the same issue and all had ruled in favor of arbitration. Having concluded that the issue must go to arbitration, the court dismissed the case. The State appealed.
I. Jurisdiction
¶ 8. Before reaching the merits of the trial court’s decision, we must consider the PMs’ motion to dismiss this appeal. The PMs argue that the Vermont Arbitration Act (VAA), 12 V.S.A. §§ 5651-5681, does not permit appeal of an order compelling arbitration.
¶ 9. The question before the trial court, and now this Court on appeal, is one of contract interpretation: whether the parties contractually assigned disputes over determinations of diligent enforcement to arbitration via §XI(c) of the MSA. State courts have general jurisdiction to consider questions of contract; this jurisdiction is limited only when the Legislature has specifi cally divested the courts of jurisdiction over particular claims through statute. Ordinarily, this Court is empowered to review, and litigants are entitled to appeal from, any final order of the superior court. 4 V.S.A. § 2.
¶ 10. The PMs argue that the VAA precludes jurisdiction in this Court to entertain an appeal by the State from the trial court’s order granting the PMs’ motion to compel arbitration in accordance with the MSA. See 12 V.S.A. § 5681(a)(1) (allowing an appeal from an order denying, rather than granting, a motion to compel arbitration). The VAA, however, is inapplicable in this case. The MSA expressly provides, in § XI(e), that arbitration between the parties shall be governed by the Federal Arbitration Act (FAA), 9 U.S.C. §§ 1-14.
¶ 12. This provision makes clear the parties’ intention to arbitrate under the FAA rather than the VAA, and we must give effect to this choice. See
Mayo v. Dean Witter Reynolds, Inc.,
II. Arbitration
¶ 13. In deciding whether parties agreed to arbitrate a matter, we apply the ordinary rules of contract interpretation.
Bellows Falls Union High Sch. Dist. No. 27 v. Rodia,
¶ 14. We begin our analysis with MSA § VII’s jurisdiction provision. That section provides that a designated court in each settling state — Chittenden Superior Court in Vermont — retains “exclusive jurisdiction for the purposes of implementing and enforcing this Agreement and the Consent Decree as to such Settling State” and “shall be the only court to which disputes under this Agreement or the Consent Decree are presented as to such Settling State.” The State acknowledges that there are several exceptions to § VII’s general rule of jurisdiction, including special arbitration for disputes over attorney’s fees for the settled lawsuits, MSA § XVII(d), and, as described above, § XI(c) arbitration for disputes over determinations by the auditor. The State contends, however, that no exception, including §XI(c), applies because the determination regarding diligent enforcement is not expressly assigned to the auditor.
¶ 16. The PMs contend, and the trial court agreed, that the task of determining diligent enforcement falls to the auditor, at least by default. The auditor must calculate all payments owed to the settling states. MSA § XI(a). The MSA provides specific steps that the auditor must follow in making its calculations, including the order in which adjustments are made. MSA § IX(j). Applying the NPM adjustment is the sixth step in the thirteen-step process of calculating payments due.
Id.
Thus, the auditor cannot calculate payments due in conformity with the MSA without deciding whether the NPM adjustment applies, and it can make that decision only after first deciding whether each state performed diligent enforcement. As the events leading up to this case demonstrate, the auditor must somehow decide whether to apply the NPM adjustment, even if that means simply making a presumption of diligent enforcement in certain circumstances, as was done for 2003. The State’s argument — that the auditor is an unlikely or even ill-equipped party to be making an initial determination of diligent enforcement — does not change the fact that diligent enforcement is a condition precedent to payment. See
State v. Philip Morris USA, Inc.,
¶ 17. Furthermore, the arbitration clause applies not just to determinations by the auditor but also to disputes “arising out of or relating to” those determinations. MSA §XI(c). This language broadens the arbitration clause’s application to
“any
matter arising out of, or relating to, the subject matter” of the auditor’s calculations and determinations.
State v. Philip Morris, Inc.,
¶ 19. Finally, the State maintains that submitting each settling state’s dispute over diligent enforcement to one “nationwide arbitration” is unworkable in addressing the individual facts of each state’s case. Other courts addressing this issue, however, have found “compelling logic” in having disputes over diligent enforcement handled by one arbitration panel rather than separate courts in each settling state.
Philip Morris Inc.,
Since the granting of an exemption by one settling state will automatically lead to the reallocation of its allocated portion of the NPM adjustment to all other non-exempt settling states, each governmental signatory has its own self-interest at stake in the outcome of this issue, which is necessarily in conflict with every other state. Such a result defeats the whole purpose of having a Master Settlement Agreement. The mechanism of submitting disputes involving the decisionsof the Independent Auditor to a neutral panel of competent arbitrators, who are guided by one clearly articulated set of rules that apply universally in a process where all parties can fully and effectively participate, obviates this problem and ensures fairness for all parties to the MSA. To hold otherwise is contrary to both the spirit and the plain language of the Master Settlement Agreement.
Id. We agree. Even if the State’s fear that a single arbitration panel will be unable to adequately address the specifics of each state’s case proves to be true, that fear is not a basis for denying arbitration here. How the arbitrators pursue their determination of diligent enforcement is a separate issue from whether arbitration is required by the MSA. Such problems, if they do materi alize, may be raised in a post-arbitration motion to vacate or modify the award pursuant to § 16(a)(3) of the FAA.
The order compelling arbitration and dismissing the suit is affirmed.
Notes
The PMs comprise two groups: those who were initial parties to the MSA, known as the “Original Participating Manufacturers” and those who joined the MSA later, known as the “Subsequent Participating Manufacturers.” Differences between the two groups are irrelevant to this discussion.
“A ‘Qualifying Statute’ means a Settling State’s statute, regulation, law and/or rule . . . that effectively and fully neutralizes the cost disadvantages that the [PMs] experience vis-á-vis [NPMs] within such Settling State as a result of the provisions of [the MSA].” MSA § IX(d)(2)(E). Vermont’s qualifying statute essentially mandates equalizing payments by NPMs to an escrow account for every unit of tobacco product sold. 33 V.S.A § 1914(a)(2); see also § 1914(b) (discussing when these funds will be released from escrow).
Section XI(e) goes on to parenthetically state that disputes subject to arbitration include, “without limitation, any dispute concerning the operation or application of any of the adjustments, reductions, offsets, carry-forwards and allocations described in subsection IX(j).” The State argues that this parenthetical phrase should not supersede the main clause’s provision that it applies to any dispute “arising out of or relating to calculations performed by, or any determinations made by, the Independent Auditor.” The State’s point is that the auditor did not make a calculation or determination of diligent enforcement, only a presumption. On this point we agree with the thorough opinion of the Connecticut Superior Court addressing this issue: the broader main clause “delimits the substantive scope of the right to arbitrate under MSA § XI(c), while the narrower, parenthetical phrase that immediately follows it . . . describes a subset of disputes that clearly fall within that scope and usefully illustrate the full range of disputes, controversies or claims that are made arbitrable thereunder.”
State v. Philip Morris, Inc.,
No. X02CV960148414S,
Curiously, while the State now believes that having the auditor determine diligent enforcement would be “inappropriate” and “nonsensical,” the State previously asked the auditor to presume diligent enforcement. See supra, ¶ 6.
The State tobacco stamp tax is assessed through the sale of stamps to licensed wholesale and retail dealers, who must affix a stamp to each package of cigarettes sold to evidence payment. 32 V.S.A. § 7772. It appears the auditor could determine the number of units of tobacco sold by tallying the stamps sold by the State in a given year. Id. (“The commissioner shall keep accurate records of all stamps sold to each wholesale dealer and retail dealer . . . .”).
