MEMORANDUM OF DECISION AND ORDER
System4, LLC (“System4”) petitions the court to vacate a February 16, 2017 final arbitration award and several “related findings and rulings.” Docket # 4, at 1. It further seeks attorneys’ fees and costs. Respondent Luis Ribeiro moves to confirm the award. Docket # 11.
I. Background
The following facts are drawn from the arbitrator’s findings of fact, which this court must accept. See Mercy Hospital, Inc, v. Mass. Nurses Ass’n,
A. Procedural History of Putative Class Action
This arbitration arose against the backdrop of a complicated procedural history. In 2010, a putative class action suit
B. Arbitration Proceedings
Accordingly, following the court’s decision in 2015, respondent Luis Ribeiro, who was a putative class member of the suit, filed a demand for arbitration against Sys-tem4 with the American Arbitration Association (“AAA”) to challengе his employment status under the Wage Act. The AAA appointed arbitrator Jessica Block to oversee the proceedings, which concluded two years after Ribeiro filed his demand. At the outset of the arbitration, Ribeiro requested that the arbitrator make an initial determination that the proceedings should be governed by the AAA’s Employment Rules rather than the AAA’s Commercial Rules, and that the cost of the arbitration should be borne by System4. The arbitrator reviewed Ribeiro’s request under a preliminary injunction analysis. On October 7, 2015, after receiving briefing by both parties, she issued a memorandum of decision and held that she would apply the AAA Employment Rules because Ribeiro was likely to succeed on the merits of his Wage Act claim, and ordered Systеm4 to advance the cost of the arbitration proceedings. She noted, however, that because this was a preliminary ruling, she would be willing to hear additional argument from System4 “at a later stage of the proceedings,” Docket # 1-3, at 12, that Ribeiro was in fact an independent contractor.
On August 23, 2016, the arbitrator issued a memorandum of decision on the
System4 now moves under section 10 of the Federal Arbitration Act (“FAA”) to vacate the Award and the six related decisions discussed above. See Docket # 5, at 6-7.
II. Standard of Review
“[A] district court’s review of arbi-tral awards must be ‘extremely narrow and exceedingly deferential.’” Bull HN Info. Sys., Inc, v. Hutson,
III. Discussion
System4 moves the court to vacate the Award under sections 10(a)(2) and 10(a)(4) because, it alleges, there was evident partiality by the arbitrator and she exceeded hеr powérs. “To obtain vacatur of an arbitration award, ‘[i]t is not enough for [a party] to show that the panel committed an error—or even a serious- error.’” Raymond James Fin. Serv., Inc. v. Fenyk,
A. Evident Partiality—9 Ú.S.C. § 10(a)(2)
“Evident partiality is more than just the appearance of possible bias. Rather, evident partiality means a situation in which ‘a reasonable person would have to conclude that an arbitrator was partial to one party to an arbitration.’ ” JCI Communications, Inc. v. Int’l Broth. of Elec. Workers, Local 103,
As an initial matter, courts generally will not hear claims of partiality first raised after the arbitration proceedings conclude. See Fort Hill Builders, Inc. v. Nat’l Grange Mut. Ins. Co.,
In any event, no, reasonable person would conclude that the arbitrator was partial to Ribeiro. In support of its argument,. System4 asserts, that: (1) the arbitrator conducted an “independent investigatiоn,” Docket # 5, at 10, by—-without prompting from either parties—reviewing the previous state court procedural history, and including those procedural facts in her memorandum of decision on the parties’ cross-motions for summary judgment on liability; (2) the arbitrator ruled in respondent’s favor regarding System4’s statute of limitations defense, even though Ribeiro failed to. present an opрosition; and (3) the arbitrator “was not willing to perform her own independent inquiry ... with regard to one of System4, LLC’s arguments concerning Claimant’s Petition for Attorneys’ Fees and Costs.” Id. at 12. First, System! has failed to present any evidence supporting its contention that the arbitrator reviewed the procedural background because “she perceived it to be in the interest of Ribeiro.” Docket # 5, at 10; see JCI Communications, Inc.,
B. Exceeding Power—9 U.S.C. § 10(a)(4)'
System4 also claims that the Award should be vacated under section
1. Adherence to the Terms of the Agreement
Here, System4 argues that the arbitrator refused to adhere to the clear terms of the Agreement in three ways: (1) when she “refused to enforce the Commercial Arbitration Rules [as expressly provided for in the Agreement].” Docket # 5, at 14; (2) when she refused to enforce paragraph 19(B), the confidentiality provision, of the Agreement; and (3) when she refused to enforce paragraph 19(C), the attorneys’ fees and costs provision, of the Agreement.
System4 сorrectly notes that the Agreement expressly states that the arbitration will be “conducted in accordance with [the AAA’s] current commercial arbitration rules ... on the demand of either party.” Docket # 1-1, at 21. Under Rule 54 of the Commercial Arbitration Rules, “[a]ll other expenses of the arbitration ... shall be borne equally by the parties ... unless the arbitrator in the award assesses such expenses or any part thereof against any specified party or parties.” AAA Commercial Arbitration R-54. Instead of applying Rule 54 and ordering both parties to equally bear the expenses, the arbitrator granted Ribeiro’s request to apply the AAA Employment Rules, which shifts all of the costs to the employer. Accordingly, she ordered System4 to advancе the full costs of the arbitration “as. if the arbitration clause contained in the nonnegotiable franchise agreement were part of an employer-promulgated plan.” Docket # 1-3, at 10..
“If the arbitrator ignores the plainly stated procedural rules incorporated in the agreement to arbitrate while arriving at the arbitral award, that award is subject to a manifest disregard of the law challenge.” Kashner Davidson Sec. Corp. v. Mscisz,
System4’s other arguments with respect to paragraphs 19(B) and 19(C) of the Agreement are in effect substantively attacking the arbitrator’s unfavorable rulings. The arbitrator, contrary to System4’s contention, did not “refuse, to. enforce” these provisions. Docket # 5, at 15. Rather, she interpreted paragraph 19(B) of the Agreement (i e., the confidentiality provision) and rejected System4’s construction, and ultimately denied its request for sanctions . because she found that Ribeiro’s counsel had not violated the terms of the provision. See Wonderland Greyhound Park, Inc. v. Autotote Sys., Inc.,
2. Manifest Disregard
System4 also claims that the arbitrator exceeded her powers by acting in manifest disregard of the law when she decided the misclassifícation issue and addressed its statute of limitations defense. An arbitrator manifestly disregards the law “where it is clear from the record that the arbitrator recognized the applicable law—and then ignored it.” McCarthy,
[t]he prohibition articulated by the Supreme Judicial Court [in Depianti] against the use of an intermediate entity to misclassify service workers compels the conclusion that the factfinder cannot limit his or her analysis by focusing exclusively on the relationship (or lack thereof) between the master franchisor and the unit franchisee, as did the [Georgia Court of Appeals] in Depianti-Georgia and the federal district court in Depianti-D.Mass, but also must scrutinize the .relationship between master franchisee and unit franchisee that the master franchisor designed and implemented.”
Dockеt # 1-4, at 26. In scrutinizing the facts here, she found that System4 designed and implemented a structure that “unlawfully attempted to exempt itself from the wage statute by special contract (the master franchisee agreement) and other means (the three tier system).” Id. at 30-31. System4 argues that the arbitrator manifestly disregarded the law by refusing to follow the holding in Depianti-D.Mass, which also involved a thrеe-tier franchise systeto and in which the master franchisor was not found to be an employer under the Wage Act. Depianti-D.Mass, however, is not controlling law that the arbitrator was required to follow. Even assuming that it was and that the arbitrator misapplied the law, that error is not of the kind that would permit this court to overturn the Award. See McCarthy v. Citigroup Global Markets Inc.,
IV. Conclusion
System4, LLC’s Motiоn to Vacate Arbitration Award (Docket #4) is DENIED. Its request for attorneys’ fees and costs is also DENIED. Luis Ribeiro’s Cross Motion to Confirm (Docket #11) is ALLOWED. Judgment may be entered for respondent.
Notes
. The class was never certified.
. In Hall Street Assoc., LLC v. Mattel, Inc.,
