The primary question to be decided is whether the Federal Arbitration Act (FAA) preempts State law so as to permit an arbitral award of punitive damages under an agreement purporting to be governed by New York law and providing that disputes are to be resolved by arbitration under the rules of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE).
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New York law precludes arbitration awards of punitive damages.
Garrity
v.
Lyle Stuart, Inc.,
The underlying dispute between Thomson McKinnon Securities, Inc. (Thomson), a securities brokerage firm, and its former customers, the defendants, arose as a result of two accounting mistakes by Thomson. Because the errors were not seasonably discovered, charges against the defendants’ account were not made until after the account had been closed. When the defendants refused to pay the sums claimed by Thomson, the latter demanded arbitration pursuant to the contract. The arbitrators awarded Thomson both compensatory and punitive damages, and the award was confirmed by a judgment of the Superior Court.
In their appeal from that judgment, the defendants challenge the arbitrators’ power to award punitive damages and also complain of certain alleged irregularities in the arbitration process. We find no error in the procedure, but agree with the defendants that punitive damages may not be awarded. Accordingly, we vacate the judgment insofar as it confirms the punitive damage award.
The contract, executed in 1986, is in the form of a signature card and provides that the “agreement and its enforcement shall be governed by the laws of the State of New York” and that “any dispute” between the parties “which does not arise out of the federal securities laws shall be resolved by arbitration under the Constitution and Rules of the New York Stock Exchange, Inc. [NYSE] or [at the election of Thomson] under the Code of Arbitration Procedures of the National Association of Securities Dealers, Inc.”
Under New York law, as previously indicated, arbitrators may not award punitive damages.
Garrity
v.
Lyle Stuart, Inc.,
Thomson urges that the matter is governed by the FAA and that New York law is not dispositive. Although there is language supporting this view, see
Raytheon
v.
Automated Bus. Sys., Inc.,
The leading discussion of preemption in this area is found in
Volt Information Sciences, Inc.
v.
Trustees of Leland Stanford Jr. Univ.,
The court pointed out that the FAA “contains no express preemptive provision, nor does it reflect a congressional intent to occupy the entire field of arbitration.” Id. at 477. Rather, the act (9 U.S.C. § 4 [1988])4 “confers only the right to obtain an order directing that ‘arbitration proceed in the manner provided for in [the parties’] agreement' " (emphasis in original) (citations omitted). Id. at 474-475. The principal purpose of the FAA is to ensure “that private arbitration agreements are enforced according to their terms.” Id. at 478.
The United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, in two recent cases citing
Volt, supra,
held that Federal preemption did not preclude the application of the New York
Garrity
rule (
In
Barbier
v.
Shearson Lehman Hutton Inc.,
The cases relied on by Thomson are either superseded, see note 5, supra, or are, for the most part, distinguishable as based on arbitration agreements which were read to authorize an award of punitive damages. Since the reasoning of those cases, however, suggests a different characterization of punitive damages under Volt’s preemption analysis, we *703 briefly mention their underlying rationale to indicate why we consider the Barbier case, supra, more persuasive.
In
Raytheon Co.
v.
Automated Bus. Sys., Inc.,
Todd Shipyards Corp.
v.
Cunard Line, Ltd.,
*704 These three cases, Raytheon, Todd, and Bonar, differ from the case at bar because in those cases the arbitration agreements incorporated the AAA rules, not the less explicit ones of the NYSE. Moreover, it is not self-evident that the question of punitive damages involves the scope of arbitration. Whether punitive damages may be awarded is not an issue in the underlying dispute; it is, rather, a question of available remedies. For a fuller discussion of this point, see Fletcher, Arbitrating Securities Disputes § 12.1 [2] [c] [i], particularly at 359-360 (1990). Rules governing remedies may be analogous to those governing the conduct of arbitration which were upheld in Volt. In any event, we read Volt and the FAA as permitting the application of the Garrity rule where, as here, the arbitration agreement does not explicitly or by incorporation authorize the award of punitive damages.
Accordingly, we follow the authority of
Barbier,
We turn to the procedural claims of the defendants. They argue that one of the arbitrators should have been removed for cause because he was employed by Shearson Lehman Brothers in its Boston office and the plaintiff’s counsel’s firm represented Shearson’s New York office on a number of collection matters. No one in the law firm had been involved with the Boston office of Shearson nor had there been any contact by anyone in that firm with the Shearson employee. The question whether there was a conflict was considered prior to the hearing by counsel for the NYSE and was recon *705 sidered by the Arbitration Department of the NYSE at the request of the arbitration panel prior to proceeding with the hearing. There was no error or abuse of discretion in the rejection of the defendants’ allegations (even assuming they were properly raised), and the claim presents no basis for vacating the award.
The defendants’ remaining contentions as to procedural irregularities are similarly without merit. That Cucchiella (who appeared" without representation) walked out of the hearing, thereby preventing a timely and proper consideration of his own evidentiary arguments, is dispositive of most of his claims.
The judgment is vacated, and a new judgment is to be entered vacating the award of punitive damages and confirming the remaining portions of the arbitration award.
So ordered.
Notes
Our decision is based on the record before us. For agreements executed after September 7, 1989, the NYSE rules, if introduced in evidence, may require a different construction. See NYSE Rule 636(d)&(e) (1990), 2 N.Y.S.E. Guide (CCH) par. 2636, at 4328 (1992). See also Self-Regula
*700
tory Organizations; Order Approving Proposed Rule Changes by the New York Stock Exchange, Inc., National Association of Securities Dealers, Inc., and the American Stock Exchange, Inc. Relating to the Arbitration Process and the Use of Predispute Arbitration Clauses, Exchange Act Release No. 26805, [1989 Transfer Binder]
To buttress its argument that the rules of the NYSE authorize such damages, Thomson points to the award form used by NYSE arbitrators, which has a space for the entry of “punitive” damages. As stated in
Fahnestock & Co.
v.
Waltman,
Section 2 of the FAA, 9 U.S.C. § 2 (1988), provides, in relevant part, that a written provision in a contract involving interstate commerce in which the parties agree to submit a controversy to arbitration “shall be valid, irrevocable, and enforceable . . . .”
Section 4 of the FAA, 9 U.S.C. § 4 (1988), provides in relevant part that a party aggrieved by an alleged failure to arbitrate under such an agreement may petition a United States District Court having jurisdiction under Title 28 “for an order directing that such arbitration proceed in the manner provided for in such agreement.” Whereas § 2 is applicable in State as well as Federal court, whether § 4 is also applicable to State courts remains an open question. See Volt, supra at 477 n.6. The court did not have to decide this question as the majority concluded that, even if §§ 3 and 4 of the FAA were fully applicable in State court proceedings, the California statute permitting a stay of arbitration could be applied because the parties had agreed to arbitrate in accordance with California law. Id. at 477.
In its brief before this court, Thomson relied on the Barbier decision in the District Court, describing it as one “precisely on point with the instant case,” Subsequent to the filing of Thomson’s brief, the Second Circuit, in the opinion cited in the text accompanying this footnote, reversed the District Court and ruled that an award of punitive damages was beyond the powers of the arbitrators.
Although Claire Cucchitti did not appear in the arbitration proceeding, we have discretion to consider the issue as applicable to her where injustice might otherwise result. See
Scannell
v.
Ed. Ferreirinha & Irmao, Lda.,
