Appellant Sage Hospitality Resources (“Hotel”) seeks review of a district court order compelling it to submit to arbitration a dispute over the meaning of ambiguous language in the duration clause of a neutrality agreement between the Hotel and appellee UNITE HERE Local 217 (“Union”). As the parties agreed to a broad arbitration clause that unambiguously encompasses their dispute, we hold that the issue was properly consigned to the arbitrator for resolution. We therefore affirm.
I.
The Hotel and the Union entered into a neutrality agreement (“Agreement”) on June 9, 2003, in anticipation of the renovation of a dilapidated structure in downtown Providence into the Renaissance Providence Hotel. The Agreement set forth a process allowing the Union to organize the Hotel’s employees and to seek recognition as their collective bargaining representative; in turn, the Union would refrain from engaging in any picketing or economic activity against the Hotel.
Three provisions of the parties’ Agreement are relevant to this case. First, the Agreement established a “card check” procedure, by which “[t]he Union may request recognition as the exclusive collective bargaining agent for [the Hotel’s] Employees.” 1 Second, the Agreement provided for binding arbitration of “any dispute over [its] interpretation or application”:
The parties agree that any dispute over the interpretation or application of [the Agreement] shall be submitted to expediated [sic] and binding arbitration pursuant to [the] procedures below.... The parties hereto agree to comply with any order of the arbitrator, which shall be final and binding, and furthermore consent to the entry of any order of the arbitrator as the order of judgment of the United States District Court for the District of Rhode Island without entry of findings of fact and conclusions of law.
Finally, the duration clause of the Agreement stipulated that the “Agreement shall be in full force and effect from the date it is fully executed ... until thirty months from the full public opening of the hotel, or if sooner upon the Employer’s recognition of the Union.” The Agreement did not define the term “full public opening.”
A dispute over the meaning of this term arose on January 5, 2010, when the Union requested recognition from the Hotel pursuant to the card check procedure. The Hotel declined the request, characterizing it as untimely. In the Hotel’s view, the “full public opening” occurred on June 1, 2007, when it held a ceremony marking the “opening of the hotel doors.” This event, says the appellant, was preceded by a “soft opening” in which it had already begun renting out a small number of rooms and holding events. According to the Hotel, the Agreement expired on December 1, 2009, thirty months after June 1, 2007, and it thus was no longer obligated to participate in the card check procedure.
The Union then demanded arbitration over the meaning of the term “full public opening,” alleging that the “full public opening” instead occurred on August 21, 2007, when the Hotel held a ribbon-cutting and gala. The Hotel rejected the arbitration demand, again relying on untimeliness
On January 7, 2010, the Union filed in federal court a petition to compel the Hotel to submit to arbitration. The Union argued that the meaning of the term “full public opening” was for the arbitrator, who should decide the threshold issue of whether the Agreement was in effect, as well as the ultimate issue of the results of the card check procedure. The Hotel countered that the court should determine whether an agreement to arbitrate continued to bind the parties. It maintained that the term “full public opening” did not need to be construed by an arbitrator, because either it was not an ambiguous term or it was tantamount to a “date certain.” To the extent evidence was needed to determine the date of the full public opening and hence the duration of the Agreement, the Hotel argued that the court, not an arbitrator, should conduct an evidentiary hearing.
In an Opinion and Order dated May 4, 2010 (“May 4 Order”), the district court granted the Union’s petition.
See UNITE HERE Local 217 v. Sage Hospitality Res.,
A week later, the Union moved to enforce the district court’s judgment. In response, the Hotel filed a motion to stay the court’s order pending appeal and, in the alternative, for reconsideration. It assayed an argument not previously raised: that this circuit’s law on the arbitrability of termination disputes was “implicitly overruled” by the Supreme Court’s decision in
Howsam v. Dean Witter Reynolds, Inc.,
The Hotel appeals, asserting that the district court erred in concluding that the question of what “full public opening” means, and thus whether the Agreement was still in effect at the time the Union demanded the card check and arbitration, is for the arbitrator, and not the court, to resolve. 3
II.
The central question here is whether a court or an arbitrator should decide
We review a district court’s order compelling arbitration de novo,
S. Bay Boston Mgmt. v. Unite Here, Local 26,
A. The General Legal Framework: Does the Dispute Fall Within the Scope of the Parties’ Arbitration Clause?
It is axiomatic that arbitration is a creature of contract.
See United Steelworkers v. Warrior & Gulf Navigation Co.,
Here, the parties’ dispute concerns the interpretation of the duration clause of the Agreement. We may only affirm the district court’s order compelling arbitration if this issue is within the scope of the parties’ arbitration clause. That clause of the Agreement provides that “any dispute over [the Agreement’s] interpretation or application” shall be submitted to binding arbitration. The parties did not place any limitations on that language, and certainly did not exclude controversies relating to the duration or termination of the contract. A question as to the meaning of the term “full public opening” is manifestly a “dispute over [the Agreement’s] interpretation or application.” Accordingly, by its own phraseology, the arbitration clause applies to the issue in dispute, which was appropriately referred to the arbitrator for resolution.
The appellant acknowledges that the Agreement’s arbitration clause covers a broad range of matters. On appeal, the Hotel stakes its hopes on the claim that under the Supreme Court’s decision in
Howsam,
B. The Howsam Framework: Does the Dispute Raise a Question of Arbitrability?
In
Howsam,
the Court observed that “[although [it] has ... long recognized and enforced a ‘liberal federal policy favoring arbitration agreements,’ ”
But Howsam emphasized that “question of arbitrability” is a term of art with a narrow scope:
The Court has found the phrase applicable in the kind of narrow circumstance where contracting parties would likely have expected a court to have decided the gateway matter, where they are not likely to have thought that they had agreed that an arbitrator would do so, and, consequently, where reference of the gateway dispute to the court avoids the risk of forcing parties to arbitrate a matter that they may well not have agreed to arbitrate.
Howsam,
In defending against the arbitration demand, the Hotel maintains that the dispute between it and the Union implicates a substantive question of arbitrability and, as such, should presumptively be for the court to decide. The contrary results required by
Freedom WLNE-TV
and like eases, the Hotel insists, demonstrate that our precedents are inconsistent with the Court’s recent caselaw and should be repudiated.
5
The Union counters that
Howsam
requires no reconsideration of our law; that the parties’ dispute does not fit into the types of exceptional questions
Howsam
reserves presumptively for the courts; and that even if their dispute were to be characterized as a substantive question of arbitrability, the presumption in favor of judicial resolution would nonetheless be overcome by the parties’ clearly manifested intent to arbitrate a dispute over the interpretation of the duration
The Hotel’s absolutist position that contract expiration issues are necessarily substantive questions of arbitrability proves too much. Not all questions of contract duration are alike.
6
Cf. Granite Rock Co.,
In any event, even if we were to agree with the Hotel that a duration dispute of the type at issue here could be characterized as a question of substantive arbitrability and thus presumptively reserved for judicial determination, the presumption would be overcome by the clear and unmistakable intent of the parties to arbitrate controversies such as the one raised here.
See First Options,
III.
The parties to this grievance negotiated a broad arbitration clause memorializing their intention to arbitrate all questions of contract construction. Whether categorized as an issue of substantive arbitrability or not, the instant dispute over the meaning of language in the duration clause is one that the parties clearly anticipated would be resolved by an arbitrator, not a court.
See Howsam,
So ordered.
Notes
. The Agreement provides that upon the Union's request, an arbitrator
will conduct a review of Employee’s authorization cards and membership information submitted by the Union in support of its claim to represent a majority of such Employees. If that review establishes that a majority of such Employees has designated the Union as their exclusive collective bargaining representative or joined the Union, the Employer will recognize the Union as such representative of such Employees.
. We denied on October 18, 2010, the Hotel’s emergency motion for a stay of arbitration pending appeal or, in the alternative, for a protective order.
. The Hotel also seeks review of a determination by the district court, set forth as "[a] second factor supporting” its May 4 Order and later "clarif[ied]” in its September 24 Order, that "the rule allowing arbitration of
. The Hotel also raises a less serious argument that a court should resolve the parties' dispute because the Agreement contains a "date certain” for expiration. The Agreement’s duration clause did not set a "date certain.” The parties logically made the duration of the Agreement contingent on the hotel’s "full public opening” to accommodate unforeseen construction delays. Moreover, the very fact that the parties each have offered plausible but competing theories of when the hotel "opened” indicates that the date was anything but certain.
See Municipality of San Juan,
. Given the Hotel’s view on how significant a change to the law was wrought by Howsam, we find it curious and telling that it did not even mention Howsam until its May 26, 2010, reply to the Union's motion to enforce the district court’s May 4 Order.
. The Hotel suggests without much in the way of analysis that
Granite Rock Co.
v.
International Brotherhood of Teamsters,
