Van Ness Townhouses, Shay Trustees Edward A. Shay and Ai 0. Shay, and Donald A. Haun (“the appellants”) appeal the district court’s order compelling them to arbitrate their federal securities claims and their civil RICO and pendent state law claims. We reverse.
FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
This action arises from reаl estate transactions in which the appellants agreed to sell condominium units or real property to Mar Industries Corp. (“Mar”). The appellants alleged that Shearson Lehman Bros., Inc. (“Shearson” — the appellants and Mar were Shearson customers) and Bruce M. Rose (“Rose” — a Shearson broker) had helped Mar to defraud the appellants. The appellants charged that Shearson and Rose agreed to transfer certain bonds as payment for the sales from Mar’s account at *756 Shearson to the appеllants’ accounts, but that only a few of the bonds were actually transferred.
Each of the appellants, on opening an account at Shearson, entered into a standard form Customer Agreement that provided:
Unless unenforceable due to federal or statе law, any controversy arising out of or relating to my accounts, to transactions with you for me or to this agreement or the breach thereof, shall be settled by arbitration.... This agreement to arbitrate does not apply to any controversy with a public customer for whiсh a remedy may exist pursuant to an expressed or implied right of action under certain of the federal securities laws.
(emphasis added). The record indicates that the last sentence of the form agreement was intended to comply with SEC Rule 15c2-2 which was in effect whеn the Agreement was signed and which provided:
It shall be a fraudulent, manipulative or deceptive act or practice for a broker or dealer to enter into an agreement with any public customer which purports to bind the customer to the arbitration of future disрutes between them arising under the Federal securities laws, or to have in effect such an agreement, pursuant to which it effects transactions with or for a customer.
17 C.F.R. § 240.15c2-2 (1987). However, on June 8, 1987, the Supreme Court held in
Shearson/American Express, Inc. v. McMahon,
In June 1985, the appellants brought various federal securities, civil RICO, and pendent state law claims against the defendants seeking money damages, as well as rescission of and restitution for the securities transactions. Although Shearson answered the complaints and amended complaints, and moved to dismiss the action, it did not raise the issue of arbitration in any of its pleadings.
A pre-trial conference order providing for a jury trial was approved by the parties and executed by the district court in June 1987. The trial was originally set for May 1987, but was continued on the court’s own motion to October 20. However, in July, Shearson filed a motion to compel arbitration. On October 19, the district court granted Shearson’s motion. It later denied the appellants’ motion for reconsideratiоn. The appellants now appeal. We have jurisdiction over this appeal pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
Howard Elec. & Mech. Co. v. Frank Briscoe Co.,
DISCUSSION
1. District Court’s Order Compelling Arbitration
The appellants argue that the district court erred in compelling arbitration of their securities claims because they never agreed to arbitrate those clаims. We agree.
When we are asked to compel arbitration of a dispute, our threshold inquiry is whether the parties agreed to arbitrate.
Leicht v. Bateman Eichler, Hill Richards, Inc.,
In determining whether the parties agreed to arbitrate a dispute, we ask: (1) whether an arbitration agreement applies to the particular dispute; and, if so, (2) whether legal constraints external to the рarties’ agreement foreclose the arbitration of those claims.
See Mitsubishi,
The last sentence of the customer agreement’s arbitration provision expressly excludes claims arising “under certain of the federаl securities laws.” The Arbitration Act places arbitration agreements “upon the same footing as other contracts” and requires courts to “rigorously enforce” them.
Cohen v. Wedbush, Noble, Cooke, Inc.,
Here, Shearson admits that it inserted the language excluding certain securities claims from arbitration to comply with Rule 15c2-2 and that the parties signed an agreement that contained that language. This indicates that when the agreement was signed, the parties understood and intended that certain claims were not arbitra-ble.
However, it is unclear which of the “certain” securities laws, or claims arising thereunder, were meant to be nonarbitra-ble. We may therefore look tо the circumstances surrounding the contract’s execution to determine the parties’ intent.
Laborers Health and Welfare Trust Fund v. Kaufman & Broad,
First, Shearson argues that because the аgreement provides that it “does not apply [to claims] under certain of the federal securities laws” (emphasis supplied by Shearson), it only excludes arbitration of claims arising under the Securities Act of 1933. Specifically, Shearson asserts that because it was not until McMahon (in 1987) that the Suprеme Court provided a definitive ruling on the arbitrability of claims under the 1934 Act, Rule 15c2-2 (in 1983) could not have been intended to exclude arbitration of claims, such as under section 10(b) and Rule 10b-5.
We find this argument is untenable because in rescinding Rule 15c2-2—after the McMahon decision—the SEC stated that:
In light of the fact that then existing case law generally held that predispute agreements to arbitrate claims arising under the Securities Act of1933 and the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 ■ ■ ■ were void and unenforceable, the Commission determined that their inclusion in customer contracts without disclosure of their inapрlicability to federal securities law claims was misleading, thus constituting a “fraudulent, manipulative or deceptive act or practice”....
Exchange Act Release No. 25034 (emphasis added). It cannot be doubted that Rule 15c2-2 was intended to prohibit predispute agreements to arbitrate securities claims under both the 1933 and 1934 Acts.
Second, Shearson argues that because of the policy favoring arbitration, doubts as to whether a claim is arbitrable are to be resolved in favor of arbitration. While this is a correct statement of the law
(see Mitsubishi,
Third, Shearson argues that the exclusionary language in the arbitration
*758
agreement is merely a notice provision to alert the parties that certain claims may or may not be arbitrable, and that arbitrability of a particular dispute is determined by the substantive law at the time of the hearing.
See McCowan v. Dean Witter Reynolds, Inc.,
Because we conclude that the arbitration agreement doеs not apply to the appellants’ securities claims, we need not decide whether legal constraints external to the parties’ agreement foreclose arbitration of those claims.
2. Shearson’s Express or Implied Waiver of the Right to Compel Arbitration
The appellants argue that Shearson expressly waived its right to compel arbitration unless all of the appellants’ claims are arbitrable. In addition, they argue that Shearson implicitly waived its right to compel arbitration because it actively litigated this case fоr over two years before moving to compel arbitration.”
“A party seeking to prove waiver of a right to arbitration must demonstrate: (1) knowledge of an existing right to compel arbitration; (2) acts inconsistent with that existing right; and (3) prejudice to the party opposing arbitration resulting from such inconsistent acts.”
Fisher v. A.G. Becker Paribas Inc.,
Here, the appellants’ civil RICO and pendent state law claims are arbitrable as controversies “arising out of or relating to” their accounts with Shearson. However, appellants argue that Shearson waived its right to compel arbitration of all of the claims now because it did not seek to arbitrate the civil RICO and state claims prеviously. We agree.
Under the first prong of the Fisher test, we find that Shearson expressly waived arbitration of the civil RICO and pendent state law claims because it relinquished a known existing right to arbitrate those claims. Shearson argues that it did not seek arbitration of the appellants’ securities claims until July of 1987 bеcause before the McMahon decision (on June 8, 1987), it believed that Rule 15c2-2 precluded arbitration of those claims. Thus, because Shearson believed it could not arbitrate some of the claims, it chose not to arbitrate any of them.
However, in
Dean Witter Reynolds, Inc. v. Byrd,
Moreover, Shearson’s extended silence and much-delayed demand for arbitration indicates a “conscious dеcision to continue to seek judicial judgment on the merits of [the] arbitrable claims. This choice was inconsistent with the agreement to arbitrate those claims.”
National Found, for Cancer Research v. A.G. Edwards & Sons,
Under the second prong of the
Fisher
test, we find that Shearson implicitly waived arbitration of the civil RICO and pendent state law claims because Shearson acted inconsistently with its known existing right to arbitrate those claims. Under
Byrd,
if Shearson had moved to compel arbitration of those claims alone, the district court would havе been required to grant that motion.
We also find that Shearson implicitly waived arbitration under the third prong of the
Fisher
test because the appellants were prejudiced by Shearson’s inconsistent acts. In
Fisher,
we held that even extensive discovery into both arbitrable and nonarbitrable claims before moving to compel arbitration is insufficient prejudice for a waiver if that discovery is available for trial of the non-arbitrable claim in federal district court.
CONCLUSION
The district court erred in granting Shearson’s motion to compel arbitration because the parties never agreed to arbitrate those claims, and could not do so under the law existing at the time they signed the arbitration agreement. While we need not reach the issue of wаiver of arbitration of the securities claims, we must conclude that Shearson waived arbitration of the civil RICO and pendent state law claims.
REVERSED.
Notes
. In Leicht, the arbitration clause provided in relevant part:
THE UNDERSIGNED UNDERSTANDS THAT HE IS NOT REQUIRED TO ARBITRATE ANY DISPUTE OR CONTROVERSY THAT ARISES UNDER THE FEDERAL SECURITIES LAWS BUT INSTEAD CAN RESOLVE ANY SUCH DISPUTE OR CONTROVERSY THROUGH LITIGATION IN COURT.
Although the exclusionary language used in the appellants' agreements differs from that used in Leicht, both arbitration exclusion provisions granted account holders the right to litigate claims arising under the federal securities laws.
