Vira Goldman appeals from a judgment of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Cote, /.), dismissing her petition under the Federal Arbitration Act (“FAA”), 9 U.S.C. § 10, to vacate an arbitral award requiring payment to Architectural Iron Co. (“AIC”) of $108,730.55 (plus interest and attorneys’ fees) on a contract to fabricate and install a conservatory atop Ms. Goldman’s townhouse. The petition alleges that the arbitrator acted in manifest disregard of the law.
See Halligan v. Piper Jaffray, Inc.,
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The district court denied the petition principally on the ground that Goldman failed to show disregard of law “ 'clearly applicable’ to the facts of this case.”
Goldman v. Architectural Iron Co., No. 01 Civ.
8875(DLC),
An arbitration award may be vacated if it exhibits a “manifest disregard of the law.”
DiRussa v. Dean Witter Reynolds, Inc.,
We review
de novo
a district court’s denial of a petition to vacate an arbitration award for manifest disregard of the law.
See Willemijn Houdstermaatschappij, BV v. Standard Microsystems Corp.,
The underlying dispute involved payment due under a home improvement contract for the assembly and installation of an iron-and-glass conservatory on the roof of the Manhattan townhouse that Goldman owns and in which she resides. Disagreements arose; Goldman refused to pay for work done; AIC commenced arbitration pursuant to the contract; and an architect was designated to serve as arbitrator.
Goldman argued to the arbitrator that, because AIC is concededly not licensed in New York, AIC was barred by the New York Home Improvement Law from providing such services to a New York home-owner,
see
New York City Admin. Code § 20-387(a) (“No person shall solicit, canvass, sell, perform or obtain a home improvement contract as a contractor or salesperson from an owner without a license therefor.”), and under New York precedent could not enforce a home improvement contract.
See B & F Bldg. Corp. v. Liebig,
AIC contested Goldman’s argument on legal and factual grounds. It pointed the arbitrator to New York cases saying that an unlicensed contractor may recover under a home improvement contract as against a general contractor,
see, e.g., Blake Elec.,
The fact issue for the arbitrator was whether Goldman was acting as a contractor or as a homeowner.
2
Since the arbitrator evidently decided she was a contractor, the decisive issue of law became whether the Home Improvement Law permits an unlicensed contractor to enforce a home improvement contract against a home-owner who is also acting as general contractor on the project. As to that specific question of law, there was no principle that was well defined, explicit, and clearly applicable. Certainly, Goldman advised the arbitrator of none. The resolution of the controversy in arbitration thus required application of “an unclear rule of law to a complex factual situation.”
Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Inc. v. Bobker,
The judgment denying Goldman’s petition to vacate the arbitration award is affirmed.
Notes
. Goldman deprecates the significance of this fact by pointing to § 1105(c)(3)(iii) of the New
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York tax code, which exempts all home improvements from sales tax regardless of the buyer's status as contractor or owner. However, Goldman concedes that she did not present that statutory argument to the arbitrator, and therefore we will not rely upon it to disturb the award.
See DiRussa,
. When at one stage of the proceedings Goldman sought a stay of the arbitration, the state court ruled, inter alia, that no public policy would be violated by arbitration of the dispute, which it characterized as turning on whether Goldman was a homeowner or general contractor under the New York Home Improvement Law.
