Wеlborn Clinic entered into a contract with MedQuist, Inc., under which Med-Quist agreed to perform medical transcription services for Welborn. Disputes quickly arose over the methods MedQuist used to count the lines it transcribed for billing purposes. Eventually, Welborn filed suit asserting breach of contract, fraud, deceptive trade practices, and conversion. The *636 district court determined that all of Wel-borris claims werе subject to arbitration under the contract’s dispute resolution clause and dismissed the complaint. Because we find that the narrow arbitration clause covers only some of Welborris claims, we affirm in part and reverse the remainder of the district court’s judgment and remand for further proceedings.
I
To create the medical records necessary for patient care, a medical facility must transcribe the reports, notes, and summaries dictated by health care professionals. In December 1998, Welborn, which historically had transcribed in-house, entered into a written contract with The MRC Group, Inc., under which MRC agreed to perform all transcription services on behalf of Welborn at a charge of 13.2 cents per line transcribed. The form contract was supplied by MRC. Under the heading “Payments and Charges” thе contract included § 3.5, labeled “Dispute Resolution,” which provided in its entirety:
In the event that any invoice amount is disputed by Client, Client shall deliver written notice of such disputed amount to Vendor within ten (10) days of receipt of the invoice by Client. In the absence of Client timely providing said written notice, Client waives any right to dispute said invoice in the future. Vendor shall promptly deliver to Client any backup or other informatiоn which supports the correctness of such disputed amount. Upon receipt of such information, Client shall have ten (10) days in which to examine such information and to pay to Vendor any portion of such disputed amount which Client, in its sole discretion, has determined to be substantiated. Thereafter, if any dispute still remains with respect to any amount, Vendor and Client shall immediately enter into good faith negotiations tо resolve it. In the event the parties are unable to resolve such dispute within ten (10) days of entering into negotiations, the dispute shall be settled by arbitration in accordance with the commercial arbitration rules of the American Arbitration Association. Such arbitration shall be conducted in the State of Ohio. The decision reached through arbitration shall be final and binding on both parties.
Soon thereaftеr, MedQuist acquired MRC and succeeded to all its rights and obligations under the contract.
MedQuist began performing under the contract on March 23, 1999. Almost immediately, Welborn challenged the methods MedQuist was using to count the number of lines transcribed and to calculate its charges. Welborn believed both that Med-Quist was inflating its line count and that it had misrepresented key elements of its counting and billing practices before entеring into the contract. This prompted Wel-born to initiate the dispute resolution procedure by delivering written notice of its disputes to MedQuist and requesting backup information. MedQuist refused to provide any backup. When Welborn subsequently withheld payment of the disputed invoices in October 1999, MedQuist stopped performing under the contract and refused to return any medical records it had in its possession. After severаl rounds of squabbling, Welborn exercised its right to cancel the contract.
On May 3, 2000, Welborn filed a complaint in the district court alleging breach of contract (Count I), fraud (Counts II, III, and IV), deceptive trade practices (Count V), and conversion (Count VI). It also sought declaratory relief requiring Med-Quist to return Welborn’s medical records. At a pretrial conference, MedQuist agreed to turn over those records and then moved to dismiss the complaint and compel arbi *637 tration. The district court granted Med-Quist’s motion in its entirety. Welborn appeals, claiming both that MedQuist waived its right to arbitration through its pre-litigation conduct and that some of Welborn’s claims are not subject to the narrow arbitration provision.
II
Like any other contractual right, the right to arbitrate a claim may be waived.
Grumhaus v. Comerica Sec., Inc.,
Welborn first claims that MedQuist’s delay tactics are a form of foot-dragging that is inconsistent with the agreement’s othеrwise valid arbitration clause. A party may waive its contractual right to arbitration either explicitly or through an implicit course of conduct.
Grumhaus,
It is true that lengthy delay can lead to an implicit waiver of arbitration.
Grumhaus,
Welborn also argues that MedQuist’s failure to follow the explicit steps of § 3.5 dictates that it cannot now move for arbitration. Since MedQuist did not promptly deliver to Welborn any backup information to support the correctness of its disputed amounts or enter into good-faith negotiations with Welborn, Welborn argues, it should not now be рermitted to jump *638 ahead to arbitration, the final step in the dispute resolution process.
The district court found that the other steps listed in § 3.5 were not conditions precedent to arbitration. As MedQuist points out, breach of a contract containing an arbitration clause does not amount tc a waiver of arbitration.
Local Union No. 721, United Packinghouse, Food & Allied Workers, AFL-CIO v. Needham Packing Co.,
In the labor context, Congress has voiced a strong preference for non-judicial resolution of employment disputes.
Clayton,
Based on Indiana law and the general presumption in favor of arbitrаtion, we find that the time limits and requirements to provide backup in this case were not conditions precedent to MedQuist’s contractual right to compel arbitration and that MedQuist has not waived this right. Indeed, the purpose of § 3.5 is undoubted *639 ly to encourage successful negotiations so that neither litigation nor arbitration will be necessary, not to prefer the courts to an arbitrator if informal discussions break down.
Ill
As noted above, § 3.5 provides for the arbitration of disputes over “any invoice amount.” The district court ordered all of Welborn’s claims to arbitration because it believed that the entirety of Welborn’s complaint was founded on an invoice dispute. Welborn, however, contends that the district court read the agreement’s dispute resolution provision too broadly and should not have submitted some of its clаims to arbitration. It specifically contends that Count I (breach of contract), Count IV (constructive fraud), Count V (deceptive trade practices), and Count VI (conversion) are not covered by § 3.5 and must be considered by the district court.
Whether an issue is subject to arbitration is a simple matter of contract interpretation.
Kiefer Specialty Flooring, Inc. v. Tarkett, Inc.,
The district court accepted MedQuist’s contention that the entire controversy is simply a glorified billing dispute and that all of Welborn’s claims “arise out of’ the “core allegation” that MedQuist has been overcharging the amounts on its invoices. Thus, whether Welborn wishes to put one label or six on its claim, the court concluded that it is all part of the same dispute and therefore arbitrable in its entirety.
In turning to the contract we are required to interpret, we agree with Welborn that the arbitration language in § 3.5 is far narrower than that at issue in all of the cases mentioned above and cited by Med-Quist. In each of those decisions, the contract in question contained a very broad, standard arbitration clause, similar to that recommended by the American Arbitration Association, requiring that “all controversies and claims” either “arising out of’ or “relating to” the contract would be settled by arbitration. See,
e.g., Kiefer,
The аrbitration clause here does not provide for the resolution of all controversies and claims relating to the contract; indeed, it does not even provide for the resolution of all controversies and claims relating to or arising out of billing, the interpretation the district court appears to have accepted. Instead, the provision is buried near the end of a section labelеd *640 “Payments and Charges.” That portion of the contract establishes the rates Med-Quist will charge, prohibits price increases for the first two years, provides for billing twice per month, and sets out terms of payment. After all this comes the provision dealing with disputed “invoice amounts.” It states that if, after attempts at negotiation have failed, “any dispute still remains with respect to any amount ... the dispute shall be settlеd by arbitration.” Other parts of the contract, discussing matters such as turnaround time and quality assurance standards, provide that if disputes under those sections are not resolved, either party may cancel the agreement, but these sections make no mention of arbitration. See §§ 1.2, 5.6.
While the strong presumption in favor of arbitration compels us to construe § 3.5 broadly, we cannot push it as far as Med-Quist would prefer while still making sense of the agreement. The parties here did not — either intentionally or through carelessness- — employ the nearly universal language recommended by the American Arbitration Association and referred to. in countless court decisions that would obviously have encompassed all of Welborn’s claims in this case, since all of them arise out of or relate to' the contract. Insteаd, the parties restricted the use of arbitration to the narrow question of the amount of money Welborn owes MedQuist under the invoices.
Cf. Bradford, Scott-Data Corp. v. Physician Computer Network, Inc.,
Under this standard, some of Welborn’s claims are clearly arbitrable and must be stayed. For example, Counts II and III allege that MedQuist committed fraud (in the inducement and in the factum) through various misrepresentations of the number of lines it had transcribed and the intentional billing of Welborn for a substantially greater amount. To prevail on either of these claims Welborn must demonstrate that MedQuist overbilled it, and therefore it must win, if anywhere, at arbitration. Similarly, to the extent Count I alleges that MedQuist breached the contract through overcharging, that claim too is arbitrable.
However, Welborn has also alleged in Count I that MedQuist breached the contract by stopping service, failing to meet turnaround times, and retaining untran-scribed dictation. Such actions would violate MedQuist’s delivery obligations under § 1.2, a section of the agreement that has absolutely nothing to do with invoice amounts and makes no mention of arbitration. It is true that MedQuist’s defense might be that it only stopped service because Welborn stopped payment, but looking only at the complaint, the amount of the invoice is not in dispute and the claim is not subject to arbitration.
Similarly, Count VI аlleges that MedQuist unlawfully retained, medical records that are the property of Welborn and temporarily converted them to its own use. These allegations state a valid claim under
*641
Indiana law.
Computers Unlimited, Inc. v. Midwest Data Sys., Inc.,
In Count V, Welborn complains that MedQuist violated the Indiana Deceptive Consumer Sales Act. Ind.Code §§ 24-5-0.5-1,
et seq.
The Act prohibits a vendor from falsely representing that a transactiоn has certain characteristics or will provide the purchaser with specific price advantages.
Id.
§ 24-5-0.5-3(a). The complaint alleges that MedQuist’s misrepresentation of its method for counting transcribed lines constituted an act of deception which violated the Act. If MedQuist did make such misrepresentations, the fact that it then accurately billed on its invoices in accordance with the terms of the contract is irrelevant. MedQuist cites to cases indicating that claims of fraud in making a contract may be subject to arbitration, see
Kroll v. Doctor’s Assocs., Inc.,
Finally, Count IV alleges that MedQuist constructively defrauded Welborn through its misrepresentation of the amount it charged for its services. Welborn alleges that this misrepresentation caused it to abandon in-hоuse transcription and permitted MedQuist to overcharge. Constructive fraud in Indiana is a theory used to abate the purchase price of a valid contract where one party, by means of the contract, has obtained an unconscionable advantage over the other. See
Stoll v. Grimm,
IV
Finally, MedQuist argues that Welborn’s surviving fraud claims should be dismissed for failure to plead with the specificity required by Rule 9(b), which provides that, “In all averments of fraud or mistake, the сircumstances constituting fraud or mistake shall be stated with particularity.” While this point was raised below, the district court did not rule on it because it dismissed the complaint for other reasons. The district court will have numerous other matters to sort out and may wish to stay its proceedings pending resolution of the invoice disputes being sent to arbitration. Furthermore, Welborn still has the right under Rule 15 to replead its complaint with greаter specificity (since Med-Quist has yet to file a responsive pleading), *642 even in the event of dismissal. For these reasons, we decline to address this dispute and leave it to the district court to consider on remand.
MedQuist’s motion to strike the reply brief is. denied. The district court’s order compelling arbitration of Counts II and III and the portion of Count I alleging breach through overcharging is Affirmed. As for the remainder of Count I and Counts IV, V, and VI, the judgment is Reversed and the case is RemaNDed for further proceedings.
