*357 MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
In this suit, рlaintiff Scott Y. Wood seeks a declaratory judgment that he is not required to participate in arbitration with PennTex Resources, L.P. and Lance T. Shaner. PennTex and Shaner began arbitration proceedings against Wood based on an arbitration provision in a contract that they allege binds Wood. In the arbitration, PennTex and Shaner seek to prevent Wood from continuing to prosecute claims he has asserted against a third party in a Texas state court. PennTex and Shaner assert that in the contract containing the arbitration clause, Wood agreed to dismiss or release the claims he is pursuing against the third party but has refused to do so.
In this suit, Wood asks this court to declare that he has no obligation to arbitrate with PennTex and Shaner; that he is entitled to continue to pursue the state-court claims against the third party; and, alternatively, that the arbitration is premature. PennTex and Shaner have counterclaimed and moved to compel arbitration and to stay this action, asserting that Wood is contractually bound to arbitrate whether he is required to dismiss or release the claims he is pursuing in the state court. (Docket Entry No. 8). Wood has responded, (Docket Entry No. 11), and PennTex and Shaner have replied, (Docket Entry No. 15). Diversity jurisdiction is undisputed: Wood is a Texas citizen; PennTex is a limited partnership with no Texas partner; and Shaner is a Pennsylvania citizen. (Docket Entry No. at 1, 2). The parties stipulated that this court would determine arbitrability and an expedited briefing schedule was set.
Based on a careful review of the pleadings, the motion, response, and reply, the parties’ submissions, and the applicable law, this court grants the motion to compel arbitration. 1 Because this court has compelled arbitration as to all the claims at issue in this case, dismissal rather than stay may be appropriate. No later than October 30, 2006, the parties should advise whether, given the court’s grant of the motion to compel arbitration, this case should be dismissed rather than stayed.
The reasons for these rulings are set out in detail below.
I. Background
On January 12, 2005, PennTex and Shaner acquired ERG Illinois, Inc. from ERG Illinois Holdings, Inc. through a Stock Purchase Agreement. (Docket Entry No. 10, Ex. A). The Agreement identified PennTex Resources, L.P. and its general partner, PennTex Energy, Inc., as the “Buyer Parties” and identified PennTex Resources as the “Buyer.” Shaner is the president of PennTex Energy. The Agreement identified ERG Holdings and ERG Illinois as the “Seller Parties” and ERG Illinois Holdings as the “Seller.” Wood is the president, sole director, and sole shareholder of ERG Holdings and the president of its wholly owned subsidiary, ERG Illinois, the company that PennTex bought.
Wood and Shaner both signed the Stock Purchase Agreement. The signature line for Wood stated that he signed on behalf of ERG Illinois as its president and on behalf of ERG Holdings as its president. The signature line for Shaner stated that he signed on behalf of PennTex Resources *358 by signing for PennTex Energy, the general partner, as its president.
Before the Stock Purchase Agreement was executed, Wood and ERG Illinois had been in litigation in Texas state court with Tsar Energy II, L.L.C. and its principal member, Richard Cheatham, over a joint venture between ERG Illinois and Tsar involving oil-producing properties in Illinois and Indiana. (Docket Entry No. 1, Ex. A at 2-5). ERG Illinois prevailed on one part of the Texas case, relating to whether ERG Illinois was entitled as the operator to charge the joint account a fixed monthly overhead for certain producing wells. Final judgment has been entered as to that aspect of the case and it has been severed and is on appeal. The litigation as to the other part of the Texas case continues. This part of the case is the basis of PennTex’s and Shaner’s arbitration demand and this declaratory judgment suit.
In the other part of the state-court litigation, Wood and ERG Illinois claimed that Tsar and Cheatham tortiously interfered with a prospective contract Wood and ERG Illinois had with another entity. (Docket Entry No. 11, Ex. 2). Wood sought аlmost $2 million in damages against Tsar and Cheatham. Tsar and Cheatham counterclaimed against Wood individually, asserting conspiracy with ERG Illinois to commit conversion and fraud. The Tsar litigation was pending when the 2005 Stock Purchase Agreement was executed.
Wood and ERG Illinois faced damages exposure in the Tsar state-court suit. The 2005 Stock Purchase Agreement addressed the Tsar case and any liability that might result. Section 9.4 of the Stock Purchase Agreement provided as follows:
9.4 Indemnification Provision For Seller’s Benefit Regarding Specific Litigation.
Buyer acknowledges certain litigation is now pending in the 334th Judicial District Court of Harris County, Texas, bearing Cause No.2004-39584, and styled “ERG Illinois, Inc. and Scott Y. Wood v. TSAR Energy II, L.L.C. and Richard Cheatham, ” and that future litigation may be brought or asserted regarding the subject matter of such Lawsuit in other forums or tribunals (all such pending or future litigation collectively referred to as the “Tsar case”). Buyer Parties and their successors and assigns will:
(a) Pay any and all costs of the company, Scott Y. Wood, or any of the Buyer Indemnified Parties, which may be incurred in the Tsar Case after the Closing Date. Buyer Parties will pay directly to attorneys, court reporters, copy services, expert witnesses, and consultants and other providers or entities, all fees and expenses of the Buyer Indеmnified Parties, or any of them, incurred after the Closing Date in connection with, arising out of or relating to the Tsar Case. Such payments by Buyer Parties, their successors or assigns, shall be made in accordance with the governing joint operating agreements within the time period stated on each invoice so that payment for such invoice shall not be past-due.
(b) Promptly pay all judgments, awards, sanctions, damages, expenses, and/or costs of any of the Buyer Indemnified Parties....
(c) Indemnify and hold the Buyer Indemnified Parties harmless from any and all harm, damage, loss, expense, liability, costs, awards, and judgment relating to or arising out of the Tsar Case
(d) Provide ... the amount of $1 million to secure the prompt payment and per *359 formance of all obligations of this Section 9.4.
(e) Provided that the Letter of Credit is in place and Buyer Parties have not breached this Section 9.4, Buyer will have full control of the representation of Seller Parties and Scott Y. Wood in the Tsar Case effective as of the Closing, with the right to cancel depositions and reschedule the hearing on Seller Parties’ motion for summary judgment, and Scott Y. Wood and the other Buyer Indemnified Parties shall give their full cooperation to the Buyer in the Buyer’s post-Closing prosecution and defense of the Tsar Case and Scott Y. Wood will, at Buyer’s request and upon being furnished a full and complete release of all matters in the Tsar Case, either dismiss or release the claims that he has asserted individually in the Tsar Case. Upon request, Seller Parties will deliver to the Buyer an executed form of motion for the substitution of counsel substituting Fulbright & Jaworski L.L.P, for the current attorney for Seller Parties and Scott Y. Wood in the Tsar Case.
(Docket Entry No. 10, Ex. A).
PennTex and Shaner assert that they negotiated Section 9.4 with Wood to avoid damages exposure from the Tsar litigation as a result of acquiring ERG Illinois and agreeing to indemnify Wood and the ERG entities. PennTex and Shaner argue that they negotiated the right to control the Tsar litigation after the Stock Purchase Agreement was executed. The Stock Purchase Agreement provided that PennTex would be responsible for damages, fees, costs, and expenses incurred by Wood and the other “Buyer Indemnified Parties” in the prosecution and defense of the Tsar litigation and required PennTex to post a $1 million letter of credit to secure this obligation. The Agreement defined “Buyer Indemnified Parties” as “Seller and its officers, directors, managers, employees, agents, representatives, controlling Persons, shareholders, and their Affiliates.” Id. Wood was a “Buyer Indemnified Party.” If PennTex met its Section 9.4 obligations, it would have “full control of the representation of Sellеr Parties and Scott Y. Wood in the Tsar Case effective as of the Closing ... and Scott Y. Wood and the other Buyer Indemnified Parties shall give their full cooperation to the Buyer in the Buyer’s post-Closing prosecution and defense of the Tsar Case and Scott Y. Wood will, at Buyer’s request and upon being furnished a full and complete release of all matters in the Tsar Case, either dismiss or release the claims that he has asserted individually in the Tsar Case.” (Docket Entry No. 10, Ex. A).
After the Stock Purchase Agreement was executed, PennTex posted the $1 million letter of credit. (Docket Entry No. 11, Ex. A at 2). PennTex also paid the attorneys’ fees ERG Illinois and Wood demanded. (Docket Entry No. 10, Ex. I at 3). Wood asserts that PennTex paid the attorneys’ fees to ERG Holdings, which paid Wood because of an indemnity obligation owed him as a director and officer under ERG Holdings’s articles of incorporation and by-laws. PennTex asserts that it paid ERG Holdings not only the corporate entities’ fees but also Wood’s attorneys’ fees because he was an indemnified party under the Stock Purchase Agreement. (Docket Entry No. 10, Ex. E at 4).
In January 2006, Tsar and Cheatham nonsuited the counterclaims they had asserted against Wood, without prejudice. (Docket Entry No. 10, Ex. F at 2-3). In May 2006, PennTex provided Wood a full and complete release exеcuted by Tsar and Cheatham. The release applied to “all matters in the Tsar Case” and other claims that they could have asserted against Wood. Wood asserts that the release was *360 not necessary because Tsar and Cheatham had already nonsuited their claims against him. Wood asserts that he did not request the release because he did not want to relinquish his individual claims against Tsar and Cheatham in the state-court case. (Docket Entry No. 11 at 5-6; Ex. A at 2-3). Wood further asserts that he did not need the release because he was indemnified by ERG Holdings under its bylaws. (Docket Entry No. 11 at 5). PennTex responds that the release it obtained on Wood’s behalf dismissed the Tsar parties’ claims against him with prejudice, while the prior nonsuit was without prejudice. PennTex also asserts that the release it obtained of the Tsar parties’ claims against Wood provided “absolute and unlimited contractual protection,” more valuable than the limited indemnification Wood might have from ERG Holdings. (Docket Entry No. 9 at 14; Docket Entry No. 15 at 6).
In the May 2006 letter that delivered the executed release to Wood, PennTex and Shaner demanded that Wood dismiss or release the claims he had asserted against Tsar and Cheatham in the state-court case. (Docket Entry No. 10, Ex. H at 8). Wood refused by letter dated May 3, 2006. (Dоcket Entry No. 15, Ex. B). In June 2006, PennTex and Shaner began an arbitration proceeding against ERG Holdings and Wood, seeking specific performance of Wood’s alleged obligation under the Stock Purchase Agreement to release or dismiss his claims against Tsar and Cheatham. (Docket Entry No. 10, Ex. I). The arbitration demand was based on the following provision in the Stock Purchase Agreement:
11.6 Binding Arbitration
(a) All disputes arising under this Agreement, (“Disputes”) will be resolved as follows: first senior management of Buyer and Seller will meet to attempt to resolve such Dispute. If the Dispute cannot be resolved by agreement of the Parties, any Party may, after 30 days following the first meeting of Senior Management of Buyer and Seller, make a written demand for binding arbitration of the Dispute in accordance with this Section 11.6; provided that the foregoing shall not preclude equitable or other judicial relief to enforce the provisions hereof or to preserve the status quo pending resolution of Disputes; and provided further and subject to Section 9.4 that resolution of Disputes with respect to claims by Third Persons will be deferred until any judicial proceeding with respect thereto are concluded.
(Docket Entry No. 10, Ex. A). The Stock Purchase Agreement provided that Texas law would apply. “This Agreement and the performance of the Transactions and obligations of the Parties hereunder will be governed by and construed in the State of Texas, without giving any effect to any choice of law principles.” (Id. at 35).
In June 2006, Wood filed this suit seeking a declaratory judgment that he is not obligated to arbitrate the claim that he must release or dismiss his claims against the Tsar parties and that he would not be bound by any such arbitration. Wood asserts that he is not a party to the Stock Purchase Agreement and is not bound by the arbitration provision. In this complaint, Wood seeks “declaratory relief to protect his right to proceed to trial against Tsar and Cheatham and ... a recovery of $1,869,365.00... .Wood requests the Court to construe the [Stock Purchase Agreement] and to declare that: a. he is not a party to the arbitration found in the [Stock Purchase Agreement]; b. Wood is not bound by any award made in the arbitration proceeding; and c. to the extent the Court finds that Wood is a party to the arbitration provision, the arbitration is *361 premature for failure to satisfy conditions precedent to the requested arbitration.” (Docket Entry No. 1 at 5). PennTex and Shaner counterclaimed, seeking to compel Wood to arbitrate the issue of whether the Stock Purchase Agreement requires him to dismiss or release his claims against thе Tsar parties in the state court. PennTex and Shaner assert that Wood is a party to the Stock Purchase Agreement and bound by its arbitration clause. They also argue that, even if Wood is not a party, he can be compelled to arbitrate under agency and contract principles recognized by state and federal courts. The parties have agreed to stay the arbitration until this court determines whether the dispute is arbitrable. The state-court trial of the claims Wood asserted against the Tsar parties is also stayed pending the decision on arbitrability.
II. The Legal Standards
The parties agree that this dispute falls under the Federal Arbitration Act. The Act provides in relevant part:
If any suit or proceeding be brought in any of the courts of the United States upon any issue referable to arbitration under an agreement in writing for such arbitration, the court in which such suit is pending, upon being satisfied that the issue involved in such suit or proceeding is referable to arbitration under such an agreement, shall on application of one of the parties stay the trial of the action until such arbitratipn has been had in accordance with the terms of the agreement.
9 U.S.C. § 3.
A party aggrieved by the alleged failure, neglect, or refusal of another to arbitrate under a written agreement for arbitration may petition any United States district court which, save for such agreement, would have jurisdiction under Title 28, in a civil action or in admiralty of the subject matter of a suit arising out of the controversy between the parties, for an order directing that such arbitration proceed in the manner provided for in such agreement.
9 U.S.C. § 4.
This court must first decide “whether the parties agreed to arbitrate the dispute in question. This determination involves two considerations: (1) whether there is a valid agreement to arbitrate between the parties; and (2) whether the dispute in question falls within the scope of that arbitration agreement.”
Tittle v. Enron Corp.,
If there is a binding agreement to arbitrate, the court must then decide whether the dispute is within the scope of that agreement.
Tittle,
Finally, the court must determine whether “legal constraints external to the parties’ agreement foreclosed the arbitration of those claims.”
Tittle,
Wood first claims that he did not sign the Stock Purchase Agreement in his individual capacity and cannot be required to arbitrate under that Agreement. (Docket Entry No. 11 at 1-3, 9-11). PennTex and Shaner respond that Wood is individually bound to the terms of the Stock Purchase Agreement. PennTex and Shaner also argue that even if Wood is a nonparty to that Agreement, he can nonetheless be required to arbitrate under estoppel and agency principles; Wood disputes that those principles allow a nonsignatory in his position to be compelled to arbitrate with a signatory. Wood argues that even if he is bound by the Stock Purchase Agreement, his dispute with PennTex and Shaner does not fall within the scope of the arbitration clause because certain prerequisites to arbitration have not been met; PennTex and Shaner assert that the arbitration is not premature and should be compelled. Each argument and response is examined below.
III. Is Wood a Party to the Stock Purchase Agreement?
The first issue is whether Wood can be compelled to arbitrate because he is a party to the Stock Purchase Agreement. “A federal court decides challenges to the making of an agreement to arbitrate.”
Brown v. Pac. Life Ins. Co.,
Wood argues that he did not sign the Stock Purchase Agreement in his individual capacity and that he cannot be compelled to arbitrate as a party to that Agreement. PennTex and Shaner argue that Wood can be required to arbitrate as a party to the Stock Purchase Agreement because he manifested his intent to be individually bound by its terms, despite the fact that he is not a “Seller Party” as defined in the Agreement and despite the fact that he signed the Agreement as president of ERG Illinois and ERG Holdings. PennTex and Shaner argue that Wood manifested his consent to assume individual obligations under the Agreement in addition to obligations imposed on the corporate parties on whose behalf he signed.
Under Texas law, an agent who signs a contract for a disclosed principal is generally not liable for the obligations imposed under that contract. Texas law recognizes that “parties to a contract may
*363
alter this general rule so that the agent
will
be liable on the contract.”
Instone Travel Tech. Marine & Offshore v. Int’l Shipping Partners,
In
American Petrofina,
an agreement guaranteeing a corporate debt was signed by two brothers who designated their corporate capacities after their signatures. The court held the obligations after the signatures to be
descriptio personae. Id.
at 487. Texas law defines
“descriptio personae”
as the use of a word or phrase to identify or point out the person intended, not to indicate that the person is signing only in the “technical character” that might appear indicated by that word or phrase.
Neeley v. Intercity Mgmt. Corp.,
The courts have rejected the application of
descriptio personae
when it would impose corporate obligations on an individual who signed only in a corporate capacity, as opposed to enforcing obligations that the individual agreed to assume in addition to, or in place of, corporate obligations. In
Block v. Aube,
Under Texas law, a corporate designation does not relieve an individual signatory of liability if the contract imposes such personal liability:
*364 [T]here is no clear mode of signature that will absolutely fix or avoid personal liability. A signature followed by corporate office will result in personal liability where the individual is clearly designated within the instrument аs personal surety for the principal. In such case, the corporate office may be construed a descriptio personae of the signator rather than indication of the capacity in which he signs.
Material P’ships., Inc. v. Ventura,
The Fifth Circuit has applied the
American Petrofina
rule. In
Instone Travel Tech. Marine & Offshore v. Int’l Shipping Partners,
In this case, Wood signed thе Stock Purchase Agreement above a signature line that indicated his corporate capacity. Section 9.4 of the Stock Purchase Agreement, however, clearly imposed obligations on Scott Y. Wood as an individual separately from, and in addition to, the obligations imposed on the Seller Parties, ERG Illinois and ERG Holdings. Section 9.4 stated that if the Buyer met its obligations of posting the letter of credit, paying the costs and fees relating to the Tsar litigation, and providing releases to Wood and the ERG entities relating to that litigation, then “Scott Y. Wood and the other Buyer Indemnified Parties shall give their full cooperation to the Buyer,” and “Scott Y. Wood will, at Buyer’s request and upon being furnished a full and complete release of all matters in the Tsar Case, either dismiss or release the claims that he has asserted individually in the Tsar Case.” (Docket Entry No. 1, Ex. A, Section 9.4(e)(emphasis added)). Section 9.4 of the Stock Purchase Agreement imposed duties on Wood individually, not merely on the ERG corporate entities. Under American Petrofina and Instone, the fact that Wood signed in his corporate capacity does not determine his status as a party because, read as a whole, the Agreement makes it clear that Wood agreed to assume certain personal obligations in addition to the obligations imposed on the cоrporations.
Wood claims that he insulated himself from personal liability arising from his ownership and sale of ERG Illinois stock by creating a separate corporation, ERG Holdings, to hold that stock before he signed the Stock Purchase Agreement. Wood testified that before signing the 2005 Stock Purchase Agreement, he had transferred the stock he owned in ERG Illinois to ERG Illinois Holdings to try to “separate the company out from — from myself.” (Docket Entry No. 8, Ex. G at 38; Docket Entry No. 11 at 3). This corporate struc *365 ture is not inconsistent with, and does not defeat, holding Wood individually responsible for his individual — not corporate — obligations under the Stock Purchase Agreement. The Agreement requires Wood himself to perform specific acts. In signing the Stock Purchase Agreement, Wood manifested his intent to assume these individual obligations, in addition to the obligations assumed by the disclosed principal. To read the Stock Purchase Agreement as Wood urges would do what Texas law forbids: allow a corporate designation in a signature line to overcome expressly assumed personal duties, making specific contract provisions meaningless. To read the Stock Purchase Agreement to allow Wood to avoid his obligations would negate the purpose of Section 9.4; holding that Wood has the spеcifically identified personal obligations set out in Section 9.4 gives the Agreement its intended effect.
This court finds that under Texas law, Wood’s signature under the designation of “President” in the Stock Purchase Agreement does not preclude his personal liability for the individual obligations he agreed to assume in Section 9.4 of the Agreement. Because Wood is a party to the Agreement, he can be compelled to arbitrate if the dispute is within the scope of the arbitration clause.
IY. Can Wood Be Compelled to Arbitrate Under Contract or Agency Principles?
Alternatively, PennTex and Shaner urge that, even if Wood is not a party to the Stock Purchase Agreement, he can be compelled to arbitrate this dispute arising under the Agreement under recognized contract or agency principles. This court has found that Wood is a party to the Agreement and can be compelled to arbitrate on that basis. The issue is whether Wood can be compelled to arbitrate if, despite the individual obligations Wood assumed and the individual benefits he received in the Agreement, he is considered a nonsignatory. This circuit has not analyzed a case involving similar facts.
The courts are properly cautious in binding individuals who have not signed contracts containing arbitration clаuses to arbitrate under those contracts. Arbitration is a matter of contract.
Grigson v. Creative Artists Agency, L.L.C.,
Cases addressing whether to compel arbitration involving a nonparty to an arbitration agreement can be divided into two categories. One category involves nonparties seeking to enforce an arbitration agreement against a party to that agreement.
See, e.g., Westmoreland v. Sadoux,
PennTex argues that even if Wood is not a party to the Stock Purchase Agreement, he is still bound to arbitrate under direct-benefits estoppel. (Docket Entry No. 9 at 12-18). Wood argues that because he has not sued PennTex under the contract containing the arbitration clause, the doctrine does not apply to him. PennTex and Shaner respond that under Texas law, direct-benefits estoppel can be applied to require a nonparty to an agreement containing an arbitration clause to arbitrate, even if the nonparty is not suing the party under the agreement.
The Texas Supreme Court has recently recognized direct-benefits estoppel as a basis to enforce an arbitration contract against someone who was not a party to that contract. In
Weekley Homes,
In Weekley Homes, an individual signed a contract with Weekley Homes to construct a home that he would purchase. The contract contained a broad arbitration clause that extended to claims “between Purchaser and Seller ... whether sounding in contract, tort, or otherwise .... [to] include ... those arising out of or relating to ... the design, construction, preparation, maintenance or repair of the Property.” Id. at 129. The individual who signed the contract intended to have his daughter and her family live with him in the home. The daughter and her husband negotiated with Weekley Homes on most of the issues relating to the construction. The daughter also handled subsequent problems with the house and Weekley Homes’s efforts to repair it. Both the father and the daughter — who was not party to the contract — lаter sued Weekley Homes over the condition of the house and the repair work. The father asserted contract and tort claims. The daughter sued only for personal injuries, alleging that Weekley Homes’s negligent repairs caused her to develop asthma. Id. Weekley Homes moved to compel arbitration of all the claims under the FAA. The trial court granted the motion as to the father’s claims but refused to compel arbitration as to the daughter’s claims because she was not a party to the contract. The Texas Supreme Court granted mandamus and compelled arbitration as to the daughter’s claims on the basis of direct-benefits estop-pel.
The Texas Supreme Court found that although the daughter had sued Weekley Homes in state court, she had made “no claim on the Weekley contract” and her claims did not arise from that contract. Instead, her tort claims were “what any
*367
bystander might assert.”
The Texas Supreme Court cited its prior decision in
In re FirstMerit Bank,
In
Weekley Homes,
the Texas Supreme Court recognized uncertainty as to whether Texas or federal law governed this analysis. The court applied Texas law, “while endeavoring to keep it as consistent as possible with federal law.”
In
Bridas,
however, the court declined to apply direct-benefits estoppel. The nonsignatory had not sued the signatory under the agreement containing the arbitration clause and therefore had not “exploited” the joint-venture agreement to “the degree that the cases that consider applying this version of estoppel require.”
Bridas
cited
DuPont,
Other cases have not focused on whether the nonsignatory filed a suit or claim against the signatory based on the agreement containing the arbitration clause but, as in
DuPont,
focused instead on whether the evidence showed that the nonsignatory received direct and substantial benefits from that agreement. In
Hellenic Inv. Fund, Inc. v. Det Norske Veritas,
Similarly, in
American Bureau of Shipping v. Tencara Shipyard,
Both federal and Texas state law are clear that a court may compel arbitration against a nonsignatory under direct-benefits estoppel if the nonsignatory has sued the signatory under a contract containing arbitration clause and the other requirements for direct-benefit estoppel and arbitrability are met. Weekley Homes, DuPont, and other cases make it clear that a court mаy compel arbitration against a nonsignatory who has sued the signatory, even if the suit is not based on the contract containing the arbitration clause, if the other requirements are met. Wood argues that this case would go one step further, enforcing arbitration against a nonparty who has not sued the party to the contract containing the arbitration clause at all. PennTex and Shaner ask this court to clarify when this application *370 of direct-benefits estoppel may be appropriate.
In at least one case, the court used direct-benefits estoppel to compel arbitration against a nonsignatory that had not sued the signatory. In
Legacy Wireless Servs. v. Human Capital, L.L.C.,
In
Phoenix Cos. v. Abrahamsen,
05 Civ. 4894,
Wood first argues that he has not accepted any direct benefits from the agreement (Docket Entry No. 11 at 4). Wood claims that the indemnity extended to him as a “Buyer Indemnified Party” under the Stock Purchase Agreement, the receipt of attorneys’ fees paid by PennTex, and the release obtained on his behalf by PennTex, are not direct or substantial benefits under the Agreement. The record does not support this argument. Unlike the facts described in Phoenix Companies, Wood participated in negotiating the 2005 Stock Purchase Agreement, was named in the Agreement, and has been involved in its execution and performance. The Agreement imposed obligations on him and provided benefits for him. The Agreement provided him protection against the individual exposure he faced from the Tsar parties’ counterclaims against him for actual and punitive damages for conspiring to commit conversion and theft. At the execution of the Stock Purchase Agreement, Wood received indemnification from PennTex for claims Tsar and Cheatham might assert against him. The Agreement named Wood as an Indemnified Party in Article 9 — “Scott Y. Wood and the other Buyer Indemnified Parties” — and defines him as a “Buyer Indemnified Party” in *371 Article 1 — '“Seller and its officers, directors, managers, employees, agents, representatives, controlling Persons, shareholders, and their Affiliates.” (Docket Entry No. 10, Ex. A at 2, 28). When the Stock Purchase Agreement was executed, PennTex complied with its contractual obligation to post a $1 million letter of credit to secure the indemnity obligation. (Docket Entry No. 11, Ex. A at 2). On May 2, 2006, PennTex complied with its contractual obligation to deliver Wood a broad and complete release from Tsar and Cheatham for all claims against him, including future- related claims and claims that had earlier been dismissed but without prejudice. (Docket Entry No. 10, Ex. F). Wood has received $79,144.70 in attorneys’ fees paid by PennTex. (Docket Entry No. 9 at 15; Docket Entry No. 10, Ex. E at 4-6; Docket Entry No. 11 at 2; Docket Entry No. 10, Exs. B-D).
Wood asserts that PennTex paid these fees to ERG Holdings, which in turn paid them to Wood under the indemnity required by the bylaws. (Docket Entry No. 11 at 5). The record, however, reveals that PennTex paid fees not only for ERG Illinois’s attorneys’ representation in the Tsar case, but also for fees that were incurred by Wood personally in that litigation. (Docket Entry No. 11, Ex. A at 2; Docket Entry No. 10, Exs. B-D). The record reveals that Wood demanded that PennTex pay the attorneys’ fees for the “Buyer Indemnified Parties,” which is what the Stock Purchase Agreement required. (Docket Entry No. 10, Ex. E at 4-6; Doсket Entry No. 11 at 2). Wood has knowingly received significant and direct benefits under the Stock Purchase Agreement.
Wood also argues that because he has not sued PennTex under the Stock Purchase Agreement, he cannot be compelled to arbitrate under that Agreement. Wood is correct that in
Weekley Homes,
on which PennTex primarily relies, the non-signatory had sued the signatory, although not under the contract containing the arbitration clause. This court noted this fact in
Int’l Demographics,
*372
No Fifth Circuit case has applied direct-benefits estoppel to a nonsignatory who has not sued the signatory. In
Bridas,
the court only examined whether the nonsigna-tory had sued the signatory under the contract and did not discuss the circumstances under which a nonsignatory might otherwise directly benefit from the contract containing the arbitration clause so as to trigger direct-benefits estoppel.
As noted, in this case, the nonsignato-ry — Wood—received direct and substantial benefits from the Stock Purchase Agreement. Wood did not sue PennTex under the Stock Purchase Agreement. But Wood did claim, and receive, direct and substantial benefits from the Agreement. Wood also participated in negotiating the Stock Purchase Agreement and is specifically referred to in the Agreement. These facts are similar to those involved in Weekley Homes, Hellenic, and Legacy.
The subject matter of the underlying dispute in this case is premised on the Stock Purchase Agreement. PennTex alleges that Wood is violating the Agreement by continuing to pursue his individual claims against the Tsar parties in the state court. The claims in the underlying dispute are premised on the Stock Purchase Agreement The courts emphasized the relationship between the claims the nonsignatories asserted in Weekley Homes and Hellenic and the agreements containing the arbitration provisions in those cases.
Wood claims that because he is not a plaintiff in the underlying disputе, he cannot be compelled to arbitration. Wood is right that courts must be extraordinarily cautious in allowing a contracting party to reach out to enforce an arbitration clause in that contract against a nonparty, particularly if the nonparty has not himself sued the party. What is unusual about this case is that although Wood did not sue Penn-Tex in the underlying dispute that Penn-Tex is seeking to arbitrate, his actions as a plaintiff pursuing litigation allegedly prohibited by the PennTex Agreement led to the underlying dispute. Although Wood has not sued PennTex and has not sued under the Agreement containing the arbitration clause, he is the plaintiff in a case that by its continued existence allegedly violates the Agreement, from which he has directly and substantially benefitted. It is Wood’s refusal to release or dismiss his claims he has filed as a plaintiff against the parties in the state court that allegedly violates the Agreement containing the arbitration clause. The disputed issue is whether the Stock Purchase Agreement precludes Wood from pursuing those claims. The unique fact of this case is that although Wood did not sue PennTex, he is the plaintiff in the suit that is the subject of the dispute between them. To say that he cannot be compelled to arbitrate with PennTex because he is not the plaintiff would ignore this unusual aspect of the suit.
This usual set of facts presents a stronger basis to compel arbitration than was present in Legacy. In Legacy, the nonsignatory to the contract containing the arbitration clause had not filed a suit against the signatory. It was sufficient *373 that the nonsignatory had allegedly obtained direct and substantial benefits from the contract containing the arbitration clause and participated in negotiating and performing that contract. In the present case, Wood has also obtained direct and substantial benefits from the Agreement containing the arbitration clause and participated in negotiating and performing that Agreement. In addition, the dispute to be arbitrated is whether his actions as a plaintiff in the state-court case violates the Agreement. The unusual combination of these facts leads this court to reject Wood’s argument that his procedural status precludes the application of direct-benefits estoppel. Because Wood has deliberately sought and obtained substantial and direct benefits from the Stock Purchase Agreement, yet continued as a plaintiff pressing a lawsuit against a third party so as to allegedly breach that Agreement, he is bound to arbitrate the allegation of the breach under direct-benefits estoppel. 3
IV. Is This Dispute Within the Scope of the Arbitration Clause?
The parties agree that federal Jaw applies to the question of whether PennTex’s claims against Wood under the Stock Purchase Agreement are within the scope of the arbitration provision. (Docket Entry No. 6 at 1).
The arbitration clause applies to “all disputes arising under this Agreement.” (Docket Entry No. 10, Ex. A). “[C]ourts distinguish ‘narrow’ arbitration clauses that only require arbitration of disputes ‘arising out of the contract from broad arbitration clauses governing disputes that ‘relate to’ or ‘are connected with’ the contract.”
Pennzoil Exploration & Prod. Co. v. Ramco Energy Ltd.,
The dispute at issue is an alleged breach of Section 9.4(e) of the Stock Purchase Agreement, Wood’s alleged refusal to dismiss or release his claims against the Tsar parties in the state court litigation. This *374 dispute concerns the interpretation and performance of the Agreement itself and “arises under” the Agreement.
The arbitration provision requires the “Buyer” and “Seller” senior management to attempt to resolve disputes before a written demand for arbitration. (Docket Entry No. 1, Ex. B at 33). The parties do not dispute that PennTex, a defined “Party,” filed the arbitration demand after the requisite attempts at resolution failed.
Wood argues that because the arbitration provision requires that “subject to Section 9.4 ... resolution of Disputes with respect to claims by third Persons will be deferred until any judicial proceeding with respect thereto are concluded,” the arbitration that PennTex and Shaner seek cannot proceed until the Tsar case is concluded. Wood argues that because the arbitration seeks to compel him to dismiss or release his claims against “third Persons” — the Tsar parties — the dispute cannot be arbitrated until the “judicial proceeding with respect” to the claims against the “third Persons” is concluded. (Docket Entry No. 11 at 9-11).
There are two flaws with Wood’s argument. First, the dispute to be arbitrated is PennTex’s claim that Wood breached the Stock Purchase Agreement obligation requiring him to dismiss or releаse his claims against the Tsar parties, not the merits of Wood’s claims against those parties. Second, the claims involving the Tsar parties are claims by Wood against third parties, not “by third Persons.” Wood is not a “third Person” because, as discussed above, he signed the Agreement not only as a corporate agent, but also assumed the individual obligations of Section 9.4, and because he is defined as a “Buyer Indemnified Party” under Section 9.4 of the Agreement. The Agreement states, “subject to Section 94 that resolution of Disputes with respect to claims by third Persons will be deferred.” (Docket Entry No. 10, Ex. A at 11.6) (emphasis added). The dispute at issue does not involve any claim “by third Persons” that requires deferring arbitration until judicial proceedings were concluded.
The Agreement does not state that deferring arbitration is a “condition precedent” to arbitration. The Agreement states that certain kinds of “Disputes” “with respect to claims by third Persons” will not be arbitrated until judicial proceedings with respect to those claims are concluded. Wood disputes whether Penn-Tex has complied with this provision. This court has concluded that PennTex has complied.
4
Further procedural questions
*375
go to the
“kind of arbitration proceeding
the parties agreed to.”
Green Tree Fin. Corp. v. Bazzle,
IV. Conclusion
PennTex and Shaner’s motion to compel arbitration, (Docket Entry No. 8), is granted. Because this court has compelled arbitration as to all the claims at issue in this case, dismissal rather than stay may be appropriate.
CitiFinancial Corp. v. Harrison,
Notes
. The motion to seal Docket Entry No. 10, Exhibits B, C, and D is granted. (Docket Entry No. 13).
.
In
In re Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Inc.
v.
Lockey Investment Group, L.L.C.,
. PennTex has argued for the application of other forms of estoppel and agency to compel Wood to arbitrate. Some of the other forms of estoppel or agency are not applicable. For example, equitable estoppel for "intertwined claims” does not apply.
See Grigson,
. This issue is not one of “procedural arbitra-bility” for an arbitrator to determine. See
John Wiley & Sons v. Livingston,
