In this appeal, we address under what circumstances a party may be compelled to arbitrate an agreement it did not sign. Appellants World Rentals and Sales, LLC (“World Rentals”), Cruz R. Rodriguez, Cruz R. Rodriguez General Contractors, Inc., and Cruz R. Rodriguez General Contractor, LLC (collectively the “World Parties”), advance several arguments for why the appellee Volvo Commercial Finance, LLC (“Volvo Finance”) should be compelled to arbitrate under an agreement signed only by one of its affiliates, Volvo Construction Equipment Rents, Inc. (“Volvo Rents”). After thorough review, we affirm the district court’s denial of the World Parties’ motion to compel arbitration.
I.
Although the parties lock horns over the merits of their underlying claims, the facts essential to this appeal are undisputed. Volvo Rents sells and leases Volvo construction equipment through franchisees. Beginning in March 2003, Volvo Rents entered into three agreements — a Development Agreement and two Franchise Agreements (collectively the “Franchise Agreements”) — with World Rentals. 1 The Franchise Agreements contain the following arbitration provisions:
[A]ll disputes, claims, controversies or causes of actions arising between Franchisee and Franchisor shall be finally resolved by arbitration pursuant to the then-prevailing Commercial Rules of the American Arbitration Association (“AAA”).... The award of the arbitrator shall be the sole and exclusive remedy between Franchisor and Franchisee regarding any claims, counterclaims, cross-claims, issues or accountings (“Claims”) presented or pled to the arbitrator ....
Doc. 33 Ex. A2 § 24.5.
2
Notably, the agreements also expressly state that the term “Franchisor” refers “only” to Volvo
World Rentals obtained financing for its franchise from Volvo Finance, an affiliate of Volvo Rents. The financing arrangement between World Rentals and Volvo Finance is embodied in fifteen documents, which we refer to as the “Loan Documents.” The Loan Documents list as events of default, among others, (1) the failure to make timely payments on the outstanding loans, and (2) default or breach of the Franchise Agreements by World Rentals. In September 2004, Cruz R. Rodriguez, Cruz R. Rodriguez General Contractor, Inc., and Cruz R. Rodriguez General Contractor, LLC executed guaranty and subordination agreements that guaranteed all of World Rentals’ obligations under the Loan Documents.
Neither the Loan Documents nor the guarantees contains an arbitration clause. But two of the Loan Documents — the Working Capital Facility Agreement, dated July 15, 2003, and the Amended Rental Inventory Financing Agreement, dated September 24, 2004 — contain the following incorporation provision:
All schedules, exhibits, and other documents attached to or referred [sic] in this Agreement now or at any time hereafter are hereby incorporated in this Agreement by this reference in their entirety as if fully restated in this Agreement.
Doc. 4 Ex. C § 24(h); Doc. 4 Ex. E § 18(m).
For reasons disputed by the parties and not relevant here, World Rentals’ franchise business quickly deteriorated. By early 2005, World Rentals stopped making principal payments to Volvo Finance, which alleges that it refrained from declaring a default for over a year while World Rentals attempted to sell its Volvo Rents franchise. In May 2006, Volvo Finance learned that a $24,000 interest payment from World Rentals had been returned unpaid.
On May 30, 2006, facing imminent legal action by Volvo Finance, the World Parties sued Volvo Rents and Volvo Finance in the United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida. Asserting various contract and tort claims, the complaint essentially alleged that Volvo Rents and Volvo Finance made fraudulent representations that induced the World Parties to sign the Franchise Agreements, Loan Documents, and guaranty agreements. Volvo Finance promptly filed counterclaims against the World Parties for, among other things, breach of the Loan Documents. Volvo Finance alleged as the event of default that World Rentals failed to make required payments under the Loan Documents. Volvo Finance did not rely on any breach of the Franchise Agreements. On July 11, the World Parties amended their complaint to add additional claims and a request for declarations that (1) the arbitration provisions in the Franchise Agreements were unenforceable, and that (2) both Volvo entities’ right to invoke those arbitration provisions had been waived by Volvo Finance’s participation in the litigation.
On August 2, Volvo Rents moved to stay the World Parties’ claims against it so that their dispute could be arbitrated under the arbitration provisions contained in the Franchise Agreements. Volvo Finance,
on
the other hand, sought dismissal, or in the alternative, summary judgment on the claims filed against it. The World Parties then repudiated their amended complaint by (1) agreeing that the arbitration provision was enforceable, and (2) cross-moving to stay all claims and compel arbitration of
The World Parties timely appealed, seeking an order compelling Volvo Finance to arbitrate. We have jurisdiction over this interlocutory appeal under Title 9 U.S.C. § 16(a)(1)(A) and (B).
II.
Under federal law, arbitration is “a
matter of consent, not coercion.
Volt Info. Scis., Inc. v. Bd. of Trs. of Leland Stanford Junior Univ.,
A.
Taking the World Parties’ primary argument first, they say that the incorporation provisions contained in two of the fifteen Loan Documents incorporate by reference the arbitration provisions contained in the Franchise Agreements, and thus Volvo Finance can be compelled to arbitrate. This argument actually raises two issues. First, do the incorporation provisions in the Loan Documents incorporate the arbitration clauses in the Franchise Agreements? And second, if so, does the dispute between the World Parties and Volvo Finance fall within the terms of those arbitration provisions? Because these inquiries turn on the meaning of contractual language and the district court did not consider any extrinsic evidence to determine the parties’ intent, we review the district court’s denial of the World Parties’ motion to compel arbitration
de novo. See Zaklama v. Mount Sinai Med. Ctr.,
To begin with, two of the fifteen Loan Documents provide: “All ... documents ... referred [to] in [this Loan Document] ... are hereby incorporated ... in their entirety as if fully restated in this [Loan Document].” Those two Loan Documents also specifically “refer to” the Franchise Agreements by including a breach of the
It is clear, however, that an arbitration clause can be incorporated even if the relevant incorporation language does not specifically refer to it. Thus, for example, in
J.S. & H. Construction Co. v. Richmond County Hospital Authority,
But that is not the end of the matter. We still must determine whether the dispute between the World Parties and Volvo Finance falls within the scope of that arbitration clause. We are convinced that it does not.
To determine what disputes the parties agreed to arbitrate, we begin, as we must, with the language of the applicable arbitration provision, keeping in mind “that any doubts concerning the scope of arbitrable issues should be resolved in favor of arbitration^]”
Elay v. All Defendants,
Franchisee [i.e., World Rentals] further acknowledges that: (i) the term “Franchisor” as used in this Agreement shall refer only to Volvo Construction Equipment Rents, Inc. and not Franchisor’s parents or affiliates; (ii) Franchisor is not authorized to contract for or on behalf of its parent or any of its affiliates; and (iii) this Agreement shall not be deemed to bind or otherwise restrict Franchisor’s parent or any of its affiliates.
Doc. 33 Ex. A2 § 25.4. It could not be clearer that the term “Franchisor” refers “only” to Volvo Rents and not to any of Volvo Rents’ “affiliates,” such as Volvo Finance. Thus, the applicable arbitration clause unambiguously limits its reach only to disputes between the World Parties and Volvo Rents; plainly and expressly it excludes any disputes between the World Parties and Volvo Finance.
Under circumstances like these, other courts likewise have concluded that the non-signatory — in this case Volvo Finance — cannot be compelled to arbitrate. Thus, for example, in
Transcontinental & Western Air v. Parker,
Similarly, in
Import Export Steel Corp. v. Mississippi Valley Barge Line Co.,
[T]he arbitration clause incorporated in the bills of lading is restrictive in scope in that it is limited to disputes between the [owners] and the [charterers .... It would be unduly stretching the language of this arbitration clause to say that [the affiliate], a mere notify party, or even owner of the cargo as it claims to be, is one of the [owners] or [charterers.
Id. at 505-06 (internal quotation marks omitted).
More recently, the Second Circuit has explained the general point illustrated by
Transcontinental & Western Air
and
Import Export Steel
this way: “[A]n arbitration agreement restricted to the immediate parties does not bind a non-party, notwithstanding words of incorporation or reference in a separate contract by which that non-party is bound.”
Progressive Cas. Ins. Co. v. C.A. Reaseguradora Nacional
This rule is consistent with, indeed it is dictated by general principles of arbitration and contract law. To repeat the starting point of our analysis, arbitration is “a matter of consent, not coercion[.]”
Volt,
Here, the arbitration provisions in the Franchise Agreements are expressly limited to the immediate parties (Volvo Rents and World Rentals), and they expressly exclude any affiliates such as Volvo Finance. In other words, the language of the arbitration provisions expressly and unambiguously excludes from its scope any dispute between the World Parties and Volvo Finance. Thus, we are constrained to conclude that the district court correctly refused to compel Volvo Finance to arbitrate on an incorporation-by-reference theory. Any other result would not only “unduly stretch,” but completely rewrite the arbitration clause, and compel a non-party to arbitrate in the absence of ever having agreed to do so in the first place. 6 Accordingly, Volvo Finance cannot be compelled to arbitrate with the World Parties.
B.
We turn to the World Parties’ three remaining arguments: agency, veil-piercing, and estoppel. The district court did not address them, and after reviewing the World Parties’ submissions to the district court, we doubt that any of them were raised adequately below.
See In re Pan Am. World Airways, Inc.,
1.
Agency and Veil-piercing.
A non-signatory may be compelled to arbitrate under an agency theory if a signatory signed the arbitration agreement as the non-signatory’s agent.
See Thomson-
Under Section 4 of the Federal Arbitration Act, the district court (or a jury as the case may be) must resolve any disputed facts and determine whether the applicable agency or veil-piercing tests have been met prior to compelling a non-signatory to arbitrate.
See
9 U.S.C. § 4;
Thomsoiv-CSF,
Here, the World Parties presented no evidence supporting the claims that Volvo Rents acted as the agent or alter ego of Volvo Finance. Indeed, the only relevant evidence we can find in this record is an affidavit—provided by Barry Natwick, President and Chief Executive Officer of Volvo Rents—that squarely refutes the World Parties’ allegations. Thus, even if the World Parties’ agency and veil-piercing arguments had been adequately presented to the district court (and they were not), there is no evidentiary basis for compelling arbitration under either.
2.
Estoppel.
Estoppel also may bar a non-signatory from avoiding arbitration if the non-signatory relies on a contract containing an arbitration clause.
See Blinco v. Green Tree Serv., LLC,
Relying on cases allowing
non-signatories
to invoke arbitration clauses against
signatories—see Becker v. Davis,
In short, the arbitration clauses in the Franchise Agreements between World Rentals and Volvo Rents do not require arbitration of any dispute between the World Parties and Volvo Finance, and, on this record, there is no non-contractual basis for forcing Volvo Finance into arbitration. Accordingly, we affirm the district court’s denial of the World Parties’ motion to compel Volvo Finance to arbitrate. 7
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Specifically, on March 15, 2003, Volvo Rents and World Rentals signed a Development Agreement in which Volvo Rents granted the right and World Rentals accepted the obligation "to establish and operate” a Volvo Rents franchise in South Florida. Doc. 33 Ex. A1 § 1.1. That same day, Volvo Rents and World Rentals signed a Franchise Agreement that allowed World Rentals to use Volvo Rents' proprietary marks, trade secrets, and other intellectual property. Volvo Rents and World Rentals entered into a second Franchise Agreement on July 3, 2004.
. Taking our cue from the parties, we have quoted the arbitration clause in the March 15, 2003 Franchise Agreement. The arbitration clause in the second Franchise Agreement has slightly different language, but the parties assign no significance to the differences, nor can we discern any.
. The standard of review may be different where the incorporation provision is ambiguous and the district court turned to extrinsic evidence to determine the parties’ intent.
See Case Int'l Co. v. T.L. James & Co., Inc.,
. Ordinarily, we would look to state law to determine the meaning of the incorporation language in the Loan Documents.
See, e.g., AgGrow Oils, L.L.C. v. Nat’l Union Fire Ins. Co.,
. The Eighth Circuit did not address whether the widow could be compelled to arbitrate under an estoppel theory.
. This is not to say that an arbitration agreement limited to the immediate parties can never be effectively incorporated by reference. For example, in J.S. & H., in addition to typical incorporation language, the subcontract at issue provided that the subcontractor "agrees to be bound to the Contractor by all of the terms of the agreement between the Contractor and the Owner ... and to assume toward the Contractor all of the obligations and the responsibilities that the Contractor ... assumes toward the Owner.” 473 F.2d at 214 n. 3. This language may be sufficient to compel a subcontractor to arbitrate with the contractor, because arbitration is surely one of the "obligations” that the contractor assumed toward the owner in the prime contract. But the incorporation provisions in the Loan Documents at issue here contain no similar language, and thus Volvo Finance cannot be compelled to arbitrate its dispute with the World Parties under an incorporation-by-reference theory.
. Because we conclude that there is no basis for compelling Volvo Finance to arbitrate, we have no occasion to reach Volvo Finance’s alternative argument that the World Parties waived their right to compel arbitration by initiating and participating in the litigation before the district court
