OPINION OF THE COURT
Memorandum.
The order of the Appellate Division should be affirmed, with costs.
Plaintiff-appellant, Yonkers Contracting Company, Inc., as prime contractor, entered into a multimillion dollar agreement with defendant-respondent Port Authority Trans-Hudson Corporation (PATH) to perform emergency tunnel ventilation and evacuation work in Jersey City, New Jersey. Paragraph 17 of the contract authorized PATH’S Chief Engineer "to decide all questions of any nature whatsoever arising out of, under, or in connection with * * * the Contract (including claims in the nature of breach of Contract or fraud or misrepresentation * * *).” Paragraph 17 continued: "In any action against PATH relating to any such question the Contractor must allege in *929 [the] complaint and prove such submission [to the Chief Engineer], which shall be a condition precedent to any such action.”
During construction of a slurry wall, a subcontractor encountered various delays and cost overruns, which Yonkers alleged were the result of PATH’S prior misrepresentations as to the actual subsurface conditions. When negotiations between the parties failed to resolve that disagreement, Yonkers, in June 1990, submitted a claim to PATH’S Chief Engineer pursuant to the provisions of paragraph 17. Before the Chief Engineer issued a preliminary report rejecting Yonkers’ claim, Yonkers in December 1990 commenced the instant lawsuit seeking costs and damages. PATH moved to dismiss the complaint on the ground that it failed to contain, as a condition precedent, the allegation that Yonkers’ claim had been submitted for decision by PATH’S Chief Engineer. Despite a letter from PATH urging it to amend its complaint to acknowledge the applicability of paragraph 17’s alternative dispute resolution (ADR) obligations, Yonkers, in what the Appellate Division characterized as "a calculated[,] tactical stance * * * to escape the bargained-for dispute resolution clause” (
Relying on
Westinghouse Elec. Corp. v New York City Tr. Auth.
(
As a general proposition, "parties to an arbitration contract are completely free to agree upon the identity of the arbitrators,” and New York courts have therefore regularly refused to disqualify arbitrators on grounds of conflict of interest or partiality "even in cases where the contract expressly designate[s] a
single
arbitrator * * * employed by one of the parties” (M
atter of Astoria Med. Group [Health Ins. Plan],
Three years ago, in
Westinghouse,
this Court'upheld a contractual clause authorizing an employee of defendant New York City Transit Authority to decide disputes under the contract on the ground that the employee’s decision was still subject to "some [form of] judicial review” (
In view of our affirmance of the Appellate Division’s order dismissing the complaint with prejudice, we leave for another day the question whether the standard to be applied in reviewing factual and legal determinations made in accordance with an ADR clause like the one at issue here is that provided in CPLR article 75
(Matter of Siegel,
Chief Judge Kaye and Judges Simons, Titone, Bellacosa, Smith, Levine and Ciparick concur.
Order affirmed, with costs, in a memorandum.
