Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge GINSBURG.
Zuckerman Spaeder, LLP filed this lawsuit against James Auffenberg, Jr. for recovery of unpaid attorneys’ fees. Auffenberg counterclaimed for malpractice and later petitioned for arbitration before the District of Columbia Attorney/Client Arbitration Board (ACAB), an arm of the District of Columbia Bar. He also moved the district court for a stay pursuant to the Federal Arbitration Act (FAA), 9 U.S.C. § 3, the denial of which he now appeals. We affirm the order.
I. Background
Zuckerman Spaeder represented Auffenberg in a criminal tax fraud case tried in the District Court for the United States Virgin Islands. After he had been acquitted Auffenberg refused to pay Zuckerman’s last two bills, or approximately $834,000.
Zuckerman sued Auffenberg in the District of Columbia Superior Court to recover the fees plus interest. Auffenberg removed the case to federal court, answered the complaint, and counterclaimed for legal malpractice. In the counterclaim he alleged Zuckerman had agreed to cap its fees at $1.5 million, and the $834,000 it had charged beyond that was unreasonable and actionable under Rule 1.5 of the District of Columbia Rules of Professional Conduct.
One month later Auffenberg moved for leave to amend his counterclaims to include allegations Zuckerman had violated its duties under Rule 1.6 by discussing the dispute with third parties, including former co-counsel and a reporter for the Blog of the Legal Times. Auffenberg also asked for a protective order to prevent Zuckerman from communicating with third parties absent Auffenberg’s prior consent.
Zuckerman then filed an amended complaint seeking relief quantum meruit. Auffenberg in turn amended his answer and counterclaim, again alleging violations of both Rule 1.5 and Rule 1.6. Zuckerman moved for various reasons to strike or in the alternative to dismiss the amended counterclaims. A hearing before the district court was scheduled for October 28, 2009.
Two weeks before the scheduled hearing the parties filed a joint statement pursuant to the district court’s standing order that litigants meet to discuss the possibility of settlement and the usefulness if any of alternative dispute resolution. Although they acknowledged “the prospects of settlement are unclear at this time” and the usefulness of mediation “uncertain,” they
At the October 28 hearing, the district court agreed to refer the case to mediation for two months only. The court also directed the parties to negotiate a protective order allowing Zuckerman to contact its former co-counsel, denied without prejudice Zuckerman’s motion to dismiss, and ordered Auffenberg within two weeks to amend his counterclaims so as to cure any defects.
The parties appeared before a Magistrate Judge for a single day of mediation in December 2009. Little came of the talks other than the magistrate’s suggestion the parties submit their claims to binding arbitration before either a Magistrate Judge or the ACAB. Although a client may invoke mandatory arbitration of any fee dispute under D.C. Bar Rule XIII, both attorney and client must agree to arbitrate a malpractice claim before the ACAB.
Auffenberg claims to have engaged in a “long back and forth” with Zuckerman in the hope of obtaining the firm’s consent to arbitration before the ACAB. In any event, on January 29, 2010, he filed a unilateral petition with the ACAB and that same day moved the district court for a stay of the proceedings. His petition to the ACAB covered both the fee dispute and his malpractice claims.
The district court denied Auffenberg’s request for a stay on the ground that he had waived his right to seek arbitration of the dispute. The court concluded Auffenberg, by petitioning the ACAB, was trying to “get a second bite” at alternative dispute resolution after mediation had failed. Even if Auffenberg had not engaged substantially with Zuckerman on the merits, he had answered the complaint and moved the case from state to federal court, and from the court to mediation, all before filing his petition or even indicating he intended to arbitrate his claims before the ACAB. His “participation” in the courts and in mediation precluded Auffenberg from obtaining a stay to try his luck in yet another forum, that is, the ACAB.
Auffenberg immediately appealed the district court’s order pursuant to § 16 of the FAA, 9 U.S.C. § 16(a)(1)(A) (“An appeal may be taken from ... an order ... refusing a stay of any action under section 3 of this title”);
see Arthur Andersen LLP v. Carlisle,
II. Analysis
Under the FAA a litigant is entitled to a stay pending arbitration so long as the suit in which he is a party is “referable to arbitration” under a valid agreement and he “is not in default in proceeding with such arbitration.” 9 U.S.C. § 3. We have held a party who has actively participated in litigation or otherwise acted in a manner inconsistent with an intent to arbitrate is “necessarily ‘in default,’ ” within the meaning of this provision.
Cornell & Co. v. Barber & Ross Co.,
On appeal, Zuckerman does not dispute the claims in this case are “referable to arbitration” before the ACAB, nor do the parties disagree about the relevant history of this litigation.
*
Therefore, the only issue before us is whether Auffenberg is “in
In our caselaw, from
Cornell & Co.
in 1966 through
Khan
in 2008, we have always referred to the question of default exclusively in terms of waiver.
In
Khan
we held “irrespective of other indicators of involvement in litigation, filing a motion for summary judgment ... is inconsistent with preserving the right to compel arbitration.”
Our reluctance thus far to define the standard further has imposed a cost upon both litigants and the district court. The waste of resources occasioned by this lawsuit, for one, might have been avoided had we been more clear about the standard we would have the district court apply. This is our effort to fill that gap.
First, to be technically correct as well as clear, we note forfeiture, not waiver, is the appropriate standard for evaluating a late-filed motion under Section 3 of the FAA. Forfeiture is the “failure to make a timely assertion of a right” and, unlike waiver, entails no element of intent.
Olano,
Second, to clarify what we mean by “timely,” we expand upon the suggestion of the district court: A defendant seeking a stay pending arbitration under Section 3 who has not invoked the right to arbitrate on the record at the first available opportunity, typically in filing his first responsive pleading or motion to dismiss, has presumptively forfeited that right.
See
Fed.R.Civ.P. 8(c) (enumerating affirmative defenses defendant must raise in
In this appeal, we affirm the district court’s denial of the stay because Auffenberg failed to make a timely assertion of his right to arbitrate, and his litigation activity after he filed his initial answer and counterclaim imposed substantial costs upon Zuckerman and the district court. That Auffenberg failed to invoke arbitration in (or before filing) his original answer is undisputed. Assuming for the sake of his argument that Auffenberg “told Zuckerman early and often” of his intention to arbitrate, that representation is nowhere documented in the record. In his pre-trial huffery and puffery a party may float all sorts of intentions, serious or not; a court considering a question of forfeiture is properly concerned only with intentions placed upon the record.
For similar reasons we reject Auffenberg’s belated attempt to distinguish his “arbitrable” claim regarding fees, which he says he did not attempt to litigate, from his “non-arbitrable” claim regarding third-party communications, which he says was the only subject to which his litigation conduct after filing his answer was addressed.
See Cancer Research,
Auffenberg might have overcome the presumption of having forfeit his right to a stay had his conduct in litigation after the first responsive pleading imposed no or little cost upon opposing counsel and the courts. In this vein, Auffenberg argues he made only “reactive defensive efforts” that could not have prejudiced Zuckerman. Auffenberg’s participation in discovery and mediation, however, combined with his months-long delay before petitioning the ACAB, unquestionably prejudiced Zuckerman, which reasonably enough had commenced an internal investigation, responded to and filed discovery requests, and begun preparing for depositions, all of which activity related to Auffenberg’s arbitrable as well as non-arbitrable claims. Auffenberg’s filings, including the repeated amendment of his answer and counterclaims to cure the defects Zuckerman identified, also drew upon inherently limited judicial resources, including the time of both the district court and the Magistrate Judge.
Although delay alone “rarely” constitutes prejudice,
Cancer Research,
III. Conclusion
By this opinion we alert the bar in this Circuit that failure to invoke arbitration at the first available opportunity will presumptively extinguish a client’s ability later to opt for arbitration. Accordingly, the order of the district court is
Affirmed.
Notes
The parties dispute the occurrence and import of certain extra-record discussions described by Auffenberg’s counsel at a hearing in the district court on March 16, 2010. Auffenberg’s unsupported allegations he sought arbitration “early and often” are unpersuasive and irrelevant in any event, see infra at 923.
