J. CURTIS JOYNER, District Judge.
Presently before the Court are Petitioners Morgan Stanley Smith Barney LLC and Morgan Stanley Smith Barney FA Notes Holdings LLC's Petition to Confirm Arbitration Award (Doc. No. 1), Respondent Stephen Walker's competing Motion to Vacate Arbitration Award and his accompanying Memorandum (Doc. Nos. 28 & 29), Petitioners' Response thereto (Doc. No. 40), and Respondent's Reply thereof (Doc. No. 45). For the following reasons, we GRANT Petitioners' Petition to Confirm and DENY Respondent's Motion to Vacate.
Petitioners Morgan Stanley Smith Barney LLC ("Morgan Stanley") and Morgan Stanley Smith Barney FA Notes Holdings LLC ("Notes Holdings") and Respondent Stephen Walker ("Walker") were parties to an arbitration before a panel of arbitrators, commissioned under the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority ("FINRA"), that began in 2010. The three-member arbitration panel entered a final award on November 1, 2017. Petitioners have moved in this Court to confirm the award. In response, Walker has cross-moved to vacate the award.
The parties' dispute dates back to 2001 when Walker joined Morgan Stanley as a financial advisor. As is common in the securities industry, Walker executed two promissory notes with Morgan Stanley for sums of money when he joined the firm. The written terms of these promissory notes provided that the sums owed would be accelerated and become immediately due and payable upon the termination of Walker's employment for any reason.
The relationship eventually soured and Morgan Stanley terminated Walker in May 2010. In September 2010, Morgan Stanley commenced an arbitration against Walker with the FINRA office of Dispute Resolution, Case No. 10-04094, claiming that Walker was obligated to pay Notes Holding the outstanding principal and interest on the two promissory notes. The parties brought two other FINRA arbitrations that were consolidated with Case No. 10-04094. In the first, Case No. 10-04888, Morgan Stanley asserted claims for theft of trade secrets and unfair competition against Walker and Oppenheimer & Co., Inc. In the second, Case No. 11-01780, Walker brought claims for tortuous interference with business relationships, unfair competition, improper conversion of property, and defamation against Morgan Stanley and Daniel Thompson, who was the manager of Walker's branch at Morgan Stanley.
Evidentiary hearings began before the panel of arbitrators on April 22, 2014. The evidentiary hearings were held in Philadelphia and continued until September 25, 2017.
Relevant to his current Motion to Vacate, Walker presented the panel with a motion that claimed Morgan Stanley and Thompson committed spoliation. Walker did so through a motion filed on April 2, 2014, for "(1) a finding of spoliation and for sanctions; and (2) to compel discovery and for sanctions for discovery abuses." (Walker Mem. (Doc. No. 29), Ex. I ("Spoliation Mot.")). This was a lengthy motion that laid out Walker's allegations, supporting evidence, and legal arguments.
In his spoliation motion, Walker specifically requested that the panel hold a separate hearing on his spoliation claim before the commencement of the evidentiary hearings, which were scheduled to begin just a few weeks later.
On April 18, 2014, the arbitration panel entered an Order that deferred judgement on Walker's spoliation claim, without prejudice, until the panel determined that it should be decided. (Pets. Resp., Ex. B (Doc. No. 40)). The arbitrators also denied Walker's request for a separate, preliminary hearing on his spoliation claim.
The record shows that both parties presented evidence to the arbitrators regarding Walker's spoliation claim during the evidentiary hearings. For example, Walker's attorney questioned Thompson on the events underlying Walker's spoliation claim. (
In its final award, the arbitrators awarded Notes Holdings a total award against Walker of $1,951,587.85. The arbitrators awarded Walker damages against Morgan Stanley in the amount of $525,000, which was offset by $15,000, the amount in which the arbitrators held Walker was liable to Morgan Stanley. The panel also awarded Thompson $10,000 against Walker.
Along with these damages awards, the panel also addressed Walker's spoliation claim. Specifically, in the final award, the panel denied "Walker's request for spoliation damages." (Walker Mem., Ex. E ("Arbitration Award") at p. 7). The panel also denied "[a]ny and all relief not specifically addressed herein."
Because Walker has yet to satisfy the panel's award, Morgan Stanley and Notes Holdings have moved in this Court to confirm the award. In response, Walker has moved to vacate it. Walker argues that we should vacate the award because the arbitrators failed to sufficiently address his claim for spoliation, thereby disregarding a clearly established legal principle and stripping him of a fundamentally fair proceeding.
In support of his position, Walker claims the arbitration panel "completely ignored" his spoliation claim. (Walker Mem. at 17). Walker further claims that the arbitrators "never actually did anything about it, despite Walker's counsel repeatedly imploring them to do so."
This dispute is governed by the Federal Arbitration Act ("FAA"). "Under the FAA, agreements to arbitrate are enforceable to the same extent as other contracts, and federal law looks favorably upon the enforcement of arbitration agreements."
9 U.S.C. § 9.
Walker brings his challenge under Section 10(a) of the FAA, which provides the grounds under which an arbitration award may be vacated. This Section provides:
9 U.S.C. § 10(a).
When presented with a motion to vacate, we must keep in mind the proper standard under which we review an arbitration award. "In light of the FAA and common law, court review of arbitration awards are `extremely deferential' and presents a high hurdle for the party challenging the award."
Walker provides no evidence that the arbitrators' decision was the product of corruption, fraud, or undue means. Nor does he argue that the decision was rendered by partial or corrupt arbitrators, that the arbitrators were guilty of misconduct in refusing to postpone a hearing, or that the arbitrators refused to hear evidence pertinent and material to the controversy.
Instead, Walker argues that the award should be vacated because the arbitrators' handling of his spoliation claim was so egregious that it constitutes "other misbehavior by which the rights of any party have been prejudiced." 9 U.S.C. § 10(a)(3). Walker attacks the panel's decision to not rule on his spoliation claim until the end of the proceedings. Walker claims that the panel did not address the claim in any of the merits hearings. Lastly, citing the panel's denial of his "request for spoliation damages," rather than his requested sanctions, Walker claims that the "arbitrators completely misunderstood the relief that Walker was requesting." (Walker Reply at 19-20).
Of course, we do not "revisit, reinterpret, or overrule [an] arbitrator's legal or factual analysis."
The Third Circuit has held that a "fundamental procedural error" resulting in a "fundamental unfairness" to one of the arbitrating parties can justify vacatur under Section 10(a)(3).
Short of fundamental procedural errors, it is important to remember that arbitrators have wide latitude in how they conduct the proceedings.
The record is clear that the panel did in fact entertain briefing and testimony regarding Walker's spoliation claim. The panel specifically addressed Walker's spoliation claim in its final award, and if there was any doubt, the panel also denied any relief that it did not specifically grant. Needless to say, the panel's handling of Walker's spoliation claim falls far short of the error present in
Quite simply, even if there was some degree of error, the panel's handling of Walker's spoliation claim is not "the type of procedural error that undermines the validity of the arbitration process."
Walker next argues that the arbitration panel's handling of his spoliation motion amounts to a manifest disregard of the law.
Before the Supreme Court's decision in
As the Third Circuit recognized before
Walker has failed to establish the threshold issue that the arbitration panel committed legal error. While FINRA Rules permitted the arbitrators to hold a preliminary hearing on Walker's spoliation claim, they did not require one. FINRA Rules 13501, 13503. Even in his current Motion to Vacate, Walker has not pointed to legal precedent establishing that it was error for the panel to entertain evidence regarding his spoliation claim during the evidentiary hearings, rather than at a preliminary hearing, or impose an adverse inference at the end of the hearings, if one was warranted, rather than at the beginning.
Moreover, we find that Walker did not present the panel with clearly established legal precedent requiring that it hold a preliminary hearing on his spoliation claim. In his spoliation motion, Walker dedicated a single paragraph to his request that the panel consider the issue in a preliminary hearing. (Spoliation Mot. at 30-31). The only legal authority Walker cited was in support of the proposition that "[c]ourts routinely hold separate evidentiary hearings prior to trial on the issue of spoliation."
In this case, the arbitration panel permitted Walker to submit a brief on his spoliation claim, denied ruling on the claim until it heard relevant evidence during the evidentiary hearings, permitted Walker to again brief his claim in his post-hearing submission, and ultimately issued a ruling evidencing that the panel contemplated his spoliation claim. "In the end, as long as there is a barely colorable justification for the arbitrators' decision[,] it is to be upheld."
Accordingly, even if we were to hold that a "manifest disregard of the law" remains a valid ground to vacate an arbitration award, we would not arrive where Walker wants us to go. He has failed to demonstrate legal error on behalf of the arbitrators, much less one that would rise to the level of a manifest disregard of the law.
As noted above, "[u]nder the FAA, agreements to arbitrate are enforceable to the same extent as other contracts, and federal law looks favorably upon the enforcement of arbitration agreements."
We start by noting that the promissory notes signed by Walker required that all disputes thereunder be adjudicated in a FINRA arbitration. The panel of FINRA arbitrators issued its award on November 1, 2017, and Petitioners have moved to confirm the award well within the one-year requirement. In addition, Petitioners have properly moved to confirm the award before this Court because the award was made within this district and the promissory notes did not obligate Petitioners to move elsewhere. Lastly, we are bound to confirm the award because we do not vacate, modify, or correct it.
For the foregoing reasons, we DENY Walker's Motion to Vacate and GRANT Petitioners' Petition to Confirm. Pursuant to FINRA Rule 13904(j), we apply a six-percent per annum interest rate to the unpaid monetary awards from the date of the award.
An appropriate Order follows.