JOHN McBRYDE, District Judge.
Now before the court for consideration are three petitions to compel arbitration pursuant to 9 U.S.C. § 4, filed in the above consolidated actions by defendants, William Oliver South ("South"), Jerry D. Blackburn ("Blackburn"), and Gustavo Fraga ("Fraga"). Plaintiff, USHealth Group, Inc.,'filed a consolidated response and appendix, and defendants filed a consolidated reply and appendix. Having now considered all of the parties' filings, as well as the applicable legal authorities, the court concludes that the petitions should be denied.
In August 2014, plaintiff initiated three separate actions in the District Courts of Tarrant County, Texas, against South, Blackburn, and Fraga, each of which was subsequently removed to this court. Blackburn and Fraga's actions were assigned to another judge of this court as Civil Case Nos. 4:14-CV-758-0 and 4:14-CV-759-0, respectively. The latter two cases were transferred to the docket of the undersigned where, because they' involved common questions of law or fact, they were consolidated with the instant action.
The pleadings by which plaintiff initiated the state court actions alleged the following as to each defendant:
Plaintiff is an insurance holding company under the Texas Insurance Code that owns insurance-related subsidiaries, including Freedom Life Insurance Company of America ("Freedom Life"), USHEALTH Career Agency, Inc. ("USHEALTH Career"), and Small Business Insurance Advisors, Inc. ("SBIA"). South, Blackburn, and Fraga each had a prior contract with USHEALTH Career as an independent contractor insurance agent. Defendants earned commissions payable by USHEALTH Career for sales of coverage underwritten by Freedom Life. "For a short period of time thereafter," Defs.' App.
Plaintiff sent to each defendant a Conditional Offer Letter dated May 10, 2006, whereby plaintiff offered each defendant the opportunity to participate in plaintiff's Equity Incentive Plan (referred to by plaintiff as the "Restricted Stock Plan"),
On April 13, 2010, plaintiff sent each defendant a letter informing him that a "timely, properly and truthfully executed affidavit" was a condition precedent to the distribution by plaintiff of any restricted common stock under the terms of the Restricted Stock Plan.
In reliance on each defendant's representations in his signed Conditional Offer Letter and April 2010 affidavit, plaintiff issued shares of its restricted common stock to each defendant. Without such representations, plaintiff would not have issued the stock to defendants.
Plaintiff's Restricted Stock Plan contained a provision affording plaintiff the right to repurchase the shares issued to defendants should their insurance agent relationship with USHEALTH Career terminate for any reason. Each defendant's relationship with USHEALTH Career and SBIA eventually terminated, and plaintiff executed its right to repurchase each defendant's shares of the restricted common stock. Plaintiff tendered payment to each defendant, which each one accepted, and each defendant's shares were surrendered and cancelled.
Subsequent to plaintiff's repurchase of the shares of stock from each defendant, the defendants made various false accusations concerning the stock's value, and have questioned the value and plaintiff's right to buy back the stock. This has caused plaintiff to question the original issuance of the stock, as well as question each defendant's entitlement to the stock or to compensation for its repurchase. Each defendant is alleged to have breached material provisions of the Conditional Offer Letter as would have precluded his participation in the Restricted Stock Plan and the issuance of any common stock thereunder.
Plaintiff alleged claims and causes of action against each defendant for breach of contract; breach of warranties and covenants; waiver, release, and accord and satisfaction; and for a declaratory judgment as to each defendant's rights or claims with regard to the shares of common stock previously issued to each.
Each defendant was a regional manager with USHEALTH Career. In August of 2011, each defendant signed an Independent Marketing Organization Agreement ("Agreement") with USCARE Marketing, Inc.
Defendants relied on representations by plaintiff that their stock could not be taken away and that plaintiff was committed to helping defendants grow their business, and they each worked diligently for plaintiff. Defendants invested significant time and money to grow plaintiff's business in the Florida market. However, plaintiff withdrew some key products and overpriced others, such that defendants were unable to meet their minimum requirements. Plaintiff, by and through SBIA, then terminated the Agreements and forced defendants to allow plaintiff to repurchase all of the restricted stock issued under the Restricted Stock Plan for an amount "exponentially lower" than promised. Pet. at 3.
Each Agreement included a section titled "Mandatory Mediation and Binding Arbitration," requiring that
App. in Supp. of Pl.'s Consol. Resp. to the Pets. to Compel Arbitration Pursuant to 9 U.S.C. § 4 ("Pl.'s App.") at 36-37. The Agreements provided that the mediation and arbitration would, be held in Tarrant County, Texas.
Following the termination of their employment and the Agreements, each defendant, through their current counsel, on December 3, 2012, sent an identical letter addressed to "USCARE Marketing, Inc.," and titled "Re: Demand for Mediation Pursuant to Independent Marketing Organization Agreement." Defs.' App. at 15. Towards the end of each letter, each defendant stated that he "hereby serves notice that he is invoking his right under Section 27(a) of the Agreement to submit this dispute to mandatory mediation prior to the institution of any further proceedings."
Receiving no response, defendants' counsel on December 18, 2012, sent a second letter, again addressed only to "USCARE Marketing, Inc.," and titled "Re: Demand for Mediation Pursuant to Independent Marketing Organization Agreement Our Clients: William South, Jerry Blackburn and Gustavo Fraga."
In separate letters dated December 28, 2012, SBIA indicated that it was formerly known as USCARE Marketing, Inc., acknowledged receipt of each defendants' December 3 letter, and confirmed that defendants had "initiated the mandatory dispute resolution procedures contained in the contract between" each defendant and USCARE Marketing, Inc.
When no response was received to the January 14 letter, defendants' counsel on February 4, 2013, sent another letter addressed to USCARE Marketing, Inc., again threatening to consider the Agreements' alternative dispute resolution procedures waived and to instead proceed with other remedies. By letter dated February 14, 2013, SBIA, in the interest of moving the matter forward, agreed to a joint mediation.
A mediation was held on March 28, 2013, in Tarrant County, Texas, between defendants and SBIA.
Pl.'s App. at 67. In their petitions defendants refer to the March 28 letters as the "Written Demands."
A dispute eventually arose between the parties concerning appointment of the arbitration panel. Hence, on June 12, 2013, defendants filed a petition for declaratory judgment in the District Court of Tarrant County, Texas, 17th Judicial District, naming SBIA as the sole defendant. An amended declaratory judgment petition was filed on March 4, 2014, again naming SBIA as the sole defendant. Once the dispute was'resolved, defendants on June 6, 2014, filed their Statement of Claims in the arbitration, naming only SBIA as respondent. Only after plaintiff initiated the state court actions against defendants did defendants seek to compel plaintiff to join the arbitration.
Defendants rely on a number of theories to argue that the court should compel plaintiff to arbitrate its claims against them. First, defendants urge the theory of direct benefits estoppel. Next, in a related argument, defendants claim that estoppel supports their claims for arbitration because they have raised allegations of "substantially interdependent and concerted misconduct by both the non-signatory and the other signatory to the contract." Pet. at 14. Defendants also contend that plaintiff should be compelled to arbitration under the alter ego, doctrine. Finally, defendants contend that plaintiff's claims against them are "inextricably intertwined" with and "inherently inseparable" from defendants' claims against SBIA, and so must be adjudicated in the same forum.
Plaintiff does not appear to directly respond to most of the arguments raised by defendants. Instead, plaintiff contends that the court should deny the petitions because: a lack of arbitration agreement is fatal to defendants' petitions; plaintiff's claims are not subject to any arbitration agreement; defendants are estopped, and judicially estopped, from compelling plaintiff to join the arbitration; and, defendants have waived joining plaintiff in the pending arbitration.
Defendants brought their petitions under the Federal Arbitration Act ("FAA"), 9 U.S.C. § 4. The defendants' Agreements with SBIA, however, specify that they are governed by the Texas Arbitration Act ("TAA"), Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 171.002(a)(2). Where an arbitration agreement specifies that it is governed by the TAA, state law governs all aspects of arbitration under the agreement.
"Texas law strongly favors arbitration."
The general rule is that because arbitration agreements are contractual in nature, the court may not require a party to submit to arbitration unless it has, agreed to do so.
Defendants first rely on the doctrine of direct benefits estoppel to urge the court to compel arbitration. "Under `direct benefits estoppel,' a non-signatory plaintiff seeking the benefits of a contract is estopped from simultaneously attempting to avoid the contract's burdens, such as the obligation to arbitrate disputes."
Direct benefits estoppel prevents a party from "asserting that the lack of his signature on a written contract precludes enforcement of the contract's arbitration clause when he has consistently maintained that other provisions of the same contract should be enforced to benefit him."
The basis of defendants' direct benefits estoppel theory
Defendants' direct benefits estoppel theory misses the mark. Contrary to defendants' assertions, the stock issued by plaintiff under the terms of the Restricted Stock Plan was not directly related to defendants' Agreements with SBIA. Instead, plaintiff's state court pleadings make clear that all aspects of the stock, including plaintiff's right of repurchase, were governed by the terms of the Restricted Stock Plan. As alleged in the state court pleadings, the Restricted Stock Plan authorized plaintiff to buy back the stock if defendants' employment ended for any reason, not just a reason related to the Agreements.
Additionally, the documents on which plaintiff relies in pursuit of its claims are the Restricted Stock Plan, the Conditional Offer Letters, defendants' contract with USHEALTH Career, and each defendant's sworn affidavit. In particular, plaintiff referred to the provision in its Restricted Stock Plan that gave it the "right to repurchase any shares of restricted common stock issued to any eligible Restricted Stock Plan participant, such as the shares issued to Defendantts), if the participant's insurance agent relationship with USHEALTH Career Insurance agency terminated for any reason." Defs.' App. at 46. Whatever the reason for each defendant's termination, plaintiff's Restricted Stock Plan, rather than the Agreements, served as the authority for plaintiff's stock repurchase. Nowhere in plaintiff's state court pleadings does it maintain that any provision of the Agreements should be enforced to its benefit. Nor have defendants directed the court to any provision of the Agreements which plaintiff is seeking to enforce, or which it has previously enforced to its benefit. Plaintiff's claims in this action are not alleged in any manner to "rely on" the terms of the Agreements.
Defendants' repeated contention that plaintiff referred to the Agreements also does not accurately represent plaintiff's pleadings. Plaintiff alleged that the Conditional Offer Letter sent to each defendant required the defendant to represent that he was "not in breach or violation of any of the terms of his agent contract with USHEALTH Career Insurance agency." Defs.' App. at 45. Each defendant executed his Conditional Offer Letter in 2006; each defendant executed his affidavit in 2010; and, plaintiff issued the stock to defendants in 2010. However, the Agreements were not executed by any defendant until 2011. Thus,' the only agreements on which plaintiff relied in issuing the stock were the Conditional Offer Letter, the Restricted Stock Plan, the affidavits, and the then-current agreement between each defendant and USHEALTH Career, and these are the only agreements' on which plaintiff relies for its claims in its state court pleadings.
Defendants contend this is a "difference without a distinction," as they maintain that the Agreements were merely a' continuation of defendants' prior agreements with SBIA's predecessor, and all such agreements allegedly also had arbitration agreements. Defs.' Consol. Reply at 11. In the court's view, however, the difference is significant. While the prior agreements on which plaintiff relies may indeed have included arbitration agreements, those agreements are not in the record before the court. No evidence exists to show that any prior agreement between plaintiff and defendants, particularly the "agent contract with USHEALTH Career" referenced in plaintiff's pleadings, included an arbitration agreement.
Direct benefit estoppel requires that claims must be arbitrated if "liability arises solely from the contract or must be determined by reference to it."
Defendants also rely on the theory of "substantially interdependent and concerted misconduct" by the non-signatory and signatory to support their petitions. In particular, defendants rely on the following language from
211 S.W.3d 302, 306 (Tex. 2006) (quoting
Defendants' reliance on
Alter ego is one theory under which both state and federal courts have held that a nonsignatory can be bound to an arbitration clause.
As an initial matter, there are neither allegations in the petitions nor evidence in the record showing that plaintiff exercised complete control over SBIA in order to commit a fraud or wrong against defendants. The alter ego theory would fail on those grounds alone.
For the first time in their reply, defendants maintain that the "fraud or wrong" perpetrated by plaintiff was that plaintiff, through the Written Demands, caused defendants to forego litigation and instead proceed to arbitration. The court need not consider arguments raised for the first time in a reply brief.
The primary factual basis supporting defendants' alter ego theory is the March 28 "Written Demands." According to defendants,
Pet. at 15. Defendants have cited no authority to support their contention that a single letter such as the Written Demands sufficiently demonstrates "abandonment of separateness" so as to compel arbitration by a non-signatory. Nor does defendants' reliance on
Expanding on the alter ego theory in their reply, defendants recite the list of factors set forth in
As an initial matter, evidence in the record supports only the first and third items cited above. In support of the second item, defendants included in their reply appendix unauthenticated pages that appear to be printed from the Texas Comptroller's website, purportedly showing commonality of officers between SBIA and plaintiff. However, only one officer—Cynthia Koenig, treasurer—appears on both lists. Defendants' own evidence contradicts the fourth item: all of the correspondence from SBIA to defendants that is included in defendants' appendices bears only SBIA's name and logo, not plaintiff's. And, nothing in the record supports item number 5.
Even if the court were to accept defendants' contentions at face value, however, they would still be insufficient. Courts have refused to apply the alter ego doctrine even when confronted with more substantial facts than are present here. For example, the court in
The foregoing authorities demonstrate why defendants have failed to meet their burden to show that SBIA is the alter ego of plaintiff, with the consequence that plaintiff cannot be compelled to arbitrate its claims against defendants on that theory.
In a claim the contours of which are not completely clear, defendants contend that requiring defendants to litigate their claims against plaintiff in the instant action while also arbitrating their claims against SBIA would present a "likely possibility of irreconcilable factual findings and inconsistent judgments in light of (defendants') claims, which implicate both, the stock under the EIP and the Agreement with SBIA." Pet. at 16. Defendants thus contend that the "potential for factual and legal `whip-saw' is simply overwhelming in the instant matter requiring adjudication only in the arbitration, as USHEALTH and SBIA are indispensable to [defendants'] ability to obtain complete relief."
The basis of this claim is an opinion from the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit,
Attempting to prevent the plaintiffs from pursuing their claims in state court, Owens-Illinois filed a petition to compel arbitration in the United States District Court for the Southern District of West Virginia, seeking to enforce the settlement agreement's arbitration provisions.
The district court determined that because Owens-Illinois was attempting to enjoin all of the state-court plaintiffs, including those from Ohio, from proceeding in state court, diversity of citizenship was lacking, and the court had no jurisdiction. The district court also concluded that the non-diverse Ohio plaintiffs were "necessary and indispensable parties" under Rule 19 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, whose joinder would destroy diversity, and thus the case should be dismissed for want of jurisdiction.
The Fourth Circuit's analysis centered around whether the Ohio plaintiffs were indeed "necessary and indispensable parties" under Rule 19. In answering the question in the affirmative, the court noted that, absent the required joinder of the Ohio plaintiffs, parallel actions would proceed in both state and federal courts.
The instant action is both factually and procedurally distinct from
In contrast, plaintiff's claims here concern its Restricted Stock Plan and defendants' representations in the Conditional Offer Letters and 2010 affidavits, while defendants' claims in the arbitration against SBIA concern termination of the Agreements. Defendants argue in their reply that adjudication of issues related to the Restricted Stock Plan would "necessarily require a determination of whether SBIA acted properly under the Agreement." Pet. at 16. However, this assertion is unsupported by the record, and the opposite appears true: plaintiff alleged in the state court pleadings that the Restricted Stock Plan gave it the right to repurchase defendants' stock'if their insurance agent contract terminated for
Much of defendants' petitions relies on the following language in the March 28, 2013 Written Demands:
Pl.'s App. at 67. The court is not persuaded that the Written Demands constitute binding agreements to arbitrate, as defendants contend.
While defendants would have the court consider only the language referenced above, the court finds it appropriate to consider the language in context of the entire letter, as well as the course of conduct between the parties after the Written Demands and prior to the initiation of this action. In so doing; the court finds that the Written Demands do not constitute agreements to arbitrate, and were not considered by defendants to be such until plaintiff initiated this action.
The Written Demands are on letterhead identifying only SBIA' as the sender. The context of the Written Demands makes clear that they were intended as a continuation of the mediation engaged in by defendants and SBIA:
This conclusion is bolstered by the following additional facts, concerning the parties' course of conduct following the Written Demands, which demonstrate the parties' understanding that plaintiff neither offered to arbitrate nor intended to be included in the arbitration: Following receipt of the Written Demands by defendants, a dispute arose regarding appointment of the arbitration panel. In a letter dated May 27, 2013, defendants designated their arbitrator. The May 27 letter was addressed only to SBIA and specifically addressed defendants' Agreements with SBIA.
On May 29, 2013, defendants' counsel sent a letter, again addressed only to SBIA, that referenced "your written demand for arbitration dated March 28, 2013,"
Apparently unable to resolve the dispute, defendants on June 12, 2013, filed a petition for declaratory judgment in the District Court of Tarrant County, Texas, 17th Judicial District, against SBIA. Plaintiff was not named as a party. In the petition, defendants sought a declaration of certain rights under the Agreements, such as the right to select the second arbitrator and to consolidate the three arbitrations into one. Several months later, on March 4, 2014, defendants filed an "amended original petition for declaratory judgment," again naming only SBIA as the defendant. During the course of the declaratory judgment action, at a hearing on a number of motions filed by the parties, the following exchange took place between counsel for plaintiff and counsel for defendants:
Pl.'s App. at 162.
The declaratory judgment action was apparently resolved, and on June 6, 2014, defendants filed their initial Statement of Claims in their arbitration proceeding, which indicated that it pertained to the arbitration between defendants and SBIA. Not until October 24, 2014—seven days after plaintiff filed its response to the petition to compel arbitration in the instant action—did defendants amend their Statement of Claims to include plaintiff.
The foregoing description of events following the Written Demands leads to but one conclusion: defendants did not consider the Written Demands to be offers by plaintiff to arbitrate. All of defendants' actions following receipt of the Written Demands indicate that they intended to proceed with arbitration only against SBIA. No attempt was made by defendants to include plaintiff in any of the communications or state court proceedings for a period of more than a year leading up to the filing of their initial Statement of Claims in the arbitration. Only after plaintiff filed its response to defendants' petitions in this action did defendants amend the Statement of Claims to assert claims against plaintiff.
Defendants attempt throughout their petitions to excuse this lack of inclusion by contending that plaintiff "through the Written Demands, had already submitted itself to the arbitration proceedings," so defendants brought the declaratory action against SBIA as "the only company that was resisting arbitration." Pet. at 7. This explanation borders on the absurd. Nothing in the record before the court can be interpreted as SBIA "resisting" arbitration., All of the correspondence between the parties shows progress, albeit slow, by SBIA and defendants towards appointing arbitrators and proceeding to arbitration. Never in any of the correspondence or other documents in the record does SBIA raise any opposition to arbitration; in fact, the opposite is true. Nor can defendants' conduct reasonably be viewed as that of individuals who considered plaintiff a party to the arbitration proceedings.
In short, the court is not persuaded that the Written Demands constitute consent by plaintiff to arbitrate its claims against defendants. The court finds defendants' characterization of the Written Demands to be nothing more than a post-hoc attempt to avoid litigation with plaintiff.
Therefore,
The court ORDERS that defendants' petitions to compel arbitration be, and are hereby, denied.