VINCENT L. BRICCETTI, District Judge.
Petitioner Washington National Insurance Company brings this action pursuant to the Federal Arbitration Act ("FAA"), 9 U.S.C. § 7 ("Section 7"), to enforce two arbitration summonses issued in
Now pending are respondents' motions to quash the summonses at issue and for reconsideration or reargument of the Court's December 10, 2018, Order denying respondents' motion to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. (Docs. ##27, 28).
For the following reasons, respondents' motions are DENIED and the petition to enforce the summonses is GRANTED. Respondents shall appear before the arbitration panel (the "panel") on a date of the panel's choosing and produce all responsive, non-privileged documents, to the extent required by the panel.
The Court has subject matter jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1332.
The parties have submitted briefs, declarations with exhibits, and a petition and answer with exhibits, which reflect the following background.
In the arbitration, petitioner alleges it was fraudulently induced to enter into a reinsurance agreement with Beechwood Re. Petitioner further alleges Beechwood Re concealed its connections to a hedge fund known as Platinum Partners ("Platinum"). According to petitioner, Platinum "used Beechwood Re to support its Ponzi-like scheme and to invest in other companies in which Platinum had interests, in violation of Beechwood Re's duties to Petitioner." (Doc. #30 ("Epstein Decl.") ¶ 3). Petitioner and its affiliate seek "at least $134 million in damages through the Arbitration." (
On February 22, 2018, the panel issued nonparty subpoenas requiring respondents to appear as witnesses at a hearing on March 26, 2018, and to bring with them documents identified in schedules attached to the subpoenas. Respondents objected to the subpoenas.
Petitioner twice agreed to narrow the scope of the subpoenas. In addition, petitioner agreed to extend respondents' time to produce the documents until April 11, 2018, and respondents agreed to produce the documents without the need for a hearing. On April 11, 2018, respondents produced 14,814 pages of documents, incurring $15,700.25 in attorneys' fees and costs as a result.
After respondents produced the documents on April 11, 2018, another non-party to the arbitration produced an email from respondent Katzenstein that respondents had not produced. In that email, respondent Katzenstein stated that four "Grantor Trusts" would "be managed by Platinum related persons, but
Petitioner wrote to respondents asserting respondents had failed to produce documents responsive to the subpoenas and requesting production of additional documents. Respondents refused, stating they had fully complied with their obligations under the subpoenas.
On August 24, 2018, the panel issued two summonses requiring respondents to appear at a hearing in New York City on October 15, 2018, and to bring documents responsive to schedules attached to the summonses. Respondents objected to the August 24, 2018, summonses, and the parties were unable to resolve respondents' objections.
The panel proceeded with the October 15, 2018, hearing, and was prepared to receive testimony and documentary evidence from respondents pursuant to the August 24, 2018, summonses. Respondents failed to show. Thus, on October 15, 2018, the arbitration panel issued an order stating, "The documents and information sought by the Arbitration Summonses are relevant to the issues raised in the Amended Arbitration Demand filed by Claimants." (Epstein Decl. Ex. 4 ¶ 9). The order further stated, "The Panel unanimously affirms that the Arbitration Summonses should be enforced by a Court of appropriate jurisdiction" (
Petitioner filed a petition in this Court on October 22, 2018, seeking enforcement of the summonses. On November 21, 2018, respondents moved to dismiss the petition for lack of jurisdiction. In a bench ruling issued on December 10, 2018, the Court denied respondents' motion. (Doc. #25). On December 21, 2018, respondents moved for reconsideration or reargument of their motion to dismiss and to quash the summonses.
"To prevail on a motion for reconsideration, the movant must demonstrate `an intervening change of controlling law, the availability of new evidence, or the need to correct a clear error or prevent manifest injustice.'"
The motion must be "narrowly construed and strictly applied in order to discourage litigants from making repetitive arguments on issues that have been thoroughly considered by the court."
Section 7 of the FAA authorizes arbitrators to "summon in writing any person to attend before them or any of them as a witness and in a proper case to bring with him or them any book, record, document, or paper which may be deemed material as evidence in the case." 9 U.S.C. §
7. If a person refuses to comply with the arbitrators' summons, a "United States district court for the district in which such arbitrators, or a majority of them, are sitting may compel the attendance of such person or persons before said arbitrator or arbitrators, or punish said person or persons for contempt in the same manner provided by law for securing the attendance of witnesses or their punishment for neglect or refusal to attend in the courts of the United States."
Respondents assert three arguments why the Court should grant reconsideration of their motion to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction: (i) the Court incorrectly determined the diversity of the parties by looking to the citizenship of the parties to the instant proceeding, rather than the parties to the underlying arbitration; (ii) petitioner fails to allege an amount in controversy sufficient to trigger diversity jurisdiction; and (iii) the Court lacks the power to adjudicate the petition because the arbitrators are not sitting in the Southern District of New York.
As an initial matter, respondents' motion for reconsideration is a thinly-veiled attempt to relitigate the motion to dismiss. Respondents do not raise any controlling precedent or facts that the Court overlooked. Instead, respondents rehash old arguments and raise entirely new issues. On that basis alone, respondents' motion for reconsideration is groundless.
Nonetheless, for the reasons discussed below, the Court also rejects respondents' arguments on their merits.
Respondents argue the Court should grant reconsideration of the motion to dismiss because the Court overlooked three controlling decisions allegedly prohibiting the Court from finding diversity jurisdiction based on the citizenship of the parties to a Section 7 enforcement action. According to respondents, (i)
The Court disagrees.
None of the three cases respondents cite stands for the proposition that a court must look through a Section 7 petition to determine whether it may exercise diversity jurisdiction. None of the cases dealt with diversity jurisdiction or held a Court
Moreover, Section 7 actions—unlike those involving Section 4 or Section 10—involve different parties than those in the underlying arbitration. Respondents' approach would have the Court ignore the citizenship of the parties to the controversy actually before the Court and rely on the citizenship of parties to a different controversy.
The Second Circuit's reasoning in
Respondents also rely on
In addition, respondents somehow contend the Court overlooked
As this Court previously held,
Accordingly, the Court rejects respondents' argument that the Court must look through the Section 7 petition to determine whether it may exercise diversity jurisdiction.
Respondents also argue petitioner fails sufficiently to allege the requisite $75,000 amount in controversy, because petitioner may not satisfy the amount-in-controversy requirement by relying on the amount at issue in the underlying arbitration.
The Court is not persuaded.
"In actions seeking declaratory or injunctive relief, it is well established that the amount in controversy is measured by the value of the object of the litigation."
Petitioner seeks at least $134 million in damages in the underlying arbitration. Even if documents responsive to the summonses pertain to only a small fraction of that sum, the amount in controversy requirement would still be satisfied. Moreover, the panel has already determined that the summonses seek relevant information, thus increasing the responsive documents' value.
Accordingly, petitioner easily satisfies the $75,000 amount-in-controversy requirement.
Respondents argue the Court lacks authority to adjudicate the petition because a majority of the panel's arbitrators are not sitting in the Southern District of New York. Respondents did not raise this issue in their motion to dismiss. However, respondents argue they would have asserted this argument had they been permitted to submit a reply to petitioner's opposition to their original motion to dismiss.
Respondents' argument is without merit.
Section 7 permits a party to petition a United States district court "for the district in which such arbitrators, or a majority of them, are sitting" to compel compliance with a summons. 9 U.S.C. § 7. Section 7 does not authorize nationwide service of process.
Here, the summonses ordered respondents to appear at a hearing in New York City. Thus, the arbitrators are sitting in the Southern District of New York, and the Court has the authority under Section 7 to enforce the summonses.
Respondents urge the Court to adopt a rule that looks to the arbitrators' business addresses to determine where the arbitrators are sitting. The Court rejects respondents' approach. Respondents do not cite any case in which a court looked to the arbitrators' business addresses to determine where the arbitrators are sitting, and the Court knows of none. Moreover, such an approach contradicts
Respondents further argue the panel is not permitted to issue nonparty summonses in multiple districts—the panel also summoned a nonparty to appear for a hearing in Philadelphia, and a district court in the Eastern District of Pennsylvania issued an order on October 1, 2018, enforcing that summons.
The Court disagrees.
Respondents rely on
Nothing in Section 7 requires an arbitration panel to sit in only one location. Indeed, such a holding would greatly circumscribe an arbitration panel's ability to decide a case, potentially discourage litigants from arbitrating disputes involving nonparty witnesses in multiple locations, and thus contradict "the strong federal policy in favor of arbitration."
Accordingly, the panel, sitting in New York, was authorized under Section 7 to issue the summonses at issue here.
Respondents offer several reasons why the Court should quash the summonses, none of which has merit.
First, respondents argue the summonses are defective because they seek impermissible pre-hearing discovery. Section 7 does not authorize arbitrators to issue pre-hearing document subpoenas to nonparty witnesses.
The summonses at issue here are proper under Section 7. The panel summoned respondents to a hearing before the arbitrators—not to a deposition. The panel's October 15, 2018, order stated the panel was "prepared to receive testimony and documentary evidence from [respondents] . . . and the panel was prepared to rule on evidentiary issues." (Epstein Decl. Ex. 4 ¶ 6). And there was a court reporter ready to record the hearing so the hearing "would become part of the arbitration record for the Panel to use in its ultimate determination of this dispute." (
Respondents also argue petitioner's willingness to waive the hearing and produce the documents evidences a subterfuge to circumvent the prohibition against pre-hearing discovery. The Court is not persuaded. The issue is whether the panel's summonses are enforceable, not whether the terms negotiated by the parties are enforceable. Moreover, the Court will not prejudice petitioner for its sensible willingness to negotiate with respondents.
Second, respondents argue the district court, not the arbitrator, has the power to rule on the merits of objections to the summonses because Section 7 does not provide a mechanism for nonparties to challenge objectionable summonses. "Regardless of whether this Court has the authority" to independently assess materiality, the Court "does not have the obligation, or sufficient information, to make that assessment."
Even if the Court has authority to rule on the merits of respondents' objections, the Court declines to exercise that authority as to respondents' evidentiary objections. In its October 15, 2018, order, the panel stated the evidence was relevant and that the summonses should be enforced by a court of appropriate jurisdiction.
Finally, respondents argue in their reply brief that petitioner is not entitled to relief because petitioner did not move to compel enforcement of the summonses and did not submit supporting evidence. The plain language of Section 7 contradicts respondents' argument: "if any person or persons so summoned to testify shall refuse or neglect to obey said summons, upon
Accordingly, the Court will not quash the summonses, and, instead, will grant the petition.
Respondents' motions to quash and for reconsideration or reargument are DENIED.
The petition to enforce the two arbitration summonses is GRANTED.
Respondents must comply with the summonses. Respondents shall appear before the arbitration panel on a date of the panel's choosing and produce all responsive, non-privileged documents, to the extent required by the panel.
The conference scheduled for January 22, 2019, is cancelled.
The Clerk shall terminate the motions (Docs. ##27, 28) and close this case.
SO ORDERED.