GERALD E. ROSEN, Chief Judge.
Petitioner Amway Global commenced this action on July 24, 2009, seeking confirmation of an interim arbitration award entered earlier that same day by arbitrator Linda R. Singer. In this interim award, as subsequently restated in an August 7, 2009 final award, the arbitrator determined (i) that Respondents Orrin and Laurie Woodward were liable to Petitioner in the amount of $12,736,659, (ii) that Respondents Chris and Terri Brady were liable to Petitioner in the amount of $9,578,756, and (iii) that Respondents Tim and Amy Marks were liable to Petitioner in the amount of $3,533,230. Petitioner has moved for an order confirming this award under § 9 of the Federal Arbitration Act ("FAA"), 9 U.S.C. § 9, and Respondents, in turn, have moved to vacate the arbitrator's award under § 10 of the FAA, 9 U.S.C. § 10, as well as on the threshold ground that the parties' disputes were not arbitrable. This Court's subject matter jurisdiction rests upon the diverse citizenship of the parties. See 28 U.S.C. § 1332(a).
The parties' cross-motions to confirm or vacate the arbitrator's award have been fully (and extensively) briefed. Having reviewed the parties' lengthy written submissions and accompanying (and voluminous) exhibits, and having gained considerable familiarity with the issues raised in the present motions by virtue of having presided over an earlier suit involving the same parties, see Quixtar Inc. v. Brady, No. 08-14346, 2008 WL 5386774 (E.D.Mich. Dec. 17, 2008), the Court finds that the relevant allegations, facts, and legal arguments are adequately presented in the parties' briefs and supporting materials, and that oral argument would not aid the decisional process. Accordingly, the Court will decide the parties' cross-motions "on the briefs." See Local Rule 7.1(f)(2), U.S. District Court, Eastern District of Michigan. This opinion sets forth the Court's rulings on these motions.
Petitioner Amway Global is a Virginia corporation with its headquarters in Ada, Michigan. Petitioner sells health and beauty products, and is the successor in interest to Quixtar Inc. (the petitioner in the prior suit before this court) and the original Amway Corporation. Petitioner sells its products through a network of hundreds of thousands of individuals referred to as Independent Business Owners ("IBOs"). Respondents Orrin and Laurie Woodward, Chris and Terri Brady, and Tim and Amy Marks are Florida residents and former Amway IBOs.
In August of 2007, Petitioner terminated each of the Respondents as IBOs and commenced arbitration proceedings against them, along with several other former IBOs. In this arbitration, Petitioner asserted breach of contract and tortious interference claims against Respondents, arising from their alleged violation of contractual prohibitions against soliciting other IBOs to compete against Petitioner.
These arbitration proceedings were interrupted and delayed by a number of trips to courts across the country. As this Court observed in an earlier suit involving Petitioner, Respondents, and other former Amway IBOs, "[i]t would scarcely be possible to recount" all of the disputes between
Upon the parties' return to arbitration, Petitioner settled its claims against certain of its former IBOs, and motion practice led to the narrowing of Petitioner's claims against Respondents. Following a hearing spanning from May 5, 2009 to June 4, 2009, the arbitrator issued an interim award on July 24, 2009, holding Respondents Orrin and Laurie Woodward liable to Petitioner in the amount of $12,736,659, holding Respondents Chris and Terri Brady liable to Petitioner in the amount of $9,578,756, and holding Respondents Tim and Amy Marks liable to Petitioner in the amount of $3,533,230. (See Petitioner's Motion, Ex. 1-A, Interim Award at 6.)
Apart from deciding Petitioner's substantive claims against Respondents, the arbitrator also was called upon to rule on a number of threshold questions of arbitrability. In particular, in a pair of motions filed on February 22, 2008, Respondents requested that the arbitrator dismiss the arbitration proceeding, arguing (i) that the agreement giving rise to the arbitration was unenforceable on a number of grounds, and (ii) that, even if this agreement might be enforceable in some instances, the specific claims asserted by Petitioner against Respondents were not subject to arbitration. Following a hearing, the arbitrator denied these motions in an April 1, 2008 order.
In their pending motion to vacate the arbitrator's award, Respondents seek to reassert these arbitrability challenges that they advanced in the course of the arbitration proceedings. As the parties recognize, the viability of these challenges turns,
In the earlier case brought by Petitioner against Respondents and other former Amway IBOs, the Court and the parties extensively addressed the question whether Respondents had waived their opportunity for independent judicial review of the question of arbitrability by submitting this matter for determination by the arbitrator. See Quixtar, 2008 WL 5386774, at *9-*13. The principal focus of this discussion was the Sixth Circuit's decision in Cleveland Electric Illuminating Co. v. Utility Workers Union, Local 270, 440 F.3d 809, 813 (6th Cir.2006), in which the court held that plaintiff Cleveland Electric had waived its opportunity for independent judicial review of the issue of arbitrability by "submitt[ing] the question of arbitrability to the arbitrator for his determination" without any indication that it "wanted to reserve the question of arbitrability for the court."
Upon considering the ruling in Cleveland Electric in light of the arbitrability challenges Respondents had submitted for the arbitrator's determination, this Court opined that "it would appear that Respondents did not sufficiently preserve their opportunity to have a court decide the question of arbitrability." Quixtar, 2008 WL 5386774, at *11. The Court explained:
Quixtar, 2008 WL 5386774, at *11.
Nonetheless, this Court recognized that "Cleveland Electric is distinguishable in at least one respect":
Quixtar, 2008 WL 5386774, at *12. Likewise, in its decision on appeal from this Court's ruling, the Sixth Circuit concurred in this Court's conclusion that "Respondents abandoned their efforts to secure a judicial determination of arbitrability and submitted this issue to the arbitrator." Quixtar, 328 Fed.Appx. at 322 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted).
Yet, while this earlier discussion is instructive here, this Court expressly acknowledged that it was dicta. Specifically, the Court observed that "the issue of waiver [wa]s not yet ripe for decision" while the parties remained in arbitration, and emphasized that it "need not (and does not) decide what issues have been preserved for judicial review at the conclusion of the JAMS Arbitration, nor what standards should govern any such review." Quixtar, 2008 WL 5386774, at *13 n. 21. Similarly, the Sixth Circuit recognized that "[b]ecause the District Court declined to make any determination on the issue of waiver, there is no decision for this Court to review." Quixtar, 328 Fed.Appx. at 322. Accordingly, in the absence of any prior "law of the case" on this issue, the Court must now determine the standard that governs its review of the arbitrator's decisions on matters of arbitrability.
With this renewed opportunity to review the record and consider the pertinent case law, the Court no longer views the issues of waiver and abandonment as controlling here. Rather, the Court views the "standard of review" question as governed by the more general principles of contract law addressed by the Supreme Court in First Options of Chicago, Inc. v. Kaplan, 514 U.S. 938, 115 S.Ct. 1920, 131 L.Ed.2d 985 (1995). This Court extensively surveyed the First Options decision in the earlier suit brought by Petitioner, and this discussion bears repeating here:
Quixtar, 2008 WL 5386774, at *10.
To resolve the "standard of review" question here, then, the Court must begin with the terms of the parties' agreement, inquiring whether the parties agreed to submit the issue of arbitrability to the arbitrator or instead intended to reserve this matter for the courts. Under the Rules of Conduct that governed the relationship between Petitioner and the Respondent IBOs, the parties were directed to use a set of "Dispute Resolution Procedures" to "address any issues that relate to" an IBO's business. (Petitioner's Motion, Ex. 2, Rules of Conduct ("ROC") Rule 11.)
As noted, the Rules of Conduct incorporate a set of "Arbitration Rules" that govern arbitration proceedings conducted as part of the overall "Dispute Resolution Process." One of these "Arbitration Rules" specifically addresses the arbitrator's authority to decide questions of arbitrability:
(ROC Rule 11.5.4.)
Under Rule 11.5.4, then, the arbitrator is expressly vested with the authority to decide "[j]urisdictional and arbitrability disputes, including disputes over the existence, validity, interpretation, or scope of the agreement under which Arbitration is sought." Each of the threshold challenges asserted in Respondents' motion in this case—namely, that the agreement to arbitrate does not reach disputes between Petitioner and former IBOs, and that this agreement is unenforceable as illusory and unconscionable, (see Respondents' Motion, Br. in Support at 7-30)—plainly qualifies as a "jurisdictional" or "arbitrability" dispute within the meaning of Rule 11.5.4. Under comparable circumstances, where parties have included language in their arbitration agreement authorizing the arbitrator to decide issues of arbitrability, the courts have held that such a provision serves as the requisite "clear and unmistakable evidence" under First Options that the parties agreed to arbitrate arbitrability. See, e.g., Qualcomm Inc. v. Nokia Corp., 466 F.3d 1366, 1373 (Fed.Cir.2006); Terminix International Co. v. Palmer Ranch Limited Partnership, 432 F.3d 1327, 1332 (11th Cir.2005); Contec Corp. v. Remote Solution Co., 398 F.3d 205, 208 (2d Cir.2005); FSC Securities Corp. v. Freel, 14 F.3d 1310, 1312-13 (8th Cir.1994); Apollo Computer, Inc. v. Berg, 886 F.2d 469, 473 (1st Cir.1989); Bishop v. Gosiger, Inc., 692 F.Supp.2d 762, 769 (E.D.Mich. 2010).
In an effort to avoid this result, Respondents point to the seemingly discretionary language of Rule 11.5.4, under which jurisdictional and arbitrability disputes "
In any event, if the language of Rule 11.5.4 alone does not supply a sufficiently clear statement of the parties' intent to authorize the arbitrator to decide questions of jurisdiction and arbitrability, Respondents have removed all doubt on this point by acting in accordance with this stated intent. In particular, Respondents filed a pair of motions in the arbitration proceedings in which they raised each of the jurisdictional and arbitrability challenges they seek to pursue before this Court. In the first of these motions, Respondents argued that the arbitration provisions in the Rules of Conduct were unenforceable for lack of mutuality of obligation and as procedurally and substantively unconscionable. (See Respondents' Motion, Ex. 36.) In their second motion, Respondents contended that Petitioner's claims in arbitration rested upon contractual provisions in the Rules of Conduct that were either unenforceable or did not give rise to legal obligations owed by Respondents. (See Case No. 08-14346, Dkt. No. 40, Ex. E.)
As this Court observed in the earlier litigation between Petitioner and Respondents, these motions did not contest the arbitrator's authority to decide Respondents' threshold challenges to the arbitrator's jurisdiction and to arbitrability. See Quixtar, 2008 WL 5386774, at *11. To the contrary, and as this Court previously recognized, Respondents expressly cited Rule 11.5.4 as imposing upon the arbitrator the affirmative obligation to resolve these threshold matters. See Quixtar, 2008 WL 5386774, at *11 (citing Case No. 08-14346, Dkt. No. 40, Ex. E, Respondents' Br. in Support of Motion to Dismiss at 1). Indeed, a party seemingly cannot invite an arbitrator to dismiss an arbitration proceeding on jurisdictional or arbitrability grounds without acknowledging, at least implicitly, that the arbitrator has the authority to decide such questions. Here, this recognition was explicit in Respondents' motions, and confirmed what was clear from Rule 11.5.4 itself—namely, that the parties had empowered the arbitrator to rule upon "[j]urisdictional and arbitrability disputes."
Under this record, the Court does not view the "standard of review" question as turning upon considerations of waiver or abandonment. Nor does the Court find it necessary to decide whether Respondents exhausted (or were required to exhaust) all possible avenues of judicial recourse before they presented their jurisdictional and arbitrability disputes to the arbitrator. Rather, the Court instead views Respondents' actions during the arbitration—and, in particular, their submission of motions challenging the arbitrator's jurisdiction and the arbitrability of Petitioner's claims—as both an acknowledgment and an affirmative exercise of the parties' contractual right to present questions of jurisdiction
This conclusion is fully in accord with the Supreme Court's recognition in First Options that "arbitration is simply a matter of contract between the parties," with the parties free to choose which types of disputes (if any) they wish to resolve through this means. First Options, 514 U.S. at 943, 115 S.Ct. at 1924. In that case, two of the parties before the Court, Manuel and Carol Kaplan, "denied that their disagreement with [petitioner] First Options was arbitrable," on the ground that they "had not personally signed" the "only ... document ... that contained an arbitration clause." 514 U.S. at 941, 115 S.Ct. at 1922. Although the Kaplans "fil[ed] with the arbitrators a written memorandum objecting to the arbitrators' jurisdiction," the Court found that this did not "indicate a clear willingness to arbitrate that issue, i.e., a willingness to be effectively bound by the arbitrator's decision on that point." 514 U.S. at 946, 115 S.Ct. at 1925. Rather, the Court observed that "insofar as the Kaplans were forcefully objecting to the arbitrators deciding their dispute with First Options, one naturally would think that they did not want the arbitrators to have binding authority over them." 514 U.S. at 946, 115 S.Ct. at 1925.
First Options shows, then, that a party's mere submission of an arbitrability challenge to the arbitrator does not, by itself, demonstrate the requisite "clear and unmistakable" intent to be bound by the arbitrator's resolution of this challenge. Here, however, Respondents' election to submit issues of jurisdiction and arbitrability to the arbitrator does not stand alone, but is instead accompanied by contractual language that both (i) permits the parties to submit these issues to the arbitrator, and (ii) empowers the arbitrator to decide these issues. There was no such contractual language in First Options that a court could look to as evidence of the parties' intent; to the contrary, the Kaplans, as individuals, were not even parties to any contract containing an arbitration clause. In light of this crucial distinction, the Court finds ample basis for a different result here.
Finally, the Supreme Court's recent decision in Rent-A-Center, West, Inc. v. Jackson, ___ U.S. ___, 130 S.Ct. 2772, 177 L.Ed.2d 403 (2010), lends further support to the conclusion that the arbitrator's decisions on jurisdiction and arbitrability should be reviewed under a deferential standard. In that case, the parties' arbitration agreement included provisions that broadly called for arbitration of "all past, present or future disputes arising out of [respondent] Jackson's employment with [petitioner] Rent-a-Center," and that conferred upon the arbitrator the "exclusive
The Court then discussed the different types of challenges that a party might bring under § 2 of the FAA, 9 U.S.C. § 2, in order to contest the validity or enforceability of an agreement to arbitrate:
130 S.Ct. at 2778 (internal quotation marks and citations omitted).
Applying these principles to the case before it, the Court observed that respondent Jackson had "challenged only the validity of the contract as a whole"—that is, the entirety of the parties' arbitration agreement—and had not mounted a separate and distinct challenge to the "delegation provision." 130 S.Ct. at 2779. In particular, Jackson contended that the entire arbitration agreement, including its delegation provision, was both procedurally and substantively unconscionable, but he did not separately contest petitioner Rent-a-Center's argument that, under the agreement's delegation provision, the arbitrator
The ruling in Rent-A-Center provides further confirmation that the arbitrator's decisions in this case on matters of jurisdiction and arbitrability must be reviewed under a deferential standard. As discussed in this Court's opinion in the earlier suit brought by Petitioner, and as reiterated above, "Respondents submitted the issue of arbitrability to the arbitrator for her consideration, without separately arguing that the arbitrator had no authority to decide the issue of arbitrability." Quixtar, 2008 WL 5386774, at *11 (internal quotation marks, alteration, and citation omitted). Similarly, in their pending motion to vacate in the present suit, Respondents have advanced various challenges to the enforceability of the parties' arbitration agreement as a whole, as well as the Rules of Conduct within which this agreement is contained, but they do not separately contest the enforceability of the specific provision within the Rules of Conduct, Rule 11.5.4, that empowers the arbitrator to decide jurisdictional and arbitrability disputes. Under Rent-A-Center, then, this "delegation provision" in Rule 11.5.4 is entitled to enforcement under the FAA, and Respondents' challenges to the validity of the parties' arbitration agreement as a whole were properly left for the arbitrator to decide. This, in turn, triggers deferential review of the arbitrator's determinations on those matters that Rule 11.5.4 gave her the power to decide.
Having resolved the threshold issue of the standard of review under which to review the arbitrator's decisions on matters of jurisdiction and arbitrability, the Court turns to the (far easier) question whether the arbitrator's determinations pass muster under this standard. An arbitrator's decision on a matter that the parties have elected to submit for her determination may be set aside only on the limited grounds set forth in § 10 of the FAA, 9 U.S.C. § 10. See Hall Street Associates, L.L.C. v. Mattel, Inc., 552 U.S. 576, 590, 128 S.Ct. 1396, 1406, 170 L.Ed.2d 254 (2008); Grain v. Trinity Health, Mercy Health Services Inc., 551 F.3d 374, 378 (6th Cir.2008). Section 10, in turn, provides that an arbitrator's decision may be vacated only under the following circumstances:
In this case, as Petitioner points out, Respondents have utterly failed to "argue or explain how the Court could vacate the Arbitrator's ruling on arbitrability" under the deferential standard that governs the Court's review of this ruling. (Petitioner's 12/31/2009 Reply Br. at 12.) Rather, Respondents' argument on this point is relegated to a footnote, in which they summarily assert that "the Arbitrator's rulings on the arbitrability issues were flatly contrary to clearly established law and to the undisputed facts," and "[t]herefore ... would have to be vacated even under a deferential standard of review." (Respondents' Motion, 12/4/2009 Br. in Support at 7 n. 7.)
Even if this challenge had not been waived, the Court would readily conclude that the arbitrator's decisions on questions of arbitrability were not "flatly contrary to clearly established law" as Respondents contend. Assuming that Respondents mean by this contention to appeal to the "manifest disregard" standard of review, and assuming that this standard remains viable in the wake of the Hall Street decision, the Sixth Circuit has recognized that "manifest disregard of the law is a very narrow standard of review," and that "[a] mere error in interpretation or application of the law is insufficient" to disturb an
Respondents have identified three aspects of the arbitrator's rulings which, in their view, were flatly contrary to clearly established law. First, they contend that the parties' arbitration agreement requires only current IBOs, and not former IBOs, to participate in arbitration. As support for this proposition, they rely principally upon a district court ruling that construed the Amway Rules of Conduct as binding only current IBOs to arbitrate their disputes with Petitioner, and as reaching only those disputes that arise prior to the termination of an IBO's relationship with Petitioner. See Monavie, LLC v. Quixtar Inc., 741 F.Supp.2d 1227, 1235-37, 1238-40, 2009 WL 3584331, at *5-*6, *8 (D.Utah Oct. 26, 2009). As Petitioner points out, however, this ruling is in tension with (and does not address) the presumption that a party's obligation to arbitrate generally survives the termination of the underlying contract containing the arbitration provision, at least as to disputes arising out of the contractual relationship. See Litton Financial Printing Division v. NLRB, 501 U.S. 190, 208, 111 S.Ct. 2215, 2226, 115 L.Ed.2d 177 (1991) ("We presume as a matter of contract interpretation that the parties did not intend a pivotal dispute resolution provision to terminate for all purposes upon the expiration of the agreement."); Zucker v. After Six, Inc., 174 Fed.Appx. 944, 947-48 (6th Cir.2006); Bishop, supra, 692 F.Supp.2d at 775; Lyman v. Greater Boston Radio, Inc., No. 09-14502, 2010 WL 2557831, at *6 (E.D.Mich. June 21, 2010) (collecting cases). Moreover, the dispute here arguably arose out of the contractual relationship, as it rests upon allegations that Respondents breached obligations owed under the Rules of Conduct not to solicit IBOs to a competitor for a limited time and not to use Petitioner's trade secrets. Under these circumstances, the arbitrator's decision cannot be said to be flatly contrary to clearly established law.
Next, Respondents contend that the arbitrator erred by failing to follow, or give preclusive effect to, the Fifth Circuit's ruling in Morrison v. Amway Corp., 517 F.3d 248, 254-57 (5th Cir.2008), that the arbitration agreement between Petitioner and the plaintiff distributors in that case was illusory and unenforceable. Yet, as to Respondents' claim of issue preclusion, this Court expressed doubt in the prior suit brought by Petitioner that the ruling in Morrison, decided under Texas law, would be binding on Petitioner under the standards of Michigan law that govern here. See Quixtar, 2008 WL 5386774, at *5.
Finally, Respondents suggest that the arbitrator ruled contrary to clearly established law by failing to hold that the parties' arbitration agreement is procedurally and substantively unconscionable. As Respondents recognize, Michigan law requires that both forms of unconscionability must be shown in order to declare an arbitration provision unconscionable. See Lozada v. Dale Baker Oldsmobile, Inc., 91 F.Supp.2d 1087, 1100 (W.D.Mich.2000). Again, however, Petitioner points to decisions in which courts have found that its arbitration agreement with its IBOs is not procedurally unconscionable. See, e.g., McCrone v. Quixtar, Inc., No. 07-2737, slip op. at 9-12 (N.D.Ohio Feb. 21, 2008) (attached as Exhibit 12 to Petitioner's Response to Respondents' Motion); U-CAN-II v. Setzer, No. 02-2535-CA, slip op. at 15-16, 2003 WL 25919932 (Fla.Cir.Ct. Apr. 23, 2003) (attached as Exhibit 13 to Petitioner's Response to Respondents' Motion). Thus, it cannot be said that the arbitrator disregarded a clearly established and unified body of law in rejecting Respondents' unconscionability challenge to their arbitration agreement with Petitioner.
Respondents acknowledge that this Court's review of the arbitrator's decisions on the merits of Petitioner's claims against Respondent is governed by a deferential standard. In particular, and as stated earlier, the arbitrator's award may be vacated only on the four grounds set forth in § 10 of the FAA, 9 U.S.C. § 10, which are listed above and need not be repeated here. Alternatively, the arbitrator's award may be
9 U.S.C. § 11.
As the Sixth Circuit has observed, the FAA "expresses a presumption that arbitration awards will be confirmed," and judicial review of an arbitrator's decision "is very narrow; one of the narrowest standards of judicial review in all of American jurisprudence." Nationwide Mutual Insurance, 429 F.3d at 643. Nonetheless, an arbitrator's award must be set aside where the arbitrator exceeds her power by "act[ing] beyond the material terms of the contract from which [she] draw[s] [her] authority, or in contravention of controlling principles of law." Electronic Data Systems Corp. v. Donelson, 473 F.3d 684, 688 (6th Cir.2007) (internal quotation marks and citations omitted). Similarly, an award must be vacated "if, from an analysis of the transcript of the arbitration proceeding and the evidence provided to the [arbitrator], absolutely no rational means c[an] be determined by which the [arbitrator] may have come to [her] decision." Fitzgerald v. H & R Block Financial Advisors, Inc., No. 08-10784, 2008 WL 2397636, at *5 (E.D.Mich. June 11, 2008).
In this case, the arbitrator did not give reasons for her award in favor of Petitioner and against Respondents, explaining that under Rule 11.5.47 of the Rules of Conduct, the arbitrator may provide a summary of reasons for an award only upon the unanimous written request of all parties, and that only Petitioner, and not Respondents, gave the requisite consent. (See Petitioner's Motion, Ex. 1, Final Award at 2.) "Arbitrators are not required to explain their decisions," and "[i]f they choose not to do so, it is all but impossible to determine whether they acted with manifest disregard for the law." Dawahare v. Spencer, 210 F.3d 666, 669 (6th Cir.2000); see also Merrill Lynch, 70 F.3d at 421 ("Where, as here, the arbitrators decline to explain their resolution of certain questions of law, a party seeking to have the award set aside faces a tremendous obstacle."); Fitzgerald, 2008 WL 2397636, at *4-*5. Under these circumstances, "[i]f a court can find any line of argument that is legally plausible and supports the award then it must be confirmed," and "[o]nly where no judge or group of judges could conceivably come to the same determination as the arbitrators must the award be set aside." Merrill Lynch, 70 F.3d at 421.
Broadly speaking, Respondents have mounted three challenges to the arbitrator's
As noted earlier, and as summarized in the arbitrator's award, Petitioner's claims against Respondents rested upon theories of breach of contract, tortious interference, and misappropriation of trade secrets. In light of the arbitrator's statements in her award regarding (i) her rulings on the parties' motions for summary disposition and (ii) the conduct giving rise to Respondents' liability, (see Final Award at 4, 6), it seems fair to say that the award was based upon the first of these theories—namely, that Respondents breached the Rules of Conduct by soliciting other IBOs to compete with Petitioner's business. More specifically, Respondents evidently were held liable for violating Rule of Conduct 6.5.5, which prohibits IBOs from "encourag[ing], solicit[ing], or otherwise attempt[ing] to recruit or persuade any other IBO to Compete with the business of the Corporation." (Petitioner's Response to Respondents' Motion, Ex. 5, ROC Rule 6.5.5.)
Turning first to Respondents' challenge to the arbitrator's finding of breach-of-contract liability, Respondents do not contest that Petitioner introduced evidence in the course of the arbitration proceeding of a three-stage strategy employed by Respondents under which (i) IBOs terminated their relationship with Petitioner, (ii) these former IBOs remained affiliated among themselves and with Respondents by means of the "TEAM" organization co-founded by Respondents Orrin Woodward and Chris Brady, and (iii) Respondents then issued coordinated statements in which they announced that they were joining Petitioner's competitor, MonaVie, and listed their reasons for doing so. This record includes evidence that would readily be characterized as solicitations; most notably, in a blog entry in which Orrin Woodward announced his decision to join MonaVie and gave his reasons for doing so, he stated, "If you knew what I knew, you would do what I do." (Petitioner's Response to Respondents' Motion, Ex. 82.) More generally, this record is summarized in Petitioner's brief in response to Respondents' motion to vacate the arbitrator's award, (see Petitioner's Response, Br. at 35-39), and this summary need not be repeated here, as Respondents do not challenge the general thrust of this evidence.
The courts have confirmed that communications qualifying as solicitations do not lose this character simply by virtue of being posted on the Internet. See, e.g., Domino's Pizza PMC v. Caribbean Rhino, Inc., 453 F.Supp.2d 998, 1000 (E.D.Mich. 2006) (describing the defendant's efforts to "solicit[] pizza franchises by telephone and internet websites to participate in his pizza card program"); United States v. Zein, No. 09-20237, 2009 WL 4884973, at *2 (E.D.Mich. Dec. 11, 2009) (determining, for purposes of calculating a defendant's sentencing range under the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines, that the placement of an advertisement on the Craigslist website "certainly qualifies as a plan to solicit by the internet"). More to the point, in United States v. Pirello, 255 F.3d 728, 732 (9th Cir.2001), the Ninth Circuit rejected a defendant's contention that he had not engaged in "mass marketing" by posting classified ads on the Internet because "only three people responded to his advertisement." In holding that the defendant was properly subject to a "mass marketing" sentencing enhancement, the court reasoned that his ad "invited any and all persons to send money for computers that [he] had no intention of providing," and that "[t]he relatively low number of individuals actually victimized by [the defendant] before the FBI ended his scheme was the product of chance, and is in no way indicative of the breadth of [his] solicitation." Pirello, 255 F.3d at 732. Notably, the dissent in that case, like Respondents here, argued that the "passive placement" of an advertisement on an Internet website devoted to that purpose should not qualify as solicitation because it did not entail "one-on-one importuning" and was not "directed at specific individuals," Pirello, 255 F.3d at 733 (Berzon, J, dissenting), but this contention failed to carry the day. While these cases, of course, arise in different contexts and under different bodies of law, they nonetheless demonstrate that the arbitrator did not act with manifest disregard for the law by viewing Respondents' Internet-based communications as evidence of actionable solicitation.
On a related note, Petitioner points to the decision in Neways Inc. v. Mower, 543 F.Supp.2d 1277 (D.Utah 2008), as indicating that solicitation encompasses more than simply explicit, one-to-one exhortations. In that case, the court found that the defendant distributors violated a contractual non-solicitation clause through such activities as (i) providing information to other distributors about the plaintiff's competitor, (ii) holding a series of meetings at the home of one of the defendant distributors at which the competitor's products and compensation plan were discussed, (iii) sponsoring former distributors of the plaintiff's products into the competitor's network of distributors, and (iv) giving speeches about the competitor's mission
Next, Respondents seize upon Petitioner's failure to produce evidence that any particular IBO received the communications characterized by Petitioner as solicitations, much less that any specific IBO actually acted and relied upon these communications as grounds for leaving Petitioner's distributor network and joining MonaVie. Indeed, as a matter of brute fact, Respondents note that a large number of TEAM-affiliated IBOs had already terminated their relationships with Petitioner before Respondents began any of the activities that Petitioner has identified as impermissible solicitations—namely, Respondents' communications informing others about MonaVie and urging them to follow Respondents to this competitor. It follows, in Respondents' view, that Petitioner cannot establish a breach of the non-solicitation provision in the Rules of Conduct.
There are two problems with this argument. First, and as Respondents themselves expressly acknowledge, nothing in the pertinent Rule of Conduct, Rule 6.5.5, "prohibit[s] soliciting an IBO to leave Amway." (Respondents' Motion, Br. in Support at 33.) Consequently, it is immaterial to Respondents' breach-of-contract liability whether their communications led any IBO to leave Petitioner's network of distributors, and it follows that they cannot be
Accordingly, the Court turns to Respondents' challenges to the arbitrator's determination of the amount of a damage award. As Respondents point out, the arbitrator awarded the entirety of the damages computed by Petitioner's expert. Respondents summarize this damage calculation as follows (and Petitioner does not dispute the accuracy of this summary):
(Respondents' Motion, Br. in Support at 32-33 (footnote and citations to record omitted)).
In challenging the arbitrator's decision to award damages in the full amount identified by Petitioner's expert, Respondents point to various purported deficiencies in Petitioner's effort to prove that these damages were properly attributable to Respondents' breach of the non-solicitation provision at Rule of Conduct 6.5.5. First, and as noted earlier, Respondents point to the absence of evidence that they actually solicited the above-cited 9,380 former IBOs to leave Petitioner's network of distributors and join MonaVie, much less that any such solicitation efforts were the cause of these former IBOs' decisions to join Petitioner's competitor. Indeed, Petitioner made no effort to identify anyone in this class of 9,380 former IBOs, making it impossible,
As the parties agree, the Michigan courts follow the venerable rule of Hadley v. Baxendale, 9 Exch. 341 (1954), in determining the damages recoverable for a breach of contract. As stated by the Michigan Supreme Court, a party may recover "those [damages] that arise naturally from the breach or those that were in the contemplation of the parties at the time the contract was made." Kewin v. Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Co., 409 Mich. 401, 295 N.W.2d 50, 52-53 (1980).
The Court finds nothing in the law that demands the form of proof Respondents would require. Presumably, Respondents would agree that Petitioner need not have introduced direct evidence that each of the 9,380 IBOs relied upon in computing damages received a soliciting communication from Respondents and acted upon it. Yet, with anything short of this comprehensive evidentiary showing as to why each of these 9,380 IBOs acted as they did, a trier of fact necessarily would have to extrapolate from a more limited set of data in order to conclude that Petitioner was entitled to damages based upon this entire universe of 9,380 departed IBOs who had joined MonaVie. Plainly, then, Petitioner was entitled to rely, at least to some extent, upon inferential and statistical proofs in establishing how many IBOs defected to a competitor as a result of Respondents' solicitation efforts. Viewed in this light, it is not clear how the quality of the proofs would be substantially improved by insisting that Petitioner identify, say, one, ten, or perhaps one hundred specific IBOs who received Respondents' communications and were led through these solicitations to leave Petitioner and join MonaVie.
More generally, the case law confirms that breach-of-contract damages—including the lost profit damages sought by Petitioner and awarded by the arbitrator—may be established through methods of proof like the one employed by Petitioner here. Under Michigan law, "[i]t is clear that loss of future profits is permitted as an element of damages in breach of contract actions when they can be established with reasonable certainty." American Anodco, Inc. v. Reynolds Metals Co., 743 F.2d 417,
Upon reviewing the record submitted for the arbitrator's consideration, the Court finds that it provides a sufficient basis for the arbitrator to accept the estimate of damages proffered by Petitioner's experts. First, Petitioner did, in fact, produce evidence of specific former IBOs who joined MonaVie as a result of Respondents' solicitation efforts. (See, e.g., Arb. Hearing Tr. at 1170-76; Petitioner's Response to Respondents' Motion, Ex. 90.) Next, Petitioner introduced expert testimony that the manner and rate of departures of IBOs downline of Respondents could not have happened randomly or independently, and that such widespread departures had not occurred elsewhere in Petitioner's distribution network during the relevant time frame.
To be sure, Petitioner's computation of damages was subject to challenge on the ground that there were a variety of other reasons, separate from Respondents' solicitation efforts, why an IBO might have elected to leave Petitioner's distribution network and sign up with MonaVie. Yet, Petitioner's expert sought to account for at least some of these factors in arriving at his estimate of damages, and Respondents do not contend that they lacked the opportunity to challenge his analysis on this ground. To the contrary, they thoroughly explored this matter in their questioning of Petitioner's expert, and they point to a variety of evidence introduced during the arbitration proceedings that, in their view, "shows that there were many reasons why IBOs left." (Respondents' Motion, Br. in Support at 36.) As the courts have confirmed, an expert's failure to account for all possible causes or factors goes only to
As Respondents point out, and Petitioner does not dispute, there was no evidence that the Respondent wives—Laurie Woodward, Terri Brady, and Amy Marks—engaged in any solicitation activities in violation of Rule of Conduct 6.5.5. Rather, it is clear that these three Respondents were charged with liability under the arbitrator's award solely by virtue of Rule of Conduct 3.2.1, which provides:
(Petitioner's Response to Respondents' Motion, Ex. 5, ROC Rule 3.2.1.) Respondents contend that the arbitrator acted beyond the bounds of the parties' contract by invoking this rule to impose liability upon the Respondent wives, where the acts giving rise to this liability—the solicitation efforts of the Respondent husbands—occurred after the termination of the contractual relationship between Petitioner and Respondents. Upon the termination of this relationship, Respondents reason that the wives were no longer bound by Rule of Conduct 3.2.1, and therefore could not be held liable under this rule.
In light of the considerable latitude given to the arbitrator to interpret the parties' contract, the Court cannot say that the arbitrator acted wholly beyond the bounds of this agreement in imposing liability on the Respondent wives. As observed earlier, the liability of the Respondent husbands was predicated on their violation of Rule of Conduct 6.5.5. By the express terms of Rule of Conduct 3.2.1, a husband or wife is "held accountable for the actions of" his or her spouse "so far as the Rules of Conduct are concerned." This rule is readily construed as imposing liability on both spouses for any violations of the Rules of Conduct committed by either spouse. Moreover, if one spouse may continue to be bound by a Rule of Conduct—here, Rule of Conduct 6.5.5—and incur liability for conduct violating that rule after the termination of the Amway/IBO relationship, the Court fails to see why the other spouse cannot continue to be charged with joint liability for this violation under Rule of Conduct 3.2.1.
As their final challenge to the arbitrator's award, Respondents contend
To establish that the arbitrator's award should be vacated as procured by undue means, Respondents must show (i) clear and convincing evidence of fraud or misconduct by Petitioner, (ii) that this fraud or concealment could not have been discovered prior to or during the arbitration proceedings through the exercise of due diligence, and (iii) that the fraud or concealment materially related to an issue in the arbitration. See International Brotherhood of Teamsters, Local 519 v. United Parcel Service, Inc., 335 F.3d 497, 503 (6th Cir.2003); Pontiac Trail Medical Clinic, P.C. v. PaineWebber, Inc., No. 92-1972, 1993 WL 288301, at *3 (6th Cir. July 29, 1993); Barcume v. City of Flint, 132 F.Supp.2d 549, 556 (E.D.Mich.2001). As to the first prong of this standard, the courts have held that a showing of "undue means" under § 10 of the FAA "requir[es] some type of bad faith behavior," and that this language "clearly connotes behavior that is immoral if not illegal," as opposed to "mere sloppy or overzealous lawyering." Pontiac Trail, 1993 WL 288301, at *4 (internal quotation marks and citations omitted); see also Barcume, 132 F.Supp.2d at 556.
As noted, Respondents' claim of "undue means" here rests upon Petitioner's purported "concealment" of the damage analysis Mr. Thomas performed on Petitioner's behalf in the Stewart Arbitration. This claim of "concealment," however, fails on a fundamental ground: namely, it does not appear that Petitioner ever had an obligation to produce this analysis at any point during the arbitration proceedings, such that it could be accused of "concealing" material that it had a duty to disclose. Rather, as discussed below, while Petitioner certainly resisted Respondents' efforts to obtain discovery relating to the Stewart Arbitration, this resistance was based upon permissible grounds that the arbitrator upheld in denying Respondents' request for this discovery.
Respondents evidently first became aware of Mr. Thomas's employment as an expert in the Stewart Arbitration when he was deposed in the present arbitration proceeding. When Respondents' counsel sought to inquire about the nature and substance of Mr. Thomas's expert analysis and report in the Stewart Arbitration, Petitioner's counsel instructed Mr. Thomas to answer only in general terms and not to disclose the substance of his report, on the ground that more detailed responses would
Instead, Respondents pursued other means of obtaining discovery relating to the Stewart Arbitration. First, they sought an order compelling Petitioner to produce a copy of the award issued in the Stewart Arbitration, but the arbitrator denied this request in a July 14, 2008 order. (See Respondents' Motion, Ex. 152, 7/14/2008 Order at ¶ 13.) Next, Respondents issued a notice of deposition duces tecum in which they asked Petitioner to designate a witness who could testify on a number of matters, including the discovery provided by Petitioner in a federal suit arising from the Stewart Arbitration and the award issued in the Stewart Arbitration, and they further demanded that this designated witness produce (i) the documents provided by Petitioner to the opposing party in discovery in the suit arising from the Stewart Arbitration, to the extent these documents concerned "the issue of the enforceability of the Amway/Quixtar arbitration provisions in the Amway/Quixtar Rules of Conduct or registration forms," and (ii) the award issued in the Stewart Arbitration. (Petitioner's Response to Respondents' Motion, Ex. 93.) Again, Petitioner opposed these discovery efforts on the ground that the Stewart Arbitration was governed by a confidentiality agreement, and the arbitrator determined at a December 30, 2008 hearing that these matters were "neither relevant nor likely to lead to relevant evidence." (Respondents' Motion, Ex. 153, 12/30/2008 Arb. Hearing at 20-21.) There is no indication that Respondents pursued this matter any further in the arbitration proceedings.
Under this record, even assuming that the document Petitioner is accused of "concealing" —namely, Mr. Thomas's deposition testimony in the Stewart Arbitration—was encompassed within any of Respondents' discovery efforts outlined above,
Under comparable circumstances, the courts have held that a party's assertion of objections to a discovery request does not rise to the level of misconduct that could sustain a finding of "undue means" under § 10 of the FAA. In Bauer v. Carty & Co., 246 Fed.Appx. 375, 376-77 (6th Cir.2007), for example, plaintiff Ty Kevin Bauer sought to vacate an arbitration award on the ground that defendant Carty & Company had fraudulently procured the award by withholding documents during discovery in the arbitration proceeding. Although Bauer argued that defendant Carty "must have acted in bad faith" because the documents at issue "were responsive to. . . valid document requests but were not produced," the court found that this lack of production was merely "consistent with bad faith," and that "this inference alone is not clear and convincing evidence of bad faith." Bauer, 246 Fed.Appx. at 378-79. The court further noted that Carty had objected to the production of the documents at issue on grounds of relevance, and it found that this "relevance objection may have had merit." 246 Fed.Appx. at 379. Under these circumstances, the court held that "[t]he narrow interpretation of a document request and withholding of a document based upon a potentially meritorious objection do not constitute clear and convincing evidence of bad faith or immoral conduct required for fraud or undue means." 246 Fed.Appx. at 379-80.
Similarly, in Pontiac Trail, 1993 WL 288301, at *1, the party seeking to vacate the arbitrator's award, plaintiff Pontiac Trail Medical Clinic, made a request for documents during the arbitration proceedings, but defendant PaineWebber objected to these requests on grounds of relevancy, and the arbitrators denied Pontiac Trail's discovery requests. Pontiac Trail contended that PaineWebber "obtained the [arbitration] award fraudulently by withholding relevant documents," but the Sixth Circuit disagreed, finding that "Pontiac Trail has cited no authority suggesting that allegedly defective objections and misleading discovery responses to prehearing discovery requests can constitute fraud within the meaning of § 10(a)(1) when, as here, the arbitrators declined to order production of the requested documents and sustained PaineWebber's objections to their production." 1993 WL 288301, at *3-*4. The court further concluded that Pontiac Trail had failed to establish that the award was procured by undue means, reasoning that a party does not exhibit bad faith behavior merely by advancing even a "meritless" position in a discovery dispute. 1993 WL 288301, at *4-*5 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted).
Finally, it is not evident that Mr. Thomas's deposition testimony, if introduced during the arbitration proceedings, would have materially altered the record or the outcome. Respondents' claim of materiality rests upon Mr. Thomas's calculation of lost profits in the Stewart Arbitration, with Thomas opining that the income of the plaintiff IBOs in that case would have fallen to a flattened, "terminal" level after five years. (See Respondents' Motion, Ex. 157, Thomas Dep. at 108-12.) In the present arbitration proceeding, in contrast, Petitioner's expert, Dr. Wise, projected Petitioner's lost profits due to IBO defections to competitor MonaVie by reference to a 20-year period.
Yet, as Petitioner points out, Mr. Thomas's selection of a five-year lost-profits curve in the Stewart Arbitration did not rest upon generalized notions of the average profit-making "life span" of an IBO, but instead was based upon the specific facts of that case. (See id. at 109, 114-15.) Indeed, Thomas specifically denied at his deposition that he had "assumed" a five-year period of profit-making, or that he had simply relied upon information indicating that the average life span of an IBO is two to five years, and he instead insisted that his analysis was based on the historical figures and actual experiences of the IBOs at issue. (See id. at 108-09, 111-12, 114.) Under these circumstances, it cannot be said that any effort to impeach Dr. Wise based on Mr. Thomas's fact-specific testimony in the Stewart Arbitration would have materially altered the arbitrator's assessment of Dr. Wise's testimony, particularly where Respondents vigorously cross-examined Dr. Wise on his 20-year projections of lost profits, and where they offered the testimony of their own damage expert to refute this and other aspects of Dr. Wise's analysis.
For the reasons set forth above,
NOW, THEREFORE, IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that Petitioner's October 21, 2009 motion to confirm arbitration award (docket #30) is GRANTED. IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that Respondents' November 6, 2009 motion to vacate arbitration award (docket #39) is DENIED.