SUSAN OKI MOLLWAY, District Judge.
On January 27, 2016, the court determined that claims arising under the Services Agreement and/or the Non-Circumvention Agreement are subject to mandatory arbitration. Before sending any party to arbitration, the court stated that it would determine which parties are subject to the arbitration agreement. The court stayed this action, except with respect to the issue of which parties are subject to the arbitration agreement. The court also denied Defendants' motion to dismiss and request for sanctions.
On February 10, 2016, Defendants moved for partial reconsideration of the court's interlocutory order.
Defendants seek reconsideration of an interlocutory order. That is, Defendants seek reconsideration of an order that compelled arbitration of claims, but expressly left for determination which Defendants had agreed to arbitrate the claims. The reconsideration motion is governed by Local Rule 60.1, which allows such motions based on "(a) Discovery of new material facts not previously available; (b) Intervening change in law; and (c) Manifest error of law or fact." "Mere disagreement with a previous order is an insufficient basis for reconsideration."
All parties agree that the arbitration clause contained in the Services Agreement is valid and enforceable. The arbitration clause is broad, stating:
To the extent the motion is based on new evidence in support of its argument that the two contracts were not related, the motion is denied. "To support a motion for reconsideration based upon newly discovered evidence, the movant is obliged to show not only that the evidence was newly discovered or unknown, but also that it could not with reasonable diligence have discovered and produced such evidence at the hearing."
Even if the court considered the additional evidence, the court would not change its ruling. The additional evidence addresses the circumstances under which the Services Agreement, the Non-Circumvention Agreement, and a third contract were entered into. However, the circumstances and the third contract do not alter the unambiguous terms of the Services Agreement and the Non-Circumvention Agreement. Those unambiguous terms were the underpinning of the ruling that Defendants now challenge.
Defendants additionally argue that, even without the newly submitted evidence, the court committed a manifest error of fact when it determined that the Non-Circumvention Agreement related to the Services Agreement, meaning that disputes under the Non-Circumvention Agreement had to be arbitrated pursuant to the Services Agreement. Citing the Declaration of Jeffrey Dunster, Defendants say that the "subject matter of the Services Agreement was assisting [Legacy Carbon LLC] in the process of obtaining carbon credit certification." ECF No. 29-1, PageID # 405. Defendants say that the "Services Agreement is not related to the NCA [Non-Circumvention Agreement] . . . used . . . solely to address the relationship between Hawaiian Legacy Hardwoods, LLC and those who desired to act as a finder of purchasers of Investment trees and Legacy Trees."
The plain language of the Services Agreement indicates that it is broader than Dunster represents. Pursuant to the Services Agreement, Streamline was not only to "assist in implementing [Hawaiian Legacy Carbon's] business plan" by (1) coordinating and creating a retail program or plan to sell carbon offset and water quality and trading credits, it was also supposed to (2) introduce Hawaiian Legacy Carbon affiliates to people or companies that raised capital or sold products; (3) assist with retail strategies and grant proposals; and (4) include Streamline's president's biography in Hawaiian Legacy Carbon and Hawaiian Legacy Hardwoods marketing documentation and website. ECF No. 1-1, PageID # 22.
The Non-Circumvention Agreement with Streamline, ECF No. 1-2, contained a requirement that Hawaiian Legacy Hardwoods not "circumvent, avoid, bypass, or obviate directly or indirectly, the creation or pursuit of the Collaboration [defined as the mutually beneficial business relationship that might involve third parties] by entering into any direct or indirect negotiations, communications, or transactions with, or by soliciting or accepting any business or financing from or on behalf of an Introduced Party."
Paragraph 32 of the Complaint alleges, "As part of Streamline's performance of services to the Dunster Entities pursuant to the Services Agreement in 2014, Streamline assisted the Dunster Entities in obtaining certification of the Dunster's Project for the Gold Standard Foundation (herein the `Gold Standard')." ECF No. 1, PageID # 9. Paragraph 33 of the Complaint alleges, "The Gold Standard is an award-winning certification standard for carbon mitigation projects, recognized internationally as the benchmark for quality in both the compliance and voluntary carbon markets." ECF No. 1, PageID # 10. Paragraphs 35 to 37 of the Complaint allege that after Streamline introduced Defendants to The Gold Standard, Defendants refused to pay Streamline and instead began direct contact with The Gold Standard.
Consistent with the allegations in the Complaint, the Declaration of Tiffany Potter indicates that the agreements were intended to create and coordinate a retail program selling carbon offsets and water quality credits, which included helping Defendants to obtain The Gold Standard certification.
Defendants demonstrate no manifest error of fact in this court's determination that the breach of the Non-Circumvention Agreement claim "relates to" the Services Agreement. As the court noted in its order,
ECF No. 36, PageID # 468-69. On this motion for reconsideration, Defendants do not demonstrate that the Non-Circumvention Agreement was unrelated to the Services Agreement.
Even if the Non-Circumvention Agreement relates to a separate "Finders Fee Agreement," as argued by Defendants in the reconsideration motion, Defendants do not demonstrate that the Non-Circumvention Agreement does not also "relate to" the Services Agreement.
The court denies the motion for reconsideration.
IT IS SO ORDERED.