DAVID S. DOTY, District Judge.
This matter is before the court upon defendant Heckler & Koch GmbH's motion to dismiss or stay proceedings and to compel arbitration. Based on a review of the file, record, and proceedings herein, and for the following reasons, the court grants the motion in part.
This contract dispute arises out of Heckler & Koch's (H&K) alleged failure to deliver twenty XM25 weapons systems and certain intellectual property to plaintiff Orbital ATK, Inc. (ATK).
On September 29, 2005, ATK and H&K entered into a teaming agreement for the OICW Weapons System (Teaming Agreement), which superseded the cooperation agreement.
The Teaming Agreement contains an arbitration provision that states in relevant part: "Any controversy or claim arising out of or relating to this Agreement, or the breach thereof, but specifically excluding Subcontract Disputes . . . shall be determined by arbitration administered by the International Centre for Dispute Resolution in accordance with its International Arbitration Rules." O'Brien Decl. Ex. A § 8.05. The parties further agreed that: "Notwithstanding anything . . . to the contrary, any claims, controversies or disputes concerning the performance, validity or enforceability of any Subcontract negotiated under the Agreement shall be resolved in accordance with the applicable disputes provision of such Subcontract."
On March 24, 2011, the Army awarded a prime contract to ATK to begin the engineering and manufacturing development phase of the XM25 weapons program. Compl. ¶ 25. In anticipation of being awarded a government contract, on February 1, 2011, pursuant to the Teaming Agreement, ATK awarded H&K a subcontract under which H&K agreed to deliver twenty-five final design XM25 weapon systems to ATK
The subcontract incorporated general terms and conditions that provided for resolving disputes through informal and formal mediation but not arbitration.
ATK alleges that H&K failed to deliver the XM25 weapons systems in breach of the subcontract. Attempts at informal mediation failed, and, on December 2, 2016, ATK terminated the subcontract due to H&K's alleged default. Compl. ¶¶ 46-50. On December 8, 2016, ATK, pursuant to the terms of the Teaming Agreement, sent a thirty-day cure notice to H&K.
On January 26, 2017, ATK filed suit against H&K alleging that H&K breached the subcontract by failing to deliver the XM25 weapon systems and failing to participate in a formal mediation process. Additionally, ATK claims H&K breached the subcontract and Teaming Agreement by failing to transfer intellectual property to ATK. ATK also seeks a declaratory judgment that (1) the Teaming Agreement requires that H&K grant ATK a non-exclusive license in H&K's intellectual property and (2) the subcontract requires that H&K immediately deliver technical work product and inventions related to the XM25 program. H&K now moves to compel arbitration, arguing that the dispute is subject to the Teaming Agreement's arbitration clause.
In a motion to compel arbitration, the court must determine whether (1) a valid agreement to arbitrate exists between the parties
In deciding whether a dispute is subject to arbitration, the court must first determine whether the clause is broad or narrow.
Here, the arbitration clause in the Teaming Agreement covers "[a]ny controversy or claim arising out of or relating to this Agreement, or the breach thereof, but specifically excluding Subcontract Disputes." The clause is broad, because the clause covers a wide variety of disputes except for subcontract disputes—a comparatively narrow set of claims. Indeed, the Eighth Circuit has held that the use of the phrase "arising out of or relating to" renders the clause broad.
Because the arbitration clause is broad, there is a presumption in favor of arbitration. But this "presumption may be overcome by an express provision excluding a particular grievance from arbitration or by persuasive evidence of a purpose to exclude the claim from arbitration."
In determining whether a dispute is subject to arbitration, the court must "look past the labels the parties attach to their claims to the underlying factual allegations."
The court must examine each of these disputes independently.
ATK's claim that H&K failed to timely deliver weapons systems falls squarely under the subcontract. Indeed, it is the only contract that gives rise to H&K's obligation to deliver the weapons systems; the Teaming Agreement imposes no such obligation. Because H&K's obligation to deliver the weapons systems arises under the subcontract, its alleged failure to do so is a subcontract dispute. The court therefore concludes that this claim is expressly excluded from the arbitration clause and, therefore, not subject to arbitration.
H&K argues that even if a dispute is governed by the subcontract, the arbitration clause still applies because the subcontract incorporated the terms of the Teaming Agreement by reference. The court is not persuaded. First, the subcontract generally incorporates "any written Agreements, Representations, and Certifications" only "where applicable."
ATK seeks both a declaratory judgment and damages for breach of contract based on its claim that H&K failed to deliver intellectual property as required by § 1.14 of the subcontract's general terms and conditions. Section 1.14 of the general terms and conditions obligates H&K to deliver or assign to ATK all technical work product, inventions, and works of authorship developed by H&K in its work under the subcontract. O'Brien Decl. Ex. C. § 1.14. Because H&K's obligation to deliver or assign to ATK arises solely under the subcontract, its alleged failure to do so is a subcontract dispute and therefore not subject to arbitration. Accordingly, the court also denies H&K's motion as to this claim.
ATK seeks damages for breach of contract due to H&K's alleged failure to pursue formal mediation under the subcontract. Again, the parties' obligation to pursue formal mediation arises solely under the subcontract; there is no similar provision in the Teaming Agreement. Therefore, this claim arises under the subcontract and is not subject to arbitration. As a result, the court denies H&K's motion as to this claim.
ATK also seeks declaratory relief and damages arising under H&K's alleged failure to deliver intellectual property pursuant to the Teaming Agreement. The Teaming Agreement provides that if ATK terminates the Teaming Agreement, H&K is required to grant ATK a non-exclusive license for intellectual property owned by H&K so that ATK can perform H&K's unfulfilled obligations.
ATK responds that the non-exclusive license dispute is excluded from arbitration because the default of a subcontract is a condition precedent to the remedy available under the Teaming Agreement. In other words, argues ATK, this dispute is excluded from arbitration because it arises from and is related to the subcontract dispute. The court is not persuaded.
First, although a default is a condition precedent to the obligation to provide a non-exclusive license, H&K's alleged failure to do so is a breach of the Teaming Agreement — not the subcontract. Indeed, even if ATK proved that H&K defaulted on the subcontract, whether H&K additionally failed to grant a non-exclusive license is a separate factual and legal question, the scope of which involves the interpretation and application of the Teaming Agreement. Second, to the extent that the non-exclusive license dispute relates to the subcontract dispute, it renders the arbitration clause ambiguous. When obligations under the Teaming Agreement, which contains an arbitration clause, are related to obligations under the subcontract, which contains no such clause, the court cannot say with positive assurance that the express exclusion applies. As a result, the court grants H&K's motion as to this claim, and it is dismissed without prejudice.
Accordingly, based on the above,