DAVID S. DOTY, District Judge.
This matter is before the court upon defendant Municipal Parking Systems' (MPS) motion to compel arbitration. Based on a review of the file, record, and proceedings herein, and for the following reasons, the court grants the motion.
This contract dispute arises out of MPS' alleged failure to abide by the terms of the parties' agreements regarding the use of plaintiffs' patented parking meter technology and related shareholder rights.
MPS is a Minnesota Corporation that sells parking meters and other parking enforcement technologies to businesses and municipalities.
On April 1, 2010, plaintiffs agreed to sell forty-nine percent of their interest in the parking meter technology to MPS (the Original Agreement).
The Original Agreement provided that "[a]ny dispute arising under this [a]greement shall be determined by arbitration [sic] shall be determined by a single arbitrator." Cassady Decl. Ex. 1 ¶ 4. The Original Agreement further provided that the "arbitration shall be initiated and conducted in accordance with the provisions of the Commercial Arbitration Act of British Columbia" and that it "shall be construed under the laws of British Columbia, Canada and ... that any dispute shall be resolved [sic] arbitration as set forth herein."
The parties amended the Original Agreement twice thereafter.
On March 12, 2012, plaintiffs agreed to license their remaining fifty-one percent interest in the parking meter technology to MPS, in exchange for, among other things, a $2,000,000 CDN payment and the right to periodically conduct third-party audits of MPS' revenues (the Patent License).
On October 12, 2012, the parties consolidated the Original Agreement and its amendments and the Patent License into a Binding Letter Agreement.
On October 16, 2012, Fred Mitschele and Jason Mitschele entered into an agreement with MPS regarding, among other things, their stock voting rights and obligations and the sale and purchase of MPS transfer stock (the Shareholder Agreement).
On December 19, 2012, MPS told plaintiffs that it was completing its initial capital formation and offered to purchase their shares of MPS stock before the year's end. Compl. ¶¶ 71, 74. Plaintiffs accepted MPS' offer and sold their stock back to MPS for ¢10, ¢23, and ¢29 per share respectively.
On July 25, 2016, plaintiffs sent MPS a default notice alleging that MPS had breached the Original Agreement and its amendments, the Patent License, and the Binding Letter Agreement by, among other things, not making timely royalty payments, not paying the $300 parking meter fees, and not permitting third-party audits. Compl. ¶ 67; Cassady Decl. Ex. 6.
In mid-2016, MPS filed an arbitration action in British Colombia, Canada, against plaintiffs. Cassady Decl. Ex. 6 at 1. In the arbitration, MPS seeks a declaratory judgment that it has not breached the parties' agreements and raises an unjust enrichment claim.
On October 6, 2016, plaintiffs filed a statement of defense in the arbitration, and requested a declaratory judgment that MPS had breached the parties' agreements.
On February 21, 2018, the parties entered into an agreement within the arbitration proceeding specifically agreeing to the composition of the arbitration panel and the scope of the arbitration proceedings (the Arbitration Agreement).
Plaintiffs commenced this suit on March 23, 2018, raising breach of contract, breach of implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing, and breach of fiduciary duty claims. Compl. ¶¶ 79-89. Plaintiffs also bring shareholder claims under Minn. Stat. § 302A.471(4) and Minn. Stat. § 302A.751. Specifically, with respect to the shareholder claims, plaintiffs allege that they were unaware that MPS planned to publically sell their stock shares after the buy-back and that MPS misrepresented its intentions when offering the buy-back. Compl. ¶ 75. MPS now moves to compel arbitration.
Under the Federal Arbitration Act, a court must grant a motion to compel arbitration if the parties agreed to a valid arbitration provision.
In determining whether a particular dispute is within the scope of the arbitration agreement, the court does not examine merits of the underlying claims.
If there is a valid arbitration clause, the court must first determine whether the clause is broad or narrow.
As discussed, from 2010 through 2013, the parties entered into numerous agreements. The Binding Letter Agreement consolidated the Original Agreement and its amendments with the Patent License and expressly incorporated the Original Agreement's arbitration provision. The Shareholder and Stock Redemption Agreements on the other hand did not incorporate the Original Agreement's arbitration provision nor do they contain their own arbitration provision.
Plaintiffs argue that their shareholder disputes raised here are not subject to arbitration because the agreements that govern those disputes require resolution in a Minnesota court proceeding. In making their argument, plaintiffs ignore the Arbitration Agreement in which they expressly agreed to arbitrate all pending and incidental disputes between the parties notwithstanding the previously conflicting forum provisions. The court finds that the Arbitration Agreement supercedes the prior agreements with respect to the subject of arbitrability and that its "all matters of law, fact, and procedure incidental to" language broadly applies to plaintiffs' claims raised here. Cassady Decl. Ex. 7. Indeed, the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals has long held that the use of comparable phrases such as "arising out" of or "relating to" renders an arbitration clause broad, favoring arbitration.
In fact, plaintiffs' breach of contract claim raised here is nearly identical to the breach of contract counter-claims raised in the arbitration. Both allege, among other things, the same failure to make royalty payments and to pay the $300 parking meter fees. Similarly, plaintiffs' breach of implied good faith and fair dealing claim raised here is similar to their arbitration counter-claim regarding MPS' alleged failure to provide plaintiffs the benefits they are entitled to under the agreements, including maintaining their patents in good standing.
In addition, plaintiffs claims here under § 302A.471(4) are sufficiently similar to the shareholder claim raised in the arbitration that MPS suppressed their shareholder voting rights by manipulating the board of director nomination and appointment process in its favor. Moreover, the claims brought here under § 302A.751 rest on a theory that MPS acted fraudulently, illegally, and prejudicially when buying-back their shares of MPS stock. Plaintiffs' claims raised in the arbitration similarly allege that MPS failed to fulfill its contractual obligations regarding acceptance of private placements and equity investments, share five percent of investor funds, and bind third-party investors to agreed upon conditions, and that they consequently suffered economic loss as a result. In effect, the shareholder claims raised in the arbitration and here center on MPS' alleged practice of misrepresenting its intentions to its shareholders and misconduct regarding the issuance and redemption of it stock shares. Although not identical, given the broad language of the Arbitration Agreement, the underlying factual allegations raised here sufficiently touch on the shareholder matters addressed in the arbitration and are now governed under the Arbitration Agreement.
Further, plaintiffs' delay in challenging the scope of the arbitration undermines their position. Plaintiffs certainly could have resisted the arbitration at the outset, attempted to limit its scope, or refused to enter into the broadly worded Arbitration Agreement. Instead, they opted to not only defend, but to pursue relief in the arbitration and subsequently agreed to litigate all incidental claims there including claims regarding shareholder voting rights and the board nomination and appointment process formerly governed under the Shareholder Agreement. Plaintiffs are now bound by that decision.
Finally, plaintiffs' argument that disputes arising under the Stock Redemption Agreement are not subject to the arbitration is undercut by the fact that plaintiffs have cited to the Stock Redemption Agreement in the arbitration as part of their defense against MPS' unjust enrichment claim. In addition, plaintiffs have offered the Stock Redemption Agreement as an exhibit in support of both their defense and counter-claims in the arbitration. As such, the Stock Redemption Agreement is already part of the arbitration and further compels the court to conclude that the shareholder disputes raised here are, at minimum, incidental to the matters pending in the arbitration and governed under the Arbitration Agreement. As a result, MPS' motion to compel must be granted.
Accordingly, based on the above,