LEWIS A. KAPLAN, District Judge.
Plaintiff Charity Folks Inc. ("CFI") and Bamboo Technologies, Limited ("Bamboo"), a company of which the defendant Gene T. Kim is the chief executive officer and largest shareholder, are in the midst of arbitration of Bamboo's claims against CFI and CFI's counterclaims against Bamboo. CFI then filed this action, asserting substantially the same claims against Kim individually as it has asserted against Bamboo in the arbitration as well as a claim that Kim is Bamboo's alter ego and therefore will be personally liable in the event CFI obtains an arbitration award against Bamboo. The matter is before the Court on (1) Kim's motion to compel arbitration of CFI's claims against him and to stay this action, and (2) CFI's motion for discovery and a hearing on its alter ego claim against Kim and for security for and confirmation of any award that may be rendered in its favor.
Kim is the founder, chairman, chief executive officer and largest shareholder of Bamboo, which entered into a contract with CFI in April 2006. That contract specified that disputes arising from it would be resolved by arbitration.
In May 2010, Bamboo commenced arbitration against Charity for breach of contract. CFI interposed counterclaims asserting that it had been fraudulently induced by Bamboo to enter the contract and that Bamboo's performance was deficient. After a series of written submissions to the arbitrator, hearings on the merits were held in the week beginning November 29, 2010, and the arbitrator is expected to rule before the new year and possibly before Christmas.
Charity filed this action on November 19, 2010. As noted, it alleges against Kim personally essentially the same claims it asserts against Bamboo in the arbitration.
Kim is not a party individually to the contract between Bamboo and CFI. That, however, is not dispositive of Kim's contention that he is entitled to arbitrate CFI's claims against him. The Second Circuit has made plain that a non-signatory to an arbitration agreement may enforce that agreement against a signatory:
This principle applies here. The claims of fraud and negligence against Kim and Bamboo are nearly identical. The parties to the CFI-Bamboo contract certainly understood that Kim controlled Bamboo. It seems clear therefore that Kim's motion to compel arbitration should be granted at least with respect to the claims other than those for declaratory relief concerning his alleged alter ego status.
CFI argues that the question whether Kim is an alter ego of Bamboo should be decided by the Court because it is a question either of arbitrability or judgment enforcement. But the argument is not persuasive.
Certainly the argument is not persuasive insofar as it relates to CFI's claim that Kim would be personally liable if CFI prevails against Bamboo in the arbitration. For all CFI knows, Bamboo will prevail there, and the issue of Kim's liability, at least insofar as it relates to enforceability of an award, would be academic. There is no basis for entertaining this action for the purpose of giving CFI a hypothetical advisory opinion as to the consequences for Kim in the event that CFI should prevail in the arbitration against Bamboo.
Nor should the alter ego claim be entertained on the theory that it poses a question of arbitrability for the Court. Kim does not contend that he is entitled to arbitrate CFI's claims against him because he is Bamboo's alter ego. Rather, he argues, persuasively, that those claims are so intertwined with CFI's concededly arbitrable claims against Bamboo that CFI is equitably estopped to refuse arbitration. Hence, those claims are arbitrable without regard to whether Kim is Bamboo's alter ego.
CFI relies on a handful of cases that have held that the alter ego status of a non-signatory to an arbitration agreement is a question of arbitrability to be decided by the court rather than the arbitrator.
Kim's motion to compel arbitration and to stay proceedings in this case pending
SO ORDERED.