Leeward Construction Company, Ltd. v. American University of Antigua--College of Medicine et al
Filing
26
MEMORANDUM AND OPINION re: 9 CROSS MOTION to Dismiss DISMISS PURSUANT TO FORUM NON CONVENIENS AND FED. R. CIV. P. 12(B)(6), OR IN THE ALTERNATIVE, TO VACATE OR MODIFY THE ARBITRATION AWARD.CROSS MOTION to Dismiss DISMISS PURSUANT TO FORUM NON CONVENIENS AND FED. R. CIV. P. 12(B)(6), OR IN THE ALTERNATIVE, TO VACATE OR MODIFY THE ARBITRATION AWARD. For the reasons stated, (1) Leewards amended petition to confirm the arbitration [DI 19] is granted, but only as against AUA; (2) Man ipals cross motion to dismiss as to itself [DI 9] is granted without prejudice to Leewards filing a separate plenary action against it; and (3) AUAs cross motion to dismiss, modify, or vacate [DI 9] is denied. The Clerk shall close the case. (Signed by Judge Lewis A. Kaplan on 3/26/2013) (mro)
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK
-------------------------------------x
LEEWARD CONSTRUCTION COMPANY,
Petitioner,
-against-
12 Civ. 6280 (LAK)
AMERICAN UNIVERSITY OF ANTIGUA –
COLLEGE OF MEDICINE, and MANIPAL
EDUCATION AMERICAS, LLC f/k/a GCLR, LLC.
Respondents.
-------------------------------------x
MEMORANDUM OPINION
Appearances:
Veronica A. McMillan
J. Scott Greer
Alana Bartley
LEWIS & GREER, P.C.
Attorneys for Petitioner
Michael B. Goldsmith
Katherine M. Lieb
SILLS CUMMIS & GROSS P.C.
Attorneys for Respondents
1
Lewis A. Kaplan, District Judge.
Petitioner Leeward Construction Company (“Leeward”) seeks to confirm an
international arbitration award against Respondents American University of Antigua (“AUA”) and
Manipal Education Americas (“Manipal”).1
In September 2008, Leeward and AUA contracted for Leeward to construct a medical
school for AUA in Antigua.2 Pursuant to an arbitration clause in the contract, Leeward commenced
an arbitration proceeding against AUA before the American Arbitration Association in February
2011 regarding disputes that had arisen between them in the course of performance.3 The arbitrators
held hearings in March 2012 in Puerto Rico and issued an award in favor of Leeward of
approximately $1 million in June 2012, which was modified to correct clerical errors in August
2012.4 Leeward then petitioned to confirm the award against AUA and also against Manipal, the
latter on a theory that Manipal was the alter ego of AUA. Manipal was not a signatory to the
underlying agreement, nor was it a party to the arbitration proceeding.
Respondents cross move to dismiss the petition or modify or vacate the award on a
number of grounds.5 For the reasons stated, the petition is granted, but only insofar as Leeward
1
Leeward and AUA are both Antiguan corporations, while Manipal is a New York limited
liability company. See Am. Petition ¶¶ 4, 5; Scalafani Reply Decl. ¶ 4, Ex. A.
2
Scalafani Decl. Ex. H (hereinafter “Award”) at 2.
3
Id. at 1.
4
Id. at 2; McMillan Decl., Ex. G at 2.
5
Respondents’ motion was directed against Leeward’s initial petition to confirm, rather than
an amended petition that Leeward filed subsequently to add allegations regarding its claim
against Manipal. Compare DI 2 with DI 19. The Court rejects respondents’ contention that
2
seeks to confirm the award against AUA. Manipal’s cross motion to dismiss is granted, and AUA’s
cross motion is denied.
I.
Cross Motions to Dismiss
As stated at oral argument, the Court grants the cross motion to dismiss the petition
against Manipal because “an action for confirmation is not the proper time for a District Court to
pierce the corporate veil.”6 This dismissal is without prejudice to Leeward’s filing a separate
plenary action against Manipal to enforce the judgment against AUA it obtains here under an alter
ego or other theory.7
As stated also at oral argument, the Court denies AUA’s cross motion to dismiss the
petition on grounds of forum non conveniens.8
Leeward needed to file a new “request to confirm the Amended Petition” in light of the
mooting of the initial petition. DI 22 at 2. The amended petition itself is the request; what
is confirmed is not the petition but the award. To the extent that the filing of the amended
petition might have mooted respondents’ motion, pursuant to respondents’ alternative
request, id., the Court construes the motion as applying also to the amended petition.
6
Orion Shipping & Trading Co. v. Eastern States Petroleum Corp., 312 F.2d 299, 301 (2d
Cir. 1963) (internal quotation marks omitted).
7
Id. (noting that holding does not preclude petitioner from being separate action to enforce
award against third party).
8
The Court briefly amplifies the reasons it set forth in open court for denying the motion on
this ground. Even as a foreign plaintiff, Leeward’s choice of forum is entitled to some
deference, particularly to the extent that it sues here for “legitimate reasons.” Bigio v. CocaCola, 448 F.3d 176, 179 (2d Cir. 2006); Iragorri v. United Tech. Corp., 274 F.3d 65, 71 (2d
Cir. 2001) (en banc) (setting forth “sliding scale” of deference). The Court credits
Leeward’s contention that it chose this forum to expedite enforcement of the judgment
against the assets it has reason to believe AUA possesses within the United States. This is
a legitimate reason to bring the petition here. See Sonera Holding B.V. v. Curkova Holding,
A.S., 2012 WL 3925853, *8 (S.D.N.Y. Sep. 10, 2012); Norex Petroleum Ltd. v. Access
Industries, Inc., 416 F.3d 146, 155 (2d Cir. 2005) (legitimate reasons are those based on
3
II.
Cross Motion to Vacate or Modify the Award
AUA additionally contends that the award should be vacated or modified on a
number of grounds. In particular, AUA challenges four components of the arbitrators’ award:
(1) overhead and profit for “omitted work,” (2) “change order work,” (3) damages under the “bad
faith doctrine,” and (4) interest.
The parties agree that, as an international arbitration occurring in Puerto Rico, the
defenses to confirmation set forth both in the New York Convention and in the Federal Arbitration
Act apply.9 In either case, review of the award is “severely limited.”10 Indeed, when considering
the merits of an arbitrators’ decision, “the award should be enforced, despite a court’s disagreement
with it . . . , if there is a barely colorable justification for the outcome reached.”11
questions of “genuine convenience”).
Assuming arguendo that Antigua would have been an adequate alternative forum, the Court
finds that the public and private interest factors do not support dismissal, let alone outweigh
the deference owed to Leeward’s choice. As this action is a summary confirmation
proceeding requiring no further evidence, there is no practical difficulty in resolving it here.
See Sonera Holding, 2012 WL 3925853 at *9; Constellation Energy Commodities Group,
Inc. v. Transfield ER Cape Ltd., 801 F. Supp.2d 211, 220 (S.D.N.Y. 2011); Iragorri, 274
F.3d at 74 (directing courts to consider practical conveniences regarding “precise issues that
are likely to be actually tried”). Moreover, while generally there is a “local interest in
having localized controversies decided at home,” the Second Circuit has recognized that
confirmation of international arbitration awards falling under the New York Convention is
a “favored policy” of the United States—a public interest that weighs here heavily in favor
of accepting jurisdiction. Figueiredo Ferraz E Engharia de Projeta Ltda. v. Peru, 665 F.3d
384, 389–90, 392 (2d Cir. 2011) (internal quotation marks omitted).
9
See Scandinavian Reinsurance Co. Ltd. v. St. Paul Marine & Fire Ins. Co., 668 F.3d 60, 71
(2d Cir. 2012); Yusuf Ahmed Alghanim & Sons, W.L.L. v. Toys “R” Us, Inc., 126 F.3d 15,
21 (2d Cir. 1997); see generally 9 U.S.C. §§ 10, 11.
10
Scandinavian Reinsurance Co., 668 F.3d at 71 (internal quotation marks omitted).
11
T.Co Metals, LLC v. Dempsey Pipe & Supply, Inc., 592 F.3d 329, 339 (2d Cir. 2010)
(emphasis in original; internal quotation marks omitted); see also Schwartz v. Merrill Lynch
4
For the reasons stated, AUA fails to meet its heavy burden to prevent confirmation
of each challenged component of the award.
A.
Overhead and Profit for Omitted Work
In the arbitration proceeding, the central dispute was whether, in light of various
reductions in the scope of the project from what Leeward and AUA initially contemplated, Leeward
was entitled to be paid on the basis of the contract price or on the work actually performed. The
arbitrators ruled that the contract between Leeward and AUA was a fixed-price contract subject to
additions and deletions.12 Although the contract envisioned that additions and deletions would occur
through formal change orders and AUA never issued any such orders, the arbitrators concluded that
Leeward was entitled to payment for only the work it performed on the ground that Leeward and
AUA had waived the change order requirement.13
This said, the arbitrators generally accepted Leeward’s claim that it was owed
compensation for its overhead and profit on work that it did not perform, including both (1) “deleted
work,” which was work that AUA removed from the contract and submitted for general bidding, and
(2) “omitted work,” which was work that never was done at all due to design changes in the
& Co., Inc., 665 F.3d 444, 452 (2d Cir. 2011) (describing standard for whether arbitrators
engaged in “manifest disregard of law” sufficient to warrant vacatur as “first, whether the
governing law alleged to have been ignored by the arbitrators was well defined, explicit,
and clearly applicable, and, second, whether the arbitrator knew about the existence of
a clearly governing legal principle but decided to ignore it or pay no attention to it”); Jock
v. Sterling Jewelers, Inc., 646 F.3d 113, 122 n.1 (2d Cir. 2011) (vacatur requires more than
mere legal error, but a showing “that the panel intentionally defied the law” (internal
quotation marks omitted)).
12
Award at 6.
13
Id. at 6–7.
5
project.14
AUA challenges the arbitrators’ grant of overhead and profit for omitted work. It
contends that Leeward did not seek this overhead and profit until its post-hearing submissions and
that the arbitrators therefore exceeded their powers and engaged in prejudicial misconduct in making
that part of the award.15
As AUA itself concedes, Leeward sought payment for omitted work in its notice of
claim, which sought full payment for such work and not just recovery of its overhead and profit.
It was not outside of the arbitrators’ power to award only a portion of what Leeward sought.
Moreover, AUA was able to defend against this particular alternative claim in its rebuttal posthearing submissions and argued there that the claim should not be considered because it was
untimely. The arbitrators specifically rejected the latter contention, concluding that they “will not
exclude any claim under the sole contention of timeliness,” apparently because “both parties
breached various provisions of the Contract and are, therefore, barred from enforcing said provisions
against each other.”16 AUA does not even attempt to identify error in this conclusion in its
submissions. The Court identifies no misbehavior by the arbitrators or other ground for vacatur in
the circumstances.
14
See id. at 31.
15
See 9 U.S.C. § 10 (permitting vacatur where arbitrators “exceeded their powers” or were
“guilty of . . . misbehavior by which the rights of any party have been prejudiced”).
16
Award at 15–16.
6
B.
Change Order Work
AUA next challenges the arbitrators’ award regarding change order work, i.e., work
that Leeward completed but that was not part of the original contract. AUA contends that the
arbitrators’ decision provided no reasoning as to why it accepted Leeward’s contentions regarding
this compensation, stating only that “[f]rom the evidence presented at trial, the Panel finds that
Leeward is entitled [to such compensation].” AUA contends that therefore the arbitrators exceeded
their powers as they failed to provide the “reasoned award” required by the parties’ contract.
Courts have read a “reasoned award” requirement as mandating that the arbitrators
provide “something short of findings [of fact] and conclusions [of law] but more than a simple
result.”17 The decision in this case was well over thirty pages long with considerable detail
regarding the panel’s findings and conclusions as to the various components of the overall award.
The parties had ample opportunity to contest Leeward’s entitlement to compensation for change
order work, and the summary nature of the discussion in the decision shows that the panel simply
accepted Leeward’s arguments on this particular point. While the award may have been deficient
if it summarily had indicated agreement with all of Leeward’s contentions, that does not mean that
the arbitrators were obliged to show how every single proposition they adopted could be derived
from first principles.18
17
Rain CII Carbon, LLC v. ConocoPhillips Co., 674 F.3d 469, 473 (5th Cir. 2012) (internal
quotation marks omitted).
18
To the extent AUA suggests that other aspects of the award were deficient also for failing
to satisfy the “reasoned award” requirement, this same reasoning applies.
7
C.
Damages Under “Bad Faith Doctrine”
AUA contends also that the arbitrators’ award for damages under the “bad faith
doctrine” cannot stand. While this presents a closer question, the challenge fails.
1.
Background
As discussed above, the original contract contemplated that Leeward would do a
number of projects that AUA deleted from the scope of engagement and then put out for competitive
bidding—namely, (1) flooring work, (2) door and window work, and (3) painting work.19 It appears
that Leeward submitted bids and was chosen to do the flooring work and the door and window
work, which it completed under contracts separate from the principal contract.20 Apparently,
however, Leeward did not do the painting work.21
Leeward sought in the arbitration both unpaid balances on its separate contracts with
AUA and overhead and profit on all deleted work, including the flooring and door and window work
that it had completed pursuant to the separate contracts.22 Leeward argued that the fact that it was
able to complete work under a separate contract did not eliminate its entitlement to overhead and
profit for that same work under the original contract, because among other things, Leeward had to
19
Scalafani Decl. Ex. E at 15.
20
See Award at 16, 18 (finding that door and window work and flooring work were given
to Leeward under separate contracts).
21
See id. at 8, 26.
22
See id. at 13, 16, 25.
8
bid competitively for such work “with no guarantee of being awarded the work.”23
As a
consequence, Leeward suggested that it might have had to bid “at a significantly lower rate [of
overhead and profit] to stay competitive.”24 It contended that “AUA removed these items of work
from the Contract in an effort to reduce the cost of the works through competitive bidding and to
avoid paying Leeward preliminaries for work performed after the substantial completion date.”25
2.
Award
To the extent that Leeward sought payment of unpaid balances under the separate
contracts, the arbitrators ruled that those contracts were not subject to the arbitration clause and that
therefore the claims could not be considered.26 They concluded also that, while as a general matter,
Leeward was entitled to overhead and profit for omitted and deleted work, they would not award
such overhead and profit for deleted work that had been awarded to Leeward under separate
contracts.27
The award did not appear to conclude that Leeward was not entitled to such
compensation, however. Rather, it appeared to exempt this work from its overhead and profit award
“because such work was then given to Leeward under a Separate Contract and, therefore, is not
23
McMillan Decl. Ex. E at 26.
24
Id.
25
Scalafani Decl. Ex. E at 15.
26
Award at 5.
27
Id. at 8.
9
subject to this Arbitration.”28 Nevertheless, the arbitrators went on to award damages for this work,
concluding that “Leeward is entitled to damages in the amount of EC $232,670.13 for work that was
deleted from the Contract and then assigned to Leeward under Separate Contracts, under the bad
faith doctrine.”29
3.
Discussion
AUA objects to the arbitrators’ reliance on a “bad faith doctrine,” noting that no such
doctrine was invoked by Leeward throughout the arbitration proceedings. It contends also that the
award appears to provide tort damages, above and beyond the contract damages to which Leeward
may have been entitled, that would not have been within the arbitrators’ power to grant. In response,
Leeward urges this Court to construe reference to the “bad faith doctrine” as a determination that
AUA breached the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing.
Under general principles of contract law,30 the implied covenant of good faith and
fair dealing requires “faithfulness to an agreed common purpose and consistency with the justified
28
Id. at 25 (emphasis added).
29
Id. at 8. Describing the same award elsewhere in the decision, the arbitrators said, “After
careful consideration regarding the works that were deleted from the Contract and then
assigned to Leeward under Separate Contracts, this Panel finds that Leeward is entitled to
damages under the bad faith doctrine.” Id. at 12.
“EC $” refers to Eastern Caribbean dollars and is the denomination of the award. The
petition indicates that at the time of the award, 2.700 Eastern Caribbean dollars equaled one
United States dollar. Am. Petition ¶ 3 n.1.
30
No party has argued that Antiguan contract law deviates from these principles.
10
expectations of the other party.”31 Examples of bad faith include “evasion of the spirit of the
bargain” and “abuse of a power to specify terms.”32 Importantly, the implied covenant does not
provide some form of general damages awardable simply because a court determines that a party
acted in bad faith.33 Rather, it provides a basis for damages if the other party took actions in bad
faith that worked to deprive the plaintiff of the benefit of the bargain.
Recognizing that the arbitrators’ reasoning regarding the deleted work awarded to
Leeward under separate contracts is questionable and leaves much to be desired, the Court concludes
that there is at least a “barely colorable justification” for the award rendered and that AUA’s
challenge therefore fails.34 While Leeward had framed its claim as one for overhead and profit and
did not use the term bad faith, it essentially argued that AUA’s actions with regard to this work
breached the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing. That is, it argued that it was entitled
to the benefit of the margins it had negotiated for such work in the original contract and that AUA
had deprived it of this benefit when it deleted the work from the contract and then put the work up
for separate bidding.
In awarding damages under what they called the “bad faith doctrine,” the arbitrators
apparently accepted Leeward’s contentions that AUA had evaded the spirit of the bargain. The
31
RESTATEM ENT (SECOND ) OF CONTRACTS , § 205.
32
Id.
33
See Southeastern Penn. Transp. Auth. v. Bank of New York Mellon Corp., No. 12 Civ. 3066,
2013 WL 440628, *13 (S.D.N.Y. Jan. 23, 2013) (“The implied covenant protects the benefit
of the bargain made. It does not create new benefits out of whole cloth.”).
34
T.Co Metals, LLC, 592 F.3d at 339 (emphasis, internal quotation marks omitted).
11
award of damages can be construed as restoring to Leeward the benefit of the original contract as
to this work. To be sure, the arbitrators might have achieved the same outcome by simply accepting
Leeward’s claim to overhead and profit for this work. They appeared to conclude that they could
not do so because the work had been part of separate contracts not subject to arbitration, even though
it would seem that Leeward’s claim for overhead and profit derived from the original contract, not
the separate ones. In any event, the damages award can be construed as amounting to the same
thing, and this is a barely colorable justification for this award. The conclusion finds further support
in the rough proportionality between the bad faith damages award and what it appears Leeward was
seeking for overhead and profit as to this work.35
While complaining generally about the issuance of “bad faith” damages, AUA’s
submissions before this Court do not even attempt to engage with the issue with which the
arbitrators were clearly concerned: AUA’s actions in deleting work from the original contract and
then putting that work up for competitive bidding. In the circumstances, AUA has not met its heavy
burden to prevent confirmation of this portion of the award.
D.
Interest Calculation
Finally, AUA challenges the arbitrators’ award of EC $44,617.37 for interest.
Leeward had sought interest at a rate of 10 percent, which it calculated to be EC $63,739.12. The
arbitrators concluded that an interest award was appropriate, but only on a 7 percent rate, and
awarded Leeward 70 percent of what it had sought.36
35
See Award at 7, 16–18.
36
Id. at 28–29.
12
The problem, AUA contends, is that Leeward’s interest demand included interest for
“mobilization” payments and that, in addressing whether Leeward would receive interest on such
payments, the arbitrators stated that “the disputes regarding mobilization were resolved” by a
separate settlement between the parties.37 AUA reads the decision as having concluded that no
interest was warranted on mobilization payments, but then failing to exclude this interest from
Leeward’s claim before scaling the award by 70 pecent. It asserts that the Court should modify the
award by removing interest relating to mobilization because the calculation is an “evident material
miscalculation of figures,”38 which would reduce the interest awarded to EC $17,152.92.
Assuming arguendo that a miscalculation amounting to approximately $10,000 U.S.
dollars on an approximately $1 million award is “material,” the Court nevertheless rejects AUA’s
request.39 First, while the language of the decision strongly suggests that the arbitrators denied
interest for mobilization, the decision did not expressly say so.40 Rather, what is clear is that the
arbitrators decided to award EC $44,617.37 in interest, whatever that was meant to represent.
Second, courts considering the “evident material miscalculation of figures” ground for modification
37
Id. at 29.
38
9 U.S.C. § 11(a).
39
Cf. South East Atlantic Shipping Ltd. v. Garnac Grain Corp., 356 F.2d 189, 192 (2d Cir.
1966) (concluding that certain discrepancies due to rounding error were not material, and
that “[i]f such calculations were to be subject to judicial review, there would be few
arbitration awards which would be immune from the very time and money consuming court
reviews which arbitration is designed to avoid”).
40
See Award at 29 (finding, in response to question about whether Leeward was entitled to
mobilization interest or whether this issue was previously settled, that “the disputes
regarding mobilization were resolved with a payment by AUA in December 22, 2009 and
a settlement was reached by the parties in January 13, 2009").
13
have limited it to “‘mathematical error appearing on the face of the award,’”41 such as when the
arbitrators award various damages but then err in computation of the total amount. That is not this
case; AUA must make assumptions about the arbitrators’ calculation methodology to demonstrate
error. While the assumptions AUA makes are quite reasonable, and it seems likely that there was
a small error here, this does not mean that the error is evident on the face of the award permitting
modification under 9 U.S.C. § 11.42
III.
Conclusion
For the reasons stated, (1) Leeward’s amended petition to confirm the arbitration [DI
19] is granted, but only as against AUA; (2) Manipal’s cross motion to dismiss as to itself [DI 9] is
granted without prejudice to Leeward’s filing a separate plenary action against it; and (3) AUA’s
cross motion to dismiss, modify, or vacate [DI 9] is denied. The Clerk shall close the case.
SO ORDERED.
Dated:
March 26, 2013
41
Grain v. Trinity Health, Mercy Health Servs., Inc., 551 F.3d 374, 378 (6th Cir. 2008)
(quoting Apex Plumbing Supply, Inc. v. U.S. Supply Co., 142 F.3d 188, 194 (4th Cir. 1998))
(emphasis added).
42
In fact, AUA presented the purported calculation error to the arbitrators in a letter after the
initial decision. See Scalafani Decl., Ex. G at 2. While the arbitrators made some other
clerical corrections after submission of the letter, they did not modify the award’s interest
calculation. This further augurs against presuming that any error was evident.
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