Bettis Group Inc v. Transatlantic Petro ( 2002 )


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  •               IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
    _______________________________
    No. 01-20377
    _______________________________
    BETTIS GROUP, INC.; ROYAL HOLT BETTIS, JR.;
    TARPON BENIN II, INC.; BAHAMAS W.A. LDC;
    WEST AFRICA, LDC,
    Plaintiffs-Counter Defendants-Appellants,
    versus
    TRANSATLANTIC PETROLEUM CORP.; ET AL,
    Defendants,
    TRANSATLANTIC PETROLEUM CORP., formerly
    known as PROFCO RESOURCES, LTD.,
    Defendant-Counter Claimant-Appellee.
    Consolidated with
    _______________________________
    No. 01-20379
    _______________________________
    BETTIS GROUP INC.; ROYAL HOLT BETTIS, JR.;
    TARPON BENIN II, INC.; BAHAMAS W.A. LDC;
    WEST AFRICA LDC,
    Plaintiffs-Counter Defendants-Appellants,
    versus
    SOGW BENIN, LTD; TIFAND, INC.;
    TARPON BENIN LDC; BBFI BENIN LTD.;
    CANDELA RESOURCES, LTD.,
    Defendants-Counter Claimants-Appellees.
    _________________________________________________
    Appeals from the United States District Court
    for the Southern District of Texas
    (H-00-CV-3310)
    _________________________________________________
    December 23, 2002
    Before KING, Chief Judge, and REAVLEY and WIENER, Circuit Judges.
    PER CURIAM*:
    Plaintiffs/Counter-Defendants/Appellants             (collectively,
    “Plaintiffs”)    filed   the     two    captioned    lawsuits,     which    are
    consolidated for purposes of this appeal, seeking enforcement of
    the   arbitration   award      that    they   had   obtained     against    the
    Defendants/Counter-Claimants/Appellees.              In   the    first     case
    (hereafter, the “Guarantor Lawsuit”), the district court sustained
    the counterclaim of TransAtlantic Petroleum Corp. (“TransAtlantic”)
    which asserted that, as guarantor only, it was not subject to the
    arbitration provision that led to the award in question.                 In the
    second case (hereafter the “Affiliates Lawsuit”), the district
    court concluded that the arbitrator’s award to the Plaintiffs was
    grounded in damages that were too speculative to support the award,
    thereby constituting “manifest disregard of the law,” which the
    court equated with misconduct by the arbitrator.            As a result of
    these rulings, the district court vacated the arbitration award in
    its entirety as to all parties previously found liable by the
    arbitrator (collectively, “Defendants”), whether as obligors or
    guarantor, and dismissed both actions.
    *
    Pursuant to 5TH Cir. R. 47.5, the court has determined that
    this opinion should not be published and is not precedent except
    under the limited circumstances set forth in 5TH Cir. R. 47.5.4.
    2
    The Plaintiffs appeal all rulings of the district court in
    both suits, principal among which are (1) the court’s determination
    that the arbitrator erred in finding that TransAtlantic was bound
    to arbitrate, and (2) the court’s vacatur of the arbitration award
    as to all Defendants.     We reverse these rulings of the district
    court and remand with instructions to enforce the arbitrator’s
    award as rendered.
    I. Facts and Proceedings
    Tarpon-Benin, S.A., a company that is not a party to this
    litigation, was incorporated pursuant to the laws of the West
    African Republic of Benin (“Benin”) by corporate and individual
    associates of one of the Plaintiffs, Bettis Group, Inc. (“Bettis
    Group”).1   The initial shareholders of Tarpon-Benin were those
    affiliates of Bettis Group (collectively “the Bettis Affiliates”)
    but not Bettis Group itself.        The government of Benin granted
    Tarpon-Benin   a   petroleum   drilling   concession   (the   “Concession
    Contract”), under which Tarpon-Benin assumed various contractual
    obligations and acquired drilling rights, in particular the right
    to drill offshore in an area designated as Block 2.
    Presumably to obtain additional capital for exploitation of
    the Concession Contract, Tarpon-Benin brought Profco Resources,
    Ltd. (subsequently renamed TransAtlantic and referred to throughout
    this opinion as such) into the venture through the sale of Tarpon-
    1
    The laws of Benin require seven shareholders, at least one
    of whom must be a natural person.
    3
    Benin       stock        to     individual        and     corporate        affiliates    of
    TransAtlantic, but not to TransAtlantic itself.                             At all times
    relevant to this appeal, the shareholders of Tarpon-Benin consisted
    of (1) the Bettis Affiliates and (2) all captioned Defendants-
    Counter Claimants-Appellees other than TransAtlantic (collectively
    “the    TransAtlantic           Affiliates”).           Together,    the    TransAtlantic
    Affiliates owned 75% of Tarpon-Benin’s issued and outstanding
    stock,      controlling         its    board     of     directors    and    its   principal
    committees, and held the presidency.
    The owners of all Tarpon-Benin stock signed a Shareholders
    Agreement (the “Agreement”). Although not shareholders themselves,
    the two primary corporate players in the venture —— Bettis Group
    and    TransAtlantic           ——     signed     the    Agreement    to    guarantee    some
    obligations of some of their respective affiliates that were
    shareholders, as expressly set forth in the body of the Agreement.
    Specifically,        section          6.5   of    the    Agreement    identifies       which
    obligations         of        which    shareholders        among     the    TransAtlantic
    Associates are guaranteed by TransAtlantic:
    6.5 Guaranty of SOGW Benin’s Obligations
    [TransAtlantic] hereby agrees to guarantee (i)
    any and all obligations of SOGW Benin to
    [Tarpon-Benin] and (ii) any and all obligations
    of SCL, Tifand, and LDC in their capacities as
    Shareholders of [Tarpon-Benin].2
    2
    Section 6.7 of the Agreement mirrors section 6.5, specifying
    which obligations of which shareholders among the Bettis Group
    Affiliates were guaranteed by Bettis Group: “6.7 Guarantee of West
    Africa’s Obligations. The Bettis Group agrees to guarantee (i) any
    and all obligations of West Africa to [Tarpon-Benin] and (ii) any
    4
    After Tarpon-Benin drilled a dry hole in Block 2, differences
    developed between the Plaintiffs and the Defendants about the
    future of the venture.          The Concession Contract with Benin was
    eventually lost.       When the dispute between the two factions could
    not be resolved amicably, the Plaintiffs invoked the arbitration
    clause    of    the   Agreement,      instituting     arbitration       proceedings
    against   the    Defendants     for    breach    of   the    Agreement.         These
    proceedings, which began in Denver and were transferred to Dallas
    by unanimous consent of the participants,3 culminated in an award
    of $1.35 million, plus fees and interest, against the Defendants.4
    To enforce their arbitration award, the Plaintiffs filed the
    captioned      lawsuits    in     federal    district       court   in    Houston.
    TransAtlantic counterclaimed in the Guarantor Lawsuit, seeking (1)
    reversal of the arbitrator’s preliminary ruling that TransAtlantic
    was subject to arbitration and (2) vacatur of the arbitration
    award.    The     TransAtlantic       Affiliates      counterclaimed       in    the
    Affiliates      Lawsuit,   also    seeking      vacatur     of   that    award    but
    contesting neither the validity of the agreement to arbitrate nor
    their susceptibility to arbitration.             Following the filing of the
    and all obligations of Tarpon II and RHB in their capacities as
    Shareholders of [Tarpon-Benin].”
    3
    The transfer to Dallas occurred after TransAtlantic
    boycotted the proceedings, although the arbitrator stated that the
    proceedings would be moved back to Denver if TransAtlantic decided
    to participate and insisted on a Denver situs.
    4
    In its appellate brief, TransAtlantic states that the award
    against it is in “the total sum of $1,848,359.32.”
    5
    Defendants’ cross-motions for summary judgment, the district court
    entered orders in both lawsuits.
    As an initial matter in the Guarantor Lawsuit, the district
    court     reversed     the        arbitrator’s        preliminary     ruling    that
    TransAtlantic was bound to arbitrate, crediting TransAtlantic’s
    contention that it did not consent to arbitrate when it signed the
    Agreement as guarantor of the obligations of the TransAtlantic
    Affiliates, as expressly spelled out in the body of the Agreement.
    The     court   went   on    to    vacate       the   arbitration     award    as   to
    TransAtlantic.
    In the Affiliates Lawsuit, the district court vacated the
    arbitrator’s      award,     crediting          the   TransAtlantic     Affiliates’
    characterization       of    the     arbitrator’s       ruling   as    constituting
    “manifest disregard for the law” and therefore “misconduct” by the
    arbitrator.       In so doing, the court rejected the Plaintiffs’
    contentions that (1) the shareholders’ express waiver of appeal in
    the Agreement precluded the court’s appellate review of the award,
    (2) manifest disregard of the law is not a valid basis for vacating
    the arbitrator’s award anyway, and (3) in fact and in law, the
    arbitrator had not manifestly disregarded the law applicable to the
    instant dispute.       The district court was of the opinion that under
    the substantive law of Texas (which is the law selected by the
    parties in the Agreement), the damages were too speculative to
    support an award, so that the arbitrator’s award of such damages
    constituted manifest disregard for the law and thus arbitrator
    6
    misconduct. In the end, the district court vacated the arbitration
    award       in   toto     and   dismissed   both    lawsuits,   after   which   the
    Plaintiffs timely filed notices of appeal.
    II. Analysis
    A.   Standard of Review
    In the Affiliates Lawsuit, we review de novo the court’s
    denial of the Plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment to enforce
    their       award    in     arbitration     and    the   court’s   grant   of   the
    TransAtlantic Affiliates’ summary judgment motion to vacate the
    arbitration award and dismiss the case.                  Thus, our review of each
    appellate issue in the Affiliates Lawsuit is plenary.5
    In the Guarantor Lawsuit, the Plaintiffs and TransAtlantic
    filed cross-motions for summary judgment.                     The district court
    denied the Plaintiffs’ motion and granted TransAtlantic’s.                  Again,
    our review of the grant or the denial of a summary judgment is
    plenary.         Our standard of review of the district court’s rulings
    should not, however, be confused or equated with the extremely
    restricted and deferential standard to which federal courts are
    held when reviewing arbitration proceedings themselves, including
    the conduct of the arbitrator and the arbitration award.6
    5
    Six Flags Over Texas, Inc. v. Int’l Brotherhood of Elec.
    Workers, Local No. 116, 
    143 F.3d 213
    , 214 (5th Cir. 1998).
    6
    Brook v. Peak Int’l, Ltd., 
    294 F.3d 668
    , 672 (5th Cir.
    2002)(noting that the de novo standard of review is “intended to
    reinforce    the    strong    deference    due    an    arbitrative
    tribunal”)(quoting McIlroy v. Paine Webber, Inc., 
    989 F.2d 817
    , 820
    (5th Cir. 1993)).
    7
    B.   The Affiliates Lawsuit
    The   TransAtlantic   Affiliates   participated   fully   in   the
    arbitration proceedings, never objecting to their being subject to
    arbitration or to any other aspect of the proceedings except for
    the results reached by the arbitrator in making his award, which,
    on appeal, the TransAtlantic Affiliates, like the district court,
    label as manifest disregard for the law by the arbitrator.          On
    appeal to us, the Plaintiffs assert two independent and alternative
    bases for reversing the district court:   (1) the parties’ waiver of
    the right to appeal the legal rulings and award of an arbitrator;
    and (2) the district court’s legal error in (a) applying an
    impermissible standard to justify reviewing the substance of the
    dispute and the arbitrator’s award, and, alternatively, (b) the
    district court’s holding that the arbitrator manifestly disregarded
    the law of Texas governing contractual damages and that this
    constitutes arbitrator misconduct.7
    1.    Waiver of Appeal
    As a preliminary contention, the Plaintiffs insist that the
    TransAtlantic Affiliates violated an express provision of the
    Agreement when they filed a counterclaim seeking vacatur of the
    award, and that the district court erred reversibly by entertaining
    7
    FAA § 16 authorizes our review of the district court’s order
    vacating the arbitration award.      See 9 U.S.C. § 16(a)(1)(E);
    Atlantic Aviation, Inc. v. EBM Group, Inc. 
    11 F.3d 1276
    , 1280 (5th
    Cir. 1994); Bull HN Info. Sys., Inc. v. Hutson, 
    229 F.3d 321
    , 327
    (1st Cir. 2000); Jays Foods, L.L.C. v. Chem. & Allied Prod. Workers
    Union, 
    208 F.3d 610
    , 613 (7th Cir. 2000).
    8
    that counterclaim which unquestionably constitutes an appeal of the
    arbitration proceedings and the arbitrator’s award. The Plaintiffs
    rely on the fifth paragraph of § 17.2.2, which contains the
    arbitration provision of the Agreement:
    The decision of the arbitrator shall be final
    and binding on all Shareholders and shall be
    enforceable   in   any   court   of  competent
    jurisdiction.     The Shareholders agree to
    exclude any right of application or appeal to
    the courts of any jurisdiction in connection
    with any question of law arising in the course
    of arbitration or with respect to any award
    made, except for enforcement purposes as stated
    above. (emphasis added)
    In their district court counterclaim, the TransAtlantic Affiliates
    do not assert any vice in the making of the Agreement or their
    joinder therein; neither do they contest the general applicability
    of the above-quoted waiver of appeal.           Rather, they take the
    position that, despite its unambiguous and unconditional wording,
    the contractual waiver of the right to appeal in any court anywhere
    regarding any question of law or any award is inapplicable to an
    appeal based on a claim that an award was made in manifest
    disregard for the law.       This is so, they argue, because that
    constitutes “misconduct” by the arbitrator.           We perceive this
    argument as advocating a policy that a general waiver of appeal
    that does not expressly state that the waiver applies even to the
    four grounds listed in § 10(a) of the FAA, does not preclude the
    seeking of vacatur on one or more of those grounds.
    Even    assuming   arguendo   that   the   Agreement’s   broad   and
    9
    unconditional waiver of judicial appeal would not prohibit an
    appeal      grounded   in   one   or    more    of    §   10(a)’s        grounds,   the
    TransAtlantic      Affiliates     were        not    entitled       to     appeal   the
    arbitrator’s award here by asserting manifest disregard for the
    law.   First, we have never reversed our rejection of the “manifest
    disregard for the law” standard of review of arbitration awards in
    commercial     contract     cases.       We    must,      therefore,       reject   the
    TransAtlantic Affiliates position (which was successful in the
    district court) equating manifest disregard for the law with
    “misconduct by the arbitrator,” the latter being one of the four
    exclusive grounds listed in § 10(a) of the FAA for vacating an
    arbitration award.          Consequently, even when we assume without
    granting that the TransAtlantic Affiliates’ waiver of appeal does
    not apply to a claim of arbitrator misconduct, such an appeal
    cannot be based on manifest disregard of the law as a proxy for
    such misconduct.
    As    signatories    to    the    Agreement,         which        contains   the
    arbitration clause that includes the quoted waiver of appeal, the
    TransAtlantic Affiliates are held to knowledge of the law of
    arbitration, including the extremely narrow and chary approach of
    the federal courts to an appeal of the merits of an arbitration
    award, especially when appeal has been waived unconditionally in
    the contract. This deemed knowledge includes, inter alia, that the
    list of grounds for review contained in § 10(a) of the FAA is
    exclusive and, more importantly, that in this circuit manifest
    10
    disregard for the law is not equated with arbitrator’s misconduct.
    Thus, the district court erred as a matter of law in hearing the
    appeal, which the TransAtlantic Affiliates dressed in the garb of
    a counterclaim, grounded in manifest disregard of the law.
    Our long-standing rejection of that ground for vacatur in
    commercial contract cases pretermits its being considered under the
    aegis of any of the four grounds under § 10(a) even if appeals
    based on § 10(a) are not prohibited by the waiver of appeal in the
    Agreement.    We must, therefore, reverse the district court’s
    vacatur of the arbitration award as it applies to the TransAtlantic
    Affiliates.
    2.   Alternative Ground for Reversal:    Merits of Appeal
    Furthermore, even if we assume without granting that the
    waiver of appeal is inapplicable here, and assume further that, in
    this commercial contract case governed by Texas substantive law,
    manifest disregard of the law could somehow constitute misconduct
    by the arbitrator, our review of the district court’s vacatur of
    the award vis-à-vis the TransAtlantic Affiliates on those grounds
    ultimately leads to reversal.
    a.   Governing Law; the Arbitration Provision
    Article XVII of the Agreement contains § 17.2, which is styled
    Governing Law and Dispute Resolution.   Subsection 17.2.1 specifies
    that the “Agreement shall be governed and interpreted according to
    the substantive law of the State of Texas.”    That is followed by
    subsection 17.2.2, which is the six-paragraph arbitration provision
    11
    of the Agreement.   The first sentence of the first paragraph of
    17.2.2 states:
    Any and all disputes or differences relating
    to, arising out of or in connection with this
    Agreement which cannot be settled amicably
    shall be finally settled by arbitration
    pursuant to this Section 17.2.2. (emphasis
    added).
    ....
    The second paragraph of 17.2.2 then reiterates:
    The substantive law of Texas shall be applied
    without reference or regard to any rules and
    procedures regarding conflicts of law which
    would refer the matter to the laws of another
    jurisdiction.
    b.   The Dispute
    At this juncture, the details of the controversy underlying
    the dispute between the two shareholder groups and their respective
    guarantors are not important.   It is sufficient unto this appeal
    that the controversy involved accusations by the Plaintiffs that
    the Defendants breached the Agreement in such a manner as to cause
    the Concession Contract to be lost, thereby damaging Tarpon-Benin
    and its shareholders.   The dispute is a stereotypical breach of
    contract controversy, and the Plaintiffs instigated arbitration in
    an effort to resolve their breach of contract claims.
    At the end of the day, the arbitrator ruled in favor of the
    Plaintiffs, concluding that the Defendants had breached their
    obligations under the Agreement, causing Tarpon-Benin to violate
    express obligations under the Concession Contract following the
    initial drilling of a dry hole in Block 2, including specifically
    12
    the obligations to provide a training program for the citizens of
    Benin and to conduct extensive geophysical operations.                        This,
    according to the arbitrator, resulted in the corporation’s loss of
    the Concession Contract.             In the arbitration proceedings, the
    Plaintiffs asserted that the loss of the Concession Contract was
    caused at least in part by TransAtlantic’s unilateral notification
    to the government of Benin that TransAtlantic was “relinquishing”
    its interest in Tarpon-Benin —— a step that the Plaintiffs insisted
    neither TransAtlantic nor its affiliates had the legal right to
    take.       This in turn prompted the Plaintiffs to refuse to accept
    TransAtlantic’s “declarations of transfer.”             Based on all oral and
    written        submissions,    the     arbitrator      concluded       that    the
    TransAtlantic Affiliates had breached the Agreement, causing the
    Plaintiffs      to   suffer   damage   of    $1.35   million,   plus    fees   and
    interest.8
    c.        Vacatur of Arbitration Award to Affiliates
    In the Affiliates’ Lawsuit, the district court ignored the
    waiver of appeal, ignored our long-standing rejection of manifest
    disregard of the law as grounds for vacatur in commercial contract
    cases, and proceeded to consider the merits of the arbitration
    award against the TransAtlantic Affiliates under the manifest error
    doctrine, ultimately reversing the arbitration ruling and vacating
    the award.       It is anything but clear, however, that we have ever
    8
    See supra n.3.
    13
    accepted the manifest error doctrine as a ground for vacating
    arbitration awards in commercial contract cases in which the
    substantive      law   of        Texas    is        applicable    under      the    Federal
    Arbitration Act (“FAA”).                 Indeed, we expressly rejected                 that
    doctrine    in   McIlroy         v.   PaineWebber,        Inc.9   and     R.M.      Perez    &
    Associates., Inc. v. Welch.10             Those precedents not only recognize
    the exclusivity of the list of four grounds for vacatur expressly
    set forth in § 10 of the FAA, to wit, (1) The award was procured by
    corruption,      fraud,     or    undue    means;       (2)   there     is   evidence       of
    partiality or corruption among the arbitrators; (3) the arbitrators
    were guilty of misconduct which prejudiced the rights of one of the
    parties; or (4) the arbitrators exceeded their powers.11                           They also
    eschew manifest disregard as either an additional ground for
    vacatur or a manifestation of arbitrator misconduct.
    We acknowledge that the subsequent statement in Williams v.
    Cigna Financial Advisers, Inc.,12 to the effect that “clear approval
    of the ‘manifest disregard’ of the law standard in the review of
    arbitration awards under the FAA” was signified by the Supreme
    9
    
    989 F.2d 817
    , 820 n.2 (5th Cir. 1993)(noting this circuit’s
    refusal to adopt manifest disregard for the law as a ground for
    vacatur).
    10
    
    960 F.2d 534
    , 539 (5th Cir. 1992)(“[T]his circuit never has
    employed a ‘manifest disregard of the law’ standard in reviewing
    arbitration awards”).
    11
    See 
    id. at 540
    (quoting Forsyth Int’l, S.A. v. Gibbs Oil Co.
    of Texas, 
    915 F.2d 1017
    , 1020 (5th Cir. 1990)).
    12
    
    197 F.3d 752
    , 759 (5th Cir. 1999).
    14
    Court in First Options,13 sent a somewhat conflicting signal by
    referring to dicta included in the parenthetical citation to an
    earlier case. The above-quoted statement from Williams is likewise
    dicta, as the controversy there involved employment discrimination,
    to which a different standard might apply.                  Furthermore, the
    arbitration award in that case was affirmed, not vacated.              But even
    if the subject pronouncement in Williams were not dicta and no
    distinction could be drawn on the basis of that being an employment
    case, we would remain bound to follow the pronouncements in Perez
    and   McIlroy    as    earlier   precedents,14   in   the    absence    of     an
    unequivocal and unambiguous reversal by the Supreme Court —— and,
    we cannot read First Options to qualify as such for issues such as
    those under consideration here.
    It is no longer necessary to repeat the jurisprudential
    authority      for    the   universally   recognized    proposition          that
    arbitration is favored.       When it comes to an order of the district
    court that vacates an arbitration award, our review is plenary.15
    And, in conducting our plenary review, we defer to the arbitrator’s
    13
    First Options of Chicago, Inc. v. Kaplan, 
    517 U.S. 938
    , 942
    (1995).
    14
    See Smith v. Penrod Drilling Corp., 
    960 F.2d 456
    , 459 n. 2
    (5th Cir. 1992)(acknowledging that the earlier of prior conflicting
    panel decisions control).
    15
    Forsythe Int’l, S.A. v. Gibbs Oil Co. of Texas, 
    915 F.2d 1017
    , 1020-21 (5th Cir. 1990).
    15
    resolution of the dispute whenever possible.16   But even if we were
    to assume arguendo that the district court did not err in applying
    the manifest error standard (or that we could affirm for other
    reasons by applying, de novo, one of the four standards of § 10 of
    the FAA), we would reverse that court’s vacatur in the Affiliates
    Lawsuit.
    As noted, the Agreement specifies that the substantive law of
    Texas is controlling.   Without reiterating the extensive case law
    cited by the parties in their respective appellate briefs, we are
    convinced that the arbitrator’s award against the TransAtlantic
    Affiliates cannot be reversed and vacated on the basis of manifest
    disregard of Texas law.     If we were authorized to review the
    substance of the arbitrator’s award under a less        deferential
    standard, we, like the district court, might find the damages too
    speculative; but we have no such authority and neither did the
    district court.   Furthermore, even if we were to conclude that,
    under the evidence here, the damages awarded by the arbitrator were
    indeed speculative, we would not view this putative error as rising
    to the level of manifest disregard of the law.      A difference of
    opinion between courts as to the degree of speculation required to
    cross that line does not even approach the level of egregiousness
    required to constitute manifest disregard; it amounts to nothing
    more than a difference of opinion among jurists of reason.
    16
    Anderman/Smith Operating Co. v. Tennessee Gas Pipeline Co.,
    
    918 F.2d 1215
    , 1218 (5th Cir. 1990).
    16
    But the boundaries of federal courts’ latitude in this respect
    are far too narrow to permit such a review and ruling by a court
    that is considering enforcement of an arbitrator’s award under
    circumstances such as these.     Moreover, there is a surfeit of Texas
    common law to the effect that majority shareholders may owe a
    fiduciary-like duty to minority shareholders, casting significant
    doubt on the clarity and certainty of the Texas law applicable to
    this issue.17    As Texas law is, at a minimum, unclear on the
    underlying contractual cause of action asserted by the Plaintiffs
    in the instant arbitration proceedings, neither we nor the district
    court are legally positioned to say that the arbitrator was guilty
    of prejudicial misconduct, exceeded his powers, or otherwise opened
    his award to the possibility of reversal by the court.           We repeat
    for   emphasis   that,   even   though   we   might   disagree   with   the
    arbitrator’s analysis and even though we might judge the damages to
    be speculative, the acts of the arbitrator in this case fall well
    short of the kind of misconduct required to constitute grounds for
    vacatur.   There is no hint of arbitrariness, caprice, or reckless
    disregard for the provisions of Texas law governing this matter.
    As such, the district court erred as a matter of law in vacating
    the arbitration award against the TransAtlantic Affiliates on
    grounds of arbitrator misconduct.
    17
    See, e.g., Patton v. Nicholas, 
    279 S.W.2d 848
    (Tex. 1955);
    Davis v. Sheerin, 
    754 S.W.2d 375
    (Tex. App.——Houston [ISD Dist.]
    1988, writ denied); Duncan v. Lichtenberger, 
    671 S.W.2d 948
    (Tex.
    App.——Fort Worth 1984, writ ref’d n.r.e.).
    17
    In summary, on the basis of the parties’ waiver of the right
    to appeal any aspect of an arbitration award and, alternatively, on
    the basis of the court’s legal errors, first in applying the
    manifest-disregard-of-the-law standard and then in misapplying it
    to the instant facts, we reverse the court’s vacatur, reinstate the
    award to the Bettis Affiliates, and remand for enforcement by the
    court after conducting any ministerial proceedings, consistent
    herewith, that might be needed to effectuate enforcement of the
    award.
    C.   The Guarantor Lawsuit
    1.      Amenability of TransAtlantic to Arbitration Under the
    Agreement
    After the Plaintiffs invoked the arbitration clause of the
    Agreement and commenced proceedings, TransAtlantic asserted that,
    as a non-shareholder, guarantor-only, signatory to the Agreement,
    it was not bound by the arbitration provisions of the Agreement.
    TransAtlantic    formalized      this     contention    in    its   Statement    of
    Objections    filed    early   in   the      arbitration     proceedings.        The
    arbitrator rendered a preliminary decision, holding that both
    TransAtlantic    and    Bettis      Group     were   proper    parties      to   the
    arbitration, regardless of the fact that they had signed the
    Agreement as guarantors only.           Thereafter, however, TransAtlantic
    refused to participate in the arbitration proceedings.
    When,    following   completion         of   arbitration,      the   Guarantor
    Lawsuit was instituted by the Plaintiffs to enforce their award,
    18
    TransAtlantic repeated its contention that it was not subject to
    the binding arbitration provision of the Agreement.                  TransAtlantic
    advanced   this       position    in    the     district    court    by   filing     a
    counterclaim    in     which     it    reiterated     the   contention    that     the
    arbitrator had rejected in his preliminary ruling, i.e., that
    TransAtlantic was not subject to arbitration.
    a.    Waiver
    As    an   initial      contention,        the   Plaintiffs     insist       that
    TransAtlantic waived any right it might have had to challenge the
    arbitrator’s preliminary ruling that TransAtlantic is subject to
    the instant arbitration.          They ground this waiver claim not in the
    wording of the Agreement but in Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. § 172.082(f)
    (hereafter “82(f)”), which states:
    If the arbitration tribunal rules as a
    preliminary question that it has jurisdiction,
    a party waives objection to the ruling unless
    the party, not later than the 30th day after
    the date the party receives notice of that
    ruling, requests the district court of the
    county in which the place of arbitration is
    located to decide the matter.
    Keeping in mind that this enforcement action was instituted in
    federal court and that TransAtlantic filed its counterclaim there,
    asserting that it is not subject to arbitration, we must examine
    the applicability of 82(f) in the framework of the FAA and the
    International Rules of the AAA, as well as the Agreement’s clauses
    addressing arbitration and the choice of Texas substantive law.
    First,     the    FAA     contains    no    mechanism     for   a    party     in
    19
    TransAtlantic’s position to bring an interlocutory appeal of an
    arbitrator’s ruling that such party is subject to arbitration.
    Under the FAA, a party seeking to compel arbitration can seek court
    relief under § 4; a successful party can seek enforcement of the
    arbitration award under § 9; a party against which an award is made
    can seek to vacate such an award under § 10 by filing a motion
    pursuant to § 12 within three months after the award is rendered.
    But we have been referred to nothing in the FAA or in the AAA’s
    International Rules (and have found nothing on our own) that
    authorizes a party to seek an interlocutory federal court review of
    a preliminary ruling by the arbitrator to the effect that the party
    is subject to arbitration.
    It follows, then, that if we were to view 82(f) as being
    substantive in nature, parties situated like TransAtlantic would
    have    no   remedy   in   federal    court:        They    could    not   bring
    interlocutory appeals to the district courts under the FAA; and
    attempts to bring post-award petitions to vacate arbitration awards
    would be thwarted as time-barred by 82(f).             We conclude for two
    reasons,     therefore,    that      82(f)   does     not    block     judicial
    consideration of TransAtlantic’s challenge to its susceptibility to
    arbitration on the basis of waiver.
    First, we are satisfied that this provision of the Texas Civil
    Practice and Remedies Code is procedural rather than substantive;
    and, second, that even if it were substantive, 82(f) would be
    preempted because it would be in direct conflict with the FAA.                We
    20
    conclude, therefore, that TransAtlantic did not waive its right to
    challenge the arbitrator’s preliminary determination that it was
    subject to arbitration in this case.       (Neither did TransAtlantic
    waive or forfeit its right to contest the preliminary ruling by
    filing objections with the arbitrator: Such limited appearances to
    contest jurisdiction are not general appearances that have the
    effect of submitting to the jurisdiction of the tribunal.)
    b.   Guarantors’ Agreement to Arbitrate
    TransAtlantic insists that, by signing the Agreement “for the
    sole    purpose   of   guaranteeing    certain   obligations”   of   the
    TransAtlantic Affiliates as shareholders, and then only “to the
    extent specifically provided in this Agreement,” neither it nor
    Bettis Group agreed to arbitrate, irrespective of the commitment to
    arbitrate of those other signatories whose obligations under the
    Agreement they guarantee.    We note at the outset that, despite the
    expressly limited substantive purpose of TransAtlantic’s joinder in
    the Agreement, i.e., as guarantor only, its position is different
    from a purely non-signatory guarantor (one who signs a separate
    guaranty) seeking to avoid arbitration. Generally, a non-signatory
    guarantor to an agreement containing an arbitration provision is
    not bound by that provision; the opposite is frequently true for
    signatory guarantors.18
    We also note that the posture of this case —— a signatory’s
    18
    See Asplundh Tree Expert Co. v. Bates, 
    71 F.3d 592
    , 595 (6th
    Cir. 1995).
    21
    unilateral refusal to participate in an arbitration proceeding that
    eventually produces an award against such signatory, followed by a
    suit to enforce the award, in which suit the signatory counters by
    asserting an affirmative defense of not having been subject to a
    broad form arbitration clause —— differs significantly from the
    more    common    posture     of    a     guarantor      (1)       asserting    such       an
    affirmative defense in a suit to compel arbitration or (2) seeking
    a   declaratory       judgment     that    it    is     not    subject    to        such    an
    arbitration clause.         Here, the district court’s standard of review
    of a ruling by the arbitrator that a signatory party is subject to
    arbitration under a broad form arbitration provision is decidedly
    more limited in scope and deferential to the arbitrator than in
    either   of    the    more   familiar         settings        of   a   suit    to    compel
    arbitration      or   a   declaratory         action,    in    either    of    which       the
    district court, rather than the arbitrator, would have the first
    bite at the apple and the arbitrator basically would have none.
    Irrespective of context, however, the law is settled that, to
    answer the       question    whether      a    signatory       party    has    agreed       to
    arbitrate a dispute, two considerations must be addressed:
    (1) Whether there is a valid agreement to
    arbitrate between the parties; and (2) whether
    the dispute in question falls within the scope
    of that arbitration agreement. When deciding
    whether the parties agreed to arbitrate the
    dispute   in   question,   “courts   generally
    ...should apply ordinary state-law principles
    that govern the formation of contracts.” In
    applying state law, however, “due regard must
    be given to the federal policy favoring
    arbitration, and ambiguities as to the scope of
    22
    the arbitration clause itself must be resolved
    in favor of arbitration.” The second step is
    to   determine  “whether   legal    constraints
    external to the parties’ agreement foreclosed
    the arbitration of those claims.”19
    It    is    axiomatic   that,   unless      an   arbitration      agreement
    expressly provides otherwise, the arbitrator is empowered to rule
    on   his    own     jurisdiction.20      This      includes       subject   matter
    jurisdiction, i.e., which issues are subject to arbitration and
    which are outside its scope; and personal jurisdiction, i.e., who
    is or is not bound to arbitrate.                  Here, none challenge the
    jurisdiction of the arbitrator to decide the basic contractual
    issues submitted by the Plaintiffs, but the Defendants continue to
    challenge the arbitrator’s jurisdiction to decide the liability of
    Bettis Group and TransAtlantic as guarantors of any award against
    those whose obligations they have guaranteed under the Agreement.
    Likewise, none challenge the existence or validity of the Agreement
    or   the    arbitration     provisions      in   it,   but   do    challenge     the
    susceptibility of the two guarantors to mandatory arbitration,
    relying     on    the   express   limitations     of   their      joinder   in   the
    Agreement to eschew amenability to arbitration.
    The    Agreement     contains    no    express     statement      that     the
    19
    Webb v. Investacorp., Inc., 
    89 F.3d 252
    , 257-58 (5th Cir.
    1996)(internal citations omitted).
    20
    See American Arbitration Association, International
    Arbitration Rules art. 15 (“The tribunal shall have the power to
    rule on its own jurisdiction, including any objections with respect
    to the existence, scope or validity of the arbitration
    agreement.”); see also Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. § 172.082(a).
    23
    guarantors are bound to arbitrate; but neither does it contain an
    express statement that the guarantors are exempt from arbitration.
    Thus, in applying the rules and maxims of contract interpretation,
    the arbitrator was bound to consider all facially                  applicable
    provisions    in   the   context   of   the   Agreement   as   a   whole   when
    determining whether subject matter jurisdiction included the power
    to decide personal jurisdiction over the guarantors and subject
    matter jurisdiction over their liability as guarantors to the
    claimants on any amount awarded against those whose obligations are
    guaranteed.    In this case, the arbitrator went the extra mile by
    looking beyond the four corners of the Agreement and hearing
    extrinsic evidence affecting the jurisdictional issues.
    Our examination of the Agreement as a whole, the preliminary
    ruling by the arbitrator and his award, and other matters in the
    record, satisfies us that the arbitrator was empowered to determine
    his own jurisdiction (including jurisdiction over the guarantors),
    that he exercised discretion in making those determinations, and
    that his determinations are supported by the Agreement as a whole
    and the circumstances of its execution.21
    We have already noted that TransAtlantic and Bettis Group are
    signatories to the Agreement, and that they expressly guarantee the
    21
    The instant situation is significantly different from that
    in Grundstad v. Ritt, 
    106 F.3d 201
    (7th Cir. 1997), in which
    neither the guarantee nor the guarantor was mentioned in the
    agreement and the arbitration clause expressly referred to the two
    principals.
    24
    obligations undertaken by other parties to the Agreement, which
    parties and objections are indisputably subject to arbitration.
    Structurally, Article XVII of the Agreement addressing applicable
    law and dispute resolution, first designates substantive law of
    Texas as applicable and then, in the first sentence of § 17.2.2,
    states   unequivocally     and   unconditionally       that   “[a]ny      and   all
    disputes   or   differences      relating   to,   arising     out    of    or    in
    connection   with   this   Agreement...shall      be    finally     settled     by
    arbitration pursuant to this Section 17.2.2” (emphasis added).
    Although it is true, as strenuously insisted by TransAtlantic, that
    the subsequent sentences of that paragraph and the remaining
    paragraphs of Section 17.2.2 contain multiple references to “the
    Shareholders” and none to the guarantors, the above-quoted first
    sentence contains no limitation —— no reference to shareholders, or
    to guarantors, or to anything other than unqualified applicability
    to any and all disputes.           Indeed, rather than supporting the
    inference that the commitment to settle “any and all disputes or
    differences relating to, arising out of or in connection with” the
    Agreement should not apply to the guarantors, the omission of the
    limiting reference to shareholders from the initial sentence of
    Section 17.2.2 provides support for the arbitrator’s determination
    that the guarantors are subject to arbitration: Inclusio unius est
    exclusio alterius.       And, like the position of the guarantors as
    signatories to the Agreement, the statement appearing on page 2,
    immediately preceding “RECITALS,” confirms that the guarantors “are
    25
    entering into this Agreement,” albeit for the limited purpose of
    guaranteeing certain obligations.
    Irrespective, then, of our standard of review —— whether,
    pursuant      to    FAA,   one   that   is     extremely     deferential     to    the
    arbitrator, or completely de novo,22 or somewhere in between (such
    as    abuse    of    discretion)    ——       we    ultimately    agree   with      the
    arbitrator’s conclusion that (1) he has the power to determine his
    own   jurisdiction,        including     the      substantive   question     of    the
    responsibility of the guarantor for any award in arbitration
    against     those    whose   commitments          were   guaranteed,   and   the    in
    personam amenability of the guarantors to arbitration; (2) that,
    when the Agreement is read as a whole, both guarantors are bound to
    arbitrate; and (3) as guarantor, TransAtlantic is bound jointly and
    severally with those shareholders of Tarpon-Benin against whom the
    award in arbitration was rendered.                These conclusions comport with
    the frequently repeated maxims that (1) “[W]here the parties
    include a broad arbitration provision in an agreement that is
    ‘essential’ to the overall transaction, we will presume that they
    intended the clause to reach all aspects of the transaction”23 and
    22
    See generally First Options, 
    514 U.S. 938
    (1995); Kona Tech.
    Corp. v. S. Pac. Transp. Co., 
    225 F.3d 595
    (5th Cir. 2000).
    23
    See Personal Security & Safety Systems Inc. v. Motorola
    Inc., 
    297 F.3d 388
    , 394 (5th Cir. 2002); see also Neal v. Hardee’s
    Sys., Inc., 
    918 F.2d 34
    , 38 (5th Cir. 1990)(“We hold that when the
    parties included a broad arbitration clause in the essential
    [contracts] covering ‘any and all disputes,’ they intended the
    clause to reach all aspects of the parties’ relationship....”).
    26
    (2) that arbitration clauses are to be liberally read to implement
    congressional policy expressed in the Federal Arbitration Act.24
    Given the totally broad form arbitration provision of the
    Agreement, the recognition of the guarantors as parties to the
    Agreement for the limited purpose of guaranteeing obligations
    created in the Agreement, and the joinder of the guarantors as
    signatories to the Agreement, we are convinced that the arbitrator
    had and correctly exercised the power to determine his jurisdiction
    over    TransAtlantic       as    guarantor     and    over       the   extent    of
    TransAtlantic’s obligation as guarantor. But even if our review is
    de novo, we would agree with the arbitrator’s jurisdictional
    ruling. The fact that TransAtlantic boycotted the arbitration
    proceedings      after     the    arbitrator    ruled      preliminarily         that
    TransAtlantic was subject to arbitration is of no moment.                        The
    arbitrator restricted his award vis-à-vis TransAtlantic to its role
    as guarantor, so TransAtlantic has no basis for complaining that
    the arbitrator         exceeded   his   authority     in   that     regard.      And,
    inasmuch as we have concluded earlier that the district court’s
    vacatur     of   the    arbitrator’s    award   against       the    TransAtlantic
    Affiliates must be reversed and the award enforced, our conclusion
    that the arbitrator was correct in holding TransAtlantic subject to
    arbitration not only requires reversal of the district court’s
    jurisdictional ruling to the contrary, but also requires reversal
    24
    See, e.g., Penzoil Exploration and Prod. Co. v. Ramco Energy
    Ltd., 
    139 F.3d 1061
    , 1068 (5th Cir. 1998).
    27
    of that court’s vacatur of the award against TransAtlantic as
    guarantor.
    III. Recap
    For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the district court’s
    vacatur   of   the   arbitrator’s   award   as   having   been   granted   in
    manifest disregard of Texas law governing contractual damages,
    thereby constituting misconduct by the arbitrator. And although we
    agree that TransAtlantic did not waive its right to challenge the
    arbitrator’s preliminary ruling on jurisdiction, we also reverse
    the court’s reversal of the arbitrator’s ruling that TransAtlantic
    is subject to arbitration.     We reverse as well the court’s vacatur
    of the arbitrator’s award against TransAtlantic as guarantor.              We
    therefore reinstate the award of the arbitrator in all respects and
    remand this case to the district court with instructions to enforce
    the award of the arbitrator in favor of the Plaintiffs in both of
    the cases that are consolidated in this appeal, doing so against
    the several Defendants-Appellees in the Affiliates Lawsuit, No. 01-
    20379, and jointly and severally against TransAtlantic Petroleum
    Corp., Defendant-Appellee in the Guarantor Lawsuit, No. 01-20377.
    REVERSED and REMANDED with instructions.
    28