CVD Equipment Corp. v. Development Specialists, Inc. ( 2015 )


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  • COURT OF CHANCERY
    OF THE
    SAM GLASSCOCK 111 STATE OF DELAWARE COURT OF CHANCERY COURTHOUSE
    VICE CHANCELLOR 34 THE CIRCLE
    GEORGETOWN, DELAWARE 19947
    Date Submitted: July 23, 2015
    Date Decided: July 23, 2015
    Vernon Proctor, Esquire Christopher A. Ward, Esquire
    Aaron Nelson, Esquire Christopher M. Coggins, Esquire
    Proctor Heyman Enerio LLP Polsinelli PC
    300 Delaware Avenue, Suite 200 222 Delaware Avenue, Suite 1101
    Wilmington, DE 19801 Wilmington, DE 19801
    Re: C VD Equipment Corp. v. Development Specialists, Inc.
    Civil Action No. 11062-VCG
    Dear Counselgfi
    This matter arises in a peculiar procedural posture.‘ Plaintiff CVD
    Equipment Corporation (the “Seller”) entered into a purchase agreement with Stion
    Corporation (the “Buyer”) for the sale of certain equipment (the “Purchase
    Agreement”),_‘- which Purchase Agreement included an arbitration clause,,
    Eventually, the Buyer became insolvent and assigned its assets for the benefit of
    creditors, under California law, to Defendant Development Specialists, Inc. (the
    “Assignee”). The Assignee sold the Buyer’s tangible assets but retained choses in
    action. According to the Assignee, the Seller was in breach of the Purchase
    Agreement, and the Assignee brought a complaint in arbitration, seeking damages
    l The facts included in this Letter Opinion are taken entirely from the Plaintiffs Verified
    Complaint to Enjoin Arbitration (the “Complaint”) and are not in dispute.
    for the breach. The Seller challenged the Assignee’s standing and, relatedly, the
    arbitrator’s jurisdiction to hear the matter; it reserved, however, the right to raise
    the same issues in this Court. The arbitrator, E. Norman Veasey, Esquire,
    determined that the Assignee had standing to bring the action and that the Purchase
    Agreement conferred jurisdiction upon him to hear the matter. The Seller brought
    this action seeking to enjoin the arbitration and has moved for such injunctive
    relief.2 The Assignee asks me to dismiss this matter for lack of subject matter
    jurisdiction, arguing that the Purchase Agreement provides a remedy before the
    arbitrator. I agree with the latter proposition, and accordingly grant the Assignee’s
    Motion to Dismiss.
    The facts before me are not in dispute, and the parties agree that the Seller is
    entitled to a de novo determination of the jurisdiction/standing question. The
    parties also agree that the Purchase Agreement contains a broad arbitration clause
    and incorporates the rules of the American Arbitration Association, and that
    normally under those circumstances, pursuant to our Supreme Court’s decision in
    James & Jackson, LLC v. Willie Gary, LLC,3 questions of substantive arbitrability
    are for the arbitrator to determine.4 Nevertheless, the Seller argues that here I must
    . _
    2 The Seller originally moved for a preliminary injunction but represented at oral argument that
    no further factual development was necessary and that it was seeking final relief based on the
    undisputed facts in its Complaint.
    3 
    906 A.2d 76
    , 80 (Del. 2006).
    4 The question of whether a party is bound to arbitrate—the question of so-called “substantive
    arbitrability”—and the related question of who should make that determination, court or
    rule, as a matter of law, that it has no contractual duty to arbitrate with the
    Assignee, a stranger to the Purchase Agreement between the Seller and the Buyer.
    It argues that the question of whether there is a contract to arbitrate between these
    parties is a predicate question that must be resolved by this Court, and not a matter
    of substantive arbitrability to be presented to the arbitrator. For its part, the
    Assignee asks that I find, as a matter of law, that an assignee for the benefit of
    creditors under California law stands in the shoes of the assignor and therefore
    may, as a matter of law, exercise any contractual right that could have been
    exercised by the assignor.5 Because this case can be decided more narrowly, I
    decline both of these invitations.
    The peculiar factual predicate to this case is significant: the Seller agreed
    with the Buyer in the Purchase Agreement that “[a]ny claim or controversy arising
    out of or relating to this Purchase Agreement or the breach of this Purchase
    Agreement shall be resolved by binding arbitration in or around the State of
    _ —_ _ _ 1,.
    —___—_=_—— —— _
    arbitrator, are matters of the intent of the parties as expressed in the contract. Only where, as
    here, the parties have clearly indicated their intent to have questions of substantive arbitrability
    presented to the arbitrator will the court so defer; otherwise, these questions are properly before
    the court. See, e.g., Meso Scale Diagnostics, LLC v. Roche Diagnostics GMBH, 
    2011 WL 1348438
    , at *16 (Del. Ch. Apr. 8, 2011).
    5 To be clear, California law controls the assignment for the benefit of creditors between the
    Buyer and the Assignee, but the law 1 apply in this Letter Opinion is Delaware law—the law
    governing the Purchase Agreement. See Compl. Ex. A, § 20 (“This Purchase Agreement and
    any controversy relating to this Purchase Agreement shall be governed by the laws of the State of
    Delaware, without regard to conflict of law principles”). Specifically, I apply Delaware law as
    it informs the Federal Arbitration Act, which both parties concede governs the enforceability of
    this arbitration provision. See, e.g., Willie Gary LLC v. James & Jackson LLC, 
    2006 WL 75309
    ,
    at *5 (Del. Ch. Jan. 10, 2006) (explaining the interplay between the Federal Arbitration Act and
    state law).
    Delaware by a single arbitrator under the commercial rules of the American
    Arbitration Association then in effect.”6 The Assignee seeks to present a claim for
    breach of contract to the arbitrator that is clearly within this broad arbitration
    language. The Seller, therefore, is signatory to and bound by a contract under
    which it is compelled to arbitrate the issue which the Assignee has placed before
    the arbitrator. The standing and jurisdictional questions that the Seller seeks to
    raise, in that context, are questions of scope: Was the arbitration provision drafted
    broadly enough to include disputes arising from the Purchase Agreement brought
    not by a signatory to that contract, but by an assignee of that signatory pursuant to
    an assignment for the benefit of creditors? The Seller concedes, consistent with
    Willie Gary, that it agreed in the Purchase Agreement that questions of substantive
    arbitrability would be decided by the arbitrator. The question of scope described
    above, is just such a question.7
    6 Compl. Ex. 1, § 20.
    7 Cf Mesa Scale, 
    2011 WL 1348438
    , at *15—17 (“This dispute focuses on the gateway issue of
    whether Plaintiffs may invoke the arbitration provisions in the Roche License based on their
    having consented to and joined in parts of that License. 1 find that issue to be related to the
    scope of the arbitration provisions and, therefore, substantive in nature”). I note, however, that
    the federal circuits are split on this issue and its varying iterations. Compare Apollo Computer,
    Inc. v. Berg, 
    886 F.2d 469
    , 473 (1 st Cir. 1989) (“Whether the right to compel arbitration survives
    the termination of the agreement, and if so, whether that right was validly assigned to the
    defendants and whether it can be enforced by them against Apollo are issues relating to the
    continued existence and validity of the agreement”), and Contec Corp. v. Remote Solution, Co,
    Ltd, 
    398 F.3d 205
    , 210 (2d Cir. 2005) (adopting the holding of Apollo, stating, “Under the
    reasoning of Apollo, whether the arbitration rights under the 1999 Agreement were validly
    assigned by Contec LP. to [the plaintiff] is an issue that pertains directly to the continued
    ‘existence, scope or validity’ of the Agreement. As such, it is within the jurisdiction of the
    arbitrator pursuant to AAA Rule R-7(a) as incorporated into the 1999 Agreement”), and
    In light of this context, the only issue I must, and may, decide is whether the
    Assignee’s position—that an action for breach of contract brought by an assignee
    for the benefit of creditors is within the scope of the agreement to which the Seller
    is bound—constitutes a non-frivolous legal claim.8 The Seller contends that the
    _____ __ -= — .-
    Terminix Int’l Co. v. Palmer Ranch Ltd. P’ship, 432 F.3d 1327,1332—33 (11th Cir. 2005)
    (determining that the issue of whether an arbitration agreement is unenforceable due to non-
    severable remedial restrictions concerns the “existence, scope or validity of the arbitration
    agreement,” which the parties had agreed the arbitrator should decide by incorporating the AAA
    Rules), with Microchip Tech. Inc.v. U.S. Philips Corp, 
    367 F.3d 1350
    , 1358—59 (Fed. Cir. 2004)
    (holding, notwithstanding that the parties had adopted a broad arbitration clause incorporating
    arbitration rules by which the arbitrator is to determine arbitrability, that the issues of whether an
    agreement to arbitrate exists between the parties and whether an arbitration agreement has
    expired are both issues for the court, not the arbitrator to determine, regardless of whether it is a
    non-signatory seeking to enforce arbitration against a signatory or vice versa), and In re Toyota
    Motor Corp. Unintended Acceleration Mktg., Sales Practices, and Products Liab. Litig., 838 F.
    Supp. 2d 976, 985—87 (CD. Cal. Mar. 12, 2012) (holding that the issue of whether a non-
    signatory can enforce an arbitration provision against a signatory under the doctrine of equitable
    estoppel is a threshold question properly before the court, and distinguishing Apollo and Contec
    as cases where the non-signatory had a relationship to the relevant agreement), and Calanese
    Corp. v. Boc Group PLC, 
    2006 WL 3513633
    , at *3 (ND. Tex. Dec. 6, 2005) (holding that the
    issue of whether a signatory to the contract who was expressly excluded from the arbitration
    provision can invoke that arbitration provision is a threshold issue properly before the court, and
    distinguishing Apollo and Contec by reasoning that “the cases . . . allowing a nonsignatory to
    compel a signatory to arbitrate issues of arbitrability involve a nonsignatory defendant that
    essentially stood in the shoes of a signatory to the arbitration agreement when defending the
    suit”).
    8 See Meso Scale, 
    2011 WL 1348438
    , at *17 (“This conclusion [that the defendant, Roche,
    clearly and unmistakably committed questions of arbitrability to the arbitrator] also withstands
    Roche’s argument that Plaintiffs lack standing to compel Roche to arbitrate their claim because
    they were not “Parties” to the license, and merely joined in or consented to it. Although it is
    tempting to address that issue on its merits, it would be inconsistent with Willie Gary for a court
    to address the merits of the underlying claim once it has determined that an arbitrator should
    decide arbitrability. Nevertheless, consistent with my holdings in Julian, in cases where the
    parties dispute whether the arbitrator should decide arbitrability because one party claims the
    other does not have standing to compel arbitration, ‘a court conceivably could consider a
    preliminary question of whether or not there is a colorable basis for the court to conclude that’
    the opposing party, in fact, has such standing. As such, ‘[i]fthere is such a colorable basis, along
    with a broad clause and reference to the AAA Rules or something analogous to them, then the
    question of substantive arbitrability should be sent to the arbitrator.’” (alteration in original)
    (footnotes omitted) (quoting Julian v. Julian, 
    2009 WL 2937121
    , at *7 (Del. Ch. Sept. 9,
    Assignee’s position is frivolous for two reasons. First, the Seller points out that
    there is a provision in the Purchase Agreement entitled “No Assignments,” and
    argues that, since that clause does not expressly grant the Buyer the right to assign
    rights and responsibilities under the Purchase Agreement, the underlying action for
    breach of contract is not maintainable by the Assignee, in arbitration or elsewhere.
    The Assignee counters with a non-frivolous argument that the clause by its
    language grants, not restricts, specific assignment rights, and that nothing in the
    language of the clause prohibits assignment of any rights by the Buyer.9 In fact,
    the Assignee asserts that the only evidence of an attempt to restrict assignability is
    the title of the clause, “No Assignments,” and that even that title is merely an
    artifact of an entirely different version of the clause that the parties changed in the
    drafting process.10
    1:— — ————__:=____—g_ :_
    2009)»; McLaughlin v. McCan—n, 
    942 A.2d 616
    , 626—27 (Del. _Ch. 2008) (“[A]bsent a_cleari
    showing that the party desiring arbitration has essentially no non-frivolous argument about
    substantive arbitrability to make before the arbitrator, the court should require the signatory to
    address its arguments against arbitrability to the arbitrator. Otherwise, the efficiency gains
    contemplated by Willie Gary will be greatly undermined”).
    9 The clause in question provides, in full and unedited form:
    Unless this Purchase Agreement expressly provides otherwise, SELLER shall
    have the right to assign, delegate or subcontract all or any portion of this Purchase
    Agreement to any party other than SELLER without the prior written consent of
    BUYER. BUYER shall have the right to transfer the PURCHASE
    AGREEMENT upon sale, acquisition, consolidation, or merger in whole or in
    part of BUYER. SELLER shall have the right to transfer the PURCHASE
    AGREEMENT upon sale, acquisition, consolidation, or merger in whole or in
    part of SELLER.
    Compl. Ex. 1, § 17.
    ‘0 This case is in an unusual posture, conflating a hearing for final injunctive relief with
    argument on a motion to dismiss. Strictly speaking, the evidence supporting the Assignee’s
    Next, the Seller contends that it cannot have intended via the Purchase
    Agreement to agree to arbitrate with an entity it was not aware of at the time of
    contracting, and that the Assignee should be limited to proceeding on its assigned
    claim in a court, rather than before an arbitrator. The Assignee, on the other hand,
    maintains that its status as an assignee for the benefit of creditors attempting to
    vindicate the Purchase Agreement through a money judgment leaves the Seller and
    the Assignee in the precise positions they would have assumed without the Buyer’s
    insolvency, if the Buyer itself were pursuing the claim. The Assignee further
    argues that by contracting, broadly, to arbitrate “all claims” arising from the
    Purchase Agreement, the Seller did manifest its intent to be bound to arbitrate
    under the circumstances here.
    The Assignee’s position, in my View, is not frivolous. Given that, I must
    resist any temptation to decide the matter and leave the decision to the arbitrator.
    Since the Seller contractually agreed to be bound on questions of substantive
    arbitrability by the arbitrator, a complete contractual remedy exists in arbitration,
    and I am without jurisdiction.
    For the foregoing reasons, the Assignee’s Motion to Dismiss is granted, and
    the Seller’s request for injunctive relief is moot. IT IS SO ORDERED.
    I —.- _ — — - _ - —== '——_ .- -=_ _ — —-—— —— ——M__
    latter argument here, concerning the drafting history of the clause, is beyond my purview on a
    motion to dismiss, and I do not base my decision on that evidence.