Source: https://www.mintz.com/insights-center/viewpoints/2196/2018-08-after-granting-motion-compel-arbitration-court-operating
Timestamp: 2019-04-22 23:56:43+00:00

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After Granting a Motion to Compel Arbitration, a Court Operating Under the FAA Should Stay, Not Dismiss, the Pending Suit. And Then What?
After granting a motion to compel arbitration, should a court operating under the FAA stay or dismiss the pending judicial proceeding? While the federal circuit courts are split on the question, the better rule seems to be that after granting a defendant’s motion to compel arbitration, FAA §4 (9 U.S.C. §4), the court should stay the judicial proceeding pending the arbitration.
On that basis, the Second Circuit decided in Katz v. Cellco Partnership, dba Verizon Wireless, 2015 WL 4528658 (2d Cir. July 28, 2015), that such a stay was mandatory. The Court relied on the legislative use of the word “shall”. “It is axiomatic that the mandatory term ‘shall’ typically ‘creates an obligation impervious to judicial discretion’. Lexecon, Inc. v. Milberg Weiss Bershad Hynes & Lerach, 523 U.S. 26, 35 (1998).” Cf. Lopez v. Davis, 531 U.S. 230, 241 (2001).
The Court further pointed out that its interpretation was consistent with the FAA’s statutory scheme and pro-arbitration policy. For example, the FAA prohibits an appeal from an order compelling arbitration (but permits an appeal from an order denying a motion to compel). If a court were to dismiss a case after compelling arbitration, that would be a final order that was inherently appealable, and thus conflict with the FAA scheme.
And after a court issues a stay order, then what? The court has a potential ancillary role concerning the arbitration. It would, for example, be available to enforce arbitral subpoenas, to provide (if not otherwise available from the arbitral tribunal) and/or enforce interlocutory relief, and eventually to confirm or vacate an award that is issued by the arbitral tribunal. As the Katz court noted, the FAA identifies circumstances in which “judicial participation in the arbitral process is permitted” — i.e., (i) to resolve disputes regarding the appointment of an arbitrator or to fill an arbitrator vacancy, 9 U.S.C. §5; (ii) to compel the attendance of witnesses (i.e., to enforce an arbitrator’s subpoena) or to punish a witness for contempt, id. §7; and (iii) to confirm or vacate or modify an arbitral award, id. §§9-11.
And there is also the sometimes-overlooked proviso in FAA §3 that in effect gives the court a backstopping role. Recall that a stay of a judicial proceeding should be granted as noted above provided “the applicant for the stay is not in default in proceeding with [the] arbitration.” Notably, “proceeding with [the] arbitration” arguably refers to conduct by the applicant that is most likely to occur after the court stays the judicial proceeding. Therefore, the court presumably would offer recourse to a litigation plaintiff that had opposed arbitration if the arbitration commenced and the stay applicant then “defaulted” in proceeding with it.
What would constitute such a default? A refusal to participate in the arbitration, certainly. Obstruction of the arbitration, possibly. Thus, not long before the Katz v. Cellco Partnership decision was rendered in the Second Circuit, the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals identified post-stay conduct by the stay applicant that constituted a “default” regarding the arbitration and thereby justified vacating the stay. See Pre-Paid Legal Services, Inc. v. Cahill, 2015 WL 3372136 (10th Cir. May 26, 2015).
In Cahill, the defendant had successfully moved to stay the action in question pending arbitration. (The Tenth Circuit later agreed that a District Court must, upon the request of a party after arbitration is compelled, stay judicial proceedings pending arbitration pursuant to FAA §3.) The plaintiff — Pre-Paid Legal Services – then commenced an arbitration under the rules of the American Arbitration Association (“AAA”), but Cahill refused to pay his share of the requisite initial fees. (And Pre-Paid declined to advance those fees on behalf of Cahill on an interim basis as is permitted by the AAA.) Consequently, after warning the parties, the arbitral tribunal terminated the arbitration, as permitted by the relevant rules.
The Court of Appeals held that Cahill’s conduct put him “in default” in the arbitration. The arbitration had been conducted in accordance with the relevant arbitration agreement, the arbitral tribunal did not issue an award on the merits, but instead it terminated the proceeding in accordance with AAA rules. The Court thus determined that when a party successfully obtains a stay of judicial proceedings after arbitration has been compelled, but that stay applicant subsequently does not fulfill its obligation under the relevant rules to maintain the arbitral proceeding, and the arbitration is thereupon terminated, that party was “in default,” and the stay of the judicial proceeding could be lifted by the court accordingly.

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