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You are here: Home / Arbitration / Court Decisions / Arbitration Process Issues / ARBITRATION PROVISIONS IN ANCILLARY AGREEMENTS DO NOT WARRANT ARBITRATION AS TO ISSUES ARISING OUT OF THE PRINCIPAL AGREEMENT

ARBITRATION PROVISIONS IN ANCILLARY AGREEMENTS DO NOT WARRANT ARBITRATION AS TO ISSUES ARISING OUT OF THE PRINCIPAL AGREEMENT

June 10, 2008 by Carlton Fields

In a case presenting a messy set of facts, a federal district court ordered the arbitration of certain claims, allowed litigation to proceed as to other claims, but ordered a stay of the litigation pending the outcome of the arbitration. The defendants acquired certain intellectual property rights from the plaintiff inventors. The parties’ acquisition agreement addressed potential litigation, but not arbitration. However, attached to the acquisition agreement as exhibits were eleven separately executed ancillary agreements, including a consulting agreement and net sales agreement which did contain arbitration agreements. The consulting agreement governed the parties’ rights and obligations with respect to one of the plaintiff’s post-closing consulting services for one of the defendants. The net sales agreement governed the parties’ rights and obligations with respect to specific post-closing sales. Three other agreements which referenced the acquisition agreement, but which were not incorporated into the acquisition agreement, were also relevant: an operating agreement, trust agreement and subscription agreement. Of these, only the operating agreement contained an arbitration clause; that agreement governed the parties’ rights with respect to defendants’ business operations and internal governance.

The defendants paid the plaintiffs $2 million at closing, and agreed to pay additional consideration in connection with the acquisition. However, before the additional consideration was tendered, the defendants filed an arbitration principally alleging that the plaintiffs breached at closing by misrepresenting inventorship and ownership of the subject products. That same day, the plaintiffs filed a lawsuit in federal district court principally alleging that the defendants breached at closing by not transferring the closing documents to a trustee as required in the trust agreement and acquisition agreement. The defendants moved to stay the litigation and to compel arbitration. After initially determining that there were valid arbitration agreements, the court turned to the question of the agreements’ scope. The defendants argued that the plaintiffs should not be allowed to pursue litigation on selective portions of the acquisition dispute to avoid the inventorship/ownership issue. The court disagreed, finding that the plaintiffs did not agree to arbitrate all claims simply because three ancillary agreements contained arbitration provisions. The acquisition agreement contemplated litigation alone on disputes relating the plaintiffs’ claims. The court did conclude, however, that the defendants’ claims for breach of the consulting agreement, net sales agreement and operating agreement were arbitrable. This limited conclusion was not disputed by the plaintiffs. The court, exercising its discretion, also ordered a stay of the arbitration pending resolution of the inventorship/ownership issue because certain aspects of the plaintiffs’ nonarbitrable claims could have a preclusive effect on resolution of the arbitrable claims. Brennan v. Global Safety Labs, Inc., Case No. 07 CV 546 (USDC N.D. Okla. May 29, 2008).

This post written by Brian Perryman.

Filed Under: Arbitration Process Issues, Week's Best Posts

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