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You are here: Home / Archives for Arbitration / Court Decisions / Criminal Actions

Criminal Actions

SUPREME COURT HEARS ORAL ARGUMENT ON WHETHER PARTIES MAY SUPPLEMENT ARBITRATION AGREEMENTS BEYOND FAA’S VACATUR STANDARDS

January 3, 2008 by Carlton Fields

The Supreme Court recently heard oral arguments on whether an arbitration agreement may provide for more expansive judicial review of an arbitration award than the narrow standard of review provided for in the Federal Arbitration Act. This case arose out of a property lease dispute between Mattel, the well-known toy manufacturer, and its landlord, Hall Street Associates. The parties agreed to arbitrate the dispute pursuant to the FAA procedures, but also agreed that a district court could overrule the arbitrator’s decision if the arbitrator’s “conclusions of law [we]re erroneous.”

The Ninth Circuit barred this type of court review, reasoning that private parties cannot expand the Congressionally-determined role of courts in reviewing arbitration awards. In contrast, the First, Third, Fourth, Fifth, and Sixth Circuits appear to have interpreted the FAA’s vacatur standards as non-exclusive standards which parties may supplement by agreement. While the Seventh Circuit has not squarely addressed the issue, it stated in dicta that the parties “cannot contract for a judicial review” of a labor arbitration award “because federal jurisdiction cannot be created by contract.”

After hearing oral arguments on the issue, the Supreme Court asked for additional briefing on three issues: (1) whether authority exists outside the FAA under which a party to litigation begun without reliance on the FAA may enforce a provision for judicial review of an arbitration award; (2) if such authority does exist, did the parties, in agreeing to arbitrate, rely in whole or part on that authority; and (3) whether the petitioner waived any reliance on authority outside the FAA for enforcing the judicial review provision of the parties’ arbitration agreement.

  • Petitioner’s Brief
  • Respondent’s Brief
  • Amicus briefs and other filings by the parties are available at an ABA site
  • Supreme Court oral argument transcript

Hall Street Associates, LLC v. Mattel, Inc., No. 06-989.

This post written by Lynn Hawkins.

Filed Under: Arbitration Process Issues, Confirmation / Vacation of Arbitration Awards, Contract Interpretation, Criminal Actions, Jurisdiction Issues, Week's Best Posts

DISTRICT COURT QUASHES CRIMINAL SUBPOENAS ISSUED TO INSURANCE COMPANIES AND THEIR ATTORNEYS

October 25, 2007 by Carlton Fields

Last year, a federal grand jury in New Haven indicted four former senior executives of General Re Corporation and one former senior executive of AIG for their participation in a fraudulent scheme to manipulate AIG’s financial statements. Recently, three of the defendants issued multiple subpoenas to several insurance companies and their attorneys pursuant to Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 17(c). The subpoenas were contested by both the government and the third party subpoena recipients.

Applying the legal standard set forth by the Supreme Court in U.S. v. Nixon, the district court concluded that the subpoenas were unenforceable because they sought materials outside the proper scope of Rule 17(c). Specifically, the materials sought by several of the subpoenas would only be useful as impeachment materials, and therefore failed Nixon’s admissibility requirement. Other subpoenas were to be found unenforceable because they failed Nixon’s relevancy requirement. United States of America v. Ferguson, Case No. 3:06cr137, (USDC D. Ct. Sept. 26, 2007).

Filed Under: Accounting for Reinsurance, Criminal Actions

Rulings with respect to indictment relating to allegedly fraudulent reinsurance transaction

February 14, 2007 by Carlton Fields

A US District Court has denied motions to dismiss an indictment of six former officers of General Reinsurance Corp. and American International Group, which alleged that the two companies engaged in a fraudulent reinsurance transaction, which had the effect of boosting AIG's loss reserve for the fourth quarter of 2000 by $250 million, and by $250 in the first quarter of 2001. The transaction was allegedly entered into shortly after AIG reported that its year 2000 third quarter loss reserves declined $59 million from the previous quarter, after which AIG's stock price decreased. United States v. Ferguson, Case No. 3:06CR137 (D. Conn. Jan. 24, 2007). The decision disposed of ten different motions, which attacked the indictment and sought discovery.

Filed Under: Criminal Actions

District Judge files appellate brief in KPMG criminal tax case

January 22, 2007 by Carlton Fields

In a highly unusual event, United States District Judge Lewis Kaplan has filed a brief with the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, defending his opinion relating to the arbitrability of issues relating to KPMG paying attorneys fees for defendants in a criminal tax action, which was the subject of a post on this blog on September 26, 2006. This brief was invited by the Second Circuit in an Order entered December 13, 2006, which provided in part: “Pursuant to Fed. R. App. P. 21(b)(4), we now invite the District Court to address, if it so chooses, the motion for leave to file a mandamus petition.” Stein v. KPMG, LLP, Case No. 06-4358 (2d Cir. Jan. 8, 2007).

Filed Under: Arbitration / Court Decisions, Criminal Actions

Court denies arbitration of fee dispute in KPMG criminal tax case

September 26, 2006 by Carlton Fields

In the massive criminal tax case against seventeen former partners and employees of KPMG, KPMG declined, under severe pressure from the government, to pay the attorneys' fees of the defendants. The District Court permitted the defendants to add KPMG as a defendant, and assert a claim against it for fees. The Court recently denied KPMG's motion for summary judgment, and set the claims seeking the advancement of fees for trial on an expedited basis. United States v. Stein, Case No. 05-crim-0888 and 06-civ-5007 (USDC S.D. N.Y. Sept. 6, 2006). The Court rejected KPMG’s contention that the fee issue was subject to arbitration under the partnership agreement, in part because not all of the defendants had been partners, but also on public policy grounds, due to the severe disruption that such a course would necessarily have had on the pending criminal case. This opinion may become of interest to reinsurers to the extent that there are criminal charges filed relating to finite reinsurance matters.

Filed Under: Arbitration Process Issues, Criminal Actions

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