The case involved motions to compel arbitration by multiple defendants, all of which were parties to contracts with the plaintiff, an association captive insurer, but only some of which had signed contracts containing arbitration provisions. The court compelled the plaintiff to arbitrate breach of contract and related claims with the arbitration-signatories, finding that the claims fell under the arbitration provisions’ scope, which covered all disputes “arising out of” the underlying contracts. The court rejected, however, a non-arbitration-signatory’s attempt to compel the plaintiff to arbitrate under an estoppel theory, finding that the nonsignatory was “really arguing” that the court should read the arbitration clause into its non-arbitration agreements. Notwithstanding the court’s decision to only partly compel arbitration, it did stay the entire litigation, finding that some of the issues or claims might eliminate certain issues against the non-arbitration-signatory, and that the arbitration would likely proceed expeditiously. J.M. Woodworth Risk Retention Group, Inc. v. Uni-Ter Underwriting Management Corp., Case No. 2:13-cv-00911 (USDC D. Nev. Sept. 11, 2013).
This post written by Michael Wolgin.
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