The case involved a seller of a 91% interest in a Virginia-based government contractor that provides overseas staffing and logistics support to government agencies. The parties’ sale contract contained a choice-of-law provision that stated the agreement “shall be governed by and construed in accordance with the internal laws of the Commonwealth of Virginia without giving effect to any choice or conflict of law provision or rule.” The contract also included an arbitration provision applicable to disputes related to any adjustment payments after the closing of the sale. The parties ultimately could not agree on the amount of a post-closing adjustment payment and proceeded to arbitration. The arbitrator awarded the buyer approximately $3.1 million, after which the parties filed cross-motions to confirm and to vacate the arbitration award. In support of its motion to vacate, the seller included an argument that the award was in “manifest disregard” of the applicable law.
The federal district court first noted that “manifest disregard” is recognized by the Fourth Circuit as a valid basis under federal arbitration common law to vacate an arbitration award, but it is not under Virginia law. As a result, the court was required to determine whether the contract’s general choice-of-law provision selecting Virginia law resulted in the application of the Virginia Uniform Arbitration Act to the parties’ dispute. Again relying specifically on controlling Fourth Circuit precedent, the court found that “a contract’s general choice-of-law provision does not displace federal arbitration law if the contract involves interstate commerce.” Rather, the parties “may displace the FAA only by specifying that state law should apply specifically to arbitration proceedings.” Neither party disputed that the contract involved interstate commerce. As such, the contract’s choice-of-law provision was sufficient to invoke Virginia law for issues of contract interpretation, but not for purposes of displacing the FAA, because the agreement did not specifically address the law that would govern arbitration disputes.
Having won the argument that federal arbitration law applied to the parties’ dispute regarding confirmation or vacatur of the arbitration award, the seller then lost its argument that the arbitrator “manifestly disregarded” the applicable law. The court noted that, under federal arbitration law, a party moving to vacate an arbitration award faces a “heavy burden” and that the scope of a federal court’s review of an arbitration award is “among the narrowest known at law.” The court’s review is limited to “whether the arbitrators did the job they were told to do — not whether they did it well, or correctly, or reasonably, but simply whether they did it.” Pursuant to Fourth Circuit precedent, an arbitrator’s determination is not in manifest disregard and must be upheld “so long as it draws its essence from the agreement.” An award “fails to draw its essence from the agreement only when the result is not rationally inferable from the contract.”
After analyzing the seller’s claim, the court found that, “[d]istilled to its essence, the Seller’s argument does nothing more than challenge the arbitrator’s interpretation of applicable law.” As this argument was “plainly insufficient” to support a claim of “manifest disregard” of the law, the court confirmed the arbitration award.
Vogel v. Gracias Juan, LLC, No. 1:21-cv-01355 (E.D. Va. Aug. 9, 2022).