11-5425, 12-1382
LJL 33rd Street Associates, LLC v. Pitcairn Properties Inc.
1 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
2 FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT
3
4
5 August Term, 2012
6
7 (Argued: December 13, 2012 Decided: July 31, 2013)
8
9 Docket No. 11-5425-cv,
10
11 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -X
12
13
14 LJL 33RD STREET ASSOCIATES, LLC,
15 Plaintiff-Cross-Defendant-Appellant,
16
17 v.
18
19 PITCAIRN PROPERTIES INC.,
20 Defendant-Cross-Claimant-Appellee.
21
22 -------------------------------X
23
24 (Argued: April 15, 2013 Decided: July 31, 2013)
25
26 Docket No. 12-1382-cv,
27
28 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -X
29
30
31 PITCAIRN PROPERTIES INC.,
32 Plaintiff-Appellant,
33
34 v.
35
36 LJL 33RD STREET ASSOCIATES, LLC,
37 Defendant-Appellee.
38
39 -------------------------------X
40
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1 Before: LEVAL, POOLER, LIVINGSTON Circuit Judges.
2
3 LJL 33rd Street Associates, LLC appeals from an order of the United States District
4 Court for the Southern District of New York (Rakoff, J.) reviewing an arbitration award. The
5 district court vacated the arbitrator’s determination of fair market value based on the court’s
6 conclusion that the arbitrator violated the Federal Arbitration Act, 9 U.S.C. §10(a)(3), by
7 excluding certain evidence offered by Pitcairn Properties, Inc., but upheld the arbitrator’s refusal
8 of LJL’s demand for a determination of the Purchase Price. The Court of Appeals (Leval, J.)
9 concludes that the arbitrator acted within its discretion in excluding the evidence, and in
10 declining to determine the Purchase Price.
11 In a separate action, Pitcairn appeals from an order of the United States District Court for
12 the Southern District of New York (Rakoff, J.) dismissing its claims against LJL for breach of
13 fiduciary duties and breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing. The Court of
14 Appeals (Leval, J.) concludes that Pitcairn’s claims were properly dismissed. AFFIRMED IN
15 PART, VACATED IN PART, and REMANDED with instructions to confirm the award.
16
17 For LJL 33rd Street Associates, LLC: THEODORE S. STEINGUT, New
18 York, NY.
19
20 For Pitcairn Properties, Inc.: GLENN A. WEINER (Brian R.
21 Fitzgerland, on the brief), Klehr
22 Harrison Harvey Branzburg LLP,
23 Philadelphia, PA.
24
25 LEVAL, Circuit Judge:
26
27 LJL 33rd Street Associates, LLC (“LJL”) and Pitcairn Properties Inc. (“Pitcairn”),
28 adversaries in two related litigations in the United States District Court for the Southern District
29 of New York (Rakoff, J.), each appeal from district court rulings. The controversy between LJL
30 and Pitcairn arises out of LJL’s exercise of its contractual option to purchase Pitcairn’s
31 ownership stake in a jointly owned high-rise luxury residential building in New York City, after
32 which the parties pursued an arbitration to determine the value of the property. The arbitrator
33 determined that the Stated Value (essentially the fair market value) of the building was $56.5
34 million, but refused to make a determination of the Purchase Price to be paid by LJL (Stated
35 Value minus certain specified deductions for liabilities, etc.). The district court vacated the
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1 arbitrator’s determination of the Stated Value, based on its conclusion that the arbitrator
2 committed misconduct in violation of the Federal Arbitration Act, 9 U.S.C. § 10(a)(3), in
3 excluding certain hearsay evidence offered by Pitcairn. The district court upheld the arbitrator’s
4 refusal to determine the Purchase Price. LJL appeals from both rulings.
5 In a separate action, Pitcairn appeals from the court’s dismissal of Pitcairn’s claims that
6 LJL breached its fiduciary duties and the covenant of good faith and fair dealing in its exercise
7 of the purchase option and in alleged subsequent interference with Pitcairn’s efforts to ascertain
8 the market value of Pitcairn’s ownership stake in the building.
9 In LJL’s appeal, we agree with its contention that the arbitrator’s exclusion of Pitcairn’s
10 hearsay exhibits was within the arbitrator’s authorized discretion. We therefore vacate the
11 district court’s order overturning the arbitrator’s determination of the Stated Value. We agree
12 with the district court’s conclusion that the arbitrator acted in accordance with the terms of the
13 arbitration agreement in refusing to determine the Purchase Price. We therefore remand with
14 instructions to confirm the arbitration award in its entirety. In Pitcairn’s appeal, we find no error
15 in the district court’s dismissal of Pitcairn’s claims for breach of fiduciary duties and breach of
16 the covenant of good faith and fair dealing. We therefore affirm that judgment.
17 BACKGROUND
18 A. The Property and the Operating Agreement
19 LJL and Pitcairn are the sole equity owners of a limited liability company known as 35-
20 39 West 33rd Street Associates, LLC (the “Company”), whose sole asset is a luxury high-rise
21 apartment complex at 35-39 West 33rd Street in Manhattan (the “Property”). Pitcairn is a wholly
22 owned subsidiary of Pitcairn Properties Holdings, Inc. (“Pitcairn Holdings”) and owns 49.99%
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1 of the Company. Pitcairn is an owner, developer, and manager of real estate assets, and manages
2 the Property. LJL is a New Jersey limited liability company, owned by Les Lustbader and his
3 children, Jared and Lauren Lustbader, that owns 50.01% of the Company.
4 LJL and Pitcairn have an elaborate and specific Operating Agreement governing aspects
5 of their shared ownership of the Company; the agreement provides an arbitration clause of
6 limited scope. The sections of the Operating Agreement of particular pertinence to this appeal
7 are Sections 8.8, 6.12(c), and 11.19. The agreement specifies two terms of significance: Stated
8 Value and Purchase Price, which are defined in Section 6.12 to mean grosso modo fair market
9 value and fair market value minus liabilities.
10 Section 8.8 gives LJL the option, if Salah A. Mekkawy ceases to be employed by
11 Pitcairn, to purchase Pitcairn’s interest “pursuant to the terms, conditions and procedures set
12 forth in Section 6.12(c).” It goes on to add that the Stated Value shall be determined by
13 agreement between Pitcairn and LJL, but “[i]f Pitcairn and LJL are unable to agree upon the
14 Stated Value . . . , then either party may elect that such dispute be determined by Expedited
15 Arbitration pursuant to Section 11.19, whereupon the arbitrator shall select an independent, third
16 party . . . appraiser who shall determine the Stated Value.”
17 Section 6.12(c) explains how the Purchase Price (the price to be paid by LJL for
18 Pitcairn’s interest) is to be derived from Stated Value. (The full text of Sections 8.8 and 6.12(c),
19 insofar as pertinent, are set out in the margin.)1
1
Section 6.12(c) of the Operating Agreement provides, in relevant part:
The purchase price (“Buy/Sell Purchase Price”) of the Interest of the selling
Member (“Selling Member”) shall be payable in cash by the purchasing Member
(“Purchasing Member”) and will be such as will produce for Selling Member the
same cash consideration as Selling Member would have received if the assets of
the Company had been sold on the Buy/Sell Transfer Date to a third party in an
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1 Section 11.19 states that arbitrated disputes will be resolved by “the Expedited
2 Arbitration procedures of the American Arbitration Association” with certain modifications,
3 including that each party “shall be entitled to present evidence and witnesses to support its
4 position and to cross-examine witnesses presented by the other.” It specifies,
5 Any provision of this Agreement which specifically provides that a dispute will be
6 resolved by the Expedited Arbitration provided in this Section 11.19 shall be
7 resolved by the Expedited Arbitration Procedures of the American Arbitration
8 Association. . . . In rendering such decision and award, the arbitrators shall not add
9 to, subtract from or otherwise modify the provisions of the Agreement and may only
10 determine the issue or question presented as their award.
all-cash sale for a purchase price equal to the Stated Value (subject to the
prorations provided in Section 6.12(c)(iii)(D)), as if the Company had been
dissolved and wound up following such sale and the proceeds of such sale
remaining after discharge and payment of all Company liabilities had been
distributed to the Members in accordance with the provisions of Articles V and X
of this Agreement (including, without limitation, the repayment of any loans
made by the Selling Member or the Purchasing Member to the Company).
(Emphases omitted).
Section 8.8 of the Operating Agreement provides, in relevant part:
If at any time after the date of this Agreement, Salah A. Mekkawy shall no
longer be employed by Pitcairn or its parent company, Pitcairn Properties
Holdings, Inc. (“PPHI”), then, within 5 days after such termination of
employment, Pitcairn or PPHI shall be obligated to provide written notice of such
termination of employment to LJL. Upon receipt by LJL of such aforementioned
written notice, LJL shall by written notice to Pitcairn and the Company, have the
right to purchase Pitcairn’s Interest (in whole but not in part), pursuant to the
terms, conditions and procedures set forth in Section 6.12(c) of this Agreement
(as modified pursuant to this Section 8.8); provided, however, such right to
purchase shall expire thirty (30) days after the last date of employment of Salah
A. Mekkawy by Pitcairn or PPHI, provided that LJL shall have received notice of
such termination of employment of Salah A. Mekkawy. The Stated Value in
effecting the sale and purchase of Pitcairn’s Interest pursuant to this Section 8.8
shall be determined by agreement between Pitcairn and LJL. If Pitcairn and LJL
are unable to agree upon the Stated Value within ten (10) Business Days, then
either party may elect that such dispute be determined by Expedited Arbitration
pursuant to Section 11.19, whereupon the arbitrator shall select an independent,
third party MAl appraiser who shall determine the Stated Value.
(Emphases omitted).
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1 B. The ouster of Mekkawy and LJL’s exercise of the option
2 In the summer of 2010 a preferred shareholder of Pitcairn Holdings sought to take over
3 its board. The management, led by then-CEO Mekkawy, tried to block the takeover through an
4 action in Delaware Chancery Court, and also filed for bankruptcy. That litigation was settled in
5 September 2010. After the settlement, the preferred shareholder took over the board of Pitcairn
6 Holdings and Mekkawy received a new employment agreement involving a “change of title and
7 duties,” and a diminished role. In early October 2010, without the knowledge of Pitcairn’s
8 senior officers or Board, Mekkawy told LJL that he would be leaving Pitcairn.
9 On October 7, 2010, Pitcairn’s Chief Operating Officer and two other employees met
10 with Jared Lustbader (one of LJL’s principals). At the time, Pitcairn was considering whether it
11 should terminate Mekkawy. During this meeting, there was discussion of Mekkawy’s potential
12 termination. Pitcairn alleges that:
13 Pitcairn’s representatives met with Lustbader and specifically discussed
14 Mekkawy’s potential separation from Pitcairn. Lustbader, having been tipped off
15 by Mekkawy, and knowing and intending that Pitcairn would take action
16 accordingly, told Pitcairn’s representatives that LJL did not like Mekkawy, did
17 not want to deal with him and did not trust him. Lustbader further acknowledged
18 that Mekkawy was not involved with management of the Property and that LJL
19 had no problem with Mekkawy’s departure from Pitcairn. Lustbader also said that
20 LJL was comfortable with Pitcairn’s management of the Property, which he
21 complimented. Lustbader did not tell Pitcairn’s representatives that LJL would try
22 to exercise the purchase option in § 8.8 of the Operating Agreement if Pitcairn
23 terminated Mekkawy.
24
25 Pitcairn did not ask LJL whether it would exercise its option if Mekkawy were terminated. There
26 was no mention of the option during the meeting. The Board of Pitcairn Holdings voted on
27 October 18, 2010 to terminate Mekkawy’s employment. Pitcairn asserts in its Complaint that the
28 decision was made “relying in part on Lustbader’s comments regarding Mekkawy.” Ten days
29 later, Pitcairn informed LJL of Mekkaway’s termination. Pitcairn alleges that in this
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1 conversation, Les and Jared Lustbader reiterated their dislike for Mekkawy and their approval of
2 his termination, and said nothing of their plan to exercise the Purchase Option.
3 On November 2, 2010 LJL formally exercised its Purchase Option under Section 8.8 of
4 the Operating Agreement. LJL asserted that the value of the Property was $49.8 million, barely
5 more than the $48.4 million in debt on the Property. Pitcairn asserted that the Property was worth
6 $62-$72 million. Pitcairn proposed selling the Property to Equity Residential, which Pitcairn
7 asserts had offered $68 million, or alternatively offering the property for sale so as to determine
8 the true market price. LJL refused both proposals. LJL’s attorney also sent a letter to Equity
9 advising that it “respectfully demands that you cease and desist from any further involvement in
10 this matter” and stating that LJL “reserve[s] all of its rights and remedies at law or in equity
11 concerning the Company, or against you or [Pitcairn] with respect to the matters embraced
12 hereby.”
13 C. The arbitration proceeding and the excluded evidence
14 As the parties did not agree on the price, LJL filed an arbitration demand pursuant to its
15 option agreement, asking for determination of both the Stated Value and Purchase Price. Pitcairn
16 objected to the demand for determination of the Purchase Price, arguing that the agreement
17 provides for arbitration of only the Stated Value, and not the Purchase Price.
18 The parties selected Jonathan T.K. Cohen as their arbitrator, and he selected appraiser
19 James Levy to determine the Property’s value. At the arbitration hearing, each party introduced
20 testimony and reports of appraisers, and each party cross-examined the other side’s witnesses.
21 LJL’s appraiser testified that the Property had a value of approximately $50-52 million, while
22 Pitcairn’s appraiser testified to a value of approximately $65 million.
23 LJL objected on hearsay and other grounds to four of Pitcairn’s exhibits. These were: (1)
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1 An “asset summary” report of Eastdil, a real estate banking firm, stating that the value of the
2 Property is between $63 million and $71.9 million, with a midpoint of $67.2 million; (2) A
3 valuation of the Property made by CBRE Capital Advisors, drawn from discussion materials
4 presented by CBRE to Pitcairn’s board of directors on July 22, 2010, which values the Property
5 between $63,194,800 and $71,541,600; (3) A June 22, 2010 letter of Eric Blum, the managing
6 member of PPH Investments Management, LLC (which was at the time of the letter the preferred
7 shareholder of Pitcairn Holdings, and which later took over its board and ousted Mekkawy)
8 stating that PPHI valued the Property “in the low $60 millions”; and (4) Equity Residential’s
9 non-binding “letter of intent” to purchase the Property for $68 million. Pitcairn did not call
10 witnesses to testify to or defend what was stated in the four exhibits. The arbitrator sustained
11 LJL’s objections to these four exhibits, without explanation beyond the statement that they “shall
12 not be admitted into evidence and shall not be considered by the Arbitrator or the neutral
13 appraisal expert . . . .”
14 Based on the appraiser’s appraisal, the arbitrator entered an award determining the Stated
15 Value as $56.5 million and declined to determine the Purchase Price. LJL moved to modify the
16 award with respect to the decision not to determine the Purchase Price. The arbitrator denied the
17 motion. Subsequent to the arbitration, Pitcairn initiated a “Buy/Sell” procedure provided for in
18 Section 6.12 of the Operating Agreement, under which one owner of the Company may send the
19 other an opinion on the value of the Property, and the other owner may choose either to buy the
20 interest of the first owner or to sell its own interest to the first owner based on that value. LJL
21 declined to participate.
22 D. The proceedings in the district court
23 LJL petitioned the Supreme Court of New York on September 7, 2011, to confirm the
24 arbitrator’s determination of Stated Value, but to vacate the arbitrator’s refusal to also determine
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1 the Purchase Price. On the latter question, LJL argued, in part, that Pitcairn had forfeited
2 objection to arbitrating the Purchase Price by failing to move for a stay of arbitration of the
3 Purchase Price within 20 days of LJL’s demand as required by New York’s state arbitration law,
4 NY CPLR § 7503(c). Pitcairn removed the case to federal court on the basis of diversity of
5 citizenship, 28 U.S.C. § 1332, and cross-petitioned to vacate the award because the arbitrator had
6 excluded evidence in violation of the FAA, 9 U.S.C. § 10(a)(3).
7 On both issues, the district court ruled in favor of Pitcairn. The court vacated the
8 arbitrator’s determination of Stated Value by reason of the exclusion of the four Pitcairn
9 exhibits. The court sustained the arbitrator’s refusal to determine the Purchase Price, ruling that
10 determination of the Purchase Price was not within the arbitration agreement and rejecting LJL’s
11 contention that Pitcairn had waived objection. LJL appeals those rulings.
12 Pitcairn meanwhile sued in the district court, alleging that LJL’s conduct breached
13 fiduciary duties as well as its implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing, and that LJL was
14 equitably estopped from exercising its purchase option because it misled Pitcairn to believe that
15 it would not exercise the option if Mekkawy were fired. LJL moved to compel arbitration, or in
16 the alternative to dismiss the suit for failure to state a claim. The district court denied the motion
17 to arbitrate, finding that these claims did not fall within the terms of the narrow arbitration
18 clause, but granted the motion to dismiss. Pitcairn appeals the dismissal of the claims for breach
19 of fiduciary duty and implied covenants.
20 DISCUSSION
21 In reviewing a district court’s decision to vacate an arbitration award, this Court reviews
22 findings of fact for clear error and questions of law de novo. Applied Indus. Materials Corp. v.
23 Ovalar Makine Ticaret Ve Sanayi, A.S., 492 F.3d 132, 136 (2d Cir. 2007). A district court’s
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1 dismissal of claims by reason of the insufficiency of the pleading presents a pure question of law,
2 which is reviewed de novo. Berrios v. N.Y.C. Housing Auth., 564 F.3d 130, 134 (2d Cir. 2009).
3 A. Pitcairn did not waive its objection to arbitrating the Purchase Price
4
5 LJL contends that Pitcairn forfeited its right to object to arbitration of the Purchase Price
6 by failing to move to stay the aspect of LJL’s arbitration demand which sought determination of
7 the Purchase Price within twenty days of service of LJL’s notice of intention to arbitrate the
8 Purchase Price in accordance with NY CPLR § 7503(c). See, e.g., In re Fiveco, Inc. v. Haber, 11
9 N.Y.3d 140, 144-45 (N.Y. 2008) (holding that a party could not stay arbitration where it did not
10 file an application within twenty days per § 7503(c)).
11 We reject LJL’s contention. In our view, § 7503(c) does not apply to these facts.2 Section
12 7503(c) provides,
13 A party may serve upon another party a demand for arbitration or a notice of
14 intention to arbitrate . . . stating that unless the party served applies to stay the
15 arbitration within twenty days after such service he shall thereafter be precluded
16 from objecting that a valid agreement was not made or has not been complied with
17 and from asserting in court the bar of a limitation of time. . . . An application to stay
18 arbitration must be made by the party served within twenty days after service upon
19 him of the notice or demand, or he shall be so precluded.
20
21 As we understand this provision, it applies to objections to arbitrate on the grounds that “valid
22 agreement was not made or has not been complied with” and to objections based on time
23 limitations. Id. Pitcairn’s objection is not based on one of these grounds. Pitcairn’s argument is
24 that the agreement to arbitrate is limited to specified issues, which do not include the Purchase
25 Price.
26
2
We assume without deciding that § 7503(c) applies in an action brought in a federal
court on the basis of diversity of citizenship.
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1 B. The arbitrator properly refused to exercise jurisdiction to determine the Purchase
2 Price
3
4 LJL further contends that the arbitrator was required by the Operating Agreement to
5 decide the Purchase Price of the Property. We disagree.
6 Section 8.8 of the agreement expressly provides for arbitration to determine Stated Value,
7 under the provisions of Section 11.19. Nowhere in the agreement is there a suggestion that the
8 Purchase Price be determined by arbitration. Furthermore, Section 11.19, the clause that governs
9 arbitration procedures, states that it applies to “[a]ny provision of this Agreement which
10 specifically provides” (emphasis added) for resolution by arbitration and adds, “[T]he arbitrators
11 shall not add to, subtract from, or otherwise modify the provisions of the Agreement and may
12 only determine the issue or question presented as their award.”
13 In an effort to rebut this apparent prohibition of expansion of the scope of the arbitration,
14 LJL relies on the close linkage between Stated Value and Purchase Price and seeks support from
15 Dialysis Access Center, LLC v. RMS Lifeline, Inc., 638 F.3d 367 (1st Cir. 2011) and McAllister
16 Bros., Inc. v. A & S Transportation Co., 621 F.2d 519 (2d Cir. 1980). Neither opinion is helpful.
17 Dialysis Access involved a broad arbitration clause which provided for arbitration of “any
18 dispute that may arise under this Agreement.” Dialysis Access, 638 F.3d at 371. It has no
19 application where the parties have elected arbitration of narrow precisely specified issues and
20 have instructed the arbitrators not to expand the scope of the arbitration to other issues.
21 Notwithstanding the general view expressed in that case favoring resolution of disputes by
22 arbitration where the parties have agreed to that procedure, “arbitration is a matter of contract
23 and a party cannot be required to submit to arbitration any dispute which he has not agreed so to
24 submit.” United Steelworkers of Am. v. Warrior & Gulf Navigation Co., 363 U.S. 574, 582
25 (1960).
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1 LJL cites McAllister Bros. as authority for the proposition that an issue arising out of an
2 arbitrated issue is itself arbitrable when it is “inextricably tied up with the merits of” the
3 arbitrated matter. McAllister Bros., 621 F.2d at 523. Our case differs materially from McAllister.
4 McAllister involved the agreement of a transporter of sludge (“Modern”) to employ McAllister
5 Brothers, Inc. (“McAllister”) for all towing services it required, and the contract in that case
6 prohibited Modern from employing another tower’s services unless “the service rendered by
7 McAllister does not meet the standards of the industry.” Id. at 521. Any disagreement with
8 respect to McAllister’s failure to meet industry standards was to be settled by arbitration. Id.
9 When Modern terminated the employment of McAllister and sought towing services elsewhere,
10 McAllister claimed breach and demanded arbitration. Modern refused, and McAllister sued in
11 the district court to compel arbitration. Modern raised the defense that McAllister had abandoned
12 the contract “by failing to provide [Modern] with all necessary tugboat services.” Id. at 523. The
13 district court ruled that Modern’s defense of abandonment should be heard by the arbitrator, and
14 our court affirmed. According to Modern’s contention, McAllister’s abandonment consisted of
15 its failure to provide Modern with all necessary tugboat services, and that claim was, at least
16 arguably, within the scope of the conformity of McAllister’s services to industry standards —
17 the very issue the parties had agreed to arbitrate. We ruled that in deciding whether the
18 arbitration agreement “arguably cover[s] the dispute at hand . . . doubts should be resolved in
19 favor of coverage and arbitration should be compelled unless it may be said with positive
20 assurance that the arbitration clause is not susceptible of an interpretation that covers the asserted
21 dispute.” Id. at 522 (citations and internal quotation marks omitted).
22 McAllister’s holding has no application to the present case, where the two issues
23 (Purchase Price and Stated Value) are unquestionably analytically distinct, and thus the disputed
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1 issue is not even “arguably” within the scope of the arbitration clause. In McAllister we held that
2 the abandonment defense must be arbitrated because the claim of abandonment derived from,
3 and was related to, the issue compelled to arbitration by the arbitration clause, as Modern
4 contended that McAllister’s failure to provide conforming service constituted its abandonment.
5 McAllister is also inapposite because the arbitration clause there did not contain a clause
6 expressly confining the scope of arbitration to specifically enumerated issues, as Section 11.19
7 of this agreement does.
8 In any event, even if we were to assume, despite §11.19’s restriction of the arbitration to
9 “specifically” designated issues, that the arbitrator would have acted within the limits of his
10 lawful discretion had he expanded his determination to encompass Purchase Price, it was
11 certainly not an abuse of the arbitrator’s discretion to decline to do so. The district court
12 correctly rejected this contention.
13 C. The arbitrator’s exclusion of evidence was not an abuse of discretion
14 LJL contends that the district court was unjustified in overturning the arbitration award
15 setting the Stated Value. We agree.
16 As explained above, the arbitrator excluded four pieces of hearsay evidence offered by
17 Pitcairn to support higher values for the Property. The district court held that the arbitrator’s
18 decision to exclude this evidence constituted illegal “misconduct” under the FAA, 9 U.S.C. §
19 10(a)(3). That statute provides that a reviewing court may vacate an arbitration award “where the
20 arbitrators were guilty of misconduct in . . . refusing to hear evidence pertinent and material to
21 the controversy.” The district court ruled that the arbitrator’s exclusion of this evidence denied
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1 Pitcairn a meaningful opportunity to present pertinent and material evidence of the value of the
2 Property, which rendered the proceeding “fundamentally unfair” and therefore constituted
3 misconduct that justified setting aside the award. LJL 33rd St. Assoc., LLC v. Pitcairn Props.,
4 Inc., No. 11-cv-6399, 2012 WL 613498, at *7 (S.D.N.Y. Feb. 15, 2012). In the district court’s
5 view, this exclusion “prevented Pitcairn from effectively demonstrating” the agreement of four
6 experts that the Property was worth substantially more than LJL’s valuation. Id. at *6.
7 We do not disagree with the district court’s general proposition that an arbitrator’s
8 unreasonable exclusion of pertinent evidence, which effectively deprives a party of the
9 opportunity to support its contentions, can justify vacating an award. Nonetheless, we do not
10 think this was an instance of such fundamental unfairness.
11 The district court recognized that the excluded valuations were all hearsay. It noted,
12 however, that in arbitration proceedings there is no need to comply with strict evidentiary rules,
13 see Coppinger v. Metro-N. Commuter R.R., 861 F.2d 33, 39 (2d Cir. 1988), and that the AAA
14 Rules and Mediation Procedures provide that “conformity to legal rules of evidence shall not be
15 necessary.” AAA Rule 31. The court concluded that LJL’s objections to those exhibits, based on
16 hearsay and other grounds,3 “should have gone to the weight afforded to the Excluded Evidence
17 rather than its admissibility.” LJL 33rd St. Assoc., 2012 WL 613498, at *6.
18 While it is indisputably correct that arbitrators are not bound by the rules of evidence and
19 may consider hearsay, it does not follow that arbitrators are prohibited from excluding hearsay
3
The grounds of LJL’s objections included, in addition to hearsay, that Equity’s offer
was not binding, and that the other sources of evidence were hired guns or were unreliable for
other reasons.
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1 evidence, especially when (a) the evidence could be presented without reliance on hearsay and
2 (b) its hearsay nature is unfairly prejudicial to the adversary. As to Pitcairn’s four exhibits, both
3 conditions applied. So far as appears, there was no good reason for Pitcairn to rely on hearsay. It
4 could have presented this evidence, unencumbered by the hearsay objection, merely by calling
5 the makers of the exhibits — thus providing LJL with the opportunity to cross-examine these
6 witnesses in an effort to undermine the probative value of the exhibits. Furthermore, expert
7 valuations of this nature are the product of so many complex factors, and so many assumptions
8 (especially where the controversy is over a valuation differential as small as 20%), as to make it
9 particularly important that the opponent of the valuations be offered the opportunity to test their
10 conclusions by cross-examination.
11 Section 8.8 called for the parties to agree on an arbitrator, who would in turn appoint an
12 appraiser. Stated Value was to be determined by the appraiser. If the arbitrator had presented
13 Pitcairn’s hearsay exhibits to the appraiser without LJL having had the opportunity to test their
14 conclusions by cross-examination to explore the underlying reasoning, LJL would have been
15 severely prejudiced. While Pitcairn may well have been harmed by the exclusion of its exhibits,
16 it is not clear that this harm can be considered unfair when Pitcairn could have cured the problem
17 simply by calling the makers of the exhibits as witnesses. Therefore, these circumstances were
18 crucially different from those that led the First Circuit to vacate an arbitration award by reason of
19 the arbitrator’s refusal to give any weight to testimony from a trial transcript, see Hoteles
20 Condado Beach, La Concha & Convention Center v. Union De Tronquistas Local 901, 763 F.2d
21 34 (1st Cir. 1985), where the court of appeals concluded that the transcript was central to a
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1 litigant’s position and no other evidence was available to sustain it. In this case, there was no
2 showing that Pitcairn could not call the makers of the exhibits, thus eliminating the hearsay
3 problem.
4 For these reasons, we do not agree with the district court that the arbitrator’s exclusion of
5 Pitcairn’s exhibits constituted “misconduct” in violation of § 10(a)(3) of the FAA. Arbitrators
6 have substantial discretion to admit or exclude evidence. See Commercial Arbitration Rules of
7 the American Arbitration Association, Rule R-31(b) (“The arbitrator shall determine the
8 admissibility, relevance, and materiality of the evidence offered and may exclude evidence
9 deemed by the arbitrator to be cumulative or irrelevant.”). The exclusions in this case did not
10 impair the “fundamental fairness” of the proceeding. See Tempo Shain Corp. v. Bertek, Inc., 120
11 F.3d 16, 20 (2d Cir. 1997). We therefore conclude it was within the bounds of the arbitrator’s
12 permissible discretion to exclude the exhibits.
13 D. Pitcairn has not stated a claim for breach of fiduciary duties
14 Pitcairn claims that LJL violated its fiduciary duties by failing to disclose its intention to
15 exercise the buyout option upon the discharge of Mekkawy and refusing to sell the property to a
16 third party or to entertain third party offers. We disagree.
17 The purchase option upon discharge of Mekkawy was LJL’s contractual right. The
18 contract furthermore contains a fair mechanism (arbitration) for resolving any dispute over the
19 price of the buyout should the parties disagree. Pitcairn does not contend that LJL ever made
20 false representations about Mekkawy, or stated that it would not exercise the purchase option
21 should Mekkawy be terminated. Indeed, Pitcairn did not ask whether LJL intended to exercise
22 the purchase option, or request that it be waived.
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1 Nor did LJL violate fiduciary duties by refusing Pitcairn’s plea to market the Property to
2 third parties to help determine its value. The contract between LJL and Pitcairn specifically
3 contemplated an adversarial arbitration procedure to determine the value of the Property should
4 the parties disagree. LJL had no obligation to agree to participate in the conduct of an illusory
5 auction, deceiving potential purchasers into bidding for a property that was in fact not for sale,
6 for the purpose of helping Pitcairn obtain evidence of value. There is no contention that LJL
7 prevented Pitcairn from obtaining reliable evidence on the value of the Property by conventional
8 methods — such as having it appraised by experts.
9 Pitcairn relies on Richbell Information Services v. Jupiter Partners, 309 A.D.2d 288
10 (N.Y. App. Div. 2003), where the New York court found a breach of the fiduciary duties owed
11 by one party to a joint venture to the other. The facts of Richbell were very different from the
12 present case, as they included a bid-rigging scheme by one party to force its co-venturer into
13 default and thereby obtain its assets on the cheap. LJL is not accused of any analogous
14 misconduct. Richbell, accordingly, does not furnish a precedent for imposing such liability on
15 LJL.
16 E. Pitcairn has not stated a claim for breach of good faith and fair dealing
17 Pitcairn also claims that by exercising the buyout option, LJL has violated its implied
18 duty of good faith and fair dealing. The implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing bars a
19 party from taking actions “so directly to impair the value of the contract for another party that it
20 may be assumed that they are inconsistent with the intent of the parties.” Bank of China v. Chan,
21 937 F.2d 780, 789 (2d Cir. 1991). However, the implied covenant of good faith cannot create
22 duties that negate explicit rights under a contract. Murphy v. Am. Home Prods. Corp., 58 N.Y.2d
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1 293, 304 (N.Y. 1983) (“New York does recognize that in appropriate circumstances an
2 obligation of good faith and fair dealing on the part of a party to a contract may be implied and,
3 if implied, will be enforced . . . . No obligation can be implied, however, which would be
4 inconsistent with other terms of the contractual relationship.”); D & L Holdings v. RCG
5 Goldman Co., 287 A.D.2d 65, 73 (N.Y. App. Div. 2001) (“The covenant of good faith and fair
6 dealing cannot be used to add a new term to a contract, especially to a commercial contract
7 between two sophisticated commercial parties represented by counsel.”). Pitcairn had agreed
8 with LJL in Section 8.8 of the Operating Agremeent that LJL would have the right to exercise a
9 buyout option if Mekkawy ceased to be employed by Pitcairn. The mere fact of LJL’s decision to
10 exercise its contractual right, absent bad faith conduct, cannot be deemed a breach of its duty to
11 deal with Pitcairn in good faith.
12 CONCLUSION
13 For the foregoing reasons, the opinion of the district court is AFFIRMED IN PART and
14 VACATED IN PART. We REMAND the case to the district court with instructions to confirm
15 the arbitration award.
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