Prescott v. Northlake Christian School

                                                        United States Court of Appeals
                                                                 Fifth Circuit
                                                              F I L E D
                  UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS                May 4, 2004
                       FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
                                                          Charles R. Fulbruge III
                  ______________________________                  Clerk


                           No. 03-30201

                  ______________________________


                        PAMELA L. PRESCOTT,

                                                  Plaintiff-Appellee,

                               versus

                NORTHLAKE CHRISTIAN SCHOOL; ET AL,
                                               Defendants,

                    NORTHLAKE CHRISTIAN SCHOOL,

                                              Defendant-Appellant.


          Appeal from the United States District Court
              for the Eastern District of Louisiana


Before GARWOOD, JONES, and STEWART, Circuit Judges.

EDITH H. JONES, Circuit Judge:

          Northlake Christian School (NCS) attempted to forestall

strife with its newly-hired principal Pamela Prescott by entering

into an employment contract for “biblically-based mediation” or

arbitration under the auspices of the Institute for Christian

Conciliation, these methods being prescribed as the “sole remedy”

for any controversy.   When the school’s relationship with Prescott

deteriorated, however, Prescott filed suit.       The district court

ordered ADR.   Mediation occurred, then arbitration; NCS appealed a
highly adverse and somewhat dubious award back to the court; NCS

appealed to this court; and we are forced to remand for further

proceedings.     So much for saving money and relationships through

alternative dispute resolution.        Perfect justice is not always

found in this world.

                            I.   BACKGROUND

          NCS hired Prescott as its elementary/preschool principal

for the 1999-2000 school year.     In a written employment contract,

the parties agreed “in conformity with the biblical injunctions of

1 Corinthians 6:1-8, Matthew 5:23,24, and Matthew 18:15-20 . . .

that any claim or dispute arising out of, or related to, this

agreement or to any aspect of the employment relationship” would be

referred to “biblically-based mediation” and, if unsuccessful,

binding arbitration. The agreement specified that “the arbitration

process shall be conducted in accordance with the current Rules of

Procedure for Christian Conciliation of the Institute for Christian

Conciliation.”     Moreover, the parties waived “their respective

rights to file a lawsuit against one another in any civil court for

such disputes, except to enforce a legally binding arbitration

decision.”

          In the spring of 2000, NCS told Prescott her contract

would not be renewed for the following year and instructed her to

vacate the premises of the school by March 31, 2000.         She was

placed on administrative leave for the duration of the school year



                                   2
contract and was paid her full salary and benefits throughout the

contract term.

             In February 2001, Prescott filed suit against NCS, its

board of directors, and its chief administrator in federal court.

She asserted claims for Title VII gender discrimination, sexual

harassment, and retaliation, violation of the Louisiana Whistle-

blower Protection Act, LA. R.S. § 23:967 (2003), and breach of

contract.     NCS moved to compel arbitration.                    The court granted

NCS’s motion, stayed Prescott’s suit, and administratively closed

the case.1

             To submit their dispute to arbitration, following the

failure      of      mediation,       the        parties     executed      a     form

mediation/arbitration agreement furnished by the ICC.                   They agreed

to   be   governed    by     ICC   rules,       which   included    conducting    the

arbitration       pursuant    to   the   Montana        Uniform    Arbitration   Act

(“MUAA”).    Most important, the parties interlineated the agreement

in two places.       First, the agreement originally provided that all

communications, written or oral, “between the parties during the

mediation and/or arbitration process shall be inadmissible in a

court of law or for legal discovery.”               The parties crossed out the

“and/or      arbitration”          language,        presumably        making     such

communications admissible in a court of law. Second, on Prescott’s



      1
            On the eve of arbitration, Prescott voluntarily dismissed with
prejudice all claims against the individual defendants. Thus, only NCS and
Prescott remain parties to this litigation.

                                            3
initiative,    the    parties    added       and   initialed   a   hand-written

provision, which stated: “No party waives appeal rights, if any, by

signing this agreement.”

            After an unsuccessful attempt at mediation, the parties

proceeded before a single ICC arbitrator.             Over a six-day period,

the arbitrator heard testimony from a multitude of witnesses and

reviewed the evidence and affidavits submitted by the parties.               On

June 14, 2002, the arbitrator determined that NCS had failed to

resolve its conflict with Prescott in accordance with Matthew 18,

and other biblical scriptures, which he held were incorporated into

the terms of Prescott’s employment contract.2                  The arbitrator

rendered judgment in favor of Prescott on her breach of contract

claim and awarded her $157,856.52 for damage to her reputation and

for future loss of income.3            The arbitrator also awarded NCS

$786.46 for past due COBRA payments.                 NCS filed a motion to

reconsider with the ICC administrator.4             The arbitrator denied the

motion.


      2
            Curiously, the arbitrator employed the biblical passages that were
cited as prefatory principles in the contract in order to supersede the actual
contract language, which gave Prescott no right to be employed beyond a one-year
term. This result appears incompatible with Louisiana law. See Barbe v. A.A.
Harmon & Co., 705 So. 2d 1210 (1998).
      3
            The arbitrator rejected Prescott’s Title VII claims, as well as her
claim under the Louisiana Whistleblower Protection Act. Prescott did not appeal
the rejection of these claims to the district court.
      4
            NCS also filed other post-arbitration motions with the arbitrator.
NCS filed an objection to ex parte communications, a motion for a new hearing,
and a motion for disclosure contending that new evidence had been uncovered that
demanded a hearing. The arbitrator summarily denied these motions on July 31,
2002.

                                         4
               NCS next moved to vacate the arbitration award in federal

court, and argued, inter alia, that the handwritten amendments to

the arbitration agreement expanded the federal court’s scope of

review.        Under this expanded scope of review, NCS urged the

district court to vacate the arbitration award, as a matter of law,

because Prescott was not wrongfully terminated, and she was not

entitled to damages.           The district court disagreed and concluded

that the “if any” language “merely preserves whatever appeal rights

are statutorily granted under the MUAA.”                    The district court

rejected NCS’s substantive claims under the MUAA’s narrow scope of

review.       NCS now appeals that decision to this court.

                              II.   STANDARD OF REVIEW

               On a motion to vacate an arbitration award, we review the

district court’s findings of fact for clear error and questions of

law de novo.         Harris v. Parker College of Chiropractic, 286 F.3d

790, 791 (5th Cir. 2002). Normally, the district court’s review of

an arbitration award, under the Federal Arbitration Act (“FAA”), is

“extraordinarily narrow.”           Antwine v. Prudential Bache Securities,

Inc., 899 F.2d 410, 413 (5th Cir. 1990)(stating that, under the

FAA,       “courts   should    defer   to   the     arbitrator’s   decision   when

possible”)(citations omitted).5                 The scope of judicial review is

       5
            Under the FAA, a district court may vacate an award only if: (1) the
award was procured by corruption, fraud, or undue means; (2) there is evidence
of partiality or corruption among the arbitrators; (3) the arbitrators were
guilty of misconduct which prejudiced the rights of one of the parties; or (4)
the arbitrators exceeded their powers. 9 U.S.C. § 10(a)(2001); Harris, 286 F.3d
at 791. An arbitration award may also be vacated if in making the award the
arbitrator acted with “manifest disregard for the law.” Williams v. Cigna Fin.

                                            5
equally narrow under the MUAA.6            The MUAA also permits modification

of an arbitration award under limited circumstances.7

               In the instant case, we are called upon to determine

whether the parties’ arbitration agreement expanded the scope of

judicial review beyond that provided in the MUAA.                  The district

court’s       interpretation      of   a   contract,   including   the   initial

determination whether the contract is ambiguous, is a conclusion of

law.       American Totalisator Co., Inc. v. Fair Grounds Corp., 3 F.3d

810, 813 (5th Cir. 1993); Thrift v. Hubbard, 44 F.3d 348, 357 (5th

Cir. 1995).       If the contract is ambiguous, then “the determination



Advisors, Inc., 197 F.3d 752, 761 (5th Cir. 1999).
       6
               Under MUAA, a court may only vacate an arbitration award if:

       (a) the award was procured by corruption, fraud, or other undue
       means; (b) there was evident partiality by an arbitrator appointed
       as a neutral or corruption in any of the arbitrators or misconduct
       prejudicing the rights of any party; (c) the arbitrators exceeded
       their powers; (d) the arbitrators refused to postpone the hearing
       upon sufficient cause being shown therefor or refused to hear
       evidence material to the controversy or otherwise so conducted the
       hearing, contrary to the provisions of 27-5-213, as to prejudice
       substantially the rights of a party; or (e) there was no arbitration
       agreement and the issue was not adversely determined in proceedings
       under 27-5-115 and the party did not participate in the arbitration
       hearing without raising the objection.

MONT. CODE. § 27-5-312(1)(2003).
       7
               An arbitration award may be modified or corrected, under the MUAA,
only if:

       (a) there was an evident miscalculation of figures or mistake in the
       description of any person, thing, or property referred to in the
       award; (b) the arbitrators awarded upon a matter not submitted to
       him and the award may be corrected without affecting the merits of
       the decision upon the issues submitted; or (c) the award is
       imperfect in a matter of form not affecting the merits of the
       controversy.

MONT. CODE § 27-5-313(1)(2003).

                                           6
of the parties’ intent through the extrinsic evidence is a question

of fact.”      Watkins v. Petro-Search, Inc., 689 F.2d 537, 538 (5th

Cir. 1982).

                              III.    DISCUSSION

            NCS offers several arguments on appeal: (1) the arbitra-

tion agreement expanded the scope of judicial review; (2) the

arbitrator erred, as a matter of law, in ruling that NCS breached

its contract with Prescott and that Prescott was entitled to

damages; and (3) the arbitrator violated several provisions of the

MUAA.8      Because we are uncertain whether, and if so, to what

extent, the arbitration agreement expanded the scope of judicial

review, we vacate the district court’s judgment and remand for

further proceedings.

            In a broad sense, this dispute is subject to the FAA.

See Volt Info. Sciences, Inc. v. Board of Trustees, 489 U.S. 478-

79, 109 S. Ct. 1248, 1255-56 (1989)(finding that the FAA applies to

“a   written    agreement   to   arbitrate    in   any   contract    involving

interstate commerce”); 9 U.S.C. § 2 (2000).           Thus, the FAA, and the

body of federal substantive law interpreting it, would typically

govern the resolution of this dispute.              Moses H. Cone Memorial


      8
            More specifically, NCS argued, in addition to the scope of review
issue, that the arbitrator erred in: (1) finding that NCS breached its contract
with Prescott; (2) awarding damages that were unauthorized under Louisiana law;
(3) exceeding his contractually limited authority; and (4) engaging in misconduct
by participating in ex parte communications with Prescott’s counsel, neglecting
material evidence, and refusing to disclose circumstances likely to affect
impartiality. The district court found against NCS on all grounds, and NCS has
appealed each assignment of error to this court.

                                       7
Hosp. v. Mercury Constr. Corp., 460 U.S. 1, 24, 103 S. Ct. 927, 941

(1983)(recognizing that the FAA “create[s] a body of federal

substantive law of arbitrability, applicable to any arbitration

agreement within the coverage of the Act”).

            The FAA, however, does not bar parties from structuring

an arbitration by means of their contractual agreements, nor does

it preempt all state laws regarding arbitration.           See Harris, 286

F.3d   at   793   (permitting       contractual   modification     concerning

standard of review); Specialty Healthcare Mgmt., Inc. v. St. Mary’s

Parish Hosp., 220 F.3d 650, 654 (5th Cir. 2000)(recognizing that

the FAA “does not preempt all state law related to arbitration

agreements”).      We   held   in    Gateway   Technologies,     Inc.   v.   MCI

Telecommunications Corp., 64 F.3d 993, 996 (5th Cir. 1995), that “a

contractual modification is acceptable because, as the Supreme

Court has emphasized, arbitration is a creature of contract and the

FAA’s pro-arbitration policy does not operate without regard to the

wishes of the contracting parties.”

            A threshold issue is which state’s law governs the

interpretation of the arbitration contract. Prescott’s employment

agreement provided that the arbitration “was subject to . . . the

Montana Arbitration Act, Title 27, Montana Code Annotated.”                  The

district court viewed this as a choice-of-law provision concerning

the standards for arbitration.         NCS contends, correctly, that the

reference to the MUAA is not a choice-of-law provision, and that

Louisiana   law   controls     the   interpretation   of   the    arbitration

                                        8
agreement as an addendum to the employment contract.                   In Valero

Refining, Inc. v. M/T Lauberhorn, 813 F.2d 60, 64 n.5 (5th Cir.

1987),     this    circuit      determined     that    contractual         language

authorizing arbitration in New York City did not constitute a New

York choice-of-law provision.               Instead, “the provision merely

requires that       the    procedures   that   the    arbitrators     use    be    in

accordance with the laws applicable to New York City.”                 Id. at 65

(emphasis    in    original).      Accordingly,       the    MUAA   controls      the

procedures attendant to the arbitration, but not the interpretation

of the underlying contract.

            Louisiana law applies to this dispute between a Louisiana

resident     and     a     Louisiana    school       concerning      the    proper

interpretation of a Louisiana contract.9              The employment contract

contained    a     valid    provision   requiring       all    disputes     to    be

adjudicated under the laws of Louisiana.               In Louisiana, “[w]here

parties stipulate the State law governing the contract, Louisiana

conflict of laws principles require that the stipulation be given

effect, unless there is statutory or jurisprudential law to the

contrary or strong public policy considerations justifying the

refusal to honor the contract as written.”                  Delhomme Industries,

Inc. v. Houston Beechcraft, Inc., 669 F.2d 1049, 1058 (5th Cir.



      9
             See Coghlan v. Wellcraft Marine Corp. 240 F.3d 449, 452 (5th Cir.
2001) (federal court must apply choice-of-law rules of state in which it sits);
Godchaux v. Conveying Techniques, Inc., 846 F.2d 306, (5th Cir. 1988) (“Louisiana
provides that the law of the place of contracting determines the nature,
validity, and construction of that contract.”) (citations omitted).

                                        9
1982)(quoting Associated Press v. Toledo Invs., Inc., 389 So.2d

752, 754 (La. App. 1980)). The parties’ additional pre-arbitration

agreement in no way detracts from that choice; alternatively, it is

independently subject to Louisiana law.

            The inquiry thus becomes whether the parties’ arbitration

agreement contemplated expanded judicial review.         Contrary to the

district court’s determination, this matter cannot be resolved on

the face of the agreement and requires further factual development.

Under Louisiana law, “interpretation of a contract is the deter-

mination of the common intent of the parties.”         LA. CIV. CODE ANN.

ART.   2045 (2003).      However, “[w]hen the words of a contract are

clear and explicit and lead to no absurd consequences, no further

interpretation may be made in search of the parties’ intent.”        LA.

CIV. CODE ANN.   ART.   2046 (2003).   Only if the contract is ambiguous

may the court look beyond the four corners of the document.        Taita

Chemical Co., Ltd. v. Westlake Styrene Corp., 246 F.3d 377, 386

(5th Cir. 2001).

            In a handwritten additional paragraph, NCS and Prescott

agreed that “[n]o party waives appeal rights, if any, by signing

this [arbitration] agreement.”         The district court concluded that

this language merely preserved whatever appeal rights the MUAA

already granted to the parties.        This conclusion is far from self-

evident.     In Gateway, the arbitration agreement provided that

“[t]he arbitration decision shall be final and binding to both

parties, except that errors of law shall be subject to appeal.”       64

                                       10
F.3d at 996.        The court concluded that this language “expanded

review of the arbitration award by the federal courts.”               Id.     This

court reached the same result in Harris, where the agreement

provided that “[t]he Award of the Arbitrator shall be binding on

the parties hereto, although each party shall retain his right to

appeal any questions of law, and judgment may be entered thereon in

any court having jurisdiction.”             286 F.3d at 793.         While the

language in Harris and Gateway is more straightforward, it can

certainly be argued that by adding this language to a form contract

that otherwise contained no provision concerning appeal of an

arbitration award, the parties here intended to expand the scope of

judicial review.         Such an interpretation heeds the principle that

“[a]        provision    susceptible   of   different     meanings     must    be

interpreted with the meaning that renders it effective and not one

that renders it ineffective.”          LA. CIV. CODE   ART.   2049 (2003).    The

district       court’s    interpretation    would      seem    to   render    the

handwritten modification surplusage, and therefore meaningless.10


       10
            Furthermore, the instant case is materially distinct from Action
Indus., Inc. v. U.S. Fidelity & Guaranty Co., 358 F.3d 337 (5th Cir. 2004).
There, the court determined “that the parties’ intent to replace the FAA’s
vacatur standard [could] not be gleaned from the Agreement’s general choice-of-
law provision, which provide[d] that Tennessee law govern[ed] contractual
execution and performance.” Id. at 341. Thus, the arbitration clause did “not
in any way modify or replace the FAA’s rules.” Id. However, in the instant
case, the contractual modification is not premised on a general choice-of-law
provision or a vague reference to a particular state’s arbitration statute.
Rather, the parties expressly adopted the ICC arbitration agreement and amended
that agreement by inserting tailor-made appellate review language. Thus, the
provision at issue is fundamentally different than the provision struck in Action
Industries and more closely resembles the provisions approved of in Gateway and
Harris.    Last, as Action Industries recognizes, “we construe ambiguous
contractual language against the party who drafted it.” Id. (citing Ford v.
NYLCare Health Plans of the Gulf Coast, Inc., 141 F.3d 243, 249 (5th Cir. 1998)).

                                       11
             Even if the parties intended to affect the scope of

judicial     review     with    this     language,        however,    their     precise

intentions concerning expanded review are ambiguous. We reach this

conclusion mindful that “[e]ach provision in a contract must be

interpreted in light of the other provisions so that each is given

the meaning suggested by the contract as a whole.”                      LA. CIV. CODE

ART. 2050.     Thus, it is also significant that the parties decided

to   permit     “a     court    of     law”       to   review     written     and    oral

communications (i.e., the record evidence) from the arbitration;

this modification of the contract’s form language amplifies their

apparent      intent    to     expand       the    scope    of     judicial     review.

Reinforcing Prescott’s apparent intention to preserve expanded

appeal rights (it was her attorney who insisted upon these special

conditions),     Prescott       had     a     court     reporter     transcribe      the

arbitration proceedings.

             These     contractual      tidbits        strongly    suggest    that   the

parties intended judicial review to be available beyond the normal

narrow range of the FAA or MUAA.              Because they cannot compel a firm

decision on the face of the contract, however, we find it ambiguous

and must remand for the district court to take evidence on and

contractually interpret the circumstances surrounding the making of

the provision.         The court will then be required to re-evaluate




Therefore, we must construe the provision, and any ambiguities contained therein,
against Prescott.

                                            12
under the appropriate standard NCS’s challenges to the arbitration

award.

                         IV.   CONCLUSION

          For the reasons stated above, we VACATE the district

court’s order confirming the arbitration award and REMAND for

further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

          VACATED and REMANDED.




                                  13
CARL E. STEWART, Circuit Judge, dissenting:

     I respectfully dissent from the panel majority’s conclusion

that a clause that provides “No party waives appeal rights, if any,

by signing this [arbitration] agreement,” when considered on its

face or when read in harmony with the other provisions of the

parties’ agreement, is ambiguous regarding the parties’ intent to

contract for a more expansive scope of review than that otherwise

available pursuant to the FAA or the MUAA. The majority accurately

sets forth the facts and procedural history of this case, so I will

not repeat them here.

     The majority concludes that this clause, which speaks only in

terms of “appeal rights” and contemplates that none may exist, at

least arguably evidences the parties’ intent “to expand the scope

of judicial review.”     The majority reaches this conclusion even

though   the   clause   neither   identifies   a   question   for   our

consideration that would not otherwise be reviewable under the FAA

or MUAA nor refers to any particular level of scrutiny pursuant to

which such review should be conducted.    The majority further finds

that certain “contractual tidbits . . . strongly suggest that the

parties intended judicial review to be available beyond the normal

narrow range of the FAA or MUAA.”      Finally, notwithstanding its

uncertainty regarding whether and to what extent the parties’

agreement expanded the scope of judicial review, the majority

concludes that this ambiguity requires that we remand the case to

the district court to adduce evidence of the parties’ intentions
and “interpret the circumstances surrounding the making of this

provision.”       Because      I    find     the     majority’s       determinations

irreconcilable with the terms, context, and purpose of the parties’

arbitration agreement and our recent clarification in Action Industries,

Inc. v. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co., 358 F.3d 337 (5th Cir. 2004), regarding the

level of exactitude required to opt-out of the narrow scope of

review available under the governing arbitration statute, I must

disagree with all three conclusions.

       The majority begins its analysis by rejecting the district

court’s determination that the reference to the Montana Uniform

Arbitration Act contained in the parties’ submission agreement

constituted a “choice-of-law” provision governing the scope of

judicial review of the arbitration award in the instant case. This

provision provided that “THIS AGREEMENT IS SUBJECT TO ARBITRATION

PURSUANT TO THE MONTANA ARBITRATION ACT, TITLE 27, MONTANA CODE

ANNOTATED.” The district court reasoned that the MUAA, like the

FAA,

sets forth only limited grounds for vacatur or modification of an

arbitration award, and that to “expand the scope of judicial review

beyond that allowed by the law governing the arbitration process,

the arbitration agreement must expressly and unambiguously evidence

the parties’ intent to do so.”                   Finding no such express and

unambiguous statement in the submission agreement’s additional,

handwritten provision that “No party waives appeal rights, if any, by signing this

                                           15
[arbitration] agreement,” the district court concluded that the clause simply retained the

few grounds for disturbing an arbitration award available under the

MUAA.

      According to the majority, our opinion in Valero Refining, 813

F.2d at 64-65 & n. 5, compels the conclusion that the MUAA clause

“controls the procedures attendant to the arbitration, but not the

interpretation of the underlying contract.”                   The latter question,

the majority reasons, must be determined under Louisiana law, in

accordance with the general choice-of-law provision contained in

the parties’ employment agreement.                 While I agree that we must

resort to state rules of construction to resolve any conflict

between      purportedly        competing       contractual        provisions,       the

majority’s reliance on Valero Refining is misplaced, and injects

ambiguity into an agreement which, when properly considered as a

whole, has none.         And, even if I were to agree that the parties’

intention regarding the applicable scope of judicial review is

ambiguous, our opinion in Action Industries, Inc., 358 F.3d at 341-42, establishing that

a clause must be clear and unambiguous to expand the statutory scope of review, makes it

patently apparent that the clause at issue here fails to overcome

the governing arbitration statute and its attendant narrow grounds

for vacatur.       I will address each of these points in turn.

      In Valero Refining, we rejected the assertion that a clause

stipulating that the “laws of the City of New York” would govern




                                           16
the arbitration proceeding11 invoked the then-controlling law of the

Second Circuit, of which New York is a part, that RICO claims were

not subject to arbitration.                 Id. at 65.      We reasoned that the

agreement’s reference to New York law was not a choice-of-law

clause requiring application of the Second Circuit’s rule regarding

arbitrability, but rather “merely require[d] that the procedures

that the arbitrators use be in accordance with the laws applicable

to New York City.”           Id. (emphasis added).         The clause at issue in

Valero       Refining,   however,      is    not    comparable      to    the    specific

reference to the MUAA in the submission agreement before us.                             In

Ford v. NYLCare Health Plans of the Gulf Coast Inc., 141 F.3d 243 (5th Cir. 1998), relied

upon by the district court, we held that a virtually identical

reference       to   state    law–in    that       case,   to    the     Texas   General

Arbitration Act12—unambiguously governed nothing less than every

aspect of the arbitration under the agreement at issue, rejecting

the assertion that the clause could be read to make the “TGAA

applicable only to the procedural aspects of arbitration.”                         Id. at

249 (concluding that the reference to the TGAA unambiguously




      11
       The clause at issue provided: “Any and all differences and disputes of
whatsoever nature arising out of this Charter shall be put to arbitration in the
City of New York pursuant to the laws relating to arbitration there in force.”
Valero Refining, 813 F.2d at 64 n.5.

      12
           The arbitration agreement stated that arbitration of any claim must be
settled “in accordance with the Texas General Arbitration Act” and,
as in this case, contained a notice providing: “THIS AGREEMENT IS SUBJECT TO
ARBITRATION UNDER THE TEXAS GENERAL ARBITRATION ACT.”           Ford, 141 F.3d at 249.

                                            17
expressed the parties’ intent to supercede the FAA rules with Texas

arbitration law).

       It is clear under Ford that the MUAA clause sufficed to

supercede the FAA’s scope of review, and at least provisionally set

forth the grounds for vacatur or modification of the arbitration

award in the instant case.                   See id.; Action Industries, 358 F.3d at 342-43

(recognizing that an agreement’s specific reference to a state

arbitration statute would suffice to opt-out of the FAA standards

for vacatur).          The question thus becomes whether other language in

the parties’ agreement sufficed to overcome the MUAA clause.                                     See

Ford, 141 F.3d at 249. In this case the parties’ rights and duties with

respect to arbitration are set forth in two separate agreements:

the employment contract, which contains an arbitration clause and

incorporates the ICC’s arbitration rules by reference, and a

submission agreement, which supplements the parties’ more general

commitment        to    resolve       their      disputes       through       arbitration         by

defining the issues to be submitted to the arbitrator.

       Like the MUAA clause, the clause at the core of this dispute, “No party waives appeal rights,

if any, by signing this agreement,” appears in the submission agreement. On its face, this “no waiver”

clause indicates that the parties intended only to retain whatever appeal rights they had at the time

they added that clause. The majority, rejecting this view as “not self-evident,” finds that NCS’s

argument that such an interpretation renders the “no waiver” clause surplusage is sufficiently

compelling to create an ambiguity in the parties’ agreement. The majority is further persuaded by the



                                                 18
purported absence of any other “provision concerning an appeal of an award” in the parties’

agreement. I disagree with both aspects of the majority’s rationale and its ultimate conclusion that

such an ambiguity exists.

       First, the majority’s reading---that the clause does not simply retain the MUAA standards---

renders the language “if any” surplusage, and it is the very inclusion of the phrase “if any” that

evidences the parties’ express contemplation that the entire clause may be redundant. As the majority

acknowledges, under Louisiana law, an interpretation of a contract that has the effect of rendering

a provision superfluous or meaningless must be avoided. See LA. CIV. CODE ART. 2049. Thus, we

cannot, as the majority has done, leave out terms of a contract or render them

surplusage and then declare that there is an ambiguity, itself a

result of        refusing        to    give     effect       to   the    contract’s        express

provisions.

       Second, contrary to the majority’s conclusion, the arbitration

agreement at issue contains numerous provisions concerning “appeal

rights,” all          of    which      reaffirm        the    parties’       intent      that     any

arbitration award would be final and binding and not subject to

appeal “except as provided by law.”                          In particular, the parties’

employment agreement provided that the parties “waive their respective

rights to file a lawsuit against one another in any civil courts for such disputes, except to enforce a

legally binding arbitration decision.” (emphasis              added).          The    employment

agreement also incorporated by reference the ICC rules, which in

turn provided that “[t]he arbitrator’s decision is final” and “shall

be legally binding on the parties, except as provided by law,” and,

                                                  19
more specifically, “cannot be considered or appealed except as

provided        by    Rule      41     (Request         for     Reconsideration            [by      the

arbitrator]) and/or civil law.” ICC Rules 40.E, G.                             Clause 2 of the

submission agreement similarly provided that the arbitration would

be “legally binding.”                   In Clause 3, the submission agreement

reiterated that the parties “agreed to ‘abide by and perform any

decision rendered by the arbitrator” and that the parties “realize

that arbitration will be the exclusive remedy for this dispute and

that [they] may not later litigate these matters in civil court.”

In   short,       these      provisions         establish        the     agreement’s         primary

emphasis on the exclusivity and finality of arbitration as a means

of resolving the instant dispute between the parties. All of these

provisions support the conclusion that the parties’ handwritten “no

waiver” clause merely sought to preserve whatever narrow grounds

for challenging an arbitration award that were available to them.

        Nor do the aptly-labeled “contractual tidbits” cited by the

majority compel the contrary conclusion that the parties’ added

language intended to expand the scope of judicial review. That the

parties’ agreement authorized “a court of law” to review written and oral communications might, as

the majority concludes, support the notion that they contemplated an expanded review. However,

it is also wholly consistent with an intent to allow consideration of the arbitration award only under

the narrow grounds available under the FAA, or, in this case, the MUAA, which, for example, permit

vacatur where an arbitrator’s failure to consider relevant evidence has substantially prejudiced a party.

See 9 U.S.C. § 10 (a) (3); MONT. CODE § 27-5-312 (1) (d). In the absence of record evidence, or

                                                   20
the authorization to review written and oral communications, the reviewing court would encounter

great difficulty in assessing an alleged error by the arbitrator based on this ground.

        Similarly, Prescott’s insistence that the arbitral proceedings be transcribed do not persuade

me to lean in favor of finding an intent to expand the scope of judicial review. The application of a

narrow scope of review (limiting the grounds open for our consideration) or a deferential standard

of review (setting forth how hard we must look at such grounds) does not obviate the need for a

record. See, e.g., Prestige Ford v. Ford Dealer Computer Servs., Inc., 324 F.3d 391, 396 (5th Cir.

2003) (stating that, “[g]iven the limited record available to this court, absent further documentation

in the record suggesting a willful inattentiveness to the governing law, it would be difficult to find that

the arbitration panel acted with manifest disregard for an applicable legal principle without

undermining our stated deference for the arbitration process”). In fact, the ICC Rules pursuant to

which the parties’ arbitration was conducted specifically allow such transcription, yet, as noted above,

also expressly state that any resultant award “shall be legally binding on the

parties” and “cannot be considered or appealed except as provided

by Rule 41 (Request for Reconsideration [by the arbitrator]) and/or

civil law.” ICC Rules 40.E, G. Admittedly, the grounds available for disturbing an arbitration

award pursuant to the FAA or MUAA are narrow; however, when they apply they do not provide

for no review at all.

        Finally, even if I were to agree with the majority that the “no waiver” clause at issue is

ambiguous regarding the parties’ intent to expand judicial review, the very existence of ambiguity

means that at best this clause may be deemed a failed attempt to alter the scope of review otherwise

available under the MUAA. Our recent decision in Action Industries, 358 F.3d at 340-41, confirms


                                                    21
the district court’s rationale that the contractual language required to opt-out of the governing

statutory scope of review must be “clear and unambiguous.” See id. at 341-42 (citing Mastrobuono

v. Shearson Lehman Hutton, Inc., 514 U.S. 52, 59 (1995); Hughes Training Inc. v. Cook, 254 F.3d

588, 593 (5th Cir. 2001)). In Action Industries, we rejected the assertion that a general choice-of-

law provision referencing Tennessee law, without reference to the Tennessee Uniform Arbitration

Act, was insufficiently clear and unambiguous to evidence the parties’ intent to opt-out of the FAA’s

grounds for vacatur of an arbitration award. Id. at 342. Notwithstanding the appellant’s argument

that this intent could be “gleaned” from this choice-of-law provision, we did not remand the matter

to the district court to adduce further evidence regarding the parties’ intent. Rather, once we

determined that the parties’ agreement did not specifically reference state arbitration law or specify,

“with certain exactitude how the FAA [vacatur] rules [were] to be modified,” we simply concluded

that it failed as a matter of law to depart from the governing standard.

       As examples of clauses that met the requisite level of exactitude, the Action Industries panel

pointed to the clauses in Gateway, 64 F.3d at 996, and Harris, 286 F.3d at 793, noting that in each

case we held that the language employed “evinced the parties’ clear intent to depart from the FAA's

vacatur standard.” Action Industries, 358 F.3d at 342. Although the majority concedes that the “no

waiver” clause at issue in this case is not “as straightforward” as the clauses we considered in

Gateway and Harris, I cannot agree, in light of our opinion in Action Industries, that the lack of

specificity in the “no waiver” clause can lead us to conclude anything other than it does not suffice

to expand the scope of judicial review beyond the grounds available under the MUAA. Moreover,

a close reading of Harris reveals that the opinion presciently recognized that to the extent a clause

neither identifies with specificity a question for our consideration not otherwise available under the


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governing statutory standard nor refers to any particular level of scrutiny pursuant to which such

review should be conducted, that clause will not successfully expand the scope of review.

       In Harris, we refined Gateway’s holding by establishing that an agreement that merely reserves

the “right to appeal any questions of law,” does not necessarily mean that de novo review applies to

all issues on appeal. See Harris, 286 F.3d 793-94. At issue in Harris was the intended meaning of

the phrase “questions of law.” Id. The Harris panel found that the phrase was equally susceptible

to two reasonable and conflicting interpretations, noting that it “could reasonably be interpreted to

encompass solely ‘pure’ questions of law, [as the appellee argued,] or it could be read broadly, to

encompass mixed questions of law and fact,” as urged by the drafter-appellants. Id. at 793-94.

Consequently, the Harris panel concluded that the reference to “questions of law” was ambiguous,

and construed the phrase against the drafter-appellants.13 Id. at 794. Significantly, the panel

concluded that this not only dictated that de novo review apply only to pure questions of law, but

that, “with respect to questions of fact and mixed questions of law and fact, we apply the default

standard of review, vacating only for manifest disregard of the law, or on the grounds listed in the

FAA.” Id. (emphasis added).

       We also found that the canon of contract construction requiring courts to “give effect to all

contract provisions so that none will be rendered meaningless” compelled our narrow interpretation

of the clause. Id. We noted in Harris that because the arbitrator’s legal conclusions “were intimately


       13
       Unlike Harris, however, in the instant case the parties’ employment
contract provided that “This contract shall be interpreted under . . . Louisiana
[law] as if jointly authored by the parties,” rendering it inappropriate to
construe the added “no waiver” language against the drafter of that clause.
(emphasis added). Of course, we only resort to this principle of contractual
interpretation where the contested language is ambiguous and, as I have discussed
above, I do not agree that any such ambiguity surrounds the “no waiver” clause
at issue in this case.

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bound up with the facts,” none of his findings would be final if we were to review de novo all mixed

questions of fact and law. Id. Thus, we reasoned, a broad reading of “questions of law” to

encompass mixed questions would render meaningless “the provision that the arbitrator’s award

should be binding.” Id. Accordingly, we concluded that “questions of law” had to be construed as

referring to only “pure” legal questions in order to give effect to this finality provision. We further

pointed out that parties seeking “more extensive review of an arbitrator's award may do so by

specifying the standard of review in the arbitration agreement.” Id. (citing Hughes Training, 254

F.3d at 593 (enforcing a provision that stated that “in actions seeking to vacate an [arbitration]

award, the standard of review to be applied to the arbitrator’s findings of fact and conclusions of law

will be the same as that applied by an appellate court reviewing a decision of a trial court sitting

without a jury”). The Harris panel noted that unlike in Hughes, “[i]n the present case, the arbitration

agreement simply did not specify that the standard of review for anything other than pure questions

of law had been altered.” Id.

       In light of our circuit precedent as clarified in Harris and Action Industries, I cannot agree

with the majority’s view that a clause which, by the majority’s own admission is at best ambiguous

regarding the parties’ intent to expand judicial review, requires remanding the matter for further

inquiry into the circumstances surrounding its drafting. In Harris and Action Industries, we did not

remand the matter for the district court to take evidence on the parties’ intent; rather, we established

that the applicable statutory standard would govern to the extent of the deficiency in specificity. See

Harris, 286 F.3d at 794; Action Industries, 358 F.3d at 342. Because I find that by its terms,

purpose, and context, the “no waiver” clause does not unambiguously expand the scope of judicial

review and that a contrary interpretation would render other provisions pertaining to the finality of


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the award meaningless, I would affirm the district court’s confirmation of the arbitration award. As

the majority concedes, a remand would eviscerate whatever vestiges of efficient dispute resolution

still exist in this case, an eventuality that is wholly inconsistent with the parties’ undisputed intent to

resolve their claims exclusively through arbitration. The parties have already asserted their respective

conflicting interpretations to the district court and this court, and I am unpersuaded that they will

shed any greater light on their respective positions should they find themselves before the district

court for a reprise. I further note that it is inevitable that one side in an arbitration would be

dissatisfied with the result. Absent clear and unambiguous contractual language to the contrary,

however, I find that the sco pe of our review is limited to consideration of the narrow grounds for

vacatur or modification of the award that exist at law. For these reasons, I respectfully dissent.




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