United States Court of Appeals
For the First Circuit
No. 19-1649
AXIA NETMEDIA CORPORATION,
Plaintiff, Appellant,
KCST USA, INC.,
Plaintiff,
v.
MASSACHUSETTS TECHNOLOGY PARK CORPORATION,
d/b/a Massachusetts Technology Collaborative,
Defendant, Appellee.
APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS
[Hon. Timothy S. Hillman, U.S. District Judge]
Before
Howard, Chief Judge,
Lipez, Circuit Judge,
and Saris, U.S. District Judge.*
Brian P. Voke, with whom Adam A. Larson and Campbell Conroy
& O'Neil, P.C. were on brief, for appellant.
Robert J. Kaler, with whom Edwin L. Hall and Holland & Knight
LLP were on brief, for appellee.
* Of the District of Massachusetts, sitting by designation.
August 31, 2020
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LIPEZ, Circuit Judge. Massachusetts Technology Park
Corporation, an independent public instrumentality of the
Commonwealth of Massachusetts operating under the name
Massachusetts Technology Collaborative ("MTC"), owns a fiber-optic
network in western Massachusetts known as the Massbroadband123
Network. Before the network was built, MTC contracted with Axia
NGNetworks USA, Inc. -- now called KCST USA, Inc. ("KCST") -- to
operate and market the network. MTC also secured a guaranty of
KCST's obligations under the contract from KCST's parent company,
Axia NetMedia Corporation ("Axia").
The relationship between MTC and Axia deteriorated after
the network was built. Axia ultimately sued MTC in federal
district court over the guaranty agreement and MTC procured an
order compelling arbitration of the parties' dispute. The
arbitrator found that MTC had materially breached the underlying
contract with KCST, and, accordingly, that the guaranty agreement
was void for failure of consideration. Axia sought confirmation
of the arbitration award while MTC, dissatisfied with the
arbitrator's decision, sought vacatur or modification of the
arbitration award under section 10 of the Federal Arbitration Act
("FAA"), 9 U.S.C. § 10(a). The district court concluded that the
arbitrator had exceeded the scope of his powers, see id.
§ 10(a)(4), and vacated the portion of the arbitration award that
voided the guaranty. Axia has appealed that decision.
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Concluding that the arbitrator acted within the scope of
his powers, we reverse and remand with instructions to enter an
order confirming the arbitration award.
I.
We begin by providing background about the relevant
provisions of the contracts between MTC and KCST and between MTC
and Axia, the breakdown of the relationship among MTC, KCST, and
Axia, and the arbitrator's and district court's decisions. This
is not the first time that the dispute between MTC and Axia has
come before us. See Axia NetMedia Corp. v. Mass. Tech. Park Corp.
(hereinafter Axia I), 889 F.3d 1 (1st Cir. 2018) (affirming
preliminary injunction as modified); see also Axia NetMedia Corp.
v. Mass. Tech. Park Corp., Nos. 18-2180, 18-2192, 2019 WL 2273650
(1st Cir. Apr. 9, 2019) (dismissing appeals from district court
orders denying Axia's motion to execute on preliminary injunction
bond). We draw background facts from our prior published opinion
where appropriate.
A. The Contracts
In 2010, MTC received state and federal funding to build
the Massbroadband123 Network to provide high speed broadband
service to underserved communities in western and north central
Massachusetts. Shortly before the funding was approved, MTC
solicited proposals from telecommunications companies to operate
and market the soon-to-be-built network. Axia, a Canadian company
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seeking to expand into the United States market, submitted a bid
on behalf of its newly created United States subsidiary, KCST.
MTC selected KCST to be the network operator. On February 25,
2011, MTC and KCST entered into the Agreement for Network Operator
Services (the "Network Operator Agreement" or "NOA"), and MTC and
Axia entered into the Guaranty Agreement (the "Guaranty") that is
at issue in this appeal.
Under the terms of the NOA, MTC was responsible for
constructing the network1 and turning it over to KCST in segments.
The planned network, as described in the NOA, would be "a 1,338-
mile fiber-optic network with new fiber running through or near
124 communities in western and north central Massachusetts" that
connected to 1,392 Community Anchor Institutions ("CAIs"). CAIs
are state or community facilities, like schools, libraries,
hospitals and police departments. These facilities "are directly
connected to the network[ and] serve as hubs of connectivity for
extending the network to other customers." Axia I, 889 F.3d at 5.
The NOA defines a CAI as "any one of the organizations and agencies
identified in" a list that was appended to the NOA, which was
subject to revision by MTC "from time to time in MTC's sole
discretion."
1MTC contracted with another company, G4S Technology LLC, to
design and construct the network.
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The NOA details the many responsibilities that KCST
agreed to assume as the "Network Operator." In short, KCST was
"responsible for all aspects of the management, sales, monitoring,
operations, support, and maintenance of" the Massbroadband123
Network. Also, it was responsible for "pay[ing] for all ongoing
costs of operating" the network "and all costs of compliance with
the terms of" the NOA. KCST, additionally, paid an annual fee to
MTC. "In return, KCST retained the network's revenue up to a
defined threshold, above which it agreed to share the revenue with
MTC." Axia I, 889 F.3d at 4.
By its express terms, the NOA would not take effect until
Axia signed the Guaranty:
12.14 Parent Guaranty. This Agreement
[the NOA] shall become binding only upon
condition that Network Operator's parent
company, Axia NetMedia Corporation, executes
and delivers to MTC a guaranty of obligations
of Network Operator hereunder in a form
acceptable to MTC, with a limit of liability
no less than four million ($4,000,000) U.S.
dollars.
In the Guaranty, Axia promised that, should KCST "default in any
of its payment or performance obligations under the Network
Operator Agreement," Axia would "make all such payments and perform
all such obligations of the Network Operator" under the NOA, and
would "fully and punctually pay and discharge . . . any and all
costs, expenses and liabilities" associated with those
obligations. The Guaranty was "limited to and capped at the amount
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of" $4 million and it provided that, should Axia "advance to MTC
funds up to said amount, [Axia] shall have no further obligation
or liability under this Agreement."
The Guaranty also provided that its validity would be
unaffected by potential breaches of the NOA by KCST:
2.3 This Agreement and the liability
hereunder shall not be affected or impaired by
any compromise, settlement, release, renewal,
extension, indulgence, change in or
modification of any of the obligations and
liabilities of Network Operator under the
Network Operator Agreement, or by any failure
on the part of MTC, its successors or assigns,
to realize upon any obligations or liabilities
of Network Operator.
The Guaranty said nothing about what effect, if any, potential
breaches of the NOA by MTC would have on its continuing validity.
Finally, both the NOA and the Guaranty address dispute
resolution. The NOA provides that any dispute between MTC and
KCST that cannot be resolved through informal dispute resolution
procedures "will be finally settled by binding arbitration
conducted in accordance with the [American Arbitration
Association] Rules." Under the Guaranty, all disputes between MTC
and Axia that could not be resolved in mediation would "be resolved
by litigation in a court serving Middlesex County, Massachusetts,"
unless "MTC elect[ed] arbitration as the method of dispute
resolution for a given dispute." The Guaranty provides that, "at
MTC's sole election, MTC may file a demand for arbitration by the
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American Arbitration Association in its office serving Boston,
Massachusetts." (Emphasis added.)
B. Factual and Procedural Background2
The construction of the network did not go as planned.
The NOA required MTC to deliver the network to KCST in segments,
as it was completed, with all thirty-six segments being turned
over to KCST no later than August 25, 2013. MTC delivered only
one network segment to KCST by that date. MTC then turned over
more than half of the network at once in late December 2013 and
the remaining segments in early 2014. In addition, the network
was smaller in size and scope than the NOA contemplated, with fewer
than the anticipated 1,392 CAIs connected to it.3
KCST initially responded to MTC's delays and other
shortfalls by asking MTC to renegotiate the commercial terms of
the NOA. When those negotiations proved unsuccessful, KCST
threatened to withhold payments due MTC, which MTC relied upon to
2We draw the background information primarily from the
arbitration award, as the parties are bound by the arbitrator's
view of the facts. See United Paperworkers Int'l Union v. Misco,
Inc., 484 U.S. 29, 37-38 (1987).
3The parties dispute the number of CAIs that were connected
to the network at the time it was turned over to KCST, with
estimates ranging from 901 on the low end to 1,225 on the high
end. The arbitrator did not resolve this factual dispute but found
that, "[a]ccepting any of the[] numbers from either side as
accurate, it is plain that MTC had a material shortfall in its
failure to deliver connected CAIs reasonably approaching" the
promised 1,392 in total.
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pay for overhead and other network-related costs. MTC promptly
sought and obtained a preliminary injunction in Massachusetts
Superior Court in mid-2014 requiring KCST to perform its
obligations under the NOA, including making payments to MTC.
For the next two years, KCST performed its obligations
under the NOA, but it was losing money and required loans from
Axia to meet the demand on its financial resources. Then, "[i]n
2016, a Swiss investment firm acquired a controlling position in
Axia." Axia I, 889 F.3d at 5. To facilitate approval of the
acquisition by the Federal Communications Commission ("FCC") --
required because the FCC had authorized KCST to operate the network
-- Axia transferred all KCST shares into a trust, see id., of which
Axia was the sole beneficiary. KCST retained its original name
-- Axia NGNetworks USA, Inc. -- at that time, but changed its name
to KCST USA, Inc. in February 2017.
On March 22, 2017, KCST filed a voluntary petition for
Chapter 11 bankruptcy, an "Event of Default" that triggered Axia's
obligations under the Guaranty. On the same day, Axia preemptively
filed this lawsuit against MTC in federal district court, seeking
a declaratory judgment that the Guaranty was unenforceable because
MTC had materially breached the NOA. MTC secured a preliminary
injunction, which required Axia to perform its obligations under
the Guaranty while the parties resolved their contract dispute.
See id. at 4. And, as we noted at the outset, MTC successfully
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moved to compel arbitration of the dispute with Axia pursuant to
the dispute resolution provision in the Guaranty.
Also, before the bankruptcy court, MTC filed a proof of
claim against KCST's bankruptcy estate seeking damages for alleged
breaches of the NOA by KCST. KCST, in turn, commenced an adversary
proceeding against MTC, objecting to MTC's claim and asserting
counterclaims against MTC for its alleged breaches of the NOA.
MTC filed a motion to compel arbitration of the competing claims,
which the bankruptcy court granted. The arbitration of the dispute
between MTC and KCST was then consolidated with the arbitration
proceedings between MTC and Axia, which were already underway.4
The arbitration proceedings were conducted before a sole
arbitrator, who received documentary evidence from the parties and
heard twenty-seven days of live testimony.5 The arbitrator issued
his decision in the fall of 2018 in three parts: the Partial Final
Award ("PFA"), the Final Award and Modification of Partial Final
Award, and the Modification of Final Award.
4 Although the arbitration proceedings were consolidated, the
two disputes arose from different contracts and originated in
different fora. They retained their separate identities, and the
arbitrator's resolution of each dispute thus needed to be confirmed
in the forum where it originated after the arbitration proceedings
concluded.
5 MTC raises issues with the arbitrator selection process in
the factual background section of its brief but does not later
argue that those issues provide a basis to vacate the arbitrator's
award. We therefore do not address them.
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In the PFA, the arbitrator found that "MTC failed to
deliver a network within a reasonable range of the 1,392 CAIs that
it contracted to provide under the NOA," that it "failed to
'connect' a significant number of CAIs" to the network, and that
it "failed to comply with its obligations to deliver the Network
in a timely manner and in segments to achieve a cost-effective
rollout." The arbitrator concluded that these failures amounted
to a material breach of the NOA.6
As to remedy, the relief granted to KCST "for MTC's
breach [wa]s that of reformation of the NOA" to make the terms of
the contract commercially reasonable in light of MTC's "failed
Network delivery obligations."7 The arbitrator also granted relief
6 The arbitrator also found misconduct on the part of KCST
and Axia. Most notably, during the time leading up to KCST's
bankruptcy filing, the companies failed to disclose to MTC that
KCST had stopped paying network vendors (to the tune of hundreds
of thousands of dollars of unpaid obligations) and that it was in
dire economic straits. As a result, "the surprise attack of the
KCST bankruptcy filing and Axia federal court
litigation . . . combined to achieve maximized impact, as they
were surely calculated to do." But the arbitrator concluded that
KCST and Axia "escape[d] the consequences of these wrongful
actions" because MTC accepted "curing performance" by Axia and
because MTC failed to prove any damage caused by the delay in
disclosure of KCST's financial situation.
7 The arbitrator explained that reformation of the NOA was an
appropriate remedy based on both the language of the NOA and the
record. Specifically, the arbitrator relied on section 5.2.7 of
the NOA, in which MTC promised to cooperate with KCST to "effect
the goals, objectives and purposes" of the contract "in a
commercially reasonable manner." The arbitrator also observed
that "the record reflects that at the time of [MTC's] breach [KCST]
did not seek to terminate and claim damages, but rather it . . .
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to Axia, observing that "the underlying consideration for the Axia
Guaranty was the NOA, and MTC materially breached it." As a
result, "MTC was not entitled to the benefits it secured" pursuant
to the district court's preliminary injunction order requiring
Axia's continued performance of its obligations under the Guaranty
while the parties' dispute was ongoing. Thus, Axia was "entitled
to recoup" from MTC over $4 million in costs that it had incurred
in connection with the preliminary injunction order.
After the arbitrator issued the PFA, MTC asked the
arbitrator to clarify "the meaning of the PFA as to the continued
effectiveness of the Guaranty . . . going forward." MTC explained
that Axia understood the PFA to mean that the Guaranty was "'void'
going forward," but that MTC disagreed with that interpretation.
MTC insisted that the Guaranty remained valid, and that "the effect
of MTC making the payments to Axia required by the PFA would be to
reinstate the full value of the Guaranty." In other words, MTC
argued, "the $4 million limitation on Axia's performance
obligations would be reset" when MTC made the required payments to
Axia.
In response to MTC's request for clarification, the
arbitrator specified in the Final Award and Modification of Partial
continued to seek financially adjusted terms for ongoing
performance of the NOA." The arbitrator treated that choice by
KCST as an "election of remedies."
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Final Award that "MTC lost on its request for declaratory relief
with respect to the continued validity of the Guarant[y], as
reflected in . . . the PFA." The arbitrator explained that this
result was justified under Massachusetts law because "the breach
by MTC found in the PFA went at once to the 'essence' or
'foundation' of the NOA and underlying consideration of the
Guarant[y]." In addition, the arbitrator found that MTC had not
met its burden to prove that, if the parties had independently
renegotiated the contract, MTC would have conditioned its
acceptance of the reformed NOA on the execution of a new guaranty
agreement by Axia. Since "the record was simply devoid of specific
persuasive evidence in this regard," the arbitrator concluded, MTC
could not prevail on the issue.
MTC and Axia returned to the district court, where Axia
moved for confirmation of the arbitration award and MTC moved to
vacate it insofar as it voided the Guaranty, arguing that the
arbitrator had acted outside the scope of his authority in doing
so.8 As we recounted above, the district court agreed with MTC
and granted MTC's motion to partially vacate the arbitration award.
II.
We apply de novo review to a district court's decision
to confirm or vacate an arbitration award. Dialysis Access Ctr.,
8
KCST secured confirmation in the bankruptcy court of the
portion of the arbitration award that reformed the NOA.
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LLC v. RMS Lifeline, Inc., 932 F.3d 1, 7 (1st Cir. 2019). In doing
so, however, we are mindful that "[t]he authority of a federal
court to disturb an arbitration award is tightly circumscribed."
Cytyc Corp. v. DEKA Prods. Ltd. P'ship, 439 F.3d 27, 32 (1st Cir.
2006). After all, "the parties have contracted to have disputes
settled by an arbitrator chosen by them rather than by a judge,"
and thus "it is the arbitrator's view of the facts and of the
meaning of the contract that they have agreed to accept." United
Paperworkers Int'l Union v. Misco, Inc., 484 U.S. 29, 37-38 (1987).
Although our review is limited, "arbitration awards are
not invincible, and there are 'a few exceptions to the general
rule that arbitrators have the last word.'" Hoolahan v. IBC
Advanced Alloys Corp., 947 F.3d 101, 111 (1st Cir. 2020) (quoting
Cytyc Corp., 439 F.3d at 32-33). Under section 10(a) of the FAA,
federal courts are authorized to vacate an arbitral award only
when (1) "the award was procured by corruption, fraud, or undue
means," (2) "there was evident partiality or corruption" on the
part of the arbitrator, (3) the arbitrator is guilty of misconduct
that prejudices the rights of a party, including refusing to
postpone the hearing when sufficient cause has been shown and
refusing to hear evidence that is "pertinent and material to the
controversy," or (4) the arbitrator "exceeded [his] powers, or so
imperfectly executed them that a mutual, final, and definite award
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upon the subject matter submitted was not made." 9 U.S.C. § 10(a).9
Only the claim that the arbitrator exceeded his powers is at issue
in this appeal.
An arbitrator's decision may be vacated when the
arbitrator "strays from interpretation and application of the
agreement and effectively 'dispense[s] his own brand of industrial
justice.'" Stolt-Nielsen S.A. v. AnimalFeeds Int'l Corp., 559
U.S. 662, 671 (2010) (alteration in original) (quoting Major League
Baseball Players Ass'n v. Garvey, 532 U.S. 504, 509 (2001) (per
curiam)). In so doing, an arbitrator acts outside the scope of
his "contractually delineated powers." First State Ins. Co. v.
Nat'l Cas. Co., 781 F.3d 7, 11 (1st Cir. 2015). If, however, the
9 We have also recognized in earlier case law "a second set
of exceptions [that] flows from the federal courts' inherent power
to vacate arbitral awards." Hoolahan, 947 F.3d at 111 (quoting
Cytyc Corp., 439 F.3d at 33). This "very narrow" authority, Cytyc
Corp., 439 F.3d at 33, arises in cases where the arbitrator acted
"in manifest disregard of the law," Advest, Inc. v. McCarthy, 914
F.2d 6, 9 n.6 (1st Cir. 1990); see also id. at 9-10; Hoolahan, 947
F.3d at 111. The Supreme Court's decision in Hall Street
Associates, L.L.C. v. Mattel, Inc., 552 U.S. 576 (2008), however,
cast doubt on "[t]he availability of non-statutory grounds to
vacate an arbitration award." Hoolahan, 947 F.3d at 111 n.14; see
Hall Street, 552 U.S. at 584-87 ("[T]he text [of the FAA] compels
a reading of the §§ 10 and 11 categories [for vacating and
modifying arbitration awards] as exclusive."). We "have not
squarely determined whether our manifest disregard case law can be
reconciled with Hall Street," Kashner Davidson Sec. Corp. v.
Mscisz, 601 F.3d 19, 22 (1st Cir. 2010); see also Hoolahan, 947
F.3d at 111 n.14, and we need not do so here. The district court
did not rely on the manifest disregard doctrine, see Axia NetMedia
Corp. v. Mass. Tech. Park Corp., 381 F. Supp.3d 128, 134 n.4 (D.
Mass. 2019), and MTC does not argue that the doctrine provides a
distinct basis for affirming the district court's decision.
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award "'draw[s] its essence from the contract' that underlies the
arbitration proceeding" and the arbitrator was "even arguably
construing or applying the contract and acting within the scope of
[his] authority," the award must stand -- even if the arbitrator
committed serious legal or factual error. Cytyc Corp., 439 F.3d
at 32 (quoting Misco, 484 U.S. at 38). MTC bears the burden "to
establish that the arbitrator's award should be set aside."
Hoolahan, 947 F.3d at 110 (quoting Dialysis Access Ctr., 932 F.3d
at 7).
We note the limited scope of MTC's claim. The question
of whether the arbitrator exceeded his powers by reforming the NOA
is not before us, nor was it before the district court. Just as
the district court ordered MTC and Axia to resolve their contract
dispute over the Guaranty through arbitration, the bankruptcy
court ordered MTC and KCST to resolve their competing claims of
breach of the NOA -- which were originally raised in an adversary
proceeding in the bankruptcy court -- through arbitration. Hence,
the bankruptcy court was the proper forum for a challenge to the
arbitrator's resolution of MTC and KCST's dispute over the NOA,
including the relief awarded to KCST for MTC's material breach of
the NOA. But MTC chose not to pursue such a challenge. Instead,
it poses in this proceeding a more limited question -- whether the
arbitrator acted outside the scope of his authority by determining
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that the Guaranty agreement was void for failure of consideration
as a result of MTC's material breach of the NOA.10
The district court concluded that "the arbitrator
exceeded his powers under the FAA by prospectively voiding the
Guaranty while re-writing the terms of the NOA." Axia NetMedia
Corp. v. Mass. Tech. Park Corp., 381 F. Supp. 3d 128, 138 (D. Mass.
2019). The court reasoned, first, that "there is evidence that
the parties never intended to bestow this power upon the
arbitrator" because arbitrators do not have the power to rewrite
contracts or stray from the scope of the parties' agreement. See
id. Second, the court rejected the arbitrator's finding that "the
record was simply devoid of specific persuasive evidence" that MTC
would have insisted upon a Guaranty in any independent
renegotiation of the NOA. Id. The court observed that section
12.14 of the NOA, section 2.3 of the Guaranty, and testimony and
circumstantial evidence presented to the arbitrator demonstrate
the necessity of the Guaranty. Id. at 138-39.
10
This decision of MTC to accept in the bankruptcy court
proceedings the arbitrator's resolution of its dispute with KCST
-- the reformation of the NOA -- while refusing to accept his
resolution of the dispute with Axia -- invalidating the Guaranty
because of the material breach of the NOA -- arguably could have
precluded MTC from challenging that reformation decision here in
the guise of challenging only the decision on the Guaranty.
Indeed, Axia made preclusion arguments before the district court,
which rejected them, and renews those arguments here. Without
making any judgments on these arguments, we choose to reject the
district court's decision on a different basis.
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The district court's reasoning is incompatible in
several respects with the limited role of the courts in reviewing
arbitration awards. The question of the Guaranty's validity was
squarely before the arbitrator as a result of MTC's strategic
choices. The dispute resolution provision of the Guaranty gave
MTC the power to seek arbitration of disputes with Axia "at [its]
sole election." MTC elected to pursue arbitration and, as the
arbitrator noted in the PFA, sought "a declaration in th[e
arbitration] proceeding that '[t]he Guaranty and NOA . . . are
valid and enforceable contracts not subject to recession [sic] nor
rendered null and void.'" In addition, after the PFA was issued,
MTC sought further clarification from the arbitrator as to the
validity of the Guaranty. MTC itself submitted the issue to the
arbitrator and the arbitrator had the power to reach it. See
DiRussa v. Dean Witter Reynolds, Inc., 121 F.3d 818, 824 (2d Cir.
1997) ("Our inquiry under § 10(a)(4) . . . focuses on whether the
arbitrator[] had the power, based on the parties' submissions or
the arbitration agreement, to reach a certain issue, not whether
the arbitrator[] correctly decided that issue." (emphasis added)).
Moreover, it is clear from the text of the arbitral award
that the arbitrator did not stray outside the scope of the parties'
agreement with his decision. See First State Ins. Co., 781 F.3d
at 11 ("In ascertaining whether [the] arbitrator[] arguably
interpreted the underlying contract, an inquiring court must look
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. . . to the text of the arbitral award."). The consideration
underlying the Guaranty was the NOA, and specifically MTC's promise
to build the network as described in the NOA. The arbitrator
determined that MTC's failure to fulfill that promise constituted
a material breach of the NOA, and that the material breach of the
NOA constituted a failure of consideration for the Guaranty.
Applying Massachusetts law, the arbitrator concluded that the
failure of consideration rendered the Guaranty void.11 Thus, with
its explicit reasoning, the arbitrator's decision "draw[s] its
essence" from the contracts underlying the arbitration
proceeding,12 Misco, 484 U.S. at 38, and the arbitrator acted within
the scope of his authority in rendering it.
In an effort to support its disapproval of the
arbitrator's decision on the Guaranty, the district court observed
that section 2.3 of the Guaranty supports MTC's view that the
11 MTC argues that the arbitration award should be set aside
because the arbitrator's application of Massachusetts law was "not
even . . . colorable." Even if that were true, our limited review
of the arbitrator's decision means that we must leave the award in
place despite legal errors committed by the arbitrator, "[e]ven
where such error is painfully clear." Dialysis Access Ctr., 932
F.3d at 9 (alteration in original) (quoting Advest, 914 F.2d at
8).
12 The arbitrator's decision necessarily "draws its essence"
from both the NOA and the Guaranty. The two contracts are
connected because the NOA served as consideration for the Guaranty.
Thus, the arbitrator's resolution of MTC and KCST's competing
breach of contract claims based on the NOA affected his resolution
of MTC and Axia's dispute over the validity of the Guaranty.
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Guaranty must remain in place as long as the NOA is operative. We
disagree. As we described above, section 2.3 provides that the
Guaranty will remain valid regardless of any breaches of the NOA
by the "Network Operator," i.e., KCST. The provision is silent,
however, as to the effect (if any) of a material breach of the NOA
by MTC on the validity of the Guaranty. Thus, section 2.3 does
not constrain the arbitrator's power to determine the effect of
such a breach.13 And no other provision of the Guaranty limits the
arbitrator's power to decide issues submitted to him by the
parties, including the validity of the Guaranty itself.
Nor does the Guaranty limit the arbitrator's power to
award appropriate remedies. The "Defaults and Remedies" provision
of the Guaranty provides:
No remedy herein conferred or reserved is
intended to be exclusive of any other
available remedy or remedies, if any, but each
and every such remedy shall be cumulative and
shall be in addition to every other remedy
given under this Agreement or now or hereafter
existing at law or in equity or by statute.
The Guaranty also incorporates by reference the dispute resolution
and arbitration provisions of the NOA, which likewise do not limit
the arbitrator's choice of remedy. Thus, the decision to void the
13 The district court also highlighted section 12.14 of the
NOA, which requires a Guaranty from Axia if the NOA is to take
effect. This provision does support an argument about the
necessity of the Guaranty, but, as we explain below, we are not in
a position to question the arbitrator's finding of fact on this
score.
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Guaranty prospectively as a choice of remedy was within the
authority of the arbitrator. Indeed, "where it is contemplated
that the arbitrator will determine remedies for contract
violations that he finds, courts have no authority to disagree
with his honest judgment in that respect." Misco, 484 U.S. at 38.
The district court's disagreement with the arbitrator's
factual finding as to the necessity of the Guaranty was not an
appropriate basis for vacating the award. Federal courts "do not
sit . . . to hear claims of factual or legal error by an arbitrator
or to consider the merits of the award." Asociación de Empleados
del Estado Libre Asociado de P.R. v. Local 1850, Unión
Internacional de Trabajadores de la Industria de Automóviles,
Aeroespacio e Implementos Agrícolas, 559 F.3d 44, 47 (1st Cir.
2009) (quoting Challenger Caribbean Corp. v. Union General de
Trabajadores de P.R., 903 F.2d 857, 860 (1st Cir. 1990)). Thus,
even if the arbitrator committed serious factual error by
concluding that the record lacked "specific persuasive evidence"
that MTC would insist upon a Guaranty as part of a renegotiation
of the NOA, that would not "justify setting aside the arbitral
decision." Cytyc Corp., 439 F.3d at 32.
In short, this is not a case where the arbitrator
"ignore[d] the contract and simply dispense[d] 'his own brand of
industrial justice.'" Kraft Foods, Inc. v. Local 1295, Office and
Prof'l Emps. Int'l Union, 203 F.3d 98, 100 (1st Cir. 2000) (quoting
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United Steelworkers of Am. v. Enter. Wheel & Car Corp., 363 U.S.
593, 597 (1960)). To the contrary, the arbitration award is
grounded in the record and the parties' agreement. The arbitrator
did not exceed the scope of his powers under section 10(a)(4) of
the FAA. Accordingly, we reverse the district court's ruling and
remand the case with instructions to enter a judgment confirming
the arbitration award.
So ordered.
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