Legal Research AI

McCarthy v. Azure

Court: Court of Appeals for the First Circuit
Date filed: 1994-04-28
Citations: 22 F.3d 351
Copy Citations
169 Citing Cases
Combined Opinion
                  UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                      FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT

                                             

No. 93-1842

                       WALTON W. McCARTHY,

                       Plaintiff, Appellee,

                                v.

                        LEO L. AZURE, JR.,

                      Defendant, Appellant.

                                             

           APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

                FOR THE DISTRICT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE

         [Hon. Shane Devine, Senior U.S. District Judge]
                                                       

                                             

                              Before

              Selya, Cyr and Boudin, Circuit Judges.
                                                   

                                             

     David R.  Goodnight, with whom  Patrick D. McVey,  Howard A.
                                                                 
Coleman, Riddell,  Williams,  Bullitt  &  Walkinshaw,  D.  Donald
                                                                 
Dufresne,  and  Devine,  Millimet &  Branch  were  on brief,  for
                                           
appellant.
     Charles A. Szypszak, with whom Richard B. Couser and Orr and
                                                                 
Reno, P.A. were on brief, for appellee.
          

                                             

                          April 28, 1994

                                             

          SELYA, Circuit Judge.   This appeal presents intriguing
          SELYA, Circuit Judge.
                              

questions anent  the rights  of a  corporate officer  who, having

signed  an  agreement containing  an  arbitration  clause in  his

official capacity,  seeks to compel arbitration  of claims lodged

against  him as  an individual.   The  district court  refused to

order arbitration under these circumstances.  We affirm.

I.  BACKGROUND

          For purposes  of this  appeal, the facts  can be  taken

essentially  as alleged.  In 1987,  plaintiff-appellee Walton  W.

McCarthy, a renowned inventor of  underground shelter technology,

incorporated  T.H.E.T.A.  Technologies,  Inc.  (Theta  I), a  New

Hampshire   corporation,  for   the   purpose  of   manufacturing

underground storage tanks and  personal shelters.  McCarthy owned

fifty  percent  of  the  corporation's stock  and  served  as its

principal operating  officer.   Three passive investors  held the

remaining shares.

          In the fall  of 1989, McCarthy met  defendant-appellant

Leo  L.  Azure,  Jr.,  a  member  of  a  Montana-based  religious

organization, Church Universal & Triumphant (C.U.T.).  Azure soon

entered into negotiations for  the acquisition of both McCarthy's

company  and  patented technology.    Azure  formed a  Washington

corporation, Theta Corporation  (Theta II), to serve as a vehicle

for the planned purchase.

          On December  29, 1989,  McCarthy, Theta II,  and others

                                2

entered into a contract (the Purchase Agreement).1  Azure  signed

the Purchase Agreement on behalf of Theta II, but he did not sign

it  in  his  personal capacity.    Leaving  to  one side  special

arrangements  with  various creditors,  see  supra  note 1,  this
                                                  

contract  delineated a  two-phase transaction:   McCarthy  was to

sell his equity interest,  including the patents, to the  passive

investors,  and transfer  certain  residual rights  to Theta  II;

then, Theta  II was to buy  all the outstanding stock  of Theta I

for cash, payable over a period of no more than three years.  The

Purchase  Agreement expressly  provided that  "[d]isputes arising

under this Agreement  shall be  resolved by arbitration.  . .  ."

Though  not  mentioned in  the  Purchase  Agreement, the  parties

apparently  understood  that  Theta  II, in  addition  to  paying

McCarthy  a prescribed sum  of money for  the transferred rights,

would offer him employment under a separate long-term contract.

          On January 11, 1990,  McCarthy and Theta II  executed a

second agreement (the  Confidentiality Agreement).  Azure  signed

the  Confidentiality Agreement,  as  he had  signed the  Purchase

Agreement, on  behalf of  Theta  II, but  not otherwise;  indeed,

neither document contained a line for Azure's personal signature.

Pursuant to the Confidentiality  Agreement, McCarthy promised  to

keep all past and future information pertaining to the patents in

the bosom of the  lodge, and to  take certain related actions  on

                    

     1Apart  from  McCarthy and  Theta II,  other parties  to the
Purchase Agreement included the passive investors and three major
creditors of Theta I.  For present purposes, nothing turns on the
involvement of the other parties.

                                3

behalf  of Theta  II.   This agreement  included a  somewhat more

expansive   arbitration   clause,   which   stated   that  "[a]ny

controversy  or  claim  arising  out  of  or  relating   to  this

Agreement, or breach hereof, shall be settled by arbitration. . .

."   At a closing held the next  day, Theta II delivered a letter

(the Employment Letter) engaging McCarthy as its president, chief

engineer,  and chief  executive  officer at  a stipulated  annual

salary.  The  Employment Letter also provided for  stock options.

It did not include an arbitration clause.

          A little over two weeks after the closing, matters took

a turn  for the bizarre  (or, at  least, for the  mystical).   On

January  28, 1990,  Elizabeth  Clare Prophet,  Azure's  spiritual

leader, informed him, on  the advice of a "dead  ascended master"

of C.U.T., that his newly acquired business was incompatible with

his "divine plan" and that he should not devote further energy to

the enterprise.  Azure dutifully directed McCarthy to cashier all

the  employees  of Theta  II,  and  then  proceeded to  terminate

McCarthy's employment.    McCarthy never  obtained any  ownership

interest in  Theta II, notwithstanding the  promises contained in

the Employment Letter.

          Apparently, Azure's  religious convictions took  him so

far, and no further.   He not only continued operating  the Theta

corporations, but also formed a third company, Omega Corporation.

In October of  1990, after  Azure merged Theta  I into Theta  II,

Omega  acquired  the surviving  entity.   The following  July, it

began  selling shares  to  the  public.    For  all  intents  and

                                4

purposes, Omega's business seemed  indistinguishable from that of

Theta I  and  Theta  II;  Omega  styled itself  as  a  leader  in

underground storage and  marketed tanks manufactured pursuant  to

McCarthy's patented technology.

          Unwilling to turn the other cheek, McCarthy sued Azure,

Theta  II, Omega,  C.U.T.,  and  Prophet  in  the  United  States

District  Court for the District of New Hampshire.2  Azure, Theta

II,  and  Omega  filed  a  motion  to  stay  proceedings  pending

arbitration,  contending  that  the serial  agreements  obligated

plaintiff to arbitrate  all claims.   The district court  granted

the motion  with respect to  Theta II,  but denied it  as to  the

remaining  movants.   Azure  appeals the  district court's  order

refusing to stay the action against him.  We have jurisdiction by

virtue of 9 U.S.C.   16(a)(1) (Supp. 1992).

II.  DISCUSSION

          The court below reasoned that the source of appellant's

purported right to compel  arbitration must be found, if  at all,

in the  Purchase Agreement.3   It then denied  appellant's motion

                    

     2The complaint asserted claims  against Azure, Theta II, and
Omega for,  inter alia,  breach of contract,  wrongful discharge,
                      
fraud,  negligent  misrepresentation,  intentional infliction  of
emotional  distress, unfair  trade practices,  federal  and state
securities violations, and racketeering.  It also asserted claims
against Azure, C.U.T., and Prophet for tortious interference with
contractual  relationships.   Jurisdiction  was premised  on  the
existence of both federal questions, 28 U.S.C.   1331 (1988), and
diversity of citizenship, 28 U.S.C.   1332(a)(1) (1988).

     3Because the Confidentiality Agreement granted  legal rights
only to Theta II and not to McCarthy, we agree  with the district
court's  conclusion  that  it  could  not  furnish  a  basis  for
precluding  access  to a  judicial  forum  in  respect to  claims
asserted by McCarthy against Azure.  For that reason, and for the

                                5

to stay  on the ground that  he was not  a party to  the Purchase

Agreement and, therefore, could  not compel arbitration of claims

lodged  against  him  personally,  whether or  not  those  claims

related to  that agreement.   Azure's  appeal tests this  thesis.

Because the appeal presents a  question of law, appellate  review

is plenary.  See United States v. Gifford,     F.3d    ,     (1st
                                         

Cir. 1994) [No. 93-1645, slip  op. at 20]; Liberty Mut.  Ins. Co.
                                                                 

v. Commercial Union Ins. Co., 978 F.2d 750, 757 (1st Cir. 1992).
                            

                     A.  General Principles.
                                           

          We  start with  bedrock:  "arbitration  is a  matter of

contract  and a party cannot be required to submit to arbitration

any  dispute  which he  has  not  agreed  so to  submit."    AT&T
                                                                 

Technologies, Inc.  v. Communications Workers, 475  U.S. 643, 648
                                             

(1986), quoting United Steelworkers v. Warrior & Gulf Navig. Co.,
                                                                

363 U.S. 574, 582 (1960).  Thus, a party seeking to substitute an

arbitral forum for a judicial forum must show, at a bare minimum,

that the protagonists have agreed to arbitrate some claims.
                                                   

          This  imperative is  in  no way  inconsistent with  the

acknowledged  "federal policy  favoring  arbitration."   Moses H.
                                                                 

Cone  Memorial Hosp.  v. Mercury  Constr. Corp.,  460 U.S.  1, 24
                                               

(1983); see also Shearson/American  Express, Inc. v. McMahon, 482
                                                            

U.S. 220, 226  (1987).  The  federal policy  presumes proof of  a

preexisting agreement  to arbitrate disputes arising  between the

protagonists.    Once  that agreement  has  been  proven  and the

                    

added reason that appellant, individually, was not a signatory to
the Confidentiality  Agreement, our analysis  revolves around the
Purchase Agreement.

                                6

protagonists identified, cases such  as Cone and McMahon instruct
                                                        

courts   to  use   a  particular   hermeneutical  principle   for

interpreting the  breadth  of  the  agreement; that  is,  if  the

contract  language chosen  by the  parties is  unclear as  to the

nature  of the claims to which an agreement to arbitrate extends,

a "healthy  regard" for  the federal policy  favoring arbitration

requires that "any doubts  concerning the scope of  an arbitrable

issue be resolved  in favor of arbitration."  Moses  H. Cone, 460
                                                            

U.S. at  24-25.  The federal policy,  however, does not extend to

situations in which the  identity of the parties who  have agreed

to  arbitrate is unclear.  See Painewebber, Inc. v. Hartmann, 921
                                                            

F.2d 507,  511 (3d  Cir. 1990) (holding  that "[a]s  a matter  of

contract, no party can  be forced to arbitrate unless  that party

has entered into an agreement  to do so").  Thus, requiring  that

arbitration rest on a  consensual foundation is wholly consistent

with federal policy.

          The  requirement  also makes  perfect  sense.   Subject

matter jurisdiction over  an action  or series of  claims can  be

conceptualized as  conferring a personal right on  the parties to

have  that action,  or those  claims, adjudicated  in a  judicial

forum.  See,  e.g., Pacemaker  Diag. Clinic of  America, Inc.  v.
                                                             

Instromedix,  Inc., 725 F.2d 537,  541 (9th Cir.  1984) (en banc)
                  

(recognizing  that the  "federal litigant  has a  personal right,

subject to  exceptions in  certain classes  of  cases, to  demand

Article III adjudication of a civil suit"); accord Glidden Co. v.
                                                              

Zdanok,  370 U.S.  530,  536 (1962).    Though a  person  may, by
      

                                7

contract, waive his or her right to adjudication, see 9 U.S.C.   
                                                     

2, there  can  be  no  waiver  in the  absence  of  an  agreement

signifying an assent.

                      B.  Framing the Issue.
                                           

          Viewed against  this backdrop, the  question before  us

reduces to a matter  of contract interpretation:  Did  plaintiff,

in executing the Purchase  Agreement, agree to arbitrate disputes

he  might have  with  Azure  personally concerning  Theta-related
                                       

transactions?4  This question,  which involves the interpretation

of an  arbitration provision touching upon  matters of interstate

commerce,  must  be  resolved  according to  federal  law.    See
                                                                 

McGregor v. Industrial Excess Landfill, Inc., 856 F.2d 39, 46 n.2
                                            

(6th Cir.  1988); Letizia  v. Prudential Bache  Securities, Inc.,
                                                                

802 F.2d  1185, 1187 (9th Cir. 1986); see also  9 U.S.C.   2.  As
                                              

under  general principles  of contract  law, the final  answer to

such a question is  ordinarily a function of the  parties' intent

as expressed in the language of the contract documents.   See NRM
                                                                 

Corp.  v.  Hercules, Inc.,  758 F.2d  676,  681 (D.C.  Cir. 1985)
                         

(explaining  that contract  interpretation,  under  federal  law,

"dovetails  precisely with  general principles of  contract law,"

                    

     4Although plaintiff originally sued  Azure in two capacities
(individual  and  official),  plaintiff  agreed,  following  oral
argument in this court, to abandon his "official capacity" claims
against Azure.   Given this agreement,  plaintiff henceforth will
be disabled from pursuing  any such claims.  See United States v.
                                                              
Levasseur, 846 F.2d 786,  792-93 (1st Cir.) (explicating doctrine
         
of judicial estoppel), cert. denied, 488  U.S. 89 (1988); Patriot
                                                                 
Cinemas  Inc. v. General Cinema, Corp., 834 F.2d 208, 211-15 (1st
                                      
Cir. 1987) (similar).  Consequently, we deal in this opinion only
with plaintiff's "individual capacity" claims against Azure.

                                8

such  that,  under  both,  "the  judicial  task  in  construing a

contract  is to  give  effect to  the  mutual intentions  of  the

parties"); see also Local 1199  v. Brooks Drug Co., 956 F.2d  22,
                                                  

25  (2d  Cir. 1992)  (determining  the  parties'  intent  is  the

essential inquiry);  S.A. Mineracao da  Trinidade-Samitri v. Utah
                                                                 

Int'l, Inc., 745 F.2d 190, 193 (2d Cir. 1984) (similar).
           

          This does not  mean that state  law is an  irrelevancy.

In general, federal courts developing federal common law are free

to borrow from state  law, unless there is either  a demonstrated

need  for a  uniform  national  rule  or a  significant  conflict

between  state law  and some  discernible federal  policy.5   See
                                                                 

United States  v.  Kimbell  Foods,  Inc., 440  U.S.  715,  728-30
                                        

(1979).

                    

     5When state law is likely to prove an appropriate model, but
different  states have an interest in the claim, it is reasonable
for  a federal court to apply the choice-of-law principles of the
forum in order to  ascertain what state's substantive  law should
be consulted.  Cf.,  e.g., Klaxon Co. v. Stentor Elec.  Mfg. Co.,
                                                                
313  U.S.  487,  496-97  (1941); Crellin  Technologies,  Inc.  v.
                                                             
Equipmentlease  Corp.,     F.3d    ,     (1st Cir. 1994) [No. 93-
                     
1615,  slip op.  at 7-8].   Here,  our task  is simplified:   the
Purchase Agreement  contains a provision directing  the reader to
New Hampshire law.   Because a reasonable choice-of-law provision
in  a contract  generally  should be  respected, see  Restatement
                                                    
(Second)  of  the  Conflict  of  Laws     187  (1971);  see  also
                                                                 
Ferrofluidics Corp. v. Advanced Vacuum Components, Inc., 968 F.2d
                                                       
1463, 1467 (1st Cir.  1992) (applying New Hampshire choice-of-law
principles);  Allied Adjustment  Serv. v.  Heney, 484  A.2d 1189,
                                                
1190-91  (N.H. 1948) (stating that  the parties' selection of the
law of a particular jurisdiction will be honored so  long as "the
contract    bears   any   significant    relationship   to   that
jurisdiction"), we  will from time to time  consult New Hampshire
law for guidance.   Where New Hampshire law is recondite, we will
turn to the types of materials  that we believe the New Hampshire
Supreme Court would look to  in formulating new law.  See  Moores
                                                                 
v. Greenberg,  834 F.2d 1105,  1107 (1st  Cir. 1987)  (describing
            
materials);  see also Kathios  v. General Motors  Corp., 862 F.2d
                                                       
944, 949 (1st Cir. 1988).

                                9

          In  this case,  there is no  overt indication  that the

parties  intended  to  commit  claims against  appellant,  as  an
                                                                 

individual, to  an arbitral forum.   After all,  appellant signed
          

the Purchase Agreement solely  in his capacity as an  agent for a

disclosed principal    that is, as  "Chairman" of Theta II    and

not  in  his  personal   capacity;  and  it  is  settled   beyond

peradventure that a person signing a contract only in a corporate

capacity, and unambiguously  indicating that fact on the  face of

the  contract documents, does not  thereby become a  party to the

agreement.  See, e.g., New York Ass'n for Retarded Children, Inc.
                                                                 

v.  Keator,  606 N.Y.S.2d  784,  785  (App. Div.  1993)  (finding
          

corporation,  but   not  individual,  bound   when  president  of

corporation  signed  contract  only  on  a  line  indicating  his

official capacity); Central Ill.  Pub. Serv. Corp. v. Molinarolo,
                                                                

585  N.E.2d 199, 203 (Ill.  App. Ct. 1992)  (holding company, but

not  individual,  liable "[w]hen  an agent  signs a  document and

indicates next to  his signature  his corporation  affiliation");

Salzman Sign  Co. v. Back, 176 N.E.2d 74, 76 (N.Y. 1961) (finding
                         

no individual liability where  defendant signed only as president

of corporation and  did not otherwise explicitly  indicate in the

contract  an intent to be bound personally); cf. Dulik v. Amante,
                                                                

570 N.Y.S.2d 590, 591 (App. Div. 1991)  (finding that a party, by

signing  the   agreement  twice,   intended  to  bind   both  his

corporation and himself).

          To  be sure,  the law  recognizes certain  contract and

agency  principles under  which  nonsignatories sometimes  can be

                                10

obligated by,  or benefit from, agreements signed  by others, and

these principles can apply to arbitration provisions.  See, e.g.,
                                                                

In re  Oil Spill by Amoco  Cadiz, 659 F.2d 789,  795-96 (7th Cir.
                                

1981); Fisser  v. International  Bank, 282  F.2d 231, 233-34  (2d
                                     

Cir. 1960) (collecting cases).  Thus, appellant's failure to sign

the  Purchase Agreement  individually does  not in and  of itself

settle the somewhat different  question of whether he  can invoke

the  arbitration  clause  contained  therein.   Seizing  on  this

possibility,  appellant charts  three routes  by which  he, as  a

nonsignatory,  might achieve  the sanctuary he  desires.   In the

succeeding sections,  we trace  these routes  and explain  why we

find them to be blind alleys.

                  C.  Appellant's Agency Theory.
                                               

          Appellant's most heralded claim is that, as a disclosed

agent  of Theta  II, he  is entitled  to enforce  the arbitration

provision  included   in  his  principal's  agreement   with  the

plaintiff.   He buttresses  this claim by  citation to  authority

from  several other courts of  appeals.  See  Pritzker v. Merrill
                                                                 

Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, 7  F.3d 1110, 1121 (3d Cir. 1993);
                             

Roby  v. Corporation of Lloyd's,  996 F.2d 1353,  1360 (2d Cir.),
                               

cert. denied, 114  S. Ct. 385 (1993); Arnold v. Arnold Corp., 920
                                                            

F.2d  1269, 1282 (6th Cir. 1990); Letizia,  802 F.2d at 1188.  We
                                         

think appellant's reading of these  cases is overly sanguine  and

that his claim is insupportable for several reasons.

          1.  Comparing   Apples to Oranges.  To  put appellant's
          1.  Comparing   Apples to Oranges.
                                           

theorem  into   focus,  we  first  must   clarify  the  animating

                                11

principles  that  drive the  cases  on which  the  theorem rests.

Doing  so persuades  us  that appellant  is  comparing apples  to

oranges.

          To be  sure, there is a  superficial similarity between

the  precedents on which  appellant relies  and the  situation at

hand.    In each  of  the  four cited  cases,  the  court gave  a

nonsignatory the benefit of  an arbitration clause signed  by the

corporate entity for which he  or she worked.  In three  of these

cases, however, the defendant was sued qua employee and the court
                                          

specifically found that, as  a matter of contract interpretation,

the   parties  intended  the   arbitration  provision   to  cover

employees.    See Roby,  996 F.2d  at  1360 (observing  that "the
                      

parties fully intended  to protect the  individual Chairs to  the

extent they are charged  with misconduct within the scope  of the

agreements");  Arnold, 920  F.2d  at 1282  (explaining that  "the
                     

language of the arbitration agreement indicates that the parties'

basic  intent was  to  provide a  single  arbitral forum  to  all

disputes  arising under the  stock purchase agreement"); Letizia,
                                                                

802 F.2d at 1188 (determining that the company "clearly indicated

its  intention  to  protect  its   employees"  by  means  of  the

arbitration  provision).  The fourth case  also rested largely on

contract  language.   See Pritzker,  7 F.3d  at 1114  (noting the
                                  

breadth of language used in formulating the arbitration clause).

          Here, however,  as opposed  to the cases  marshalled by

appellant, the arbitration clause fails to indicate the corporate

signatory's  intention to protect  employees through arbitration,

                                12

see  Letizia,  802  F.2d at  1188,  and the  very  nature  of the
            

Purchase Agreement,  as contrasted  to the  agreements underlying

the  other cases,  explains  why, in  this  situation, one  would

naturally expect such protection to be absent.

          For  the  most  part,  the cases  hawked  by  appellant

involve   disputes  growing  out  of  service  contracts  between

individuals and  financial institutions.6   See Pritzker,  7 F.3d
                                                        

at 1114  (involving handling  of cash management  account); Roby,
                                                                

996 F.2d at 1357 (involving insurance underwriting); Letizia, 802
                                                            

F.2d  at 1186  (involving handling of  securities account).   The

claims  diverted to  arbitration in  those cases    and  in other

cases that appellant  could have,  but did not,  rely upon,  see,
                                                                

e.g.,  Lee v. Chica, 983 F.2d 883,  887 (8th Cir. 1993); Scher v.
                                                              

Bear Stearns & Co., 723 F. Supp. 211, 216 (S.D.N.Y. 1989)   were,
                  

without  exception, in  the nature  of professional  malpractice.

Thus,  each  related  directly  to  the essence  of  the  service

contract that  the consumer-plaintiff had signed.7   The Purchase

Agreement is at a considerable  remove; it is primarily concerned

                    

     6The solitary exception  is Arnold.   Yet, as  we point  out
                                       
subsequently,  see infra note 10, that case is distinguishable on
                        
other  grounds  and,  in  all  events,  does  not  possess  great
persuasive force.

     7This is  not to  suggest  that similarity  of claims  alone
suffices to clear  the decks  for arbitration.   As we have  made
pellucid,  see supra p. 7, the basic prerequisite is the parties'
                    
agreement  to arbitrate, or, put another way, the existence of an
actual waiver of the right to litigate.  But similarity of claims
sometimes may help to clarify what the parties intended when they
included an arbitration provision in an instrument.

                                13

with  a transfer  of assets.8   The  distinction is  an important

one.   A person  who enters into  a service contract  with a firm

contemplates an ongoing relationship in which the firm's promises

only  can  be fulfilled  by  future  (unspecified)  acts  of  its

employees  or agents stretching well into an uncertain future.  A

person who contracts to transfer assets to a company faces a much

different  prospect:    a   one-shot  transaction  in  which  the

purchaser's  obligations  are  specified  and  are,  essentially,

performed in full  at the closing, or soon thereafter.   So it is

here.   And  because  the  Purchase  Agreement cannot  easily  be

construed to refer to the operations of, or services rendered by,

Theta II,  that company's employees cannot  plausibly be included

by  implication within the ambit  of either the  agreement or its

arbitration clause.9

          2.  The Scope of the Arbitration Clause.  Close textual
          2.  The Scope of the Arbitration Clause.
                                                 

analysis supports  the conclusion  that the  Purchase Agreement's

arbitration  clause should be read more narrowly than the clauses

in the cases upon which appellant relies.  The Purchase Agreement

provides  that disputes  "arising  under" the  agreement will  be

subject  to  arbitration.   This  language  is considerably  more

                    

     8While one  section of the Purchase  Agreement describes the
sellers'  retention of a right to purchase products from Theta II
at preferential  prices and to  distribute those products  in New
England, appellant has not argued  that any of McCarthy's  claims
implicate this distribution provision.

     9Although we do  not decide the point, we note  that even an
implied reference likely  would not  suffice as  a predicate  for
enforced  arbitration.    See  Salzman  Sign,  176  N.E.2d at  76
                                            
(requiring "direct and  explicit evidence of actual intent"  as a
prerequisite to finding an obligation to arbitrate).

                                14

confining  than  that  employed   in  other  contracts  to  which

appellant alludes.10  See  Pritzker, 7 F.3d at 1114  (agreeing to
                                   

arbitrate  "all  controversies   which  may  arise  between   us,

including but  not limited to .  . . this or  any other agreement

between us, whether entered into prior, or subsequent to the date

hereof");  Roby, 996  F.2d  at 1361  (agreeing  to arbitrate  any
               

"dispute,  difference,  question  or   claim  relating  to"   the
                                                          

agreements for  "all purposes  of and in  connection with"  them)
                                                         

(emphasis in  original); Letizia, 802  F.2d at 1186  (agreeing to
                                

arbitrate disputes  "arising out  of or relating  to" plaintiff's

securities account).  

          The  circumscribed nature  of the  Purchase Agreement's

arbitration provision stands out in bold relief when one compares

it  with  the  arbitration   provision  in  the   Confidentiality

Agreement.    Whereas  the  former directs  arbitration  only  of

"[d]isputes arising under  [the agreement]" (emphasis  supplied),
                         

the  latter directs  arbitration of  "[a]ny controversy  or claim
                                           

arising  out  of  or   relating  to  [the  agreement]"  (emphasis
                                   

supplied).  Although the Purchase Agreement's arbitration  clause

might arguably be read more broadly if it were the only provision

                    

     10Once  again, the sole exception is Arnold, a case in which
                                                
the arbitration  clause is  virtually identical to  the provision
contained in the  Purchase Agreement.   See Arnold,  920 F.2d  at
                                                  
1271.   But in  Arnold, unlike  in this case,  the stated  clause
                      
comprised the only arbitration provision at issue, thus making it
much easier  to read the language  broadly.  See infra  pp. 15-16
                                                      
(discussing  interpretive  significance of  dual  agreements) and
cases cited.   At any rate, to the extent that Arnold can be read
                                                     
to support  a result at odds with the result that we reach today,
we respectfully decline to follow it.

                                15

extant, see,  e.g., Arnold,  920  F.2d at  1271; Martin  Marietta
                                                                 

Alum., Inc. v. General  Elec. Co., 586 F.2d 143, 145, 147-48 (9th
                                 

Cir. 1978),  the use of  significantly different language  in two

clauses,   sculpted  by   the  same   parties  during   the  same

negotiations as  part of  the same overall  transaction, strongly

suggests that the signatories intended the arbitration provisions

to be  of different scope.  See Appalachian Ins. Co. v. McDonnell
                                                                 

Douglas Corp., 262 Cal.  Rptr. 716, 725 (Ct. App.  1989) (holding
             

that "[t]o ignore  the differences  in language used  in the  two

agreements  would  violate   a  fundamental   rule  of   contract

interpretation,  that is, the words of a contract, if clear, must

govern  its interpretation");  see  also Triple-A  Baseball  Club
                                                                 

Assoc. v. Northeastern  Baseball, Inc., 832 F.2d 214, 221-22 (1st
                                      

Cir. 1987) (adopting narrow construction where a contract did not

include relatively  broad language found in  the parties' earlier

drafts), cert. denied, 485 U.S. 935 (1988); C & M Realty Trust v.
                                                              

Wiedenkeller, 578  A.2d 354,  357 (N.H. 1990)  (declaring that  a
            

court's role  is to  interpret contracts  in accordance  with the

parties' intent discernible at the time of agreement, as measured

by objective criteria).

          The intent  to limit arbitral rights  to signatories is

also made manifest by  the inclusion of an integration  clause in

the Purchase Agreement.  The  integration clause states that  the

written  agreement  "represents the  entire understanding  of the

parties" and "supersedes  all other understandings,  arrangements

and negotiations."  We, and other courts, routinely have declined

                                16

to  read  unwritten  terms  into  agreements  containing  similar

declarations.  See, e.g., Bidlack v. Wheelabrator Corp., 993 F.2d
                                                       

603,  608 (7th Cir.) (explaining that an integration clause is an

"indication  of  the  parties'  desire to  limit  a  free-ranging

judicial discretion to interpolate  terms"), cert. denied, 114 S.
                                                         

Ct.  291 (1993); Northern Heel  Corp. v. Compo  Indus., Inc., 851
                                                            

F.2d 456, 466  (1st Cir.  1988) (similar).   Applying that  time-

honored  principle  here,   it  would  be  wrong  to   widen  the

arbitration  clause  to  include   the  signatories'  agents  and

employees.

          In  short, the  Purchase Agreement  itself is  the best

indicator of the parties' intent.  We must honor that intent   an

intent which, for  our purposes, translates  into a direction  to

read the arbitration clause set  forth in the Purchase  Agreement

straightforwardly  rather than  expansively.   Operating in  this

mode, it is difficult to see how a lawsuit between the seller and

a nonsignatory who is not a successor in interest  to the buyer's

rights can be  said to "aris[e] under"  the Purchase Agreement.11

Thus, appellant's effort to  compel plaintiff to arbitrate cannot

succeed, for, "as a matter of contract, no party can be forced to

arbitrate unless that party  has entered an agreement to  do so."

Painewebber, 921 F.2d at 511.
           

          3.   The Individual  Capacity/Official Capacity Schism.
                                                                

                    

     11By  its terms,  the Purchase  Agreement "shall  be binding
upon  and inure to the  benefit of the  [parties'] successors and
assigns. .  . ."    There is  no comparable  provision anent  the
parties' agents, servants,  or employees.  We think  the omission
is telling.

                                17

For present purposes, we regard the distinction between Azure, in

his personal capacity, and Azure, in his representative capacity,

as possessing decretory  significance.12  Not coincidentally,  in

each  of  the  four  cases  relied  on  by  appellant  the  court

confronted  a situation in  which the  claim asserted  related to

actions undertaken  by a corporate  representative in his  or her

official, rather than personal, capacity; and  each of the courts

based its  holding on this circumstance.   See Roby, 996  F.2d at
                                                   

1360  (concluding that  the  "complaints  against the  individual

Chairs  are completely  dependent on  the complaints  against the

[principals]  .  . .  [and] arise[]  out  of the  same misconduct

charged  against the  [principals]");  Arnold, 920  F.2d at  1282
                                             

(similar);  see also  Pritzker, 7  F.3d at  1114  (reciting facts
                              

demonstrating  that  the nonsignatory  was  being  sued for  acts

within the  scope  of  her role  as  an agent  of  the  signatory

corporation); Letizia, 802  F.2d at  1188 (finding  that all  the
                     

individual defendants' allegedly  wrongful acts related to  their

employment responsibilities).

          Here,  in  contradistinction, plaintiff  asserts claims

against  Azure  in  his  personal,  rather  than  his  corporate,

capacity.  See  supra note 4.  This is  no mere semantic quibble.
                     

An  official  capacity suit  is,  in  essence,  "another  way  of

pleading an action against  an entity of  which an officer is  an

                    

     12We  use  the  terms  "individual  capacity" and  "personal
capacity"  interchangeably,  and  we   use  the  terms  "official
capacity," "representative capacity," and "corporate capacity" in
the same manner.

                                18

agent."   Kentucky v. Graham, 473 U.S. 159, 165 (1985) (citations
                            

omitted).  Consequently, such  a suit "is, in all  respects other

than  name, to be treated as a suit  against the entity."  Id. at
                                                             

166.  By  contrast, personal capacity  suits proceed against  the

individual, not against the entity  with which the individual  is

affiliated.

          In the corporate context, personal capacity actions can

take  several  forms, including  by  way  of illustration  claims

alleging  ultra vires  conduct,  see, e.g.,  Expomotion, Ltd.  v.
                                                             

Heidepriem-Santandrea  Inc.,  421  N.Y.S.2d  520, 521  (Civ.  Ct.
                           

1979); tort suits in  which a corporate officer or  agent, though

operating within  the scope of  corporate authorization, "through

his or  her own fault  injures another to whom  he or she  owes a

personal duty,"  3A William  M. Fletcher, Fletcher  Cyclopedia of
                                                                 

the  Law of  Private Corporations    1135, at  66-67 (1986  ed. &
                                 

Supp.  1992);13  and,  of  more  immediate  applicability,  suits

alleging that a  person affiliated with a corporation  created or

manipulated  it as  part of  a larger  (fraudulent) scheme,  see,
                                                                

e.g., Dietel v.  Day, 492 P.2d 455, 457-58 (Ariz.  Ct. App. 1972)
                    

(explaining that  "[i]f a corporation  was formed or  is employed

for fraudulent purposes," personal liability may be imposed).

          It is,  therefore, apparent that drawing  a distinction

between individual capacity and representative capacity claims is

                    

     13In  this  type  of situation,  the  "officer  or agent  is
personally  liable  to  the  injured third  party  regardless  of
whether  the act resulting in  injury is committed  by or for the
corporation."  3A Fletcher, supra,   1135, at 67.
                                 

                                19

to  draw   a  distinction   that  portends  a   meaningful  legal

difference.   Indeed, the distinction  between claims aimed  at a

defendant in his individual as opposed to representative capacity

can be found across the law.  See, e.g., Stafford  v. Briggs, 444
                                                            

U.S.  527,  544  (1980)  (distinguishing  between  individual and

official capacity claims for purposes of venue determination); Ex
                                                                 

Parte  Young, 209  U.S. 123,  159 (1908)  (distinguishing between
            

individual  and official  capacity  acts  for Eleventh  Amendment

purposes); Northeast  Fed. Credit Union  v. Neves, 837  F.2d 531,
                                                 

534  (1st  Cir.  1988)  (distinguishing  between  individual  and

official capacity claims for jurisdictional  purposes); Pelkoffer
                                                                 

v.  Deer, 144  B.R. 282,  285-86 (W.D.  Pa. 1992)  (applying same
        

distinction in bankruptcy  context); see also Graham, 473 U.S. at
                                                    

165  (indicating  differences  between  individual  and  official

capacity claims for  purposes of  suit under 42  U.S.C.    1983);

Estabrook v. Wetmore,  529 A.2d  956, 958  (N.H. 1987)  (applying
                    

doctrine that  acts  of a  corporate  employee performed  in  his

corporate capacity generally  do not form the  basis for personal

jurisdiction over him in his individual capacity).  The  ubiquity

of  the  distinction   is  a  reflection  of   the  reality  that

individuals in  our complex society  frequently act on  behalf of

other parties   a reality that often makes it unfair to credit or

blame the actor, individually, for such acts.  At the same  time,

the  law strikes  a  wise balance  by  refusing automatically  to

saddle   a   principal   with   total   responsibility    for   a

representative's  conduct,  come  what  may,  and  by   declining

                                20

mechanically  to  limit  an   injured  party's  recourse  to  the

principal alone, regardless of the circumstances.

          Appellant suggests that  policy considerations  counsel

against giving  credence to  the distinction between  a corporate

officer's  personal and  representative  capacities.   He asserts

that, by honoring the distinction, we will enable wily plaintiffs

to circumvent arbitration provisions to which they previously had

agreed.  To  prevent such  end runs, appellant  says, agents  and

employees must be allowed  to stand in the principal's  stead for

the  purpose of  invoking arbitration clauses.   See  Arnold, 920
                                                            

F.2d at 1281.   We believe that policy considerations,  placed in

proper perspective, tilt in the opposite direction.

          For one thing, to the extent that appellant's professed

fear of artful pleading  is genuine, the best preventative  is to

act  before, rather than after,  the fact; to  be blunt, judicial
                              

juggling is a far  less effective anodyne than  skillful drafting

of  contract documents in the first instance.  A corporation that

wishes to bring its  agents and employees into the  arbitral tent

can  do so  by  writing  contracts  in general,  and  arbitration

clauses  in particular,  in ways  that will  specify the  desired

result.  See, e.g., Roby, 996 F.2d at 1361.
                        

          For  another  thing,  whether  a  claim  properly  lies

against  a  party in  his personal  capacity  or in  his official

capacity is ultimately a  function of the facts, not  of pleading

techniques alone.  Mechanisms  exist for dealing with groundless,

overstated, or elliptical claims.  See, e.g., Fed. R. Civ. P. 11;
                                            

                                21

28  U.S.C.    1927 (1988)  (granting courts  the power  to charge

"excess costs, expenses, and attorneys' fees reasonably incurred"

due to "unreasonabl[e] and vexatious[]" conduct); Cruz v. Savage,
                                                                

896 F.2d 626, 631-32 (1st Cir. 1990); see also Chambers v. NASCO,
                                                                 

Inc., 111 S. Ct. 2123, 2131-38 (1991) (discussing federal court's
    

inherent   power  to  impose  sanctions  for  abusive  litigation

practices); Foster v. Mydas  Assocs., Inc., 943 F.2d  139, 141-45
                                          

(1st  Cir. 1991)  (discussing  range of  sanctions available  for

prosecution of frivolous claims).

          Third,  we are  doubtful  that the  incentive to  plead

deceitfully exists  at all.   Arbitration is almost  invariably a

creature of contract, and  an agent is not ordinarily  liable for

his principal's breach  of contract.   See, e.g., Mastropieri  v.
                                                             

Solmar Constr. Co., 553  N.Y.S.2d 187, 188 (App. Div.  1990) ("It
                  

is well settled that when an  agent acts on behalf of a disclosed

principal, the agent will  not be personally liable for  a breach

of the contract, unless  there is clear and explicit  evidence of

the  agent's  intention  to  be bound.");  see  also  Restatement
                                                    

(Second) of Agency   328 (1958)  ("An agent, by making a contract

only on behalf of a  competent disclosed . . . principal  whom he

has  power so  to bind,  does not  thereby become liable  for its

nonperformance.").   Thus, manipulating the reality  of events in

order to bring suit against the agent holds only marginal promise

of financial reward.

          Perhaps   most  important  from  a  policy  standpoint,

adopting   appellant's  proposal  would   introduce  a  troubling

                                22

asymmetry into the  law.  It is common  ground that "[s]igning an

arbitration agreement as  agent for a disclosed  principal is not

sufficient  to bind  the  agent to  arbitrate claims  against him

personally."    Flink  v. Carlson,  856  F.2d  44,  46 (8th  Cir.
                                 

1988);14  accord Interocean Ship.  Co. v.  Nat'l Ship.  & Trading
                                                                 

Corp.,  523 F.2d 527, 538 (2d  Cir. 1975), cert. denied, 423 U.S.
                                                       

1054 (1976); see also Restatement  (Second) of Agency   320.   In
                     

appellant's scenario,  then, the  agent, though he  could not  be

compelled to arbitrate, nonetheless  could compel the claimant to

submit to arbitration.   In other words, an agent for a disclosed

principal would  enjoy the  benefits of the  principal's arbitral

agreement, but would shoulder  none of the corresponding burdens.

He would have found a way, contrary to folklore, to  run with the

hare and  hunt with the hounds.  In our view, judges should think

long and hard before endorsing a  rule that will allow a party to

use the  courts to vindicate  his rights  while at the  same time

foreclosing his adversary from comparable access.

          Here, for  instance,  appellant insists  that  the  law

empowers him  to shunt McCarthy's claims into  an arbitral forum,

despite  the  fact that,  if  the shoe  were  on the  other foot,

                    

     14We  reject  Azure's  contention  that  the Eighth  Circuit
significantly narrowed Flink's rule in Lee, 983  F.2d at 887.  As
                                          
we  read these  cases,  an  agent's  signature  on  behalf  of  a
disclosed principal  "is  not sufficient"  to bind  the agent  to
                                        
arbitrate claims against him  personally.  Flink, 856 F.2d  at 46
                                                
(emphasis supplied).   Lee  left this  legal  rule fully  intact.
                          
Lee, unlike Frank, merely  involved the by-now routine investment
                 
service  contract context, a  situation where additional factors,
                                                        
including "the plain language  of the arbitration clause," showed
that  claims  against the  agent  appropriately  were subject  to
arbitration.  Lee, 983 F.2d at 887.
                 

                                23

McCarthy could not force appellant to arbitrate those claims   or

any other  claims, for that matter.  Though the law is not always

perfectly proportional,  this lack of mutuality  of obligation is

disturbing, particularly  as it arises in  a contractual context.

See generally Crellin Technologies, Inc. v. Equipmentlease Corp.,
                                                                

    F.3d    ,      (1st Cir. 1994) [No. 93-1615,  slip op. at 15]

(discussing rule  that mutuality of obligation  is a prerequisite

to  a binding bilateral contract; citing numerous cases and other

authorities); Smith, Batchelder & Rugg  v. Foster, 406 A.2d 1310,
                                                 

1312 (N.H. 1979).

          4.  The Nature of the Claims.  It is also worth noting,
          4.  The Nature of the Claims.
                                      

for the sake of completeness, that the bulk of plaintiff's claims

are litigable in any  event simply because they fall  outside the

ambit of  the Purchase  Agreement's closely tailored  arbitration

clause.    For example,  the claims  for  breach of  contract and

wrongful discharge concern plaintiff's  employment rights.  Those

rights are  not mentioned at  all in the Purchase  Agreement.  To

the  contrary, they  come within  the purview  of the  Employment

Letter    a  document  that conspicuously  omits any  arbitration

provision.   Similarly,  many  aspects of  plaintiff's claims  of

fraud,  misrepresentation,  emotional   distress,  unfair   trade

practices, and racketeering relate to his employment rights, and,

to  that extent, also  do not implicate  the Purchase Agreement's

arbitration provision.  And while the remaining claims touch upon

the Purchase Agreement, they do not uniformly "aris[e] under" it.

          No  useful purpose would be served by reciting book and

                                24

verse.  It suffices  to say that, even  if Azure were a party  to

the contract  that contains the operative  arbitration provision,

he  would  not  be  entitled as  of  right  to  an  order staying

litigation of all   or  even most of   McCarthy's claims.   See 9
                                                               

U.S.C.   3.15

         D.  Appellant's Third-Party Beneficiary Theory.
                                                       

          Appellant   next  posits   that,   as   a   third-party

beneficiary of  the Purchase  Agreement's arbitration  clause, he

can compel plaintiff to arbitrate.  This claim also fails.

          As  is  generally  the  case  in  matters  of  contract

interpretation, "[t]he crux in third-party beneficiary analysis .

.  .  is  the  intent  of  the  parties."    Mowbray  v. Moseley,
                                                                 

Hallgarten, Estabrook  & Weeden,  795 F.2d  1111, 1117 (1st  Cir.
                               

1986).   Because  third-party beneficiary  status  constitutes an

exception  to the  general rule  that a  contract does  not grant

enforceable rights to nonsignatories,  see, e.g., Arlington Trust
                                                                 

Co. v.  Estate of Wood, 465  A.2d 917, 918 (N.H.  1993), a person
                      

aspiring to such status  must show with special clarity  that the

contracting parties intended  to confer  a benefit on  him.   See
                                                                 

Mowbray,  795 F.2d  at 1117;  Arlington Trust,  465 A.2d  at 918;
                                             

Tamposi Assocs. v.  Star Mkt. Co., 406 A.2d 132, 134 (N.H. 1979);
                                 

see generally 3  E. Allan Farnsworth,  Farnsworth on Contracts   
                                                              

                    

     15Of course, the district court in its discretion could stay
litigation  of nonarbitrable  claims  pending the  outcome of  an
arbitration proceeding.  See Moses H.  Cone, 460 U.S. at 20 n.23;
                                           
see also  Genesco, Inc. v. T.  Kakiuchi & Co., 815  F.2d 840, 856
                                             
(2d Cir. 1987) (recommending stay of nonarbitrable claim when the
arbitrable claim  predominates and the nonarbitrable  claim is of
questionable merit).

                                25

10.3, at 22-23 (1990); 4 Arthur Corbin, Contracts   776 (1951).
                                                 

          In  this  instance,  we   are  unable  to  discern  any

indication in  the Purchase Agreement  that the parties  meant to

make   their   respective   agents   or   employees   third-party

beneficiaries.   Neither Azure nor any other employee of Theta II

is mentioned explicitly in  the Purchase Agreement; there are  no

meaningful categorical  references; the critical provision in the

contract,  see supra  note 11,  omits any  mention of  agents and
                    

employees;  and we  can find  no principled  basis for  including

Azure  by  necessary implication  (especially since  the contract

contains an  integration clause).  These  facts strongly militate

against   conferring  third-party   beneficiary  status   upon  a

corporate  officer  with  respect  to arbitration  rights.    See
                                                                 

Shaffer  v. Stratton Oakmont, Inc.,  756 F. Supp.  365, 369 (N.D.
                                  

Ill.   1991)  (refusing   to  find   a  third-party   beneficiary

relationship generating  an obligation to arbitrate  in analogous

circumstances);  Lester  v.  Basner,  676 F.  Supp.  481,  484-85
                                   

(S.D.N.Y.  1987) (refusing  to  find an  obligation to  arbitrate

under a  third-party beneficiary theory when  the contract itself

"is  silent as  to whether  [its] terms"  apply to  the purported

third-party beneficiaries).

          The  record is  equally devoid  of anything  that might

intimate a  course  of dealing  between McCarthy,  Theta II,  and

Azure from  which an  intent to create  third-party beneficiaries

plausibly  could be  inferred.   See Mowbray,  795 F.2d  at 1117.
                                            

And,  finally,  the  Purchase  Agreement neither  calls  for  any

                                26

performance  by the  promisor (McCarthy)  that will  satisfy some

obligation  owed by the promisee (Theta II) to the putative third

party, nor is it "so expressed  as to give the promisor reason to

know that  a benefit  to a  third  party is  contemplated by  the

promisee  as one  of  the motivating  causes  of his  making  the

contract."  Tamposi, 406 A.2d at 134.16
                   

          To say more would be to polish a star.  For the reasons

indicated, appellant's thrust for relief on the ground that he is

a third-party  beneficiary of  Theta II's agreement  to arbitrate

falls  short.   See Mowbray,  795 F.2d  at 1117; Shaffer,  756 F.
                                                        

Supp. at 369; Lester, 676  F. Supp. at 485; Tamposi, 406  A.2d at
                                                   

134.

                E.  Appellant's Alter Ego Theory.
                                                

          McCarthy's complaint  alleges, at one point, that Azure

is the alter ego of Theta II.  The last shot in appellant's sling

derives from this allegation:   he asseverates that he  should be

accorded  the right to  demand arbitration based  on the asserted

equivalence between him  and his corporate principal.   This shot

exhibits  a basic  misunderstanding of  the weapon  appellant has

selected.  Not surprisingly, it misses the mark.

          The alter  ego doctrine is  equitable in nature.   See,
                                                                

e.g.,  Harrell v. DCS Equip.  Leasing Corp., 951  F.2d 1453, 1458
                                           

(5th Cir. 1992); St.  Paul Fire &  Marine Ins. Comp. v.  Pepsico,
                                                                 

Inc., 884  F.2d 688,  697 (2d  Cir. 1989);  1 Fletcher, supra,   
                                                             

                    

     16These  requirements are  not  satisfied  merely because  a
third party will benefit  from performance of the contract.   See
                                                                 
Arlington Trust, 465 A.2d at 918-19.
               

                                27

41.25.  As  such, the doctrine can be  invoked "only where equity

requires the action to assist a third party."  1 Fletcher, supra,
                                                                

at   41.10; see also In  re Rehabilition of Centaur Ins. Co., 606
                                                            

N.E.2d 291, 296 (Ill.  App. Ct. 1992) (barring a  subsidiary from

piercing  its own  corporate veil  in order  to reach  its parent

because "the  equitable remedy lies with  third parties"), aff'd,
                                                                

1994  WL 28672  (Feb. 3,  1994); Village  Press, Inc.  v. Stephen
                                                                 

Edward  Comp., Inc.,  416 A.2d  1373,  1375 (N.H.  1980) (holding
                   

that,  to employ  the  alter ego  doctrine,  "the plaintiff  must

establish  that the  corporate  entity  was  used to  promote  an

injustice or fraud").

          The  case  law  that   appellant  touts  earns  him  no

indulgence.  Without exception,  these cases involve instances in

which  an allegedly aggrieved party has sought to compel a person

or  entity thought  to be  a corporate  signatory's alter  ego to

abide by an arbitration clause.   Typical of the genre is Fisser,
                                                                

a case holding that "if the parent is bound to the contract, then

its  marionette [the  alleged alter  ego] is  bound to  submit to

arbitration."  282 F.2d at 234-35.

          We are confronted with a  much different situation.  In

this case, the supposed  wrongdoer seeks to invoke the  alter ego

doctrine in order to  hide behind the corporate entity,  that is,

to  avail  himself of  the corporation's  right  to repair  to an

arbitral  forum and thereby avoid a jury  trial.  As appellant is

not  even  arguably  an  innocent third  party  disadvantaged  by

someone else's blurring of the line between a corporation and the

                                28

person who controls it,  but, rather, is  himself the one who  is

claimed to have obscured  the line, he cannot be permitted to use

the alter ego designation to his own behoof.17

III.  CONCLUSION

          We need go no further.  Although the Purchase Agreement

does contain an  arbitration clause,  it is narrow  in scope  and

does  not extend  the right  to compel  arbitration to  agents or

employees of  the  corporate  signatory.    By  like  token,  the

Purchase Agreement does not make  manifest an intention to confer

third-party beneficiary  status on any such  agents or employees.

And,  finally, appellant  cannot  rely on  plaintiff's alter  ego

claim to  draw an equivalence  between himself and  his corporate

principal  for his own benefit.  In  sum, there is no contractual

or  other legal lever by  which appellant can  force plaintiff to

arbitrate the  "individual capacity" claims that  are the subject

of the underlying  suit.  Because this is so,  the district court

appropriately  refused  to   grant  the  relief  that   appellant

requested.18

                    

     17We  note   that,  although  plaintiff  has   alleged  that
appellant  is  the alter  ego of  Theta  II, appellant  has never
admitted the truth of the allegation.  While not necessary to our
decision, we  are impelled  to remark the  obvious:  it  would be
strange  if an equitable doctrine  could be construed  to allow a
party, on one hand,  to resist the characterization that he  is a
corporation's  alter ego, and, on  the second hand,  to allow him
simultaneously  to  use  that  characterization as  a  device  to
sidetrack the characterizer's suit.

     18On  remand, the  district  court,  by  appropriate  order,
should conform plaintiff's complaint to the  representations made
in this court, see  supra note 4, dismissing any  claims asserted
                         
against  Azure  in a  representative  capacity  and striking  all
related references from the complaint.

                                29

          The  order appealed  from is affirmed  and the  case is
                                                                 

remanded  to the  district court  for further  proceedings.   The
                                                                 

motions pending  in this court  are denied  without prejudice  to
                                                                 

their renewal below.  Costs in favor of appellee.
                                                

                                30