PUBLISHED
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
CHOICE HOTELS INTERNATIONAL,
INCORPORATED,
Plaintiff-Appellee,
v. No. 05-1979
SM PROPERTY MANAGEMENT, LLC;
SAY-HAI CUN; MAY D. CUN,
Defendants-Appellants.
CHOICE HOTELS INTERNATIONAL,
INCORPORATED,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v. No. 06-1698
SM PROPERTY MANAGEMENT, LLC;
SAY-HAI CUN; MAY D. CUN,
Defendants-Appellees.
CHOICE HOTELS INTERNATIONAL,
INCORPORATED,
Plaintiff-Appellee,
v. No. 06-1812
SM PROPERTY MANAGEMENT, LLC;
SAY-HAI CUN; MAY D. CUN,
Defendants-Appellants.
Appeals from the United States District Court
for the District of Maryland, at Greenbelt.
Roger W. Titus, District Judge.
(CA-04-1774-RWT-8)
2 CHOICE HOTELS INT’L v. SM PROPERTY MANAGEMENT
Argued: December 6, 2007
Decided: February 28, 2008
Before NIEMEYER and TRAXLER, Circuit Judges, and
HAMILTON, Senior Circuit Judge.
Affirmed by published opinion. Senior Judge Hamilton wrote the
opinion, in which Judge Niemeyer joined. Judge Traxler wrote a sepa-
rate opinion concurring in part and dissenting in part.
COUNSEL
Onkar Nath Sharma, SHARMA LAW GROUP, Silver Spring, Mary-
land, for SM Property Management, L.L.C., Say-Hai Cun, and May
D. Cun. Jeremy W. Schulman, SHULMAN, ROGERS, GANDAL,
PORDY & ECKER, P.A., Rockville, Maryland, for Choice Hotels
International, Incorporated.
OPINION
HAMILTON, Senior Circuit Judge:
Below, Franchisor Choice Hotels International (Franchisor) sought
to confirm a $264,305.02 arbitration award (the Arbitration Award)
obtained by default against S.M. Property Management, L.L.C., Say-
Hai Cun, and his wife May Duong Cun (collectively Franchisees). In
response, Franchisees moved to vacate the arbitration award for lack
of notice. The district court declined to confirm the arbitration award
and granted Franchisees’ motion to vacate. Franchisor appealed. We
affirm.
Franchisees moved to recover attorney’s fees and costs as prevail-
ing parties under terms of the franchise agreement with Franchisor.
CHOICE HOTELS INT’L v. SM PROPERTY MANAGEMENT 3
The district court denied the motion, and Franchisees noted a cross-
appeal of such denial. We affirm on this issue also.
I.
On February 18, 2000, the parties executed a franchise agreement
(the Franchise Agreement) whereby the Franchisees had the right to
operate a hotel located at 450 Memorial Drive, Chicopee, Massachu-
setts (the Hotel) as a Comfort Inn. Under the Franchise Agreement,
the Hotel was subject to periodic inspections in order to ensure com-
pliance with Franchisor’s mandatory quality assurance standards.
According to an affidavit in the record by May Duong Cun, she and
her husband moved from Kentucky to Massachusetts in February
2000 to run the Hotel.
Of relevance to the present appeal, the definitional section of the
Franchise Agreement provided that the term "‘Designated Represen-
tative’ means your representative for matters about this Agreement."
(J.A. 7). Also of relevance to the present appeal, Section 15 of the
Franchise Agreement required that "[a]ll notices required or permitted
under this Agreement must be in writing, must be . . . mailed by regis-
tered or certified mail, return receipt requested . . . to you at the Des-
ignated Representative’s address." (J.A. 15). The same section
provided that Franchisees "may change the Designated Representative
by written notice to" Franchisor. Id.
At the time the parties executed the Franchise Agreement on Feb-
ruary 18, 2000, it listed Daniel T. Li (Li) as the Franchisees’ Desig-
nated Representative with an address in Ocean Township, New
Jersey. Li brokered the deal between the parties culminating in the
Franchise Agreement. In a letter dated February 20, 2000 and
addressed to Franchisor, Li requested Franchisor to "please direct all
future correspondences, bills, circular notices and all matters to the
current owner Mr. Say Hai Cun or May Cun at the Comfort Inn, 450
Memorial Drive, Chicopee, Massachusetts 01020. My position of
contact representative ends here." (J.A. 457).
Approximately a year and a half later, Elaine Bracci, General Man-
ager of the Hotel, sent a letter to Lisa Collins, Senior Paralegal of
Franchisor, requesting on behalf of the Franchisees that Franchisor
4 CHOICE HOTELS INT’L v. SM PROPERTY MANAGEMENT
"remove the name of Daniel T. Li as licensee rep for MA 405 and
substitute the names of May D. Cun and Say Hai Cun." (J.A. 459).
Approximately two weeks later, Collins sent a responsive letter
addressed to Franchisees at the Hotel address, acknowledging their
intentions to change the Designated Representative under the Fran-
chise Agreement, but instructing that they do so by completing the
enclosed "Change of Designated Representative Form," and that
"[o]nly the signatures of SM Property Management, L.L.C., Say-Hai
Cun and May Duong Cun will make this change effective."1 (J.A.
460).
Franchisor received the completed form, dated July 21, 2001, list-
ing Elaine Bracci as the new Designated Representative and the Hotel
address as the new address for such representative. Elaine Bracci had
signed the form on behalf of S.M. Property Management, L.L.C., in
her capacity as General Manager, while Say-Hai Cun and May Duong
Cun had signed in their individual capacities. We will refer to this
form as the July 21, 2001 Designated Representative Form.
On July 25, 2001, Collins responded by letter again to the Hotel
address.2 She expressly acknowledged receipt of the July 21, 2001
Designated Representative Form, but informed the Franchisees that
she could not accept the signature of Elaine Bracci, as General Man-
ager on behalf of S.M. Property Management, L.L.C. and that "[a]n
authorized officer must sign on behalf of SM." (J.A. 463). Collins
enclosed another blank Change of Designated Representative Form.
Franchisees returned such form completed per Collins’ instructions
regarding an authorized signature on behalf of S.M. Property Man-
agement, L.L.C. (May Duong Cun signed in this regard), except that,
although the form listed "Elaine Bracci, G.M.," as the new Designated
Representative, the "New Address for New Designated Representa-
tive" section was inadvertently left blank.3 (J.A. 464). Each signature
1
The copy of this letter in the record shows the following scratched
through with pen marks: "Attn: Mr. Daniel T. Li." (J.A. 460). Also, in
the greeting part of the letter, "Mr. Li" is scratched through following
"Dear." Id.
2
This time the references to Mr. Li were left intact.
3
The July 21, 2001 Designated Representative Form listed the Hotel
address.
CHOICE HOTELS INT’L v. SM PROPERTY MANAGEMENT 5
was dated August 2, 2001. We will refer to this form as the August
2, 2001 Designated Representative Form. Franchisor has never seri-
ously disputed during this litigation that the series of letters and forms
beginning with Elaine Bracci’s July 2, 2001 letter and ending with the
August 2, 2001 Designated Representative Form effectively changed
the Franchisees’ Designated Representative under the Franchise
Agreement.
After Franchisees began operating the Hotel as a Comfort Inn,
Franchisor concluded that Franchisees failed to meet its minimum
quality assurance standards and had violated other terms of the Fran-
chise Agreement. Franchisor formally notified Franchisees in writing
of the violations by letter dated October 15, 2001, addressed to Daniel
Li at his New Jersey address. Thereafter, on January 11, 2002,
Franchisor notified Franchisees by letter addressed to Elaine Bracci
at the Hotel address that it was terminating Franchisees’ rights to
operate the Hotel under the Comfort Inn franchise due to Franchisees’
failure to cure the perceived violations (the Notice of Termination).
The Notice of Termination also demanded that Franchisees pay
Franchisor $18,812.03, which Franchisor claimed Franchisees owed
it under the terms of the Franchise Agreement. The Notice of Termi-
nation was signed by Kevin M. Rooney, Associate General Counsel
for Franchisor.
On August 28, 2003 and September 8, 2003, James G. Healy,
Assistant General Counsel for Franchisor, sent the Franchisees letters
to the attention of Elaine Bracci at the Hotel address regarding
Franchisor’s claims against Franchisees for liquidated damages under
the Franchise Agreement. The September 8, 2003 letter stated that
Franchisees owed Franchisor $255,196.81 in liquidated damages aris-
ing from termination of the Franchise Agreement.
On June 9, 2004, Franchisor filed this diversity action in the district
court against Franchisees seeking, inter alia, the same $255,196.81 in
liquidated damages. The details of the service of process with respect
to this action are relevant to the issues on appeal.
A deputy sheriff for Hampden County, Massachusetts attempted to
serve the summons and complaint on May Duong Cun at 384 Stony
Hill Road, Wilbraham, Massachusetts. Although the parties dispute
6 CHOICE HOTELS INT’L v. SM PROPERTY MANAGEMENT
whether she lived there in June 2004, the parties do not dispute that
May Duong Cun actually accepted service of process with respect to
this action at the Hampden County Sheriff’s Office in Springfield,
Massachusetts, in response to a business card left by the deputy sher-
iff at the Stony Hill Road address.4
With respect to S.M. Property Management, L.L.C., and Say-Hai
Cun, each summons listed 3525 Schaffner Drive, Louisville, Ken-
tucky as the party’s address.5 The actual affidavits of service by the
Jefferson County, Kentucky deputy sheriff do not specify the actual
location of service, only the fact of personal service in Jefferson
County, Kentucky on Say-Hai Cun.
Once in federal court, Franchisees, inter alia, moved to dismiss the
action based upon Franchisor’s failure to submit the dispute to arbitra-
tion as called for in Section 22 of the Franchise Agreement (the Arbi-
tration Clause). In relevant part, the Arbitration Clause provided:
[A]ny controversy or claim arising out of or relating to
this Agreement, or the breach of this Agreement, includ-
ing any claim that this Agreement or any part of this
Agreement is invalid, illegal, or otherwise voidable or
void, as well as any claim that we violated any laws in
connection with the execution or enforcement of this
Agreement, will be sent to final and binding arbitration
before . . . the American Arbitration Association . . . in
accordance with the Commercial Arbitration Rules of
the American Arbitration Association . . . . The arbitra-
tor will apply the substantive laws of Maryland, without
reference to its conflict of laws provision . . . . Judgment
on the arbitration award may be entered in any court
having jurisdiction. If any party fails to appear at any
properly noticed arbitration proceeding, an award may
4
According to an affidavit by May Duong Cun executed on August 6,
2005, she moved out of the house located at 384 Stony Hill Road, Wil-
braham, Massachusetts in January 2004.
5
Although the record is unclear on the details, it appears that for some
period of time, the Cuns resided at this address in Kentucky. The Cuns
sold the property at this address on August 23, 2004.
CHOICE HOTELS INT’L v. SM PROPERTY MANAGEMENT 7
be entered against the party, notwithstanding its failure
to appear. Any arbitration will be conducted at our
headquarters office in Maryland.
(J.A. 18-19).
On November 10, 2004, the district court denied Franchisees’
motion to dismiss, but nonetheless, stayed the litigation and ordered
the parties to proceed to arbitration in accordance with the terms of
the Arbitration Clause. Approximately one month later, Franchisor
sought to initiate arbitration proceedings against Franchisees before
the American Arbitration Association (the AAA).
Notably, R-39(a) of the Commercial Arbitration Rules of the AAA
provided, in relevant part:
R-39. Serving of Notice
(a) Any papers, notices, or process necessary or proper for
the initiation or continuation of an arbitration under these
rules, for any court action in connection therewith, or for the
entry of judgment on any award made under these rules may
be served on a party by mail addressed to the party, or its
representative at the last known address or by personal ser-
vice, in or outside the state where the arbitration is to be
held, provided that reasonable opportunity to be heard with
regard to the dispute is or has been granted to the party.
(effective July 1, 2003).
In the completed AAA "Demand for Arbitration" forms that
Franchisor submitted to the AAA with respect to each Franchisee,
Franchisor did not list Elaine Bracci as the Designated Representative
under the Franchise Agreement, nor the Hotel Address. (J.A. 273).
Rather, the Demand For Arbitration form with respect to May Duong
Cun listed 384 Stony Hill Road, Wilbraham, Massachusetts as the
only contact address with no party listed next to the part of the form
asking for the "Name of Representative." (J.A. 275). The Demand For
Arbitration Form with respect to Say-Hai Cun listed 3525 Schaffner
8 CHOICE HOTELS INT’L v. SM PROPERTY MANAGEMENT
Drive, Louisville, Kentucky as the only contact address also with no
party listed next to the part of the form asking for the "Name of Rep-
resentative." (J.A. 274). With respect to S.M. Property Management,
L.L.C., the Demand For Arbitration Form listed 1718 West Jefferson
Street, Louisville, Kentucky as its address with "Say-Hai Cun, Mem-
ber" listed as "Name of Representative" and 3525 Schaffner Drive,
Louisville, Kentucky listed as "Representative’s Address." (J.A. 273).
Franchisor and AAA sent May Duong Cun copies of the Demand
For Arbitration and arbitration hearing notices only to the Stony Hill
Road, Wilbraham, Massachusetts address. Franchisor and AAA sent
S.M. Property Management, L.L.C. and Say-Hai Cun copies of their
respective Demands For Arbitration and arbitration hearing notices to
the Schaffner Drive, Louisville, Kentucky address. Although the
assigned arbitrator (the AAA Arbitrator) ordered AAA’s case admin-
istrator to contact the Franchisees at their last known telephone num-
bers, the record is devoid of evidence that such telephone calls were
ever made.
The arbitration proceeded on the merits in the Franchisees’
absence. On July 8, 2005, the AAA Arbitrator rendered his decision
in favor of Franchisor in a two-page document entitled "AWARD OF
ARBITRATOR." (J.A. 276). In it, the AAA Arbitrator made two ref-
erences to the issue of notice to the Franchisees regarding the arbitra-
tion proceedings. First, in the first paragraph, the AAA Arbitrator
stated, inter alia, that "having been designated in accordance with the
arbitration agreement . . . and the Respondents having failed to appear
after due notice by mail in accordance with the Rules of the American
Arbitration Association, [I] hereby, AWARD, as follows: . . . ." Id.
Second, under the heading "Procedural Matters," the AAA Arbitrator
stated: "Choice filed its arbitration demand on December 14, 2004.
Respondent has not filed any pleadings in this arbitration. Proper ser-
vice of the Choice Demand and notices of a pre-hearing scheduling
conference and the hearing was made by the AAA." Id. Ultimately,
the AAA Arbitrator awarded Franchisor $264,305.02. Of that amount,
$246,765.60 represented liquidated damages under the Franchise
Agreement.
On July 29, 2005, Franchisor moved in the district court to reopen
its case against Franchisees and to confirm the Award of Arbitration.
CHOICE HOTELS INT’L v. SM PROPERTY MANAGEMENT 9
On August 9, 2005, before Franchisees had filed any opposition
papers, the district court entered an order confirming the Arbitration
Award. On August 12, 2005, Franchisees timely moved to vacate the
Arbitration Award (Motion to Vacate), arguing principally that they
never received notice of the arbitration proceedings. On October 11,
2005, the district court vacated its August 9, 2005 order and set the
matter for hearing. At the conclusion of such hearing on March 6,
2006, the district court stated that, with respect to the notice issue, it
d[id] not believe that the AAA [A]rbitrator was resolving
anything other than that notice was sent to the last known
address according to the records of [Franchisor], and the last
known address according to the records of [Franchisor] as
used by Mr. Rooney was the Chicopee, Massachusetts
address. So, the address supplied by [Franchisor], although
they may have been well intentioned, apparently did not
work.
Had they sent it to the address of the hotel — and
although I don’t think they’re legally required to send a
copy to Mr. Sharma,6 we perhaps would not be in the pre-
dicament we’re in today, because this is a hotel that’s not a
moving target. It’s a fixed target sitting there on Memorial
Drive in Chicopee, Massachusetts, which is not too hard to
go up there and locate the people running the hotel and say,
here. Or at least send it to them at that address.
Accordingly, I conclude that the arbitrator did not have
effective service, that the resolution of the issue he had in
front of him was not the issue I have in front of me, and that
is [Franchisor] didn’t give the right address. Accordingly, I
will vacate and set aside the arbitrator’s award.
6
Onkar Sharma represented the Franchisees when the district court
stayed the case and ordered arbitration. He also represented them in the
district court in their effort to oppose the Franchisor’s motion to confirm
and their effort to vacate the Arbitration Award. He also represents the
Franchisees in the present appeal.
10 CHOICE HOTELS INT’L v. SM PROPERTY MANAGEMENT
(J.A. 360-61) (footnote added).
On March 8, 2006 the district court entered an order denying
Franchisor’s motion to confirm the Arbitration Award while simulta-
neously vacating it. Franchisor filed a motion for reconsideration, and
Franchisees filed a motion for attorney’s fees and costs. The district
court denied both motions. Both sides have appealed.
II.
In its appeal, Franchisor seeks reversal of the district court’s order
granting Franchisees’ motion to vacate the Arbitration Award.
According to Franchisor, the district court lacked authority to second
guess the finding of the AAA Arbitrator that Franchisees were prop-
erly notified of the arbitration proceedings in accordance with AAA
Commercial Rule R-39(a).
Our authority to review the arbitration award at issue, like the
authority of the district court to do the same, is "substantially circum-
scribed." Patten v. Signator Ins. Agency, Inc., 441 F.3d 230, 234 (4th
Cir. 2006). "In fact, the scope of judicial review for an arbitrator’s
decision is among the narrowest known at law because to allow full
scrutiny of such awards would frustrate the purpose of having arbitra-
tion at all-the quick resolution of disputes and the avoidance of the
expense and delay associated with litigation." Three S Delaware, Inc.
v. Dataquick Info. Sys., Inc., 492 F.3d 520, 527 (4th Cir. 2007) (cita-
tion and internal quotation marks omitted).
"In order for a reviewing court to vacate an arbitration award, the
moving party must sustain the heavy burden of showing one of the
grounds specified in the Federal Arbitration Act or one of certain lim-
ited common law grounds." Id. The Federal Arbitration Act, 9 U.S.C.
§ 2 et seq., provides that a court may only vacate an arbitration award
on one of the following grounds:
(1) where the award was procured by corruption, fraud, or
undue means;
(2) where there was evident partiality or corruption in the
arbitrators, or either of them;
CHOICE HOTELS INT’L v. SM PROPERTY MANAGEMENT 11
(3) where the arbitrators were guilty of misconduct in refus-
ing to postpone the hearing, upon sufficient cause shown, or
in refusing to hear evidence pertinent and material to the
controversy; or of any other misbehavior by which the rights
of any party have been prejudiced; or
(4) where the arbitrators exceeded their powers, or so imper-
fectly executed them that a mutual, final, and definite award
upon the subject matter submitted was not made.
Id. § 10(a).
"The permissible common law grounds for vacating such an award
. . . include those circumstances where an award fails to draw its
essence from the contract, or the award evidences a manifest disre-
gard of the law." Patten, 441 F.3d at 234. We have held that an arbi-
tration award fails to draw its essence from the agreement at issue
"when an arbitrator has disregarded or modified unambiguous con-
tract provisions or based an award upon his own personal notions of
right and wrong." Three S Delaware, Inc., 492 F.3d at 528. However,
an arbitration award "does not fail to draw its essence from the agree-
ment merely because a court concluded that an arbitrator has misread
the contract." Id. (internal quotation marks omitted). In this regard,
"as long as the arbitrator is even arguably construing or applying the
contract and acting within the scope of his authority, that a court is
convinced he committed serious error does not suffice to overturn his
decision." U.S. Postal Serv. v. Am. Postal Workers Union, AFL-CIO,
204 F.3d 523, 527 (4th Cir. 2000) (citation and internal quotation
marks omitted). All parties correctly agree that we review the district
court’s legal conclusions in this case de novo and its findings of fact
for clear error. Three S Delaware, Inc., 492 F.3d at 527.
Ever mindful of our circumscribed appellate role when reviewing
an arbitration award, we agree with Franchisees’ position that the
Arbitration Award does not draw its essence from the Franchise
Agreement, and therefore, the district court acted properly in vacating
it. The Arbitration Clause in the Franchise Agreement provided that
the parties’ disputes would be arbitrated before the AAA in accor-
dance with the Commercial Rules of the AAA. AAA Commercial
Rule R-39(a) permitted notice of the initiation of the arbitration pro-
12 CHOICE HOTELS INT’L v. SM PROPERTY MANAGEMENT
ceedings to be sent by mail: (1) to the Franchisees at their last known
respective addresses; (2) to the respective representatives of the Fran-
chisees at their last known respective addresses; or (3) by personal
service. However, it is abundantly clear that, by way of the Franchise
Agreement’s definition of the term Designated Representative ("your
representative for matters about this Agreement", (J.A. 7)), and the
Franchise Agreement’s Section 15 directing that "[a]ll notices
required or permitted under this Agreement must be in writing, must
be personally delivered or mailed by registered or certified mail,
return receipt requested, or by a nationally recognized courier service
. . . to you at the Designated Representative’s address," (J.A. 15)
(emphasis added), the parties contractually provided that, for purposes
of AAA Commercial Rule R-39(a), the address of the Designated
Representative would be considered the last known address of either
an individual party or his representative. Indeed, AAA Commercial
Rule R-1 permitted the parties to modify the operation of AAA Com-
mercial Rule R-39(a) in this manner. AAA Commercial Rule R-1 pro-
vided that "[t]he parties, by written agreement, may vary the
procedures set forth in these rules." (effective July 1, 2003). More-
over, the Arbitration Clause expressly contemplated that an arbitra-
tion award be entered against a party to the Franchise Agreement,
notwithstanding its failure to appear, only if the party was properly
noticed about the arbitration proceeding. (J.A. 19) ("If any party fails
to appear at any properly noticed arbitration proceeding, an
award may be entered against the party, notwithstanding its fail-
ure to appear."). Here, the Franchisees were not properly noticed
about the arbitration proceedings because no notice was ever sent to
the Franchisees’ Designated Representative, i.e., Elaine Bracci, at the
Hotel address.
We hold that the Arbitration Award, having been made without
notification of the initiation of arbitration proceedings being sent to
the Franchisees’ Designated Representative, as required by the Fran-
chise Agreement, did not draw its essence from the Franchise Agree-
ment. In reaching this holding, we rely not only upon our just stated
analysis, but also upon the state of the appellate record. First, there
is no evidence in the record that the provisions of the Franchise
Agreement pertaining to the parties’ Designated Representatives were
ever brought to the attention of the AAA Arbitrator. Indeed, the AAA
Arbitrator makes absolutely no mention of the Designated Represen-
CHOICE HOTELS INT’L v. SM PROPERTY MANAGEMENT 13
tative provisions in his decision. Second, there is no evidence that the
AAA Arbitrator questioned Franchisor in any critical manner about
the validity, for notice purposes, of the addresses that it provided as
Franchisees’ last known addresses (i.e., 3525 Schaffner Drive, Louis-
ville, Kentucky for S.M. Property, L.L.C. and Say-Hai Cun and 384
Stony Hill Road, Wilbraham, Massachusetts for May Duong Cun).7
Third, the record is devoid of evidence to contradict the Franchisees’
sworn assertions that they never received notice of the arbitration pro-
ceedings until after the AAA Arbitrator had issued the Arbitration
Award. Fourth, the fact that Franchisor made Franchisees jump
through so many hoops in order to change the name and address of
their Designated Representative from Mr. Li in New Jersey to Elaine
Bracci at the Hotel address unequivocally shows that Franchisor
understood the legal significance of the Designated Representative as
the recipient of all notices due the respective parties as related to dis-
putes regarding the Franchise Agreement. Fifth, on January 11, 2002,
nearly three years prior to Franchisor’s Demands for Arbitration,
Franchisor sent the Notice of Termination to Elaine Bracci at the
Hotel, thus explicitly acknowledging her status as Designated Repre-
sentative of the Franchisees and the Hotel address as the designated
address to contact her. And Sixth, Franchisor continued to send
demand letters for liquidated damages under the Franchise Agreement
to the Hotel address and to the attention of Elaine Bracci through Sep-
tember 2003.
In support of its position that the district court committed reversible
error by vacating the Arbitration Award, Franchisor relies heavily
upon the Seventh Circuit’s decision in Gingiss Int’l, Inc. v. Bormet,
58 F.3d 328 (7th Cir. 1995). The facts of Gingiss are, in certain
respects, analogous to those of the present appeal. As here, a franchise
agreement was at issue in Gingiss. Also as here, the franchise agree-
ment in Gingiss provided, with irrelevant exceptions, that all disputes
between the parties relating to the agreement would be subject to arbi-
tration in accordance with the Commercial Arbitration Rules of the
AAA. Id. at 330. Similar to the present case, a section of the franchise
agreement separate from the arbitration clause provided that "‘[a]ll
written notices permitted or required to be delivered by the provisions
7
Indeed, there is no evidence that the Franchisees were ever actually
even found at either of these addresses.
14 CHOICE HOTELS INT’L v. SM PROPERTY MANAGEMENT
of this Agreement’ shall be delivered by hand or by registered or cer-
tified mail." Id. at 333.
The franchisor, Gingiss, sought to arbitrate a dispute with its
franchisee, H-K Formalwear, and the franchisee’s guarantors, the
Bormets, under the franchise agreement.8 Id. at 331. The Seventh Cir-
cuit’s opinion provides the following facts concerning notice:
Gingiss’ attorney sent a copy of Gingiss’ arbitration
demand by regular mail to the Bormets at a post office box
in Old Fort, North Carolina. This was the same address to
which Gingiss had previously sent correspondence to the
Bormets, and the Bormets had regularly replied. The AAA
sent a letter by regular mail to the same address on Decem-
ber 30, 1993, notifying the Bormets of the arbitration pro-
ceeding. The AAA sent three additional letters concerning
the arbitration proceeding by regular mail to the Bormets at
this address in January 1994. Neither Gingiss’ arbitration
demand nor any of the AAA’s letters was ever returned as
undelivered.
Id.
The Bormets did not appear for the arbitration proceedings. Fol-
lowing the franchisor’s presentation of its case, the arbitrator entered
an award in favor of the franchisor. Id. Pursuant to an action by the
franchisor, the district court confirmed the arbitration award. The
Bormets appealed, arguing, inter alia, that the arbitration award
should be vacated because they did not receive actual notice of the
arbitration, which notice, the Bormets contended the franchise agree-
ment required to be delivered by hand or by registered or certified
mail. Id. at 333.
The Seventh Circuit held:
8
In a Shareholder’s and Officer’s Agreement, the Bormets had agreed
to be bound by all obligations under the franchise agreement as if each
was a franchisee. Gingiss, 58 F.3d at 330.
CHOICE HOTELS INT’L v. SM PROPERTY MANAGEMENT 15
The Bormets’ reliance on section eighteen of the franchise
agreement, which provided that "[a]ll written notices per-
mitted or required to be delivered by the provisions of this
Agreement" shall be delivered by hand or by registered or
certified mail, is . . . misplaced. "[A] document should be
read to give effect to all its provisions and to render them
consistent with each other." Mastrobuono v. Shearson Leh-
man Hutton, Inc., 514 U.S. 52, ___, 115 S. Ct. 1212, 1219,
131 L. Ed. 2d 76 (1995). Section eighteen, by its terms,
applied only to notices which were required to be sent under
the franchise agreement, such as default or termination
notices. The arbitration clause, which is contained in section
sixteen of the agreement, governed the notice procedures in
the arbitration.
Gingiss, 58 F.3d at 333.
The Seventh Circuit’s reading of the franchise agreement at issue
in Gingiss and Franchisor’s reading of the Franchise Agreement at
issue in the present appeal disregard the plain and unambiguous lan-
guage of those agreements. With respect to the case at hand, Section
15 unambiguously provides that "All notices required or permitted
under this Agreement must be in writing, must be personally deliv-
ered or mailed by registered or certified mail, return receipt requested,
or by a nationally recognized courier service to . . . [Franchisees] at
the Designated Representative’s address." (J.A. 15) (emphasis added).
All means all. While the Arbitration Clause sets forth the crux of the
arbitration terms of the Franchise Agreement, including that any arbi-
tration would be governed by the Commercial Arbitration Rules of
the AAA, the Arbitration Clause does not contain language otherwise
trumping the all encompassing notice-to-the-properly-designated-
representative language of Section 15. The logic of the district court’s
vacature of the Arbitration Award is even more apparent when one
considers that AAA Commercial Rule R-1 provides that the Commer-
cial Rules of AAA apply whenever the parties provide for arbitration
by the AAA, but that the "parties, by written agreement, may vary
the procedures set forth in these rules." (emphasis added).
In conclusion, we uphold the district court’s vacature of the Arbi-
tration Award on the basis that, the Franchisees having not received
16 CHOICE HOTELS INT’L v. SM PROPERTY MANAGEMENT
notice of the arbitration proceedings in accord with the Franchise
Agreement and having not otherwise received notice, such award
does not draw its essence from the Franchise Agreement. More spe-
cifically, the Arbitration Award does not draw its essence from the
Franchise Agreement because, by failing to ensure that notice of the
initiation of the arbitration proceedings was sent to the Franchisees’
Designated Representative, under the Franchise Agreement, as pro-
vided by the unambiguous language of the Franchise Agreement, the
AAA Arbitrator disregarded unambiguous contract provisions. Id. at
235. Accordingly, we affirm the district court’s vacation of the Arbi-
tration Award. We note that Franchisor remains free to properly
notice arbitration proceedings against the Franchisees by mailing
Demands for Arbitration to the Designated Representative, which, as
far as the record reflects, remains Elaine Bracci at the Hotel address.
III.
We next briefly address the Franchisees’ cross-appeal challenging
the district court’s denial of their motion seeking an award of attor-
neys’ fees and costs under the terms of the Franchise Agreement.
Franchisees’ cross-appeal is without merit.
The "Attorneys’ Fees" provision in the Franchise Agreement, set
forth in Section 17 of such agreement, provides:
The prevailing party in any action filed to enforce the terms
of this Agreement (as determined by the Court or arbitrator)
may recover from the other party the reasonable expenses of
its attorneys in bringing the action, its court costs, the rea-
sonable costs of its expert witnesses and the reasonable
travel costs (including food and lodging) of all of its wit-
nesses in the action. You and we agree that any money judg-
ment or arbitration award will provide for interest at the rate
referred to in Section 4.e. until paid.
(J.A. 15).
The district court properly denied Franchisees’ motion for attor-
neys’ fees and costs under this language because, given that this case
CHOICE HOTELS INT’L v. SM PROPERTY MANAGEMENT 17
has not yet been resolved on the merits, the motion is premature.
Under the plain terms of Section 17 of the Franchise Agreement, there
is yet to be a prevailing party in Franchisor’s federal action to enforce
the terms of the Franchise Agreement or in its pursuit of the same in
arbitration. Cf. Buckhannon Bd. and Care Home, Inc. v. West Virginia
Dept. of Health and Human Servs., 532 U.S. 598 (2001) (attorney fee-
shifting provisions of the Fair Housing Amendments Act and of the
Americans with Disabilities Act, which permit court, in its discretion,
to award reasonable attorney fees to prevailing party in litigation
under those statutes, require party to secure either a judgment on mer-
its or court-ordered consent decree in order to qualify as "prevailing
party"); Kummetz v. Tech Mold, Inc., 152 F.3d 1153, 1156 (9th Cir.
1998) (holding plaintiff’s claim for attorneys’ fees as prevailing party
under attorneys’ fees provision of the Americans with Disabilities Act
was premature; plaintiff’s claim under the Act had not yet been
decided on the merits; rather, plaintiff had only successfully avoided
employer’s claim that dispute was subject to arbitration). Accord-
ingly, we affirm the district court’s denial of Franchisees’ motion for
attorneys’ fees and costs.
IV.
For the reasons stated, we affirm the district court in both appeals.9
AFFIRMED
TRAXLER, Circuit Judge, concurring in part and dissenting in part:
The parties in this case agreed to arbitrate their disputes in accor-
dance with the commercial arbitration rules of the American Arbitra-
tion Association, and notice of the commencement of arbitration
proceedings was provided to the Cuns and SM Property Management
9
Two final contentions of the Franchisees require mention. Franchisees
contend that we lack subject matter jurisdiction over this entire action
and that Franchisor’s notice of appeal was untimely. We reject both con-
tentions. Having reviewed the record and the relevant legal authorities,
we are wholly satisfied that we possess subject matter jurisdiction under
the diversity jurisdiction statute, 28 U.S.C. § 1332, and that Franchisor
timely filed its notice of appeal.
18 CHOICE HOTELS INT’L v. SM PROPERTY MANAGEMENT
(collectively, the "Owners") in accordance with those rules. Given the
exceedingly deferential standard governing judicial review of com-
mercial arbitration awards, I believe that the district court erred by
vacating on grounds of insufficient notice the arbitration award
entered against the Owners. Accordingly, I respectfully dissent from
the affirmance of that aspect of the district court’s opinion.1
I.
The Federal Arbitration Act ("FAA"), 9 U.S.C.A. §§ 1-16 (West
1999 & Supp. 2007), establishes a strong federal policy favoring arbi-
tration. See, e.g., Moses H. Cone Mem’l Hosp. v. Mercury Constr.
Corp., 460 U.S. 1, 24 (1983). "A policy favoring arbitration would
mean little, [however], if arbitration were merely the prologue to pro-
longed litigation." Remmey v. PaineWebber, Inc., 32 F.3d 143, 146
(4th Cir. 1994). Thus, in order "to preserve the benefits of arbitra-
tion," Apex Plumbing Supply, Inc. v. U.S. Supply Co., 142 F.3d 188,
193 n.5 (4th Cir. 1998), judicial review of commercial arbitration
awards is "substantially circumscribed." Patten v. Signator Ins.
Agency, Inc., 441 F.3d 230, 234 (4th Cir.), cert. denied, 127 S. Ct.
434 (2006). "[T]o allow full scrutiny of such awards would frustrate
the purpose of having arbitration at all — the quick resolution of dis-
putes and the avoidance of the expense and delay associated with liti-
gation." Apex Plumbing Supply, 142 F.3d at 193.
A federal court may vacate an arbitration award only if the moving
party sustains "the heavy burden of showing one of the grounds speci-
fied in the [FAA] or one of certain limited common law grounds."
Three S Del., Inc. v. DataQuick Info. Sys., Inc., 492 F.3d 520, 527
(4th Cir. 2007). Under the FAA, a federal court may vacate an arbitra-
tion award if (1) "the award was procured by corruption, fraud, or
undue means"; (2) "there was evident partiality or corruption in the
arbitrators"; (3) the arbitrator was guilty of misconduct or misbehav-
ior in conducting the hearing in a manner which prejudiced a party’s
1
I agree that the requirements of diversity of jurisdiction have been sat-
isfied and that the notice of appeal was timely filed. I also agree that the
district court properly denied the Owners’ motion seeking attorney’s fees
and costs. Accordingly, I concur in Parts III and IV of the majority opin-
ion.
CHOICE HOTELS INT’L v. SM PROPERTY MANAGEMENT 19
rights; or (4) the arbitrator "exceeded [his] powers, or so imperfectly
executed them that a mutual, final and definite award upon the subject
matter submitted was not made." 9 U.S.C.A. § 10(a) (West Supp.
2007).
"The permissible common law grounds for vacating such an award
. . . include those circumstances where an award fails to draw its
essence from the contract, or the award evidences a manifest disre-
gard of the law." Patten, 441 F.3d at 234. An award fails to draw its
essence from the contract if the "arbitrator has disregarded or modi-
fied unambiguous contract provisions or based an award upon his
own personal notions of right and wrong. An arbitration award, how-
ever, does not fail to draw its essence from the agreement merely
because a court concluded that an arbitrator has misread the contract."
Three S Del., 492 F.3d at 528 (citation and internal quotation marks
omitted).
II.
The Franchise Agreement in this case provides that "[a]ll notices
required or permitted under this Agreement" must be sent to Choice
at a specified address and to the Owners at the address of the desig-
nated representative as defined in the Franchise Agreement. J.A. 15.
The Owners assert that this provision obligated Choice to send notice
of the arbitration proceedings to the address of the designated repre-
sentative as identified in the Franchise Agreement. The arbitration
notice was not sent to that address. Instead, in accordance with the
AAA’s rules, the notice was sent to the Owners’ last known addresses
— the addresses Choice just a few months prior had used to success-
fully serve the Owners with the summons and complaint in its breach
of contract action. Because Choice did not send the arbitration notice
to the address of the designated representative, the Owners contend
that the arbitration award did not draw its essence from the Franchise
Agreement and that the district court properly vacated the award.
In Gingiss International, Inc. v. Bormet, 58 F.3d 328 (7th Cir.
1995), however, the Seventh Circuit rejected a similar claim about the
import of a contractual notice provision that was largely identical to
the notice provision at issue in this case. In Gingiss, a franchisor insti-
tuted arbitration proceedings against a former franchisee seeking
20 CHOICE HOTELS INT’L v. SM PROPERTY MANAGEMENT
damages for breaches of the franchise agreement. See id. at 330-31.
The franchisor sent notice of the arbitration to the officers of the
franchisee corporation at a post office box to which it had previously
sent correspondence to the officers. The officers had regularly
responded to the correspondence that was sent to that post office box.
The American Arbitration Association also sent letters regarding the
arbitration proceeding to that address. As in this case, none of the let-
ters sent by the Franchisor or the AAA to that address were ever
returned to the sender. See id. at 331. The officers did not appear in
the arbitration proceedings, and the arbitrator awarded the franchisor
judgment against the officers. When the franchisor sought to confirm
the arbitration award in federal court, the officers appeared and
argued that the award should be vacated. The district court confirmed
the award, and the officers appealed. See id.
On appeal, the officers contended, as the Owners do here, that the
franchise agreement required notices to be sent to an address different
from the post office box used by the franchisor. The Seventh Circuit
rejected that reading of the contract:
The [officers’] reliance on section eighteen of the franchise
agreement, which provided that ‘all written notices permit-
ted or required to be delivered by the provisions of this
Agreement’ shall be delivered by hand or by registered or
certified mail, is also misplaced. A document should be read
to give effect to all its provisions and to render them consis-
tent with each other. Section eighteen, by its terms, applied
only to notices which were required to be sent under the
franchise agreement, such as default or termination notices.
The arbitration clause, which is contained in section sixteen
of the agreement, governed the notice procedures in the
arbitration.
Id. at 333 (emphasis added; citation and internal alteration omitted)).
The Seventh Circuit thus concluded that the arbitration award was
valid and that the district court properly confirmed the award.
Gingiss, of course, is not binding on this court. It is nonetheless rel-
evant that the Seventh Circuit’s understanding of the meaning of a
functionally identical contractual notice provision is diametrically
CHOICE HOTELS INT’L v. SM PROPERTY MANAGEMENT 21
opposed to the interpretation urged by the Owners in this case. As
noted above, a court may conclude that an arbitration award fails to
draw its essence from the contract if the arbitrator disregarded unam-
biguous contract terms. See Three S Del., 492 F.3d at 528. The differ-
ing judicial interpretations of largely identical notice provisions at the
very least suggests that the notice provision in this case did not unam-
biguously require the arbitration notice to be sent to the address of the
designated representative. See Sullins v. Allstate Ins. Co., 667 A.2d
617, 624 (Md. 1995) ("[C]onflicting interpretations of policy lan-
guage in judicial opinions is not determinative of, but is a factor to
be considered in determining the existence of ambiguity.");2 see also
Bankwest v. Fidelity & Deposit Co. of Md., 63 F.3d 974, 978 (10th
Cir. 1995) ("The fact that judicial opinions have interpreted identical
policy provisions differently may demonstrate ambiguity.").
Although I am inclined to conclude, like the Gingiss court, that the
notice provision in the Franchise Agreement does not require a notice
of the commencement of arbitration proceedings to be sent to the
address of the designated representative, it is not necessary to reach
a definitive conclusion on that question. Instead, it suffices to say that,
at the very least, the notice provision contained in the Franchise
Agreement cannot be read as unambiguously requiring notice of arbi-
tration to be sent to the Owners at the address of the designated repre-
sentative. Notices "required" under the Franchise Agreement include
notice of default and notice of termination of the Agreement. The
arbitration clause itself, however, does not include a notice require-
ment, but instead simply provides that claims will be arbitrated in
accordance with the AAA’s commercial arbitration rules. Because the
Franchise Agreement itself does not speak to the notice required to
commence arbitration proceedings, it is far from certain that notice of
arbitration is notice "required or permitted under" the Franchise
Agreement.
The determination that the Franchise Agreement does not unam-
biguously require an arbitration notice to be sent to the address of the
2
State law generally governs contract-interpretation issues arising in an
arbitration dispute. See, e.g., Aceros Prefabricados, S.A. v. TradeArbed,
Inc., 282 F.3d 92, 100 (2d Cir, 2002). In this case, the Franchise Agree-
ment calls for the application of Maryland law.
22 CHOICE HOTELS INT’L v. SM PROPERTY MANAGEMENT
designated representative is fatal to the Owners’ claim that the arbitra-
tion award did not draw its essence from the contract. An arbitrator’s
disregard of an unambiguous contract term may justify setting aside
an arbitration award, but the failure to recognize an ambiguity or
other mistake in interpreting the contract will not. See Three S Del.,
492 F.3d at 528 ("An arbitration award . . . does not fail to draw its
essence from the agreement merely because a court concluded that an
arbitrator has misread the contract."); cf. United States Postal Serv. v.
American Postal Workers Union, 204 F.3d 523, 527 (4th Cir. 2000)
("[A]s long as the arbitrator is even arguably construing or applying
the contract and acting within the scope of his authority, that a court
is convinced he committed serious error does not suffice to overturn
his decision." (internal quotation marks omitted)).
In this case, the arbitrator found sufficient the notice of the arbitra-
tion proceeding, which was sent in accordance with the AAA’s rules
to the last known address of the Owners,3 and the arbitrator therefore
proceeded to consider the merits of Choice’s claims. Although the
arbitrator did not expressly consider whether the Franchise Agree-
ment required a different method of notifying the Owners of the arbi-
tration proceeding, that omission cannot justify vacating the award.
"Courts of Appeals do not review the reasoning of arbitrators in deter-
mining whether their work draws its essence from the contract, but
look only to the result reached; the single question is whether the
award, however arrived at, is rationally inferable from the contract."
Apex Plumbing, 142 F.3d at 193 n.5; see also Champion Int’l Corp.
v. United Paperworkers Int’l Union, AFL-CIO, 168 F.3d 725, 729
(4th Cir. 1999) (explaining that "an arbitrator is generally under no
obligation to provide reasons for his decision"). It is rationally infer-
able from the award in favor of Choice that the arbitrator concluded
that the notice provision of the Franchise Agreement did not govern
the manner in which notice of arbitration must be provided. Because
the Franchise Agreement in my view does not unambiguously provide
3
To the extent that the Owners contend the addresses used by Choice
were not in fact the last addresses known to Choice, that argument is
unavailing. See Champion Int’l Corp. v. United Paperworkers Int’l
Union, AFL-CIO, 168 F.3d 725, 728 (4th Cir. 1999) ("A court does not
sit to hear claims of factual . . . error by an arbitrator . . . ." (internal quo-
tation marks omitted)).
CHOICE HOTELS INT’L v. SM PROPERTY MANAGEMENT 23
otherwise, the award drew its essence from the Franchise Agreement,
and our inquiry should therefore end. See Duferco Int’l Steel Trading
v. T. Klaveness Shipping A/S, 333 F.3d 383, 390 (2d Cir. 2003)
("Even where explanation for an award is deficient or non-existent,
we will confirm it if a justifiable ground for the decision can be
inferred from the facts of the case.").
I recognize that the record before us does not contain the answers
to intriguing questions, such as whether Choice brought to the arbitra-
tor’s attention the Franchise Agreement’s notice provision and why
Choice did not elect to send the arbitration notice to the address of the
designated representative and the addresses it had used when com-
mencing the lawsuit. But as relevant as such questions would seem
to be, I believe that our standard of review forecloses inquiry into
these issues.
At issue in this appeal is whether the arbitrator’s award drew its
essence from the Franchise Agreement, a question of law involving
basic principles of contract interpretation. See Seabulk Offshore Ltd.
v. American Home Assurance Co., 377 F.3d 408, 418 (4th Cir. 2004)
("The interpretation of a written contract is a question of law that
turns upon a reading of the document itself . . . ."); see also In re Vital
Basics, Inc., 472 F.3d 12, 17 (1st Cir. 2006) (explaining that a claim
that an arbitration award violated the terms of the underlying contract
"is a legal claim involving contract construction"). While the Owners
contend the Franchise Agreement required the arbitration notice to be
sent to the address of the designated representative and I believe it
does not, the question is a purely legal one that is resolved by consid-
eration of the language of the contract itself. See, e.g., Washington
Metropolitan Area Transit Auth. v. Potomac Inv. Props., Inc., 476
F.3d 231, 235 (4th Cir. 2007) (explaining that under Maryland law,
"the purpose of contract interpretation is to determine and effectuate
the intent of the parties, and the primary source for identifying this
intent is the language of the contract itself" (internal quotation marks
and alteration omitted)). The questions that spring to mind when con-
sidering the facts of this case are interesting, but neither the questions
themselves nor their answers shed any light on the meaning of Fran-
24 CHOICE HOTELS INT’L v. SM PROPERTY MANAGEMENT
chise Agreement. That these questions are not answered by the cur-
rent record thus should not affect the disposition of this appeal.4
I would hold that the arbitration award drew its essence from the
contract and that the district court erred by vacating the award.
Accordingly, I dissent from Part II of the majority opinion.
4
If these questions were somehow relevant to the issues presented on
appeal, it seems to me that the absence of any answers should lead not
to the vacating of the arbitration award but instead to a remand to the
arbitrator for clarification. See Cannelton Indus., Inc. v. District 17,
United Mineworkers of America, 951 F.2d 591, 594 (4th Cir. 1991)
("When an arbitrator does provide reasons for a decision and when those
reasons are so ambiguous as to make it impossible for a reviewing court
to decide whether an award draws its essence from the agreement, the
court may remand the case to the arbitrator for clarification.").