Hewlett-Packard Co. v. Berg

                UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                            UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
                                FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
                                         

No. 94-2251

                HEWLETT-PACKARD COMPANY, INC.,

                    Plaintiff, Appellant,

                              v.

                   HELGE BERG, ETC., ET AL.

                    Defendants, Appellees.

                                         

         APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

              FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

         [Hon. Joseph L. Tauro, U.S. District Judge]
                                                               

                                         

                            Before

                    Boudin, Circuit Judge,
                                                     

                Bownes, Senior Circuit Judge,
                                                        

                  and Stahl, Circuit Judge.
                                                      

                                         

Richard Allan Horning with whom Horning,  Janin & Harvey, Kevin P.
                                                                              
Light, Choate,  Hall & Stewart and  Robert W. Sutis were  on brief for
                                                           
appellant.
David A. Burman for appellees.
                           

                                         

                        August 3, 1995
                                         


     BOUDIN, Circuit Judge.  Hewlett-Packard  appeals from an
                                      

order of  the district court confirming  an arbitration award

rendered in a business dispute  with appellees Helge Berg and

Lars Skoog  and rejecting  Hewlett-Packard's  requests for  a

stay of the confirmation proceeding  or a declaration that it

is entitled to  a set-off for the  award.  The case  presents

several difficult  legal issues which can  be understood only

after a brief description of the facts and prior proceedings.

                        I.  BACKGROUND
                                    I.  BACKGROUND

     In March  1982, Apollo  Computer, now owned  by Hewlett-

Packard, entered  into  a two-year  distributorship  contract

with a Swedish company  called Dicoscan Distributed  Computer

Scandinavia  to  sell  Hewlett-Packard  products  in  several

Nordic countries.  The 1982 contract included an agreement to

submit any dispute under the contract to binding arbitration.

In  March 1984,  the parties  executed a  new distributorship

contract, which also contained an arbitration clause.

     In  the  meantime,   during  1983  and   1984,  Dicoscan

experienced financial  problems.  In mid-1984, Apollo claimed

that  Dicoscan was far behind in its payments.  In September,

Apollo terminated  the 1984 agreement.   The following month,

Dicoscan filed for bankruptcy.  The bankruptcy court assigned

to Berg  and Skoog, directors  and officers of  Dicoscan, the

right to bring claims against Apollo based on the contracts.

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     Berg and Skoog filed a request  for arbitration with the

International  Chamber  of  Commerce  Court  of  Arbitration,

claiming  millions  of  dollars  of damages  arising  out  of

Apollo's   unilateral  termination  of  the  1984  agreement.

Apollo counterclaimed  in the  arbitration by asserting  that

the  Swedish company had failed  to pay about  $10,000 due on

the  1984  contract and  about  $207,000 due  under  the 1982

contract.   After a dispute  about Berg and  Skoog's right to

invoke arbitration, see   Apollo Computer, Inc. v. Berg,  886
                                                                   

F.2d 469, 473 (1st Cir. 1989),  an arbitration proceeding was

begun.

     The arbitrators  were required by the parties' contracts

to  apply Massachusetts  law.    Ultimately, the  arbitrators

awarded around $700,000 plus interest  to Berg and Skoog, but

allowed a  set-off for the  $10,000 that Dicoscan  still owed

Apollo  under the 1984 contract.   To both parties' surprise,

the tribunal held that it was without  jurisdiction to decide

Apollo's more  substantial claim based on  the 1982 contract,

ruling that the  1982 contract  was not within  the Terms  of

Reference issued by  the arbitrators at the beginning  of the

proceeding.

     As a  result, Apollo was left with  a sizable obligation

to  Berg   and  Skoog   on  the   1984  contract   without  a

determination of its claim for more than $207,000 on the 1982

contract.  Apollo unilaterally decided to pay the arbitration

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award  amount  but  subtracted  the  $207,000  plus  interest

(together,  about  $300,000)  as  a  "setoff in  recoupment,"

which,  it  said,  is  a  time-honored  common  law  doctrine

embraced  in  Massachusetts  courts.   Apollo  also  filed  a

request with the tribunal  for a second arbitration regarding

the  1982 contract.  That tribunal has indicated that it will

hear the arbitration.

     In  January  1993,   Apollo  (later  succeeded  as   the

plaintiff by  Hewlett-Packard)  filed the  complaint in  this

action  with  the  Massachusetts  district  court.   Hewlett-

Packard requested  that the  district court (1)  declare that

Hewlett-Packard was entitled to the $207,000 set-off and that

the arbitration award is fully satisfied, and (2) vacate  the

tribunal's  award  and  correct it.    Hewlett-Packard  later

withdrew its second claim for relief.

     Berg and  Skoog moved to dismiss  the complaint, arguing

that  such declaratory  relief is  unavailable as  to foreign

arbitration  awards.    Later,   Berg  and  Skoog  moved  for

confirmation  of  the  arbitration  award.    Hewlett-Packard

opposed  confirmation of  the award  on  the ground  that, by

failing to include  its 1982 set-off, the  award was contrary

to public policy.   In the alternative, Hewlett-Packard moved

to  stay  confirmation, pending  the  outcome  of the  second

arbitration.  Hewlett-Packard also  asked the court to compel

arbitration as to its 1982 claim.

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     On  November  7,  1994,   the  district  judge  filed  a

memorandum, together with a  separate order, disposing of all

of these  motions.   The court's order  compelled arbitration

under the 1982 contract but it confirmed the award previously

made by the  tribunal on the 1984  contract.  The  court said

that  it   was  without   power  to  stay   the  confirmation

proceeding, as  Hewlett-Packard had  requested, and  that the

request for a set-off  was an improper attempt to  modify the

tribunal's award.  

     Apparently   ready   to   enforce    the   now-confirmed

arbitration award, Berg  and Skoog moved the court  for entry

of  final  judgment,  and   proffered  a  detailed   judgment

specifying  the award,  interest and  attorney's fees.   Four

days later,  Hewlett-Packard filed  its notice of  appeal and

thereafter filed a response  disputing certain aspects of the

proposed judgment.  The  district court has not acted  on the

motion  for entry of final judgment; and no such judgment has

been entered.

                       II.  DISCUSSION
                                   II.  DISCUSSION

     Hewlett-Packard  purports to  appeal  all  three of  the

district court's  adverse actions:   the confirmation  of the

arbitration  award,  the refusal  to  stay  that confirmation

proceeding pending the outcome of the second arbitration; and

the rejection of Hewlett-Packard's set-off claim declaration.

Commendably, Hewlett-Packard  has alerted  us  to a  possible

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jurisdiction  problem,  which   this  court  is  obliged   to

consider.   We  do  so but  caution  future panels  that  the

jurisdictional problems have not been briefed in this case.

     Nothing  in the  record in  this case  purports to  be a

"final  judgment,"  set  forth  in  a  separate  document  as

required  by Fed.  R. Civ.  P. 58,  disposing of  all claims.

Thus,  in formal  terms there  is  no basis  for appeal  of a

"final  decision" under 28 U.S.C.    1291, even  if the court

actually  resolved all of the  claims before it.   Indeed, as

already  noted, the  defendants  have pending  a motion  that

requests entry of a "final judgment."

     Nevertheless,  the  November  7  order,  insofar  as  it

confirms  the arbitration  award, is  appealable now  because

Congress  directed  in  the  statute  governing  arbitration-

related  appeals that  such  an "order"  confirming an  award

should be  immediately appealable.   9 U.S.C.    16(a)(1)(D).

The reason  is a pro-arbitration policy  designed to expedite

confirmation  of  arbitration awards.    This  is clear  from

precedent  and  scholarly  commentary.   See,  e.g.,  15B  C.
                                                               

Wright, A. Miller & E. Cooper, Federal Practice and Procedure
                                                                         

  3914.17, at 9-12, 32-34 (2d ed. 1992).

     There  is one  technical  hitch.   Seemingly, the  order

confirming the  award is not  itself a judgment   that can be

collected through court processes until it is entered  on the

docket as a judgment.  See  9 U.S.C.   13.  This has  nothing
                                      

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to  do with the final judgment rule; rather, the statute that

governs  confirmations provides that  after a confirmation is

ordered, a separate "entry of judgment" must be made pursuant

to that  order, and  it  is only  at that  stage that  "[t]he

judgment  so entered . . . may be  enforced as if it had been

rendered in an action  in the court in which it  is entered."

Id.
               

     Nevertheless, the Federal  Rules of  Civil Procedure  do

not say that appeals can only be taken from judgments; on the

contrary, they contemplate that, subject to the complex rules

that determine  what is immediately appealable,  there may be

such a thing as an "appealable order" that is not a judgment.

Fed. R. Civ. P. 79(b).   And, as already noted,  Congress has

designated  as  immediately  appealable   "an  order  .  .  .

confirming  .  .  . an  [arbitration]  award."    9 U.S.C.   

16(a)(1)(D).

     Our position  is  not at  odds  with Middleby  Corp.  v.
                                                                     

Hussmann  Corp., 962 F.2d 614 (7th Cir. 1992).  Middleby held
                                                                    

that no immediate  appeal could be  taken where the  district

court issued an  order of confirmation but declined  to enter

judgment  after  making  a specific  determination  to  delay

giving  effect  to  the  confirmation   order  until  further

proceedings were concluded.   Here, by contrast, the district

court denied  the requested stay, and  the confirmation order

is  immediately  effective,  requiring  only  the  filing  of

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specified  papers  with the  clerk  to permit  "the  entry of

judgment thereon."  9 U.S.C.   13.

     Because the  confirmation order is  appealable, we think

that there is also before us Hewlett-Packard's claim that the

confirmation proceeding should have  been stayed.  The reason

is simply that the underlying argument for  a stay is also an

objection to the  confirmation order itself.  To this extent,

it is effectively an interlocutory ruling made in the process

of approving the confirmation request and like any other such

interlocutory ruling it  is reviewable at  the time that  the

confirmation order  itself  is brought  up  on appeal.    Cf.
                                                                         

Stringfellow v. Concerned Neighbors  in Action, 480 U.S. 370,
                                                          

375  (1987); 15A Wright, Miller & Cooper, supra,   3905.1, at
                                                           

249-63.

     A  similar argument  might  also be  made to  justify an

appeal  now based on the  district court's refusal to declare

Hewlett-Packard's  right to  the  set-off it  asserted.   The

problem is complicated,  but we  see no need  to resolve  the

complexities.  Whether or  not the refusal to allow  the set-

off  is an appealable issue,  the refusal at  this time turns

out not to be a legal error, so the jurisdictional issue need

not be decided.  See Norton v. Matthews, 427 U.S. 524, 530-32
                                                   

(1976);  In re Pioneer Ford Sales,  729 F.2d 27, 31 (1st Cir.
                                             

1984).

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     We turn now  to the  merits.   Hewlett-Packard does  not

object to the confirmation  of the award in all  respects; it

says  it  has  paid  the award  except  the  disputed  amount

including  interest.    But  Hewlett-Packard  says  that  the

district court erred by confirming  the award in full instead

of  either allowing  a  set-off or  granting  a stay  of  the

confirmation pending the results of the new arbitration.

     We  agree with  the district  court's rejection  at this

time of the first alternative.  Whether Hewlett-Packard has a

valid   claim  under   the  1982   contract  is   subject  to

arbitration; we agree  with the district  court--and Hewlett-

Packard--that the  tribunal has never resolved  the merits of

that claim.  Whatever the Massachusetts law on set-offs,  the

district court could not allow the set-off at present without

determining that Hewlett-Packard had  a valid claim, which is

the very subject of the arbitration.

     It  is hard  to  imagine  a  step  that  would  be  more

offensive  to  the   pro-arbitration  policies  reflected  in

Congress'  endorsement   of  the   1958  Convention  on   the

Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards, often

called  the New York Convention.  The New York Convention was

approved   by  Congress,  and  implementing  legislation  was

codified at 9 U.S.C.    201-08.  The statute  enlists the aid

of federal courts to compel arbitration.  9 U.S.C.   206.  By

contrast,   the   judicial  set-off   requested   here  would

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circumvent the 1982 contract to arbitrate and the now-pending

arbitration under that contract.

     The request to defer confirmation of the award under the

1984  contract stands  on a different  footing.   However the

case might stand absent the bankruptcy, Dicoscan's bankruptcy

gives Hewlett-Packard a very substantial prudential argument.

If the existing award  were confirmed in full and  reduced to

judgment, Hewlett-Packard would have to pay the full award to

the  defendants  as  successors-in-interest of  an  insolvent

company.  If in due course  Hewlett-Packard then prevailed on

its claims against the insolvent company on a closely related

transaction,  it   would  have  no  assurance  of  collecting

anything.

     Further,  Hewlett-Packard  cannot  be  blamed   for  the

discrepant timing in the resolution of its claim, or at least

no argument to that effect has been made.  After  it was told

that the  defendants did  have arbitration rights  despite an

anti-assignment  clause  in  the  contracts,  Hewlett-Packard

apparently  made  a  reasonable   effort  to  have  both  the

defendants' claim  and its  own counterclaim resolved  in one

proceeding  at   the  same  time.     Only  the  arbitrators'

surprising  interpretation  of their mandate frustrated  this

attempt.

     Under these  circumstances, the seemingly  fair solution

would be  to  confirm  the award  in  its  uncontested  part,

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reserving confirmation of the balance until the 1982 contract

dispute  is  arbitrated.    The  district  court  refused  to

consider a stay  of confirmation  on the ground  that it  was

without power to  do so.   We fully understand the  basis for

the  district  court's  doubt  about its  authority,  but  we

conclude that it  does have the power to issue  a stay in the

peculiar circumstances of this case.

     Ordinarily  there  could  be  no  doubt  that  a  court,

although obliged  to decide a claim,  would retain discretion

to  defer  proceedings for  prudential  reasons.   Indeed,  a

typical reason  is the  pendency of a  related proceeding  in

another  tribunal.    "[T]he  power to  stay  proceedings  is

incidental to the  power inherent in  every court to  control

the disposition of the  causes on its docket with  economy of

time and effort for itself, for counsel, and  for litigants."

Landis v. North Amer. Co., 299 U.S. 248, 254 (1936).
                                     

     The question here is whether this traditional  authority

is curtailed  by the New York Convention and its implementing

legislation.  The statute provides that,  upon a petition for

confirmation,  a  district  court "shall  confirm  the  award
                                                    

unless it finds one of the grounds for refusal or deferral of

recognition or enforcement of the award specified in the said

Convention."  9 U.S.C.   207 (emphasis added).  Article VI of

the Convention is the only provision that deals  with staying

confirmation.  Article VI states:

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     If  an  application   for  the  setting  aside   or
     suspension  of  the  award   has  been  made  to  a
     competent authority [in the country where the award
     has  been made],  the  authority  before which  the
     award  is  sought to  be  relied  upon may,  if  it
     considers it  proper, adjourn  the decision  on the
     enforcement of the award [and require a security].

The circumstances  outlined in  Article VI  do not  appear to

exist in this case.  The question is whether a district court

may grant a stay in circumstances other than those authorized

in Article VI.

     The fact that section  207 uses the word "shall"  is not

decisive, because a stay  is a deferral rather  than refusal.

But  the fact that the  statute refers to  the Convention and

the  Convention lists  a single  ground for  a stay  could be

taken  to exclude  all other grounds  under the  principle of

expressio  unius  est  exclusio   alterius.    That  was,  in
                                                      

substance,  the reasoning  of the  district court.   However,

expressio  unius  is  an  aid  to  construction  and  not  an
                            

inflexible rule.   See, e.g., United  States v. Massachusetts
                                                                         

Bay  Transport.  Auth.,  614 F.2d  27,  28  (1st  Cir. 1980).
                                  

Whatever we might think  if the question were  entirely open,

precedent  informs  our  decision  in this  case.    Domestic

arbitrations are  governed by  the United  States Arbitration

Act (chapter 1 of Title 9) but not by the Convention (chapter

2  of Title 9).  The  Act states that, upon application, "the

court  must grant [a confirmation] order  unless the award is
                       

vacated, modified, or corrected  as prescribed in sections 10

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and 11 of this title."  9  U.S.C.   9 (emphasis added).   But

courts  routinely grant  stays in  such cases  for prudential

reasons  not listed in sections  10 and 11.   E.g., Middleby,
                                                                        

962 F.2d at 615-16.

     Similarly, this court has held that district courts have

discretion to  stay an  action to compel  arbitration pending
                                                    

the outcome of related litigation, even though the Act states

that on a motion to compel the court "shall hear the parties"

and  "shall proceed summarily  to trial."  9  U.S.C.   4; see
                                                                         

Acton  Corp. v.  Borden, Inc.,  670 F.2d  377, 383  (1st Cir.
                                         

1982).   In Acton,  then-Judge Breyer held  that, in drafting
                             

the  statute, Congress  did not  "intend[] a  major departure

from  the ordinary  rule allowing one  federal court  to stay

litigation when  another federal court  is on the  process of

deciding the same issue."  We take the same view of Congress'

intentions in implementing the Convention.

     Of course, a stay of confirmation should  not be lightly

granted.      A  central   purpose   of  the   Convention--an

international agreement  to which  the United States  is only

one of approximately one hundred signatories--was to expedite

the recognition of foreign arbitral  awards with a minimum of

judicial interference.  But  the risk that the power  to stay

could  be abused by  disgruntled litigants--real  though that

risk is, see Spier  v. Calzaturificio, 663 F. Supp.  871, 875
                                                 

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(S.D.N.Y.  1987)--argues  more  for  a cautious  and  prudent

exercise of the power than for its elimination.

     Because the district court acted under a misapprehension

of its authority, we vacate the confirmation order and remand

for further  proceedings.  Whether confirmation or collection

of  the  award  should  be  partially  deferred  pending  the

resolution  of the 1982 contract  arbitration is a matter for

the  district  court  to  determine in  the  first  instance.

Still,  we think it would require some explanation if, in the

face  of  the  equities  of  this case,  the  district  court

concluded  that  the  full  award  should  be  confirmed  and

collected now.

     The  confirmation order  is  vacated and  the matter  is
                                                     

remanded  to  the  district  court  for  further  proceedings
                    

consistent with this opinion.

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