ADT v. Richmond

18 F.4th 149
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedNovember 10, 2021
Docket21-10023
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 18 F.4th 149 (ADT v. Richmond) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
ADT v. Richmond, 18 F.4th 149 (5th Cir. 2021).

Opinion

Case: 21-10023 Document: 00516088427 Page: 1 Date Filed: 11/10/2021

United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit United States Court of Appeals Fifth Circuit

FILED November 10, 2021 No. 21-10023 Lyle W. Cayce Clerk

ADT, L.L.C.,

Plaintiff—Appellant,

versus

Kamala Richmond; Darryl Richmond, Individually and as next friend of D.R., J.R. and E.R., minors,

Defendants—Appellees.

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Texas No. 4:20-CV-759

Before King, Smith, and Haynes, Circuit Judges. Jerry E. Smith, Circuit Judge: Federal courts can enforce an arbitration agreement only if they could hear the underlying “controversy between the parties.” 9 U.S.C. § 4. In Vaden v. Discover Bank, 556 U.S. 49 (2009), the Court told us to define that “controversy” by looking to the whole dispute, including any state-court pleadings. The question here is whether we must define the “parties” that way, too. Because the statute makes clear that we may not, we vacate the dismissal and remand. Case: 21-10023 Document: 00516088427 Page: 2 Date Filed: 11/10/2021

No. 21-10023

I. Telesforo Aviles worked for ADT, L.L.C., installing security systems in customers’ homes. After a decade of service, Aviles began spying on cus- tomers using the cameras he had installed. ADT discovered Aviles’s misconduct, fired him, and reported him to the authorities. But by then, Aviles had spied on more than two hundred customers, accessing some accounts hundreds of times. Kamala Richmond and her family are citizens of Texas. They say they were among Aviles’s victims. After Aviles’s conduct became known, the Richmonds sued Aviles and ADT in Texas state court on sundry state-law claims, seeking more than $1 million in damages. But the Richmonds’ con- tract with ADT contained an arbitration clause. To enforce that clause, ADT brought this federal suit under § 4 of the Federal Arbitration Act. ADT premised jurisdiction on the complete diversity between the Richmonds and ADT, which is a citizen of Florida and Delaware. A federal court can hear a suit to compel arbitration only if it could hear “a suit arising out of the controversy between the parties.” 9 U.S.C. § 4. To define that “controversy,” a federal court must “look through” the § 4 petition “to the parties’ underlying substantive controversy.” Vaden, 556 U.S. at 62. If a federal court could hear a suit arising from that “whole controversy,” id. at 67, then that court can hear the § 4 suit, id. at 70. Applying Vaden, the district court looked through ADT’s federal suit to the Richmonds’ state-court complaint, which named Aviles and ADT as defendants. From that, the court concluded that the “whole controversy” included Aviles, ADT, and the Richmonds. But those parties lacked diver- sity of citizenship because Aviles, like the Richmonds, is from Texas. See 28 U.S.C. § 1332(a)(1). On that ground, the court dismissed ADT’s suit for want of diversity jurisdiction.

2 Case: 21-10023 Document: 00516088427 Page: 3 Date Filed: 11/10/2021

ADT asks us to revive its suit. ADT says that Vaden doesn’t extend to diversity of citizenship and that every federal circuit to consider the question agrees. The Richmonds acknowledge the weight of opposing authority but contend that Vaden requires affirmance. Although neither side stresses § 4’s text, it resolves this case.

II. Vaden tells us to look to the “whole controversy,” not just the petition to compel arbitration, to define the controversy over which the petition asserts federal jurisdiction. See Vaden, 556 U.S. at 67. The district court went a step further: It applied Vaden’s look-through test to define the “parties” to that controversy. That was error, so we vacate the dismissal and remand.

A. Section 4 is clear: The only controversy that bears on our jurisdiction is “the controversy between the parties.” 9 U.S.C. § 4 (emphasis added). Those “parties” are only the parties to the suit to compel arbitration. Section 4 empowers [a] party aggrieved by the alleged failure, neglect, or refusal of another to arbitrate under a written agreement for arbitration [to] petition any United States district court which, save for such agreement, would have jurisdiction under title 28, in a civil action or in admiralty of the subject matter of a suit arising out of the controversy between the parties, for an order directing that such arbitration proceed in the manner provided for in such agreement. Id. (emphasis added). Beyond the quoted excerpt, the word “party” or “parties” appears at six other points in § 4. At all those points, § 4 refers to one or both of two parties. The first are those who “fail[ ], neglect, or refus[e] . . . to arbitrate under a written agreement for arbitration.” Id. The second are those whom the first aggrieve

3 Case: 21-10023 Document: 00516088427 Page: 4 Date Filed: 11/10/2021

by not submitting to arbitration. See id. In other words, § 4 uses “parties” to mean only the parties to the § 4 suit: those who refuse to abide their agreement to arbitrate and those whom they aggrieve by doing so. Non- parties to that suit do not matter. Reading “parties” more broadly would make no textual sense. To take one example, if “the making of the agreement for arbitration . . . is not in issue,” a court must “order . . . the parties to proceed to arbitration.” Id. That provision applies easily to those who have agreed to arbitrate. But how could it apply to nonparties? A court can’t compel a party to arbitrate when it never agreed to. See Moses H. Cone Mem’l Hosp. v. Mercury Constr. Corp., 460 U.S. 1, 19–20 (1983). Vaden does not control. There, the Court explained only how we must define the § 4 “controversy.” It never defined the “parties” whom § 4 describes. Vaden’s facts show why. Vaden was a federal-question case. See Vaden, 556 U.S. at 70. And unlike diversity jurisdiction, federal-question jurisdiction turns not on the identity of the parties but on the subject matter of the controversy. 1 Even if the Vaden Court could have decided who the “parties” are, it did not. Vaden spoke only to the word “controversy.” Section 4, the Court explained, “does not invite federal courts to dream up counterfactuals when actual litigation has defined the parties’ controversy.” Vaden, 556 U.S. at 68 (emphasis added). “The relevant question,” the majority persisted, “is whether the whole controversy between the parties—not just a piece broken off

1 Compare 28 U.S.C. § 1331 (“The district courts shall have original jurisdiction of all civil actions arising under the Constitution, laws, or treaties of the United States.”), with 28 U.S.C. § 1332(a)(1) (requiring complete diversity among the parties to sustain diversity jurisdiction).

4 Case: 21-10023 Document: 00516088427 Page: 5 Date Filed: 11/10/2021

from that controversy—is one over which the federal courts would have jurisdiction.” Id. at 67 (emphasis added).

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Bluebook (online)
18 F.4th 149, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adt-v-richmond-ca5-2021.