AGCO Corporation v. Anglin, Max M.

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJune 9, 2000
Docket98-3373
StatusPublished

This text of AGCO Corporation v. Anglin, Max M. (AGCO Corporation v. Anglin, Max M.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
AGCO Corporation v. Anglin, Max M., (7th Cir. 2000).

Opinion

In the United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit

No. 98-3373

Agco Corporation,

Plaintiff-Appellee,

v.

Max Anglin, et al.,

Defendants-Appellants.

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Indiana, Indianapolis Division. No. IP98-0050-C-T/G--John Daniel Tinder, Judge.

Argued March 2, 1999--Decided June 9, 2000

Before Cudahy, Eschbach, and Coffey, Circuit Judges.

Cudahy, Circuit Judge. A farm equipment dealership, Silver Lake Farm Service, Inc., and its owners appeal from a district court order denying their motion to vacate an arbitration award and confirming an award for the farm equipment manufacturer AGCO. This appeal presents the question whether the arbitrators acted with the authority conferred upon them by the parties’ agreement, or instead decided issues beyond those which the parties had agreed to submit to arbitration. Concluding that the arbitrators exceeded their authority, we reverse.

I.

Max and Gary Anglin own Silver Lake Farm Service, Inc., a farm implement store in Silver Lake, Indiana. In 1987 Silver Lake became a dealer of farm equipment for the Deutz-Allis Corporation. Silver Lake bought inventory from Deutz-Allis and sold it to farmers. In 1990 AGCO acquired Deutz-Allis and assumed the dealership agreement with Silver Lake.

In building its business, Silver Lake entered into a series of financing agreements. First, to help its customers obtain credit, it signed a Retail Financing Agreement in 1989 with Agricredit Acceptance Company, an equipment lease finance company. At the same time, Agricredit required the Anglins to execute separate personal guaranties of Silver Lake’s liabilities under the Retail Finance Agreement. Significantly, neither these personal guaranties nor the Retail Finance Agreement provides for arbitration.

On June 3, 1992, Silver Lake entered into a Wholesale Financing Agreement with AGCO to obtain financing to purchase inventory from AGCO. A binding arbitration provision required the Anglins and AGCO to arbitrate all disputes arising under the Agreement. On the same day, Max and Gary Anglin and their wives executed personal guaranties (the "Guaranties") of Silver Lake’s indebtedness to AGCO. Each of the Guaranties (pre-printed, tiny-print forms drafted by AGCO) contained the broad arbitration provision at issue in this appeal:

BINDING ARBITRATION. Except as otherwise specifically provided below, all actions, disputes, claims and controversies heretofore or hereafter arising out of or directly or indirectly relating to (a) this Guaranty . . . , (b) any subsequent agreement entered into between the parties hereto, (c) any previous agreement entered into between the parties hereto, (d) any relationship or business dealings between the parties hereto, and/or (e) the transactions contemplated by this Guaranty or any previous or subsequent agreement between the parties hereto . . . will be subject to and resolved by binding arbitration . . . and judgment upon the award rendered by the arbitrator may be entered in any court having jurisdiction.

(Emphasis added.) As will become apparent, the elusive meaning of the "directly or indirectly" clause is what has given rise to this litigation.

The scope of the Guaranties is set forth in a separate provision, which also incorporates the "direct or indirect" wording:

In consideration of financing provided or to be provided by you [AGCO] to Silver Lake Farm Service, Inc. ("Dealer"), . . . we [the Anglins] . . . guaranty to you [AGCO] . . . the immediate payment of all current and future liabilities owed by Dealer to you when due, whether such liabilities are direct or indirect.

(Emphasis added.)

By late 1992 AGCO was forging a close relationship with Agricredit. In November, unknown to the Anglins, AGCO entered into an Operating Agreement with Agricredit, under which AGCO agreed to purchase any retail finance contract on which the purchase price warranty had been breached. Soon thereafter (the precise time is not clear from the record), AGCO acquired Agricredit./1

Some time in 1994, Silver Lake began receiving complaints of irregularities in a number of retail contracts with customers. Although the record is sketchy, the circumstances surrounding six contracts--all of which were signed between 1992 and 1994 and then assigned to Agricredit-- have given rise to charges of fraud against Silver Lake. These charges are not before us in this appeal. What is before us--according to AGCO--are Silver Lake’s retail obligations to Agricredit (the "Retail Obligations"), which AGCO insists are covered by the broad arbitration clause in the Guaranties. AGCO took assignment of these Retail Obligations from Agricredit in July and August 1995, several months after Silver Lake’s default led AGCO to terminate the dealership agreement and the Wholesale Finance Agreement.

In October 1995 AGCO sought arbitration against Silver Lake and the Anglins based upon the arbitration provision contained in the Guaranties. Asserting fraud and breach of contract claims against a Silver Lake manager (who the Anglins assert in their brief "has since disappeared"), AGCO complained about the six contracts executed by Silver Lake customers that involved Agricredit financing. In its written demand for arbitration, AGCO somewhat diffusely characterized the nature of its dispute as a "Claim under Dealer Contract for defaults/fraud under recourse consumer financing agreements and for unpaid wholegood sales; claims against guarantors for payment of principal obligor’s liabilities." The matter was submitted to an arbitration panel of the American Arbitration Association, which conducted a three-day hearing in September 1997. No transcript was created. In November 1997 the arbitration panel issued its ruling. Although the arbitrators submitted no findings of fact or law, they apparently determined that the arbitration clause in the Guaranties authorized them to consider the disputed retail contracts, even though those contracts involved not AGCO but Agricredit, a nonsignatory to the Guaranties. The arbitrators declared Silver Lake liable to AGCO for the debts arising from five contracts; denied Silver Lake’s counterclaim for wrongful termination of its dealership; and awarded AGCO damages of $148,517 plus attorney’s fees.

In January 1998 AGCO petitioned the district court under the Federal Arbitration Act, 9 U.S.C. sec. 1 et seq., to confirm the award. The Anglins promptly moved to vacate or modify the award largely on the basis that the arbitrators exceeded their powers by considering issues outside the scope of the arbitration agreement. The district court denied the Anglins’ motion and confirmed the award. It held that the arbitration provision in the Guaranties authorized AGCO to arbitrate a dispute with the Anglins over Silver Lake’s Retail Obligations to Agricredit because that dispute directly or indirectly related to the Anglins’ Guaranties:

[A] direct liability would be a liability of Silver Lake to AGCO under the Wholesale Financing Agreement or under the Dealer Agreement. An indirect liability would be a liability of Silver Lake to AGCO through a liability of Silver Lake to Agricredit, AGCO’s wholly owned subsidiary, under the Retail Financing Agreement.

(Dist. Ct. Order of 8/25/98, at 14.) This appeal followed.

II. We first consider whether the Anglins waived any objection to the arbitrability of the Retail Obligations when they consented to arbitration and agreed to participate in the arbitration hearing. If a party willingly and without reservation allows an issue to be submitted to arbitration, he cannot await the outcome and then later argue that the arbitrator lacked authority to decide the matter. See Jones Dairy Farm v. Local No.

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