Blue Tee Corp. v. Koehring Company and United Dominion Industries, Inc., (Formerly Known as Amca International Corp.)

999 F.2d 633, 1993 U.S. App. LEXIS 18606
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJuly 21, 1993
Docket1540, Docket 93-7033
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 999 F.2d 633 (Blue Tee Corp. v. Koehring Company and United Dominion Industries, Inc., (Formerly Known as Amca International Corp.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blue Tee Corp. v. Koehring Company and United Dominion Industries, Inc., (Formerly Known as Amca International Corp.), 999 F.2d 633, 1993 U.S. App. LEXIS 18606 (2d Cir. 1993).

Opinion

FEINBERG, Circuit Judge:

This appeal, which grows out of a fairly typical business deal, makes one wonder about the alleged speed and economy of arbitration in resolving commercial disputes. Thus far, the parties have been involved for over three years in three separate district court actions, two arbitrations and this appeal; in addition, one party seeks still further arbitration. As will be seen below, we think it is time to call these proceedings to a halt.

Blue Tee Corp. (Blue Tee) appeals from a final judgment entered in January 1993 in favor of appellees Koehring Company and United Dominion Industries, Inc. (formerly known as AMCA International Corp.) (collectively AMCA) in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, Robert J. Sweet, J. The judgment confirmed an arbitration award issued by a three-member panel of the American Arbitration Association (AAA). The award was the culmination of a fiercely-contested pricing dispute under a contract between the parties. Blue Tee challenged the award in the district court. Judge Sweet concluded that the AAA panel had jurisdiction to resolve the dispute and confirmed the award. For the reasons stated below, we affirm.

Background

In May 1989, Blue Tee and AMCA entered into a purchase agreement (the Agreement) whereby Blue Tee was to purchase the inventory and intangible assets of AMCA’s Speedstar Division, a manufacturer of drilling rigs, which was scheduled for liquidation. In the Agreement, the purchased assets were valued at $5 million, subject to adjustment based upon differences between the inventory at closing and the inventory carried on Speedstar’s books of account as of the 1988 year end.

The provisions of the Agreement dealing with preliminary purchase price, purchase price adjustments, final purchase price, and resolution of disputes concerning purchase price adjustments were all set out in Section 3.Section 3.3 (entitled “Final Statement”) dealt specifically with the valuation of inventory. Among other things, it contained a narrow arbitration clause requiring disputes regarding the computation of the final statement to be resolved by accountants, with the names of preferred firms (including Arthur Andersen) actually mentioned. 1 In addition *635 to the narrow arbitration clause in Section 3.3, the Agreement contained a general arbitration clause. Section 12.15 provided that

[a]ny dispute, controversy or claim arising out of or in connection with or relating to this Agreement or any breach or alleged breach thereof, shall be determined and settled by arbitration in the City of New York pursuant to the rules then in effect of the American Arbitration Association.

The story of this dispute, in brief, is as follows. By its terms, Section 3.1 of the Agreement (entitled “Preliminary Statement”) called for AMCA to prepare a preliminary statement, using inventory values as of a specified date, “on a basis consistent with the principles used in preparing the normal month end balance sheets,” i.e., discounted book value. The crucial dispute between the parties was whether, as AMCA claimed, the Agreement was amended at the last minute to provide for a method of valuing inventory different from the one specified in Section 3.1. According to AMCA, the parties agreed that inventory would be valued not on discounted book value (as the terms of Section 3.1 required) but on another method involving categories of “good” and “bad” inventory, and the revisions in value caused by this last-minute amendment were reflected in the preliminary statement. On this basis, the preliminary statement called for Blue Tee to pay $3,159,000 on account, pending adjustment based on inventory values as of the closing.

Blue Tee paid the preliminary price by wire transfer. Later, AMCA claimed that by paying the preliminary price, Blue Tee effectively waived the provisions of Section 3.1 and implicitly accepted AMCA’s valuation method, whereas Blue Tee claimed that it was bound only by the unamended Agreement, that it had not agreed to any last-minute changes in the Agreement and that it had paid the preliminary price since it seemed “about right” and was subject to adjustment.

At the required time, AMCA supplied a final statement based on the same valuation method it had used in the preliminary statement, with separate categories for good and bad inventory. In other words, the final statement, like the preliminary statement, was based on the assumption that the Agreement had been amended at the last minute. Thereafter, AMCA provided an amended final statement based on the same principles, which called for Blue Tee to pay an additional $492,000 (later reduced to $395,000). Blue Tee objected to the amended final statement, and, pursuant to the narrow arbitration clause contained in Section 3.3, the dispute was jointly submitted to the accounting firm of Arthur Andersen.

In the proceedings before Arthur Andersen, AMCA submitted evidence of the last-minute amendment and its effect on the valuation of inventory, and Blue Tee argued that the final purchase price was to be determined in accordance with Section 3 of the Agreement, regardless of last minute understandings as reflected in the preliminary statement. Arthur Andersen found that under a “literal interpretation” of Section 3 of the Agreement, i.e., assuming it had not been amended by the last-minute negotiation leading to the changes reflected in the preliminary statement, AMCA was required to pay Blue Tee $878,000 plus interest because Blue Tee had overpaid. But Arthur Andersen also expressly disclaimed competence to determine whether, as AMCA argued, the parties had amended the Agreement at the last minute, thereby materially affecting the valuation of inventory. AMCA then attempted to persuade Arthur Andersen to rule on what effect AMCA’s position regarding the amendment would have on the value of the inventory, if AMCA’s position were assumed to be valid. Blue Tee objected to any further rul *636 ing by Arthur Andersen on the ground that its authority to arbitrate had ended. Arthur Andersen did nothing further.

AMCA then demanded AAA arbitration under Section 12.15 of the Agreement, requesting a determination of the amount of the purchase price on AMCA’s theory— which Arthur Andersen had refused to decide — that the Agreement had been amended. AMCA’s demand for arbitration claimed the specific amount of “$395,000 plus other amounts not yet determined.” Blue Tee then filed two actions in the district court, one seeking to confirm the Arthur Andersen award and the other seeking to enjoin the AAA arbitration. AMCA opposed the relief sought in both actions. In Blue Tee Corp. v. Koehring Co. (Blue Tee I), 754 F.Supp. 26 (S.D.N.Y.1990), Judge Sweet concluded that he was compelled to confirm the Arthur Andersen award because it was sufficiently final and definite within the meaning of the Federal Arbitration Act (the Act) and entered judgment accordingly. AMCA paid Blue Tee the full amount of the judgment. Some five months later, however, in Blue Tee Corp. v. Koehring Co. (Blue Tee II), 763 F.Supp. 754 (S.D.N.Y.1991), Judge Sweet refused to stay the arbitration before the AAA on the issue of whether the Agreement had been amended at the last minute:

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Bluebook (online)
999 F.2d 633, 1993 U.S. App. LEXIS 18606, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blue-tee-corp-v-koehring-company-and-united-dominion-industries-inc-ca2-1993.