Ferro Corporation, Plaintiff-Appellee/cross-Appellant v. Garrison Industries, Inc., Defendant-Appellant/cross-Appellee

142 F.3d 926
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJune 10, 1998
Docket96-3703, 96-3771
StatusPublished
Cited by110 cases

This text of 142 F.3d 926 (Ferro Corporation, Plaintiff-Appellee/cross-Appellant v. Garrison Industries, Inc., Defendant-Appellant/cross-Appellee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ferro Corporation, Plaintiff-Appellee/cross-Appellant v. Garrison Industries, Inc., Defendant-Appellant/cross-Appellee, 142 F.3d 926 (6th Cir. 1998).

Opinion

OPINION

ROSEN, District Judge.

I. INTRODUCTION

This cross-appeal concerns the arbitrability of a Custom Manufacturing Agreement entered into by the parties. When a dispute arose concerning the agreement, Defendant-Appellant Garrison Industries, Inc. filed a demand for arbitration, alleging breach of contract. Plaintiff-Appellee Ferro Corporation initially engaged in the arbitration, but later collaterally attacked Garrison in both state and federal court.

At the center of the dispute is the District Court’s ruling that the issue of fraudulent inducement of the contract was justiciable under Ohio law, and not subject to arbitration in the first instance, and its ruling vacating the arbitration award.

II. PROCEDURAL AND FACTUAL BACKGROUND

On March 17, 1992 Plaintiff Ferro Corporation (“Ferro”) and Defendant Garrison Industries, Inc. (“Garrison”) executed a requirements contract, known to the parties as the Custom Manufacturing Agreement (“CMA”). In the CMA, Garrison agreed to manufacture for Ferro a Ferro-developed product known as PyroCheek LM, which was intended for use as a flame retardant additive to certain thermoplastics. 1 Garrison promised to manufacture at least 1.5 million pounds of PyroCheek LM per year, and as much as 3 million pounds per year. Ferro agreed to pay Garrison $250,000 up front to purchase and upgrade Garrison’s manufacturing equipment, so that Garrison could manufacture PyroCheek LM, and to accept and pay for (at the rate of 90 cents per pound) the PyroCheek LM that Garrison produced. The CMA had an initial term of two years, contained a standard arbitration *928 clause drafted by Ferro, and an Ohio choice-of-law provision.

Upon executing the contract on March 17, the parties agreed that Garrison would begin production of PyroCheck LM as soon as Garrison completed certain upgrades to its facilities as contemplated by the contract. However, Garrison did not begin to produce PyroCheck LM until May 28, 1992 because in addition to spending time making the upgrades agreed to by the parties, Garrison needed time and money to repair damage to its facilities caused by a tornado on May 9, 1992. 2

During the next several months, Garrison continued to produce PyroCheck LM as it experimented with various chemical production processes. Although the product Garrison manufactured did not always meet Ferro’s specifications 3 and the quantity produced fell short of the contract mínimums, Ferro purchased all of the product Garrison produced through March 26, 1993. 4 On March 26, 1993, however, Ferro ordered Garrison to cease production of PyroCheck LM and later told Garrison it did not intend to purchase any more of the Pyro-Check LM that Garrison might produce, and sent a contract termination letter to Garrison in December of 1993.

Despite Ferro’s expressed desire to discontinue its relationship with Garrison, Garrison sought payment from Ferro for the balance of the roughly 2.2 million pounds of PyroCheck LM that Ferro had promised it would buy from Garrison. Ferro refused, prompting Garrison to invoke the arbitration clause of the CMA on April 25, 1994. Ferro responded oh May 15, 1994 with a counterclaim in arbitration. The arbitration was scheduled for January 9, 1995. Just before the arbitration was to begin, however, the parties engaged in a whirlwind of procedural moves and counter-moves.

On December 2,1994, Ferro filed an action in state court seeking to enjoin the arbitration and have the court rescind the contract because Garrison had fraudulently induced Ferro to enter into the CMA. Ferro contemporaneously filed, with the arbitration panel, a motion to stay the arbitration proceedings pending the litigation. On December 20, 1994, the arbitration panel denied the motion to stay the arbitration proceedings. Ferro immediately sought to stay the arbitration proceedings anyway, by filing a motion for a temporary restraining order to stay the arbitration in its state court action. The state court set the matter for hearing on December 22,1994.

On December 21, 1994, before the state court had ruled on Ferro’s motion for a temporary restraining order, Garrison removed the action to the United States District Court for the Northern District of Ohio, where it was assigned to Judge Kathleen M. O’Malley. Ferro’s counsel appeared in Judge O’Malley’s chambers in federal court on December 21,1994, seeking an emergency meeting with the Court and requesting immediate issuance of a temporary restraining order, so that Ferro’s counsel could avoid preparing for the impending arbitration. Since Judge O’Malley was not in chambers, she communicated through her clerk to Fer-ro’s counsel (after being reached by telephone) that the Court declined to rule on the motion immediately, but that the Court would hold a hearing on the motion before the arbitration was scheduled to commence. Ferro’s counsel, either refusing or unable to understand this ruling, then went to Judge Aldrich, who was the “emergency/miseellaneous judge” on duty at that time, and asked *929 her to issue a temporary restraining order on the grounds that Judge O’Malley was “unavailable” to consider Ferro’s request. Judge Aldrich’s clerk learned from Judge O’Malley’s chambers what had already transpired, and quite properly refused to present the matter to Judge Aldrich. The next day, Judge O’Malley set a hearing on the motion for a temporary restraining order for January 5, 1995, and consolidated the hearing to include a hearing on Ferro’s request for preliminary injunctive relief. Also on December 22, 1994, the state court — apparently unaware that the case had been removed to federal court — issued the requested temporary restraining order. Of course, the state court no longer had jurisdiction over the dispute, so the state court’s order was null and void. Nonetheless, Ferro sent a copy of the void order to the arbitration panel. 5

On December 28, 1994, Garrison moved the District Court to refer all issues raised in the complaint (including Ferro’s fraudulent inducement claim) to arbitration. Essentially, Garrison opposed Ferro’s request for an injunction and sought an order declaring that the question of whether it had fraudulently induced Ferro to enter the CMA was an issue that only the arbitrators could resolve. Judge O’Malley ordered that the issues raised in Garrison’s motion would also be heard at the January 5,1995 hearing.

At the time of the January 5,1995 hearing, Ferro had asserted only one basis for its claim of fraudulent inducement: that it was induced into entering the CMA by Garrison’s false representation that Garrison was capable of manufacturing for Ferro the minimum quantities of PyroCheek LM using a specific, agreed-upon chemical manufacturing process. As noted, infra, later, Ferro added a second basis for its claim of fraudulent inducement: that it was induced into entering the CMA by Garrison’s false representation that Garrison sustained only minor, cosmetic damage from the tornado.

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Bluebook (online)
142 F.3d 926, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ferro-corporation-plaintiff-appelleecross-appellant-v-garrison-ca6-1998.