Interdigital Comm Co v. Fed Ins Co

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedJanuary 29, 2009
Docket08-1986
StatusUnpublished

This text of Interdigital Comm Co v. Fed Ins Co (Interdigital Comm Co v. Fed Ins Co) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Interdigital Comm Co v. Fed Ins Co, (3d Cir. 2009).

Opinion

Opinions of the United 2009 Decisions States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit

1-29-2009

Interdigital Comm Co v. Fed Ins Co Precedential or Non-Precedential: Non-Precedential

Docket No. 08-1986

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UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT ____________

No. 08-1986 ____________

INTERDIGITAL COMMUNICATIONS CORPORATION; INTERDIGITAL TECHNOLOGY CORPORATION;

Appellants,

v.

FEDERAL INSURANCE COMPANY ____________

On Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania (D.C. No.: 2-03-06082) District Judge: Honorable Eduardo C. Robreno ____________

Submitted Under Third Circuit LAR 34.1(a) January 8, 2009

Before: CHAGARES, HARDIMAN, Circuit Judges and ELLIS,* District Judge

(Filed: January 29, 2009)

____________

OPINION OF THE COURT ____________

* The Honorable Thomas Selby Ellis, III, Senior District Judge for the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia, sitting by designation. HARDIMAN, Circuit Judge.

Interdigital Communications Corp. appeals an order of the District Court

confirming an arbitration award in favor of Federal Insurance Company. Interdigital

argues that the District Court should have stayed confirmation of the award so it can

assert a recoupment claim against Federal. The District Court confirmed the award after

it held that Interdigital no longer possessed a recoupment claim. We will affirm.

I.

Because we write exclusively for the parties, we recount only the facts essential to

our decision.

Interdigital was embroiled in patent litigation with Ericsson for ten years. During

that case, Interdigital and Federal had an insurance coverage dispute that was resolved in

2000 by a Reimbursement Agreement under which Federal agreed to pay all litigation

costs in exchange for a percentage of any payment Interdigital might receive from

Ericsson. In 2003, Ericsson agreed to pay Interdigital more than $100 million to settle the

patent litigation. Federal sought payment under the Reimbursement Agreement and,

when Interdigital refused to pay, Federal demanded arbitration pursuant to a mandatory

arbitration clause contained therein.

In response to Federal’s demand for arbitration, Interdigital filed a declaratory

judgment action in federal court, claiming that the Reimbursement Agreement was void.

The District Court disagreed and compelled arbitration. Significantly, Interdigital did not

2 argue that any particular issue exceeded the arbitrator’s authority under the arbitration

clause; instead it merely objected to the timing of Federal’s arbitration demand, claiming

that the parties had not yet expended reasonable efforts to resolve the dispute on their

own. Before addressing that argument, the District Court noted: “as a threshold matter,

the [C]ourt must address whether the parties agreed to arbitrate and the scope of the

[arbitration] agreement between the parties.” Finding that “the parties have formally

agreed to arbitrate their dispute and the dispute falls within the scope of the arbitration

agreement,” the District Court concluded that the arbitrator had to decide whether the

parties had expended reasonable efforts to settle their dispute. Interdigital Commc’ns

Corp. v. Fed. Ins. Co., 392 F. Supp. 2d 707, 716-17 (E.D. Pa. 2005). The District Court

also noted:

Interdigital has not argued that its claims with respect to the amount of Federal’s reimbursement do not fall within the scope of the agreement to arbitrate. Rather, Interdigital argues that arbitration is not timely because the parties have not satisfied a condition precedent that the parties meet to resolve the dispute prior to submitting the matter to arbitration.

Id. at 716 (emphasis added).

The parties proceeded to arbitration, where they disagreed regarding royalty

payments subject to the Reimbursement Agreement, as well as the “additional value”

derived from non-monetary provisions of the Ericsson settlement. At no point did

Interdigital assert a defense to liability under the Reimbursement Agreement, or attempt

3 to assert any counterclaim against Federal. The arbitrator awarded Federal almost $20

million, and Federal sought confirmation by the District Court.

Interdigital requested a stay so it could assert a counterclaim for recoupment based

on Federal’s alleged “bad faith and [breach of] contractual and fiduciary duties to . . .

Interdigital, by withholding reimbursement for attorneys’ fees . . . to coerce Interdigital to

enter the Reimbursement Agreement.” App. 392. Significantly, Interdigital averred that

its recoupment claim sought “the same monetary relief as Federal was awarded in the

arbitration.” App. 393. The District Court denied the stay, holding that the recoupment

claim should have been presented to the arbitrator because it was a defense to the merits

of Federal’s claim in arbitration. Interdigital timely appealed the order of the District

Court confirming Federal’s arbitration award.

II.

The gravamen of Interdigital’s argument is that the District Court erred in

precluding it from prosecuting in federal court a recoupment claim that it could not have

brought in arbitration. Interdigital’s appeal succeeds or fails depending upon whether its

recoupment claim is properly characterized as a counterclaim to Federal’s arbitration

claim or as a defense on the merits.

A.

4 We begin with a brief discussion of recoupment. The leading treatise counsels that

untimely counterclaims [may] be asserted on the ground that the ability to seek relief in the form of a common-law recoupment, which was a species of defense, survives for as long as plaintiff’s claim can be asserted and therefore is not barred by untimeliness. Thus, although a defendant cannot seek affirmative relief on the counterclaim . . . [he] may assert [it as a recoupment claim] to the extent that it defeats or diminishes plaintiff’s recovery.

C HARLES A LAN W RIGHT, A RTHUR R. M ILLER & M ARY K AY K ANE, 6 F EDERAL P RACTICE

& P ROCEDURE § 1419 (2008). Under Pennsylvania law, “[r]ecoupment is the setting up

of a demand arising from the same transaction as the plaintiff’s claim or cause of action,

strictly for the purpose of abatement or reduction of such claim,” and “it is essentially a

defense to the debtor’s claim against the creditor rather than a mutual obligation.” Cohen

v. Goldberg, 720 A.2d 1028, 1030 (Pa. 1998). In the context of a contract dispute, when

“some claim [a] defendant has against [a] plaintiff aris[es] out of the very contract giving

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