Kiran Dewan, CPA, P.A. v. Arun Walia

544 F. App'x 240
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedOctober 28, 2013
Docket19-1235
StatusUnpublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 544 F. App'x 240 (Kiran Dewan, CPA, P.A. v. Arun Walia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kiran Dewan, CPA, P.A. v. Arun Walia, 544 F. App'x 240 (4th Cir. 2013).

Opinions

Vacated and remanded by unpublished PER CURIAM opinion. Judge Wynn wrote a dissenting opinion.

Unpublished opinions are not binding precedent in this circuit.

[241]*241PER CURIAM:

Kiran Dewan and his close corporation, Kiran M. Dewan, CPA, P.A. (“the Company”) (collectively, “Appellants”), appeal from the district court’s confirmation of an arbitral award in favor of the Company’s former employee, Appellee Arun Walia. Walia came to the United States from Canada in 2003 on an employment visa to work for the Company as an accountant.1 By 2009, the parties agreed to a parting of the ways, in connection with which Walia executed a broadly worded Release Agreement (“the Release”) in consideration for the Company’s payment of $7,000.

The parting proved less than amicable. In January 2010, Appellants filed a demand for arbitration against Walia, alleging that Walia breached the noncom-petition/nonsolicitation provisions in his employment agreement. Despite the Release, Walia asserted numerous counterclaims in the arbitral forum, primarily alleging that the Company had underpaid him during his employment and that Appellants had run afoul of federal immigration law attendant to the visa program. The Arbitrator found in favor of Walia on Appellants’ original claims. She also concluded, however, that the Release was valid and enforceable, but nevertheless made a substantial monetary award in Walia’s favor, holding Appellants jointly and severally liable.

In due course, the parties filed opposing petitions to vacate and to confirm/enforce the award in federal district court. The district court confirmed the award and granted Walia’s motion for attorney’s fees and costs.

For the reasons that follow, we hold that the award in favor of Walia is the product of a manifest disregard of the law by the Arbitrator. Accordingly, we vacate the judgment and remand to the district court with instructions to vacate the award.

I.

A.

Walia, a Canadian national, came to the United States in 2003 on an employment visa to work for the Company as an accountant. He entered into a three-year employment agreement. In 2006, Walia and the Company entered into a second three-year employment agreement (“the 2006 Employment Agreement”) extending through March 23, 2009. The 2006 Employment Agreement included nonsolicitation and noncompetition provisions, as well as a broad arbitration provision. Dewan signed it in his capacity as president of the Company.

In February and March 2009, Walia underwent treatment for thyroid cancer. On approximately March 14, 2009 (as the termination date for the 2006 Employment Agreement approached), the Company’s office manager, Veena Sindwani (who was also Dewan’s wife), went to the intensive care unit to see Walia. The parties dispute the events occurring in the hospital. Walia contended (and the Arbitrator later found) that Sindwani presented him with a new employment agreement, which he signed. Appellants contended that no such agreement existed.

In any event, Walia continued to work for the Company through at least August 21, 2009. The parties vigorously dispute [242]*242the circumstances surrounding the termination of Walia’s employment. This much is undisputed: Though no termination letter was ever sent to Walia, on November 3, 2009, Walia executed the Release, which “release[d] and discharge^]” Appellants from claims related to Walia’s employment in exchange for $7,000. J.A. 250-52.2 The Release provided for “binding arbitration” should a dispute arise concerning the Release or its performance. J.A. 251. As with the 2006 Employment Agreement, Dewan signed it in his capacity as president of the Company.

B.

Less than three months after Walia executed the Release, on January 29, 2010, Dewan initiated arbitration proceedings against Walia with the American Arbitration Association. Dewan asserted that Walia “breached an employment agreement by competing with and soliciting the clients of the employer,” and “breached a settlement and release agreement by making various claims against the Employer (Claimant).” J.A. 21.3

Walia asserted several counterclaims. He alleged, among other things, that (1) based on his years of accounting experience he was underpaid (in apparent violation of the relevant immigrant work visa regulations) during his time at the Company; (2) the Company breached the profit-sharing terms of the 2006 Employment Agreement; and (3) Dewan, Walia’s immigration attorney of record, fraudulently sought to withdraw Walia’s employment authorization.

The Arbitrator conducted four days of hearings in 2011 and issued a so-called interim award (“the Interim Award”) in Walia’s favor. The Arbitrator found, among other things, that

(1) no cognizable claims survived the employment agreements from 2003 and 2006 based on the applicable statute of limitations;
(2) “there' [was] a viable Employment Agreement drafted by [Dewan] and signed by [Walia] on March 14, 2009 [during the hospital visit],” which Dewan had simply refused to produce;
(3) “NO termination letter was ever sent” by Dewan, and therefore the employment relationship continued through the date of the arbitration proceedings;
(4) Dewan’s claims that Walia solicited the Company’s clients and used the Company’s confidential materials in an unauthorized manner were “baseless”;
(5) Walia “voluntarily” signed the Release and thereafter negotiated checks totaling the $7,000 paid by Dewan for the Release, and Walia was therefore “legally bound” by the Release to the extent that it barred “all tort and contractual claims in federal or state courts as well as attorney’s fees”;
(6) the continuing “employment relationship” allowed for an award of compensatory damages stretching back to 2003 despite the bar of the statute of limitations;
(7) punitive damages were justified because Dewan “purposefully harmed” Walia’s immigration interest by failing to tell Walia prior to withdrawing the Company’s sponsorship of him as required by federal law, and because Wa-[243]*243lia “had to defend himself’ against Appellants’ “baseless claims”;
(8) tax returns that Dewan provided in discovery were significantly different than those Dewan submitted to the U.S. Department of Labor (“the DOL”);
(9) the statutory remedies for failure to pay prevailing wages under the Immigration and Nationality Act (“INA”) were not exclusive, and the Arbitrator could order damages based on a violation of the INA; and
(10) the Arbitrator had given the award “interim” status to “await ... guidance in this case from DOL’s investigation” of Appellants.

J.A. 60-69.

On November 18, 2011, the Arbitrator issued a final award (“the Final Award”). The Arbitrator first recounted a series of developments since the Interim Award. These included a finding that Dewan “was a party to fraud” based on the differences between documents obtained by Walia through FOIA requests and documents provided in discovery. J.A. 189.

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544 F. App'x 240, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kiran-dewan-cpa-pa-v-arun-walia-ca4-2013.