Manuel KAPLAN; Carol Kaplan; MK Investments, Inc., Appellants, v. FIRST OPTIONS OF CHICAGO, INC., Appellee

19 F.3d 1503
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedJune 29, 1994
Docket92-1814
StatusPublished
Cited by224 cases

This text of 19 F.3d 1503 (Manuel KAPLAN; Carol Kaplan; MK Investments, Inc., Appellants, v. FIRST OPTIONS OF CHICAGO, INC., Appellee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Manuel KAPLAN; Carol Kaplan; MK Investments, Inc., Appellants, v. FIRST OPTIONS OF CHICAGO, INC., Appellee, 19 F.3d 1503 (1st Cir. 1994).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

HUTCHINSON, Circuit Judge.

Appellants Manuel Kaplan, Carol Kaplan (“Kaplans”), and M.K. Investments, Inc. (“MKI”), appeal an order of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania. It confirmed an arbitration award arbitrators appointed under the rules of the Philadelphia Stock Exchange (“the Exchange”) had entered in favor of appellee First Options of Chicago, Inc. (“First Options”).

The Kaplans argue that the arbitration panel lacked jurisdiction over them. First Options says that the Kaplans have waived any jurisdictional objections. Because they raised their objection to arbitral jurisdiction several times during the arbitration proceedings, we hold that the Kaplans have not waived it. We also reject First Options’ alternate argument that an agreement MKI signed as part of a “workout,” meant to settle a dispute arising out of Mr. Kaplan’s activities as a principal of MKI and a former member of the Exchange, evidences the Kap-lans’ consent to arbitrate and the Kaplans’ individual liability for performance of the workout. There was no arbitration clause in the workout document the Kaplans signed.

First Options’ argument that Mr. Kaplan’s position as an officer of MKI compelled him to arbitrate his obligations under the workout as an “associated person” of a member, MKI, is also rejected. The record does not contain any U-4 Form or other document evidencing Mr. Kaplan’s agreement to arbitrate, and the terms of the workout plainly show that he did not agree to submit his personal responsibility for MKI’s obligations to arbitration.

In addition, we reject First Options’ argument that Mr. Kaplan’s former membership in the Exchange subjected him to arbitration under its rules relating to members. The only dispute that arose while Mr. Kaplan was a member was the dispute that led to the workout, not the dispute over the workout’s performance that the arbitrators heard.

Finally, we reject First Options’ argument that Mr. Kaplan is the alter ego of MKI. The evidence of failure to observe corporate formalities in some distributions MKI made to him is insufficient to show that MKI was a sham that Mr. Kaplan manipulated in fraud of creditors.

We will therefore reverse the district court’s order confirming the arbitration award against the Kaplans and remand the case to it with instructions to enter an order granting the Kaplans’ request to vacate the arbitrators’ award against them as individuals. 1 We will, however, affirm the district court’s order confirming the arbitration award as to MKI. 2

*1506 I, Factual & Procedural History

First Options is a “clearing firm” or “clearinghouse” and member of the Exchange. MKI, a Pennsylvania corporation, was an “options market maker” 3 on the Exchange from 1984 through 1989. First Options acted as MKI’s clearing firm on the Exchange pursuant to a Market Maker’s. Agreement between MKI and First Options dated November 15, 1984. The Market Maker’s Agreement, executed by Mr. Kaplan on behalf of MKI, provided in part that “any controversy between [First Options and MKI] arising out of [MKI’s] business or this agreement ... shall be submitted to and determined by arbitration....” Appendix (“App.”) at 73. Mr. Kaplan has been the president, a director and the sole shareholder of MKI since 1986. MKI has been a member of the Exchange since 1984. From November 8,1981, to December 8,1987, Mr. Kaplan was also a member of the Exchange individually.

On October 19, 1987, corporate equities suffered an unprecedented drop in value. Stocks traded on the New York Stock Exchange, and those traded on regional exchanges, crashed. The Philadelphia Stock Exchange was no exception. Five days before the crash, MKI’s trading account had a balance or net equity of approximately $10.5 million. On October 19, 1987, MKI lost over $12 million and its account had a deficit of $2.1 million by the end of the trading day.

As the clearing firm for MKI, First Options guaranteed to the Exchange and the persons with whom MKI traded that all positions in MKI’s accounts would be covered. After trading closed on October 19, 1987, First Options was at risk on the $2.1 million deficit in MKI’s accounts.

First Options’ agreement with MKI gave it the right to liquidate MKI’s positions “whenever in [First Options’] discretion [First Options] deem[ed] it necessary.” App. at 72. Therefore, First Options took control of MKI’s trading accounts and proceeded to liquidate any remaining positions which, in its opinion, posed significant unacceptable risks. First Options’ liquidation of MKI’s positions increased MKI’s deficit to $5.1 million.

MKI and First Options had, in the meantime, entered into settlement negotiations about MKI’s continued operation. First Options pressed Mr. Kaplan to assume personal liability for MKI’s obligations. Mr. Kaplan refused. Instead, he and MKI disputed the size of MKI’s deficit and claimed that First Options’ mishandling of the liquidation was only increasing the deficit. During these negotiations, Mr. Kaplan and his counsel told First Options that neither MKI nor Mr. Kap-lan had any liquid assets to contribute to any settlement or workout beyond MKI’s interest in a joint trading account, certain exchange memberships and the 1987 federal income tax refund the Kaplans were anticipating. 4

Negotiations continued during November and December and there is evidence that the parties reached a “handshake” deal in December. On December 8, 1987, Mr. Kaplan relinquished his membership on the Exchange and negotiations continued. On March 24,1988, the Kaplans, MKI, and First Options separately executed four documents evidencing an overall method of settling the dispute that had resulted from MKI’s October 19, 1987, deficit. They were: (1) a Letter Agreement executed by First Options, MKI, Mr. Kaplan, Mrs. Kaplan, and certain other entities and individuals; (2) a Guaranty executed only by MKI; (3) a Subordinated Loan Agreement executed by First Options, MKI, and a separate entity; and (4) a Subordinated Promissory Note executed by MKI. Only one of these four documents, the Subordinated Loan Agreement, contained an arbitration clause, and only First Options, MKI and the other entity, whose agreement to *1507 arbitrate is not material to this ease, signed that document. 5 Individually, Mr. and Mrs. Kaplan signed only the Letter Agreement. It did not have an arbitration clause.

Under the terms of the Workout:
—MKI agreed to repay a total of $6,227,188, the full amount of its trading deficits, including the added $3 million incurred while First Options’ was liquidating its risky accounts;
—MKI immediately transferred four Exchange memberships to First Options;
—MKI and Mr. Kaplan immediately contributed $900,000 to a new Trading Account and MKI resumed trading on the new account in April 1988;
—Mr. Kaplan paid First Options $80,-000;

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Bluebook (online)
19 F.3d 1503, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/manuel-kaplan-carol-kaplan-mk-investments-inc-appellants-v-first-ca1-1994.