N In Comm Trans Dist v. Chicago S Shore/S Bend RR

CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 8, 1998
Docket46S03-9703-CV-191
StatusPublished

This text of N In Comm Trans Dist v. Chicago S Shore/S Bend RR (N In Comm Trans Dist v. Chicago S Shore/S Bend RR) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
N In Comm Trans Dist v. Chicago S Shore/S Bend RR, (Ind. 1998).

Opinion

ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT

Michael C. Harris

Chesterton, Indiana

ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE

Stanley C. Fickle

Peter J. Rusthoven

Anne N. DePrez

Indianapolis, Indiana

Michael J. Daley

Gregory C. Ward

Chicago, Illinois

IN THE

SUPREME COURT OF INDIANA

)

NORTHERN INDIANA COMMUTER )

TRANSPORTATION DISTRICT, )

Appellant (Plaintiff below), ) Indiana Supreme Court

) Cause No. 46S03-9703-CV-191

v. )

) Indiana Court of Appeals

CHICAGO SOUTHSHORE AND ) Cause No. 46A03-9506-CV-187

SOUTH BEND RAILROAD, )

Appellee (Defendant below). )

­

APPEAL FROM THE LAPORTE SUPERIOR COURT

The Honorable William J. Boklund, Judge

Cause No. 49D04-9409-CP-244

ON PETITION TO TRANSFER

BOEHM, Justice.

Arbitration presumably intended to resolve this dispute without resort to the courts has now produced lawsuits and appeals in two different states.  As their contract provided, the parties submitted a dispute over its interpretation to arbitration.  After an arbitration panel issued an award, both parties sued, one in Indiana to overturn the award and the other in Illinois to enforce it.  We hold that because the Illinois court was the first to enter a judgment on the validity of the award, the Full Faith and Credit Clause of the United States Constitution requires Indiana courts to accord that judgment the same effect it would receive in an Illinois state court.  Under Illinois law, a stay for a reasonable time pending appeal of the Illinois judgment is at least one appropriate action for a trial court to take before determining the res judicata effect of that judgment.  Although under the peculiar facts of this case the Indiana court had jurisdiction over the claims presented to it, we reverse the trial court’s dismissal and direct that the Indiana proceedings be stayed for a reasonable time pending the outcome of the Illinois litigation.     

Factual and Procedural Background

The parties to this lawsuit are Northern Indiana Commuter Transportation District (“NICTD”), an Indiana municipal corporation, and Chicago SouthShore and South Bend Railroad (“SouthShore”), an Indiana partnership engaged in the railway freight business. (footnote: 1)  NICTD and SouthShore had an agreement whereby SouthShore operated its freight business over NICTD’s rails and agreed to pay a fee for the privilege.  In 1992 a dispute arose between NICTD and SouthShore over the amount of the annual fee.  It is undisputed that the Agreement initially set the fee for each year after 1990 at twelve per cent of SouthShore’s gross revenues for the prior year.  However, the parties differed over whether a clause providing for mandatory renegotiation of the fee every third year to account for inflation applied to SouthShore itself, or only to a subsequent purchaser of SouthShore’s rights.  The parties were unable to resolve their differences through mediation and in 1993 NICTD initiated a demand for arbitration.  The Agreement stipulated that Indiana law governed and provided that (1) “all arbitration proceedings shall take place within the State of Indiana”; and (2) if either party believed an arbitration decision was based on an “error of law,” the aggrieved party could “institute an action at law within the State of Indiana to determine such legal issue.”  

These provisions notwithstanding, the parties agreed to hold the arbitration proceedings in Chicago for the convenience of the three Chicago-based attorneys who served as arbitrators. (footnote: 2)  In the summer of 1994 an evidentiary hearing was held in the offices of a law firm in Chicago.  On August 11, 1994, the arbitration panel ruled in a split decision that the inflation adjustment clause applied only to a subsequent purchaser of SouthShore, and not to SouthShore itself.  Accordingly, the award set the annual fee at twelve per cent of SouthShore’s annual gross revenues for the prior year.  

On September 9, 1994, NICTD filed a declaratory judgment action in the Superior Court of LaPorte County, Indiana.  Although not styled as a motion to vacate or modify the award, NICTD’s complaint essentially asked for a declaration that its interpretation of the Agreement was correct and in substance challenged the arbitration decision.  On October 26, 1994, SouthShore moved to dismiss the complaint for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction, citing the Uniform Arbitration Act’s provision conferring jurisdiction to confirm the award on the courts of the State where the parties agreed to arbitrate. (footnote: 3)  On October 28, 1994, SouthShore filed an application to confirm the arbitration award in the Circuit Court of Cook County, Illinois.  On December 15, 1994, NICTD filed a “motion in lieu of answer” in Illinois contesting the jurisdiction of the Illinois court over the arbitration.  On February 22, 1995, the Indiana trial court granted SouthShore’s motion to dismiss, agreeing with SouthShore that NICTD was attempting in effect to overturn the award and that only Illinois had jurisdiction because the arbitration took place there.  On March 14, 1995, the Illinois trial court ruled that it had jurisdiction over SouthShore’s application to confirm the award and denied NICTD’s motion.  On April 12, 1995, NICTD moved in the Illinois case to vacate or modify the award.  SouthShore responded with a motion to strike NICTD’s motion on the ground that NICTD had not filed within ninety days of the August 11, 1994 arbitration award, as required by the Illinois Uniform Arbitration Act. (footnote: 4)  On September 6, 1995, the Illinois trial court granted SouthShore’s motion to strike, finding that the Act did not permit extension of the ninety day deadline.  Finally, on December 20, 1995, the Illinois court entered its judgment confirming the award.  NICTD appealed that ruling in Illinois, as well as the earlier Illinois ruling holding that Illinois had subject-matter jurisdiction over the arbitration.

Meanwhile, NICTD had initiated a timely appeal of the Indiana trial court’s dismissal of its suit in LaPorte County.  On February 20, 1996, the Indiana Court of Appeals reversed the trial court’s dismissal.  The court held that (1) Indiana had subject-matter jurisdiction because the Agreement, and not the place of arbitration, controlled the location of judicial review; and (2) the arbitrators’ interpretation of the contract was contrary to law.   Northern Indiana Commuter Transp. Dist. v. Chicago SouthShore and South Bend R.R. , 661 N.E.2d 842 (Ind. Ct. App. 1996).  Even though the Indiana trial court’s ruling dealt only with SouthShore’s motion to dismiss on jurisdictional grounds, the Court of Appeals also ruled on the merits of NICTD’s complaint.  The court held that the inflation adjustment clause applied to SouthShore as well as any successor and remanded the case to arbitration for purposes of determining the amount of the fee.  The earlier ruling of the Illinois trial court, which postdated the Indiana trial court’s dismissal, had not been presented to the Indiana Court of Appeals at that point.    

SouthShore moved for rehearing in the Indiana Court of Appeals on March 21, 1996.

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Bluebook (online)
N In Comm Trans Dist v. Chicago S Shore/S Bend RR, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/n-in-comm-trans-dist-v-chicago-s-shores-bend-rr-ind-1998.