Park West Galleries, Inc v. ALP, Inc.

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Michigan
DecidedJune 15, 2023
Docket2:20-cv-11603
StatusUnknown

This text of Park West Galleries, Inc v. ALP, Inc. (Park West Galleries, Inc v. ALP, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Park West Galleries, Inc v. ALP, Inc., (E.D. Mich. 2023).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN SOUTHERN DIVISION

Park West Galleries, Inc.,

Plaintiff, Case No. 20-11603 v. HONORABLE DENISE PAGE HOOD ALP, Inc.,

Defendant. _________________________________/

ORDER DENYING PLAINTIFF’S MOTION TO VACATE ARBITRATOR’S SUMMARY DISPOSITION AND CLARIFICATION ORDERS [#12] AND GRANTING DEFENDANT’S MOTION TO CONFIRM ARBITRATION AWARD [#11]

Before the Court are Plaintiff’s Motion to Vacate Arbitrator’s Summary Disposition and Clarification Orders, ECF No. 12, and Defendant’s Motion to Confirm Arbitration Award, ECF No. 11. Both motions have been fully briefed. I. BACKGROUND ALP is engaged in the production, maintenance, marketing, licensing, and commercialization of artwork created by Peter Max. Park West is a Michigan corporation with its principal place of business in Southfield, Michigan. Park West markets itself as the “largest private gallery in the world.” It mass sells artwork through auctions on hundreds of cruise ships and in galleries at shopping malls and hotels. In April 2019, ALP brought two lawsuits in New York state court against several former business associates of Peter Max (the “ALP Lawsuits”), including

Park West, including the ongoing New York state court action (ALP, Inc. v. Park West et al., N.Y. State Court Index No. 153949/2019 (the “State Court Action”)). ALP alleged that those defendants took advantage of Peter Max’s advanced age and

disability to cash in on his continued popularity—to the detriment of Peter Max and his family. The ALP Lawsuits seek, among other things, the return of over 23,000 pieces of ALP’s artworks that were shipped to Park West in January 2019 (the “Keepers”),

following an allegedly unauthorized transaction that was put into place in November – December 2018 (the “Keepers Transaction”). All pieces were from a collection known as “Peter’s Keepers”—select pieces that Peter Max himself preferred, had

identified as being of higher quality, and had decided to set aside to be kept for his family’s future use. The 23,000 Keepers, which allegedly are worth hundreds of millions of dollars, were “sold” to Park West for $14.7 million. In July 2019, ALP filed its First Amended Complaint in the State Court Action

(the “FAC”), which alleged with respect to Park West: 1. First Cause of Action: “Conversion Against Park West and Luntz Regarding the Peter’s Keepers.”

2. Second Cause of Action: “Declaratory Judgment Against Park West and Gene Luntz Regarding the Peter’s Keepers.”

2 3. Fifth Cause of Action: “Breach of Fiduciary Duty Against Gene Luntz and Aiding and Abetting Breach of Fiduciary Duty Against Park West.”

4. Sixth Cause of Action: “Replevin against Park West.”

5. Seventh Cause of Action: “Breach of Express Contracts Against Park West.”

The Seventh Cause of Action for Breach of Express Contracts, which sought from Park West payment of $2,643,026 for unpaid artworks (the “$2.6 Million Claim”) was the only cause of action against Park West that was unrelated to the Keepers Transaction. Like the original complaint, the FAC included no cause of action against Park West for breach of contract pertaining to the Keepers Transaction. The only breach of contract cause of action related to the $2.6 Million Claim. After ALP and Park West engaged in negotiations regarding the $2.6 Million Claim, they executed the Partial Settlement Agreement, effective November 27, 2019, and ALP withdrew its Seventh Cause of Action on December 10, 2019. ALP maintains that the Partial Settlement Agreement only provided for the dismissal/withdrawal of ALP’s Seventh Cause of Action with respect to the State Court Action, but Park West’s argues that the Partial Settlement Agreement also

required the withdrawal of all non-breach of contract claims in the State Court Action, except for a portion of the Second Cause of Action for a Declaratory Judgment.

3 On December 12, 2019, Park West filed a Confidential Demand for Arbitration (the “Demand”) with the AAA in Southfield, Michigan. The Demand

sought to resolve a dispute concerning the scope and application of certain terms of the Partial Settlement Agreement entered November 27, 2019, and asserted claims for declaratory judgment and breach of contract. Park West argued that the Partial

Settlement Agreement required ALP to dismiss all claims in the State Court Action, except for certain breach of contract claims. ALP filed an answering statement and motion for summary disposition of all of Park West’s claims, arguing that the Partial Settlement Agreement was unambiguous, and that, by its plain and ordinary

meaning, required only the withdrawal of ALP’s seventh cause of action in the State Court Action (the “ALP Motion”). Following extensive briefing and a pre-hearing conference, on February 28,

2020, Arbitrator Gene J. Esshaki (the “Arbitrator”) issued an arbitral award (the “Award”). He granted ALP’s motion for summary disposition. He agreed with ALP that the Partial Settlement Agreement and Limited Release (the “Partial Settlement Agreement” or “PSA”) was clear and unambiguous “on its face and within its four

corners,” and concluded that ALP had fully complied with it, and summarily disposed of Park West’s Demand for Arbitration. In the Award, the Arbitrator found:

A fair reading of [the Partial Settlement Agreement], not taking into account any extrinsic evidence other than [Park West’s] federal court 4 Complaint and [ALP’s] First Amended state court Complaint, which are specifically referenced in the document, leads to the conclusion that on its face and within its four corners the document is clear and unambiguous. Further, a fair reading of [the Partial Settlement Agreement] conveys the intent of the parties at the time of execution.

After detailed review of the relevant clauses of the Partial Settlement Agreement, the Arbitrator concluded that: It is simply no coincidence that the consideration referenced in [the Partial Settlement Agreement] is the exact amount of damages [ALP] sought to recover under Court II of the First Amended Complaint for prior artwork sold, delivered, but unpaid by [Park West].

It is illogical to conclude that [ALP] would accept payment of the exact amount demanded under Count VII of the First Amended Complaint for open invoices due by [Park West] and, without further or additional consideration, release claims against [Park West] set forth in the First Amended Complaint in the approximate amount of $400,000,000.00.”

On March 19, 2020, Park West brought a motion requesting that the Arbitrator “clarify” the Award. Park West did not argue that the Award was ambiguous, or in need of interpretation; it instead stated that the Award “rest[ed] on a fundamental misunderstanding of Park West’s position[,]” and filed the motion “to clarify [their] own position[,]” not that of the Arbitrator. ALP opposed Park West’s motion, and on April 3, 2020, the Arbitrator issued an order denying Park West’s motion for clarification, finding it really was a prohibited motion for reconsideration (the “Clarification Order”). Specifically, the Arbitrator stated: By its very nature, a Motion for Clarification of a prior Order must rest upon a lack of clarity, confusion, or contradictory rulings contained within the prior order. Claimant’s current Clarification Motion is based 5 upon the Undersigned “fundamentally misunderstanding Claimant’s prior stated position”. Nowhere in the Motion does it point to a lack of clarity in any of the reasoning, nor contradictory or confusing statements. As such, the Motion is not one for Clarification but is actually a Motion for Reconsideration.

The Undersigned did not misunderstand Claimant’s prior arguments.

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Park West Galleries, Inc v. ALP, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/park-west-galleries-inc-v-alp-inc-mied-2023.