T & R Enterprises, Inc. v. Continental Grain Company

613 F.2d 1272, 1980 U.S. App. LEXIS 19584
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMarch 17, 1980
Docket78-1295
StatusPublished
Cited by79 cases

This text of 613 F.2d 1272 (T & R Enterprises, Inc. v. Continental Grain Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
T & R Enterprises, Inc. v. Continental Grain Company, 613 F.2d 1272, 1980 U.S. App. LEXIS 19584 (5th Cir. 1980).

Opinion

TUTTLE, Circuit Judge:

This appeal attacks a judgment confirming an arbitration award in favor of the defendant, Continental Grain Company (Continental) and against plaintiff-appellant, T & R Enterprises, Inc. (T & R). The appellant claims that the district court erred in (i) ordering the parties to proceed to arbitration in the face of an asserted dispute over the existence of an agreement to arbitrate, an issue which it claims should be submitted to a jury for resolution; (ii) entering judgment on the arbitration award under an agreement that did not explicitly provide for judicial enforcement; and (iii) confirming an award allegedly made in a different United States court district. We affirm.

T & R, engaged in poultry and poultry-related operations in Alabama, contracted with Continental, a Delaware corporation, to purchase feed corn in four deliveries, to take place over several months, at a price fixed at the date contracts were made. The orders were first placed by telephone, then reduced to writing by four sales confirmation slips sent from Continental to T & R. These slips were all signed by T & R’s president and returned to Continental. Although arbitration was not mentioned in any of the telephone conversations between T & R and Continental, the face of each standard form sales confirmation slip bore the following legends: “subject to the Rules of Grain and Feed Dealers National Association;” and, in block capitals: “THE TERMS PRINTED ON THE BACK HERE *1274 OF ARE A PART OF THIS CONTRACT.” The reverse side of each slip contained a provision for the settlement of any dispute arising under the contracts by arbitration “to the Exchange/Board and/or Association under whose Rules this contract has been drawn.” The clauses further provided that “[t]he decision reached shall be final and binding upon all the parties- thereto.”

In January 1975, Continental began to deliver corn under the first of the four contracts. In February, after accepting the first shipments, T & R gave notice purporting to cancel all four contracts on the grounds that the corn delivered did not meet contract standards of quality and that Continental gave insufficient assurance of satisfactory performance in the future. When Continental refused to accept the cancellations, T & R filed suit in district court seeking to rescind the contracts. Continental defended by moving under the Federal Arbitration Act, 9 U.S.C. § 3 (1970), to stay the proceedings pending arbitration. The judge considered affidavits from both parties and a deposition taken by the plaintiff and granted the stay on August 4,1975. Although Continental had not requested additional relief, the district court ordered the parties to proceed to arbitration, an order governed by § 4 of the Act. 1 T & R moved for a stay of the order on grounds not involved in this appeal. 2 It made no mention of the failure of the court to proceed under provisions of § 4, which required five days’ notice to the other party. Neither did it claim the right to have a jury trial on the issue of the existence of the. arbitration agreement. On September 29, 1975, the court again ordered the plaintiff to arbitration “without delay.”

Thereafter, the parties proceeded with the arbitration including the filing of briefs by T & R which later refused to comply with a rule of the National Grain and Feed Association that the parties execute an arbitration contract. Thereupon, in April 1976, Continental went back into district court seeking “further relief.” T & R then filed a “motion to expunge the record” for the first time objecting to the previous orders on the ground that the court did not follow the steps required by § 4 of the Federal Arbitration Act. The court ac *1275 knowledged that the § 4 requirements had not been met and amended its August 4, 1975 order “to be merely a stay of the proceedings.” However, the court considered Continental’s pending request for further relief as a § 4 petition for an order directing arbitration. It also considered T & R’s claim that it had missed the opportunity of requesting a jury trial by the court’s failure to follow § 4. The court stated, however, that T & R had “not raised a genuine issue as to the making of the agreement for arbitration . . . ” and thereupon again ordered the parties to arbitrate.

The arbitration hearing was held in Birmingham, Alabama, the district in which the proceedings were pending, and they resulted in an award adverse to T & R. Continental moved for judicial confirmation and enforcement of the arbitral decree under § 9 of the Federal Arbitration Act. On December 13,1977, almost three years after this dispute first arose, the district court granted Continental’s motion and reduced the award to judgment. This appeal followed.

T & R’s first challenge to the judgment confirming the arbitration award is that the district court erred in “summarily” ordering T & R to arbitrate — a § 4 order — on the basis of a § 3 motion for a stay of proceedings pending arbitration. While the district court later recognized this error, T & R urges that the judge only added insult to injury by treating Continental’s motion for additional relief as a § 4 motion and using it summarily to decide an issue that, under § 4, is a jury issue.

While it is, of course, preferable for the courts carefully to observe statutes and rules of procedure, we see no prejudice, harm or inconvenience to T & R resulting from the procedures that the court followed here. Because of the conduct of the complaining party in not timely objecting to the lack of statutory basis for the court’s first or second order to arbitrate and because the court considered T & R’s late claim to a jury trial, even though not timely made, we hesitate to elevate form over substance. 3

Section 4 of the Federal Arbitration Act provides in relevant part that “[i]f the making of the arbitration agreement . be in issue, the court shall proceed summarily to the trial thereof.” Under § 4, the party allegedly in default of an agreement to arbitrate receives five days’ notice, in writing, of the petition to compel arbitration, and has an opportunity to demand a jury trial on the issue of the making of the arbitration agreement. T & R claims that the district court’s acknowledged failure to follow these procedures in entering the first orders compelling arbitration deprived it of the statutory and constitutional right to demand a jury trial to resolve the allegedly disputed existence of the arbitration agreement.

The court did acknowledge the error of its ways, stating that it was “in agreement with the plaintiff that the defendant’s motion for a stay should not have been treated as a motion to compel arbitration under 9 U.S.C. § 4

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Bluebook (online)
613 F.2d 1272, 1980 U.S. App. LEXIS 19584, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/t-r-enterprises-inc-v-continental-grain-company-ca5-1980.