Vital Pharmaceuticals Incorporated v. PepsiCo Incorporated

CourtDistrict Court, D. Arizona
DecidedJune 16, 2022
Docket2:22-cv-00591
StatusUnknown

This text of Vital Pharmaceuticals Incorporated v. PepsiCo Incorporated (Vital Pharmaceuticals Incorporated v. PepsiCo Incorporated) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vital Pharmaceuticals Incorporated v. PepsiCo Incorporated, (D. Ariz. 2022).

Opinion

1 WO 2 3 4 5 6 IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT 7 FOR THE DISTRICT OF ARIZONA

9 Vital Pharmaceuticals Incorporated, No. CV-22-00591-PHX-DLR

10 Plaintiff, ORDER

11 v.

12 PepsiCo Incorporated,

13 Defendant. 14 15 16 Plaintiff Vital Pharmaceuticals Incorporated (“VPX”) and Defendant PepsiCo 17 Incorporated entered into a Distribution Agreement (“DA”) in March 2020. (Doc. 13-1.) 18 The parties agreed to arbitrate disputes arising out of the DA before the American 19 Arbitration Association (“AAA”) under its Commercial Arbitration Rules in New York 20 before a panel of three arbitrators. (Id. at 25.) The DA provides the following method for 21 appointing arbitrators: 22 One arbitrator will be nominated by [VPX], one will be nominated by [PepsiCo], with each nomination being made no 23 more than five (5) days following the date of notice of the dispute. The third arbitrator will be the chairman, and will be 24 nominated by the first two. If the first two are unable to agree, the arbitral institution will appoint the third. 25 26 (Id.) 27 In November 2020, PepsiCo initiated arbitration against VPX. (Doc. 1 ¶ 23.) 28 Consistent with the DA, PepsiCo and VPX each appointed an arbitrator, and the AAA 1 appointed the third. (Id. ¶ 24.) 2 The arbitral panel bifurcated the proceedings in two phases. Liability issues and 3 PepsiCo’s demands for injunctive relief were assigned to Phase 1; damages issues to Phase 4 2. (Doc. 23-3 at 4-5.) Phase 1 was held in July 2021. It resulted in a unanimous decision 5 in favor of PepsiCo on a number of issues, though the arbitral panel deferred resolution of 6 several liability issues to Phase 2, at least in part because it determined that more 7 information was needed. (See Doc. 16-2 at 95-96.) Phase 2 is scheduled to begin on June 8 20, 2022. (Doc. 28 at 9.) 9 In January 2022—after the arbitral panel issued its decision in Phase 1, but before 10 the start of Phase 2—the arbitrator appointed by PepsiCo disclosed to the AAA a 11 professional relationship with PepsiCo’s counsel’s firm. (Doc. 23-3 at 47.) On March 1, 12 2022, the AAA disqualified PepsiCo’s arbitrator and directed PepsiCo to appoint a 13 substitute arbitrator. (Id. at 41.) PepsiCo did so on March 24, 2022, and the AAA 14 appointed the substitute arbitrator on April 1, 2022. (Id. at 68, 84.) 15 VPX subsequently objected to PepsiCo’s substitute appointment, arguing that 16 PepsiCo should not have been permitted to appoint a substitute in the first place, that 17 PepsiCo’s appointment was untimely, and that the substitute arbitrator should be 18 disqualified. (Doc. 28-1 at 19-24.) After receiving full briefing, the AAA overruled VPX’s 19 objections and reaffirmed the appointment of PepsiCo’s substitute arbitrator on April 20, 20 2022. (Doc. 23-3 at 78.) 21 Before the AAA ruled on its objections to PepsiCo’s substitute appointment, VPX 22 filed this lawsuit, petitioning the Court to remove PepsiCo’s substitute arbitrator, appoint 23 a replacement arbitrator pursuant to Section 5 of the Federal Arbitration Act, 9 U.S.C. § 5, 24 and order the entire arbitration to begin anew. (Docs. 1, 13.) VPX separately filed a motion 25 for the appointment of a new arbitrator (Docs. 14, 23), which is fully briefed (Docs. 24, 28, 26 30, 33). Because VPX’s motion seeks the same relief as its petition, resolution of the 27 motion will be dispositive of this case. 28 Section 5 grants the Court limited authority to “facilitat[e] arbitration when impasse 1 in selection of an [arbitrator] has been reached.” Pac. Reinsurance Mgmt. Corp. v. Ohio 2 Reinsurance Corp., 814 F.2d 1324, 1329 (9th Cir. 1987). The Court may exercise this 3 authority in three circumstances: (1) if the parties have agreed to no method for appointing 4 an arbitrator, (2) if the parties have agreed to a method of appointment but have failed to 5 use it, or (3) “if for any other reason there shall be a lapse in the naming of an arbitrator[.]” 6 9 U.S.C. § 5. VPX argues that this case falls in the first category because, while the parties 7 agreed to a method for initially appointing arbitrators, they did not agree to a method for 8 appointing substitutes in the event of a disqualification, nor do the AAA Commercial 9 Arbitration Rules provide such a procedure. (Doc. 16 at 15-16; Doc. 33 at 3-7.) 10 The Court denies VPX’s motion for the appointment of an arbitrator for two 11 independent reasons. 12 First, by the time VPX filed the present motion, the AAA had confirmed PepsiCo’s 13 substitute appointment and set this matter for a final hearing before a fully constituted 14 panel. VPX essentially asks this Court to manufacture a vacancy by first removing 15 PepsiCo’s substitute arbitrator, but VPX fails to explain how Section 5 authorizes the Court 16 to do so. This procedural posture is more akin to Adam Technologies International S.A. de 17 C.V. v. Sutherland Global Services., Inc., 729 F.3d 443, 451 (5th Cir. 2013), in which the 18 Fifth Circuit affirmed the district court’s order declining to appoint an arbitrator because, 19 at the time the Section 5 motion was filed, “an arbitration panel had been empaneled, and 20 a final hearing date was set to resolve the underlying issue.” 21 Nor do VPX’s objections to the method of appointment change things. The 22 petitioner in Adam argued that the district court was required to reach the merits of his 23 petition because the International Centre for Dispute Resolution—the international arm of 24 the AAA—failed to follow the parties’ agreed-upon method for appointing arbitrators. The 25 Fifth Circuit rejected this argument, as well, explaining that the petition essentially was 26 advancing a challenge to the arbitration procedure, and the law presumes that such 27 procedural questions are for the arbitrator to decide. Id. at 452. 28 “[I]t is well established that a district court cannot entertain an attack upon the 1 qualifications or partiality of arbitrators until after the conclusion of the arbitration and the 2 rendition of an award.” Michaels v. Mariforum Shipping, S. A., 624 F.2d 411, 414 (2d Cir. 3 1980). “The Arbitration Act does not provide for judicial scrutiny of an arbitrator’s 4 qualifications to serve, other than in a proceeding to confirm or vacate an award, which 5 necessarily occurs after the arbitrator has rendered his service.” Florasynth, Inc. v. 6 Pickholz, 750 F.2d 171, 174 (2d Cir. 1984). VPX’s challenge is best understood as a 7 challenge to the qualifications of PepsiCo’s substitute arbitrator to serve—namely, that he 8 is not qualified because he was not appointed through the proper procedures. VPX may 9 not raise that issue in the context of a Section 5 petition, but must instead raise it in a 10 proceeding to confirm or vacate a final award after the arbitral panel has completed its 11 service. 12 Second, even if Section 5 gave the Court authority to remove an arbitrator in order 13 to manufacture a vacancy to fill, VPX’s argument fails on its merits because the parties 14 agreed to a method of appointing arbitrators.

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Vital Pharmaceuticals Incorporated v. PepsiCo Incorporated, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vital-pharmaceuticals-incorporated-v-pepsico-incorporated-azd-2022.