Volvo Construction Equipment, LLC v. PacWest Machinery, LLC

CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 15, 2025
Docket1:24-cv-01847
StatusUnknown

This text of Volvo Construction Equipment, LLC v. PacWest Machinery, LLC (Volvo Construction Equipment, LLC v. PacWest Machinery, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Volvo Construction Equipment, LLC v. PacWest Machinery, LLC, (M.D. Pa. 2025).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE MIDDLE DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA VOLVO CONSTRUCTION : Civil No. 1:24-CV-01847 EQUIPMENT, LLC, : : Plaintiff, : : v. : : PACWEST MACHINERY, LLC, : : Defendant. : Judge Jennifer P. Wilson MEMORANDUM Plaintiff, Volvo Construction Equipment, LLC (“Volvo”), and Defendant, PacWest Machinery, LLC (“PacWest”), have been engaged in a years-long contract dispute. That dispute now comes before this court following an extensive arbitration proceeding in which PacWest was awarded over $15,000,000. Volvo asks this court to vacate the arbitration award pursuant to 9 U.S.C. § 10(a)(4). Volvo makes myriad arguments as to why the award is fatally flawed. However, it is clear that Volvo’s arguments reflect nothing more than disagreement with the arbitrators’ rulings. Much more is required to vacate an arbitration award. Accordingly, the court will confirm the award. BACKGROUND The court gleans the facts of this matter from the arbitrators’ findings of fact and draws all reasonable inferences therefrom. See United Paperworkers Int’l Union v. Misco, Inc., 484 U.S. 29, 38 (1987) (“[A]n arbitrator must find facts and a court may not reject those findings simply because it disagrees with them.”); Citgo Asphalt Ref. Co. v. Paper, Allied-Indus., Chem., & Energy Workers Int’l Union

Loc. No. 2-991, 385 F.3d 809, 816 (3d Cir. 2004) (explaining that “a reviewing court must defer to the arbitrator's factual findings.”)1 Volvo manufactures heavy construction equipment. It sells this equipment

through a network of dealers, who each have rights to specific territories. (See Doc. 19, p. 8; Doc. 25, pp. 10–11.)2 In 2015, Joshua Green Corporation (“JGC”) acquired Volvo’s authorized dealer responsible for the Pacific Northwest though a newly created subsidiary called PacWest.3 (Doc. 25, p. 10.) Subsequently, on

December 17, 2015, Volvo entered into three identical agreements that appointed PacWest the exclusive authorized dealer in Washington, Idaho, and Oregon, respectively (collectively, “Dealer Agreement”). (Doc. 25, p. 3 n.3; see Doc. 19-

5.) The Dealer Agreement was negotiated during the same time period as a letter agreement between the two parties (“Side Letter”), which was executed 9 days before the Dealer Agreement, on December 8, 2015. (Doc. 19-51.)

1 The court infers these findings primarily from the two salient orders issued by the arbitrators. (Docs. 19-3 & 19-20.) The court also looks to the undisputed facts in the parties’ submissions for additional background. (Docs. 19 & 25.)

2 For ease of reference, the court uses the page numbers from the CM/ECF header.

3 PacWest was originally known as JGC DealerCo LLC. (See Doc. 19-5, p. 2.) The Side Letter’s purpose was “to grant PacWest an opportunity to expand its territory” in the future. (Doc. 19-20, p. 7.) To this end, paragraph 3 of the Side

Letter stated that if a dealer outside PacWest’s territories became for sale, then Volvo would “make an introduction for the parties and make reasonable efforts to offer [PacWest] a first opportunity to acquire the additional territory,” so long as

two conditions precedent were satisfied. (Doc. 19-51, p. 1.) First, PacWest could not account for more than 15% of Volvo’s “new machine and part sales in North America over a rolling three-year period.” (Id.) Second, PacWest had to be “meeting a majority of the mutually agreed key performance metrics in its current

Territory.” (Id.) Paragraph 3 further specified that “[a]ny new Territory assigned will require a new Dealer Agreement for that Territory, which terms shall be similar to [PacWest’s] current Dealer Agreement(s).” (Id.)

PacWest initially considered expansion in January 2020 when it sent a letter of potential acquisition terms to Tri-State Truck and Equipment (“Tri-State”), Volvo’s dealer for Montana and Wyoming. (Doc. 19-3, p. 26; Doc. 25, p. 15.) Those negotiations lapsed for some time due to the COVID-19 pandemic, but

recontinued in 2021. (Doc. 19-3, p. 26.) By November 2021, PacWest and Tri- State had drafted a contribution and purchase agreement, and by December 2021, PacWest proposed the acquisition to Volvo. (Id.; Doc. 19-20, p. 9.) A Volvo

executive initially stated he would do his best to obtain approval for the transaction, so long as both PacWest’s market share in its current territory continued to improve and PacWest signed Volvo’s new form dealer agreement.

(Doc. 19-20, p. 9.) Volvo had required all dealers seeking territorial expansion to sign this new dealer agreement since it was developed in 2017. (Doc. 19-20, p. 9.) PacWest did not accept the new dealer agreement as written. Instead, the

parties negotiated its terms between January and March 2022. (See id.) On March 22, 2022, Volvo sent what turned out to be its last proposal. (Id.) This proposal had materially less favorable terms than the Dealer Agreement. (Id. at 12–13.) PacWest presumably rejected the proposal, because two days later, Volvo told

PacWest that the Side Letter was invalid and superseded by the later-executed Dealer Agreement. (Id. at 9.) Seemingly undeterred, PacWest was also trying to acquire another dealer

around this same time. In April 2022, JGC executed a non-binding letter of intent with potential acquiree Construction Machinery Industrial (“CMI”), Volvo’s dealer in Alaska. (Doc. 19-3, p. 28.)4 CMI’s controlling owner initially wanted JGC to own CMI and operate it independently from PacWest, but he later agreed to

structure the acquisition so that PacWest owned CMI. (Id.) While the letter of intent contemplated a two-step acquisition, a later proposal of the deal involved a

4 The arbitration panel’s partial final award states that this letter of intent was signed on April 28, 2002. (Doc. 19-3, p. 28.) This date is plainly a typographical error. one-time transaction through which PacWest would acquire 100% of CMI. (Id. at 29.)

Despite initial openness to PacWest’s expansion, Volvo ultimately decided to nix the deals. In May 2022, Volvo filed a short-lived lawsuit in this court, seeking a declaratory judgment that the Side Letter was invalid. Volvo Constr.

Equip. N. Am., LLC v. Pacwest Mach., LLC, No. 1:22-CV-00748 (M.D. Pa. filed May 20, 2022). Volvo voluntarily dismissed the case only a couple of weeks after filing it. Nevertheless, on August 29, 2022, Volvo sent letters to PacWest, Tri- State, and CMI notifying each of them that Volvo was not approving either

acquisition. (Doc. 19-20, p. 10.) In its letter to PacWest, Volvo claimed that its decision was justified by PacWest’s inability to maintain acceptable market share in its territory and PacWest’s uncooperativeness with Volvo. (Id.)

Prolonged arbitration ensued before a panel of three arbitrators (“Panel”). A majority of the Panel found that Volvo breached its obligations under the Side Letter and consequently caused PacWest approximately $14.4 million in damages. (Doc. 19-3, pp. 43–44.) The Panel’s reasoning for this ruling is contained in two

orders, “Order No. 3,” dated April 7, 2023 (Doc. 19-20), and the “Partial Final Award,” dated September 25, 2024 (Doc. 19-3). After considering whether PacWest was entitled to recover other costs, the Panel issued its final award on

January 30, 2025, which awarded PacWest a total award of $15,155,644.81. (Doc. 26-1, p. 14.)5 The final award adopted the holdings of Order No. 3 and the Partial Final Award. (Id. at 13.)

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Volvo Construction Equipment, LLC v. PacWest Machinery, LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/volvo-construction-equipment-llc-v-pacwest-machinery-llc-pamd-2025.