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239:. When First Options' demands for payment went unsatisfied, it sought arbitration by a stock exchange panel. MKI, which had signed the only workout document containing an arbitration agreement, submitted to arbitration, but the Kaplans, who had not signed that document, filed objections with the panel, denying that their disagreement with First Options was arbitrable. The arbitrators decided that they had the power to rule on the dispute's merits and ruled in First Options' favor. The District Court confirmed the award, but the
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arbitrability" turns upon whether the parties agreed to submit that question to arbitration. If so, then the court should defer to the arbitrator's arbitrability decision. If not, then the court should decide the question independently. These answers flow inexorably from the fact that arbitration is simply a matter of contract between the parties. Courts generally should apply ordinary state law principles governing
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or the courts have the primary power to decide whether the parties agreed to arbitrate a dispute's merits, the Court held that just as the arbitrability of the merits of a dispute depends upon whether the parties agreed to arbitrate that dispute, so the question "who has the primary power to decide
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reversed. The Third
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in deciding whether such an agreement exists. However, courts should not assume that the parties agreed to arbitrate arbitrability unless there is "clear and unmistakable" evidence that they did so.
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The Court unanimously agreed with the Third
Circuit that arbitrability of the Kaplan—First Options dispute was subject to independent review by the courts. On the narrow question of whether the
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This case arose out of disputes over a "workout" agreement, embodied in four documents, which governed the "working out" of debts to First
Options of Chicago, Inc. incurred as a result of the
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235:(and later losses) by Manuel Kaplan, his wife, and his wholly owned investment company, MK Investments, Inc. (MKI). First Options is a firm that clears stock trades on the
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and subsequent
Supreme Court rulings, there is a strong presumption in favor of arbitration, with the courts generally deferring to the opinions of an arbitrator.
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The Court also held that courts of appeals should apply ordinary standards when reviewing district court decisions upholding arbitration awards, i.e., accepting
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Judicial review of arbitrability of contract is properly permitted when parties have not clearly agreed that arbitrator will decide question
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First
Options of Chicago, Incorporated, Petitioner v. Manuel Kaplan, et us. and MK Investments, Incorporated
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Deciding Who
Decides Questions of Arbitrability: A Survey of American Law and a Comparative Perspective
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Supreme Court of the United States, No. 94-560. Argued March 22, 1995, Decided May 22, 1995
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on who decides whether a dispute is subject to arbitration, the courts or an arbitrator.
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they should not, in those circumstances, apply a special "
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Syllabus, First
Options Of Chicago, Inc. V. Kaplan Et Al.
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82:985; 1995
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