            IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE


LG ELECTRONICS, INC.,                           §
                                                §
          Plaintiff Below,                      §       No. 475, 2014
          Appellant,                            §
                                                §
          v.                                    §
                                                §       Court Below: Court of
INTERDIGITAL                                    §       Chancery of the State of
COMMUNICATIONS, INC.,                           §       Delaware
INTERDIGITAL TECHNOLOGY                         §
CORP., and IPR LICENSING, INC.,                 §       C.A. No. 9747-VCL
                                                §
          Defendants Below,                     §
          Appellees.                            §

                                Submitted:     March 11, 2015
                                Decided:       April 14, 2015

Before STRINE, Chief Justice; HOLLAND and VALIHURA, Justices;
CHAPMAN and NEWELL, Judges; constituting the Court en Banc.


Upon appeal from the Court of Chancery. AFFIRMED.


Jeremy D. Anderson, Esquire, Joseph B. Warden, Esquire, Fish & Richardson
P.C., Wilmington, Delaware; Michael J. McKeon, Esquire (argued), Christian
Chu, Esquire, Scott A. Elengold, Esquire, Fish & Richardson P.C., Washington,
DC, for the Appellant.

Neal C. Belgam, Esquire, Kelly A. Green, Esquire, Smith, Katzenstein & Jenkins
LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; David S. Steuer, Esquire (argued), Michael B.
Levin, Esquire, Matthew R. Reed, Esquire, Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati,
P.C., Palo Alto, California, for the Appellees.


STRINE, Chief Justice, for the Majority:



    Sitting by designation under Del. Const. art. IV, § 12.
                                I.      INTRODUCTION

         LG Electronics, Inc. (“LG”) sought a declaration in the Court of Chancery

that InterDigital Communications, Inc., InterDigital Technology Corporation, and

IPR Licensing Inc. (collectively, “InterDigital”) had breached a nondisclosure

agreement between the parties by disclosing confidential information during a

pending arbitration proceeding.         In a precise, detailed opinion, the Court of

Chancery granted InterDigital‟s motion to dismiss, holding that all of LG‟s claims

were properly before the arbitral tribunal, and deferring to the first-filed

proceeding based on the factors established by this Court in McWane Cast Iron

Pipe Corp. v. McDowell-Wellman Engineering Co.1 We agree that the McWane

doctrine applies in this case, and that it supports dismissing LG‟s claims.

         This dispute arose from a contract signed by the parties in 2006, the

Wireless Patent License Agreement (the “License Agreement”), which provides

for arbitration as the mechanism to resolve any claims arising under that

Agreement. In 2011, when the parties were engaged in judicial proceedings in

multiple forums, including in an arbitration proceeding initiated by LG, LG and

InterDigital entered into another contract that governed the circumstances under

which certain “settlement communications” could be disclosed.                      That non-

disclosure agreement (“NDA”) contained a broad provision permitting both parties




1
    LG Elecs., Inc. v. InterDigital Commc’ns, Inc., 98 A.3d 135 (Del. Ch. 2014).
                                               1
to enforce the agreement in “any court, agency, or tribunal having personal

jurisdiction over the Party in alleged breach of this Agreement . . . .”2

         After the parties executed the NDA, LG filed its opening brief with the

three-member arbitration panel (the “Tribunal”), arguing that its claims should be

decided without reference to certain evidence that it alleged was barred from use

by the NDA. InterDigital contended in response that, in its view, the NDA did not

prohibit the Tribunal from considering the contested evidence. LG disagreed, and

further argued that despite having raised the subject of whether the NDA

prevented the introduction of the evidence in the first place, the Tribunal had no

authority to decide the matter. Opening yet another front, LG then filed suit in the

Court of Chancery, seeking declaratory relief and an injunction to prevent

InterDigital from using the evidence in the arbitration proceeding because that

usage would supposedly violate the NDA.

         The Court of Chancery, citing the long-standing principles of McWane and

other relevant authority, declined to decide a question that was pending in the

arbitration proceeding that LG had itself initiated and where it had first raised the

issue. On appeal, LG argues that the Court of Chancery‟s ruling was in error, and

contends that it is being forced to arbitrate an issue against its will because the

License Agreement contained an arbitration clause, even though the NDA did not.

But LG‟s arguments on appeal are confused. The Court of Chancery did not

premise its ruling on the arbitration clause in the License Agreement. Rather, the

2
    App. to Opening Br. at 30 (NDA ¶ 9) (emphasis added).
                                            2
Court of Chancery relied on the plain terms of the NDA itself. Those terms give

both parties the right to enforce the NDA not just in a court, but also before an

“agency” or a “tribunal,” two terms that LG concedes were likely intended to

cover proceedings before a regulatory agency or, most relevant here, an arbitration

panel. Consistent with what the Court of Chancery found, and LG does not

contest, the term “tribunal” has long been understood to encompass arbitral

tribunals, including the one deciding the underlying dispute over the License

Agreement.3

         Furthermore, the NDA does not give LG the right to proliferate forums and

to have the Court of Chancery resolve an evidentiary issue that was already

pending before a forum—the Tribunal—contemplated by the NDA itself, the

forum in which LG first injected the NDA issue. In fact, because both parties

have the right to enforce its terms in “any court, agency, or tribunal,” InterDigital

was entitled to seek a declaration for itself from the Tribunal that the NDA does

not bar the use of evidence it wished to introduce in the arbitration proceeding.

The Court of Chancery was thus within its discretion to hold that resolution of the

dispute be confined to the first-filed action under the principles of McWane.

         The Court of Chancery‟s decision was also consistent with well-reasoned

precedent suggesting that courts should accord respect to arbitration proceedings

by hesitating to inject themselves into the process. As in all forms of dispute

resolution, evidentiary issues often arise in arbitration and must be decided as part

3
    LG Elecs., 98 A.3d at 139.
                                         3
of resolving the underlying dispute properly before the arbitrators.           If courts

interject themselves into every procedural dispute, the value of arbitration as an

efficient dispute resolution mechanism will be compromised.

       We therefore affirm the Court of Chancery‟s judgment dismissing the case.

                              II.    BACKGROUND4

       This case arises out of a complicated set of facts, involving multiple

agreements, and multiple legal proceedings, between the parties. We will focus

only on the background relevant to the issues before us in this appeal.

       LG is a consumer electronics and telecommunications company based in

Seoul, Korea. InterDigital, a Delaware corporation, develops technologies for use

in digital cellular and wireless products and networks.             In 2006, LG and

InterDigital entered into the License Agreement, granting LG a license to certain

InterDigital patents. The Agreement included a section permitting either party to

submit any disputes “arising under this Agreement” to arbitration.5                 The

Agreement incorporated the AAA International Rules,6 which provide that the

panel is empowered to rule on issues related to its own jurisdiction, 7 that issues of

evidence are presumptively part of the arbitration panel‟s purview,8 and that the

tribunal is authorized to “determine the admissibility, relevance, materiality and


4
  The undisputed facts are drawn from the Court of Chancery‟s opinion and the record on
appeal.
5
  App. to Opening Br. at 63 (License Agreement § 5.2).
6
  App. to Opening Br. at 63 (License Agreement § 5.2).
7
  App. to Answer Br. at 140 (International Dispute Resolution Procedures Article 15).
8
  App. to Answering Br. at 143 (International Dispute Resolution Procedures Article 19).
                                            4
weight of the evidence offered by any party,” taking into account the “applicable

principles of legal privilege, such as those involving the confidentiality of

communications between a lawyer and client.”9 The AAA rules also provide that

the panel can “take whatever interim measures it deems necessary, including

injunctive relief.”10      The License Agreement further stipulated that the

“Arbitration Panel shall have the exclusive authority to permit requests for the

production of relevant documents, including confidential discovery to the extent

required by a party in order to establish its case. . . . ”11

       In 2011, InterDigital filed a complaint with the United States International

Trade Commission (ITC), an independent federal agency, against a number of

defendants, alleging various claims of patent infringement. InterDigital eventually

added LG as a defendant to those proceedings. LG moved to terminate the ITC

investigation in favor of arbitration under the License Agreement.             LG then

commenced arbitration in the International Centre for Dispute Resolution.

Eventually, after multiple rounds of appeals, InterDigital withdrew its ITC

complaint against LG in favor of the then-pending arbitration.

       Two months after LG commenced the arbitration, but before a panel was

formed, LG and InterDigital entered into an Agreement Governing Confidential

Settlement Communications, the “NDA” at issue in this appeal. The NDA, which

stated that it was to be governed by Delaware law, restricted the parties‟ use of

9
  App. to Answer Br. at 144 (International Dispute Resolution Procedures Article 20).
10
   App. to Answer Br. at 144 (International Dispute Resolution Procedures Article 21).
11
   App. to Opening Br. at 64 (License Agreement § 5.2(e)).
                                            5
specified “settlement communications” in “any existing or future legal, judicial,

administrative or arbitration proceeding.”12 Unlike the License Agreement, the

NDA did not contain a specific provision mandating arbitration.             Indeed, it

explicitly stipulated that “this Agreement does not contain or incorporate any

formal dispute resolution procedure.”13 Nevertheless, the NDA provided that “any

Party shall have the right, in addition to all other remedies at law or in equity, to

have the provisions of this Agreement specially enforced by any court, agency, or

tribunal having personal jurisdiction over the Party in alleged breach of this

Agreement . . . .”14

       On April 19, 2013, LG submitted its opening brief to the Tribunal. In its

brief, LG emphasized that it was purposely withholding fact witness statements

and supporting documents that it alleged were barred under the NDA. Two weeks

later, InterDigital‟s counsel sent a letter to the Tribunal, disagreeing with LG‟s

interpretation of the NDA and requesting an order confirming that InterDigital was

permitted to submit witness testimony and supporting documents. The Tribunal

issued an order declining InterDigital‟s request as “premature,” holding that the

issue of whether evidence was admissible under the NDA could be addressed

when evidence was introduced that one party alleged should be precluded.15




12
   App. to Opening Br. at 27 (NDA ¶ 1).
13
   App. to Opening Br. at 30 (NDA ¶ 9).
14
   Id.
15
   App. to Opening Br. at 98 (Letter from the Hon. Benjamin J. Greenberg, May 8, 2013).
                                            6
         InterDigital then filed its response brief to the Tribunal, including evidence

that LG contends breached the NDA. In that brief, InterDigital explained why it

believed the evidence was admissible, in contrast to LG‟s claims. LG requested

that InterDigital “cure its breach” by withdrawing the response brief and re-filing

it without the alleged confidential communications.

         When InterDigital did not respond, LG filed a verified complaint against

InterDigital in the Court of Chancery, arguing that InterDigital had breached the

NDA by including confidential communications in its response brief.                LG

requested a declaration that InterDigital was in breach of the NDA, and an

injunction requiring InterDigital to withdraw its response brief from the arbitration

proceeding and prohibiting InterDigital from “submitting, using, and relying on

any Settlement Communications to the Arbitration Tribunal and any other

improper use . . . .”16 Although LG had first raised the issue in the arbitration

proceedings, it asserted that the Tribunal could not properly decide issues of

admissibility under the NDA because that agreement did not contain its own

arbitration clause. InterDigital moved to dismiss LG‟s claims, arguing that under

the McWane doctrine, the Court of Chancery should dismiss the case as involving

evidentiary issues properly before the Tribunal in the ongoing arbitration.

         In an opinion dated August 20, 2014, the Court of Chancery granted

InterDigital‟s motion to dismiss. Applying the principles of McWane, the Court of

Chancery found that the arbitration constituted a first-filed action, the Tribunal

16
     App. to Answering Br. at 24 (Verified Complaint).
                                             7
could provide prompt and complete justice, and the arbitration involved the same

parties and the same issues.17 Thus, the Court of Chancery determined that LG‟s

claims should be resolved by the Tribunal to avoid duplication, inefficiency, and

potentially inconsistent rulings, and dismissed the case. LG appealed.

       After LG filed its appeal and submitted its opening brief, the Tribunal

issued an order finding that it had the authority to interpret the NDA to rule on the

evidentiary issues presented by the parties that were relevant to determining the

substantive claims before it.18 The Tribunal found that InterDigital‟s interpretation

of the NDA was correct, and therefore permitted the contested evidence to be

introduced in the proceeding.19

                                  III.   ANALYSIS

       This Court held in McWane that:

       a Delaware action will not be stayed as a matter of right by reason of
       a prior action pending in another jurisdiction involving the same
       parties and the same issues; that such stay may be warranted,
       however, by facts and circumstances sufficient to move the
       discretion of the Court; that such discretion should be exercised
       freely in favor of the stay when there is a prior action pending
       elsewhere, in a court capable of doing prompt and complete justice,
       involving the same parties and the same issues; that, as a general
       rule, litigation should be confined to the forum in which it is first
       commenced . . .; that these concepts are impelled by considerations




17
   LG Elecs., Inc. v. InterDigital Commc’ns, Inc., 98 A.3d 135, 136 (Del. Ch. 2014).
18
   App. to Answering Br. at 257 (LG Elecs., Inc. v. InterDigital Commc’ns, Inc., IDCR
Case No. 50-20-1200-0226, Decision and Order Regarding “Agreement Governing
Settlement Communications,” Oct. 27, 2014).
19
   Id. at 258.
                                            8
        of comity and the necessities of an orderly and efficient
        administration of justice.20

        Following that case, Delaware courts considering a motion to stay or

dismiss in favor of a previously filed action have applied McWane‟s three-factor

test: (1) is there a prior action pending elsewhere; (2) in a court capable of doing

prompt and complete justice; (3) involving the same parties and the same issues?

If all three criteria are met, “McWane and its progeny establish a strong preference

for the litigation of a dispute in the forum in which the first action” was filed.21

We review a trial court‟s stay or dismissal of a case under McWane for abuse of

discretion,22 but we review de novo any issues of law “applied in reaching that

decision.”23

     A.    The Court of Chancery Correctly Determined that the Arbitration
       Proceeding Constituted a First-Filed Action for Purposes of McWane

        As the Court of Chancery noted, this case appears to be the first in which

Delaware courts have considered whether an arbitration proceeding constitutes a

first-filed action for purposes of the McWane doctrine.24 LG contended before the

Court of Chancery and again on appeal that the absence of relevant precedent

suggests that McWane does not apply to arbitration proceedings.




20
   McWane Cast Iron Pipe Corp. v. McDowell-Wellman Eng’g Co., 263 A.2d 281, 283
(Del. 1970) (emphasis added).
21
   DONALD J. WOLFE, JR. & MICHAEL A. PITTENGER, CORPORATE AND COMMERCIAL
PRACTICE IN THE DELAWARE COURT OF CHANCERY § 5.01, at 5-3 (2013).
22
   See, e.g., Lisa, S.A. v. Mayorga, 993 A.2d 1042, 1047 (Del. 2010).
23
   Alaska Elec. Pension Fund v. Brown, 988 A.2d 412, 417 (Del. 2010).
24
   LG Elecs., Inc. v. InterDigital Commc’ns, Inc., 98 A.3d 135, 138 (Del. Ch. 2014).
                                             9
       We agree with the Court of Chancery that there is no principled reason to

distinguish an arbitration proceeding from other first-filed actions. First, as the

Court of Chancery observed, arbitrations are typically treated as “prior actions” for

other purposes, including issue and claim preclusion.25 Moreover, the principles

underlying McWane apply equally when the first-filed action is an arbitration: the

desire to avoid the “wasteful duplication of time, effort, and expense that occurs

when judges, lawyers, parties, and witnesses are simultaneously engaged in the

adjudication of the same cause of action in two courts,” and “the possibility of

inconsistent and conflicting rulings and judgments and an unseemly race by each

party to trial and judgment in the forum of its choice.”26

       Those factors remain relevant in a case like this one, in which the only

relief that LG seeks is a declaration that evidence is not admissible in the first-filed

action. The parties and the Tribunal have all expended considerable “time, effort,

and expense” in arguing over the admissibility of evidence under the NDA, in the

specific context in which InterDigital‟s alleged breach occurred and for which LG

seeks equitable relief. In light of Delaware‟s public policy favoring arbitration,27


25
   Id; cf. Medicis Pharm. Corp. v. Anacor Pharm., Inc., 2013 WL 4509652, at *10 (Del.
Ch. Aug. 12, 2013) (noting that the “the first-filed status” of an arbitration proceeding
“conceivably could play a role in the Court‟s decision” to dismiss pending claims in favor
of arbitration).
26
   McWane Cast Iron Pipe Corp. v. McDowell-Wellman Eng’g Co., 263 A.2d 281, 283
(Del. 1970).
27
   See, e.g., Elf Atochem N. Am., Inc. v. Jaffari, 727 A.2d 286, 295 (Del. 1999) (“Our
conclusion is bolstered by the fact that Delaware recognizes a strong public policy in
favor of arbitration. Normally, doubts on the issue of whether a particular issue is
arbitrable will be resolved in favor of arbitration.”); SOC-SMG, Inc. v. Day &
Zimmermann, Inc., 2010 WL 3634204, at *3 (Del. Ch. Sept. 15, 2010) (“To have a
                                              10
Delaware courts should be as reluctant to interfere in a dispute already before an

arbitral panel as they would be to interfere in a dispute already before another

court.28 When that dispute is about an issue incidental to the first-filed proceeding,

e.g., the admissibility of evidence, considerations of “comity and . . . the orderly

and efficient administration of justice” are even more compelling.29 Accordingly,

we find that the parties‟ arbitration proceeding constitutes a first-filed action for

purposes of the McWane analysis.

      B.     The Court of Chancery Correctly Concluded that the Arbitration
             Tribunal is Capable of Doing Prompt and Complete Justice

           The Court of Chancery determined that the Tribunal was “capable of doing

prompt and complete justice” under the second prong of the McWane analysis

because the Tribunal is empowered to decide the dispute and can provide

appropriate relief. LG argues that both findings were in error.

 1.         The Arbitration Tribunal is Empowered to Decide Issues Incidental to a
                               Dispute Properly Before It

           For much of its brief, LG focuses on arguing an issue of its own

contrivance, which played no role in the Court of Chancery‟s ruling.30 LG claims


Delaware court inject itself into this situation would show disrespect toward the
Arbitration panel, which has the broad authority to address these issues in the first
instance, and would be contrary to our state‟s—and our nation‟s—strong public policy
favoring arbitration.”).
28
   See generally McWane, 263 A.2d 282-83.
29
   Id. at 282.
30
   LG argued to the Court of Chancery that the NDA‟s reference to a “tribunal” did not
necessarily mean the Tribunal which had been formed to consider its claims under the
License Agreement, and that the Tribunal could not grant LG‟s requested relief as a
matter of equitable rather than legal relief. In an argument not advanced on appeal, LG
claimed that because the License Agreement used the phrase “arbitrators at law,” the
                                               11
that the Court of Chancery is forcing LG to arbitrate a subject that is not arbitrable

because the NDA, unlike the License Agreement, does not contain an arbitration

clause. This framing of the Court of Chancery‟s ruling misunderstands the careful

reasoning supporting the court‟s decision to dismiss LG‟s claims in favor of the

arbitration proceeding, and ignores what the NDA itself says.

       It is true that the NDA does not contain a clause requiring that any dispute

regarding its enforcement or applicability be resolved in arbitration, as the Court

of Chancery recognized.31 But the NDA also does not provide LG the right to

bring any dispute before a court at any time, regardless of the effect such an action

would have on the resources of LG‟s contractual partner, InterDigital, the

judiciary, or an arbitration tribunal. By its plain terms, the NDA can be enforced

not just in any “court,” but also in any “agency” or “tribunal.” It is on this

provision of the NDA that the Court of Chancery properly focused.

       Two independent reasons support the Court of Chancery‟s determination

that this dispute can be decided by the Tribunal. First, the terms of the NDA itself

clarify that the parties intended for a “tribunal” to have the authority to enforce the

agreement.     As LG conceded at oral argument, the NDA was a bilateral


Tribunal could not provide the equitable relief LG sought. In a thorough exegesis of the
historical distinction between law and equity, the Court of Chancery persuasively
explained why the Tribunal did have the authority to provide equitable relief. LG Elecs.,
Inc. v. InterDigital Commc’ns, Inc., 98 A.3d 135, 140-45 (Del. Ch. 2014). In light of that
well-reasoned judgment, LG did not reiterate its argument on appeal. In fact, as noted,
the AAA rules that the parties agreed to in the License Agreement explicitly empower the
Tribunal to provide equitable relief. See App. to Answer Br. at 144 (International
Dispute Resolution Procedures Article 21).
31
   See LG Elecs., 98 A.3d at 139.
                                             12
agreement,32 and it specifically permitted both parties to seek relief from “any

court, agency, or tribunal.”33 As LG also conceded, the NDA‟s reference to a

“tribunal” as one of the three forums in which either party can seek “special[]

enforce[ment]” was most likely to ensure that the NDA‟s terms could be

interpreted and enforced by an arbitral tribunal, including the one that LG sought

to form two months before it signed the NDA.34 As discussed, the parties were

engaged in multiple disputes when they signed the NDA, including before the U.S.

District Court for the District of Delaware (“court”),35 the ITC (“agency”), and the

arbitration Tribunal (“tribunal”). The parties thus likely intended for the NDA to

cover evidentiary matters in all of the legal proceedings in which they were

enmeshed. In other words, because LG had already initiated the arbitration when

the NDA was signed, these sophisticated parties could have easily excluded an

arbitral tribunal as an enforcement option. Instead, the NDA‟s broad language

expressly included a “tribunal” as one of the proper forums for enforcement.

       Moreover, LG was the first party to put the NDA at issue in the arbitration,

by contending in its opening brief to the Tribunal that the agreement barred the

introduction of certain evidence. The Tribunal determined in its ruling on the

NDA that LG‟s brief equated to “request[ing] that the NDA be „specially


32
   Videotape: Oral Argument Before the Delaware Supreme Court, at 32:21 (LG Elecs.,
Inc. v. InterDigital Commc’ns, Inc., No. 475, 2014, Mar. 11, 2015).
33
   App. to Opening Br. at 30 (NDA ¶ 9).
34
   Videotape: Oral Argument Before the Delaware Supreme Court, at 35:20 (LG Elecs.,
Inc. v. InterDigital Commc’ns, Inc., No. 475, 2014, Mar. 11, 2015).
35
   InterDigital Commc’ns v. Huawei Techs. Co., C.A. No. 11-654-MSG (D. Del).
                                           13
enforced‟ by the Arbitral Tribunal.”36 But even if LG‟s attempt to raise the issue

before the Tribunal did not constitute an official request to have the Tribunal

decide the issue, InterDigital‟s later response to the Tribunal did constitute such a

request for relief.

       LG only initiated suit in Delaware after InterDigital had requested such

relief before the Tribunal, and after the Tribunal declined to rule immediately that

the NDA did not bar certain evidence under LG‟s preferred interpretation.

Notably, LG‟s action in the Court of Chancery sought declaratory, not just

injunctive, relief about the applicability of the NDA, just as InterDigital had earlier

requested of the Tribunal. In other words, LG wanted to have it both ways: by

first raising the issue in its opening brief in the arbitration proceeding, LG sought

to bind InterDigital‟s hands in introducing relevant evidence in the arbitration

panel, but also prevent the Tribunal from ruling on the issue of whether

InterDigital could do so.37

       What LG seems to ignore is that InterDigital had its own right to seek relief

under the contract. Just as LG was entitled to ask a court to enforce the specific

terms of the NDA by way of injunctive or declaratory relief, so too was

InterDigital entitled to seek a declaration that the NDA did not bar the use of

certain evidence in the context of a concrete evidentiary dispute arising in the

36
   App. to Answering Br. at 259 (LG Elecs., Inc. v. InterDigital Commc’ns, Inc., IDCR
Case No. 50-20-1200-0226, Decision and Order Regarding “Agreement Governing
Settlement Communications,” Oct. 27, 2014).
37
   See App. to Opening Br. at 146 (Answering Brief in Opposition to Defendants‟ Motion
to Dismiss).
                                           14
arbitration proceeding.38 Nor was this right to declaratory relief limited to the non-

breaching party. The most logical reading of the phrase “any party shall have the

right, in addition to all other remedies at law or in equity, to have the provisions of

this Agreement specially enforced by any court, agency or tribunal having

personal jurisdiction over the Party in alleged breach . . .” is in accordance with its

plain terms. That is, either party to the contract had the right to avail itself of any

“remedies at law or in equity,” including the right to seek declaratory relief, as LG

itself recognized when it sought a declaratory judgment from the Court of

Chancery. Moreover, under Delaware law, which indisputably covered the NDA,

either party to a contract can seek declaratory relief.39           Because the NDA

specifically included a “tribunal” as one of the forums in which both parties could

seek relief, InterDigital was entitled by the terms of the NDA itself to keep the

related litigation in one forum, the one chosen by LG. Thus, when LG tried to

prevent InterDigital from introducing the contested evidence, InterDigital properly

brought the issue up to the Tribunal, which properly decided the issue, because it

was vested with the authority to determine incidental evidentiary issues.

       As the Court of Chancery determined, the NDA does not “entitle[] LG to

insist on a judicial forum.”40 Had the parties wanted to limit the authority of the

Tribunal to determine evidentiary matters, thereby limiting the power granted in

the License Agreement itself, they could have done so in the NDA. It is not

38
   App. to Opening Br. at 30 (NDA ¶ 9).
39
   See 10 Del. C. § 6501.
40
   LG Elecs., Inc. v. InterDigital Commc’ns, Inc., 98 A.3d 135, 139 (Del. Ch. 2014).
                                           15
uncommon for sophisticated parties to name an exclusive forum in which to bring

disputes that arise under an agreement;41 indeed, the parties to this case did so in

their License Agreement.42 But these same parties specifically declined to confine

litigation to an exclusive forum in the NDA, and instead used a broad phrase

enabling “any court, agency, or tribunal” to enforce the agreement.43 Because the

parties did not include a clause limiting litigation to the courts or any particular

court in the NDA, we agree with the Court of Chancery that this dispute was

properly subject to arbitration, and that the Tribunal was a “tribunal” within the

meaning of the NDA. LG was thus not “forced to arbitrate the merits of a dispute”

against its will; it got exactly what it bargained for in Paragraph 9 of the NDA.44

       Secondly, the broad right to have the NDA enforced by any “tribunal” is

consistent with the accepted principle that arbitrators can decide evidentiary issues

relevant to disputes pending before them.45 This Court has never held that parties


41
   See generally 7 WILLISTON ON CONTRACTS § 15:15 (4th ed. 2014).
42
   App. to Opening Br. at 63 (License Agreement § 5.2).
43
   App. to Opening Br. at 30 (NDA ¶ 9).
44
   Cf. CA, Inc. v. Ingres Corp., 2009 WL 4575009, at *47 (Del. Ch. Dec. 7, 2009) aff’d, 8
A.3d 1143 (Del. 2010) (“The 2007 Reseller Agreement is a contract with dignity, but it
remains just one of several contracts that govern the ongoing relationship between CA
and Ingres. Traditionally, courts try to give a consistent reading to interrelated
agreements. Such consistency is especially warranted here because of the complex
relationship between CA and Ingres. Indeed, it is because of this complexity that the
parties inserted broad choice of forum provisions in the Legacy Support Agreement and
the CA Support Agreement in an effort to prevent the kind of claim splitting and
piecemeal litigation that Ingres‟ California Action threatens.”).
45
   2 DOMKE ON COM. ARB. § 29:9 (2014) (“Arbitrators have discretionary power to admit
and hear any evidence that the parties may wish to present through witnesses or
documents. Arbitrators are not constrained by formal rules of evidence or procedure.
Rather, they enjoy wide latitude in the conduct of proceedings. Moreover, they are the
final judges of such matters as the admissibility and relevance of evidence. Rulings of
                                             16
must enumerate each and every matter to be addressed by an arbitrator; rather,

consistent with the policy across state and federal courts,46 this Court has held that

the arbitrator‟s power to resolve a dispute necessarily includes the power to

resolve procedural issues relevant to that dispute.47              When a party clearly

expresses the intent to arbitrate—as LG did by agreeing to arbitrate disputes

arising under the License Agreement and by initiating the arbitration in the first

place—it cannot then insist that every incidental question be resolved by the

courts.48 That is especially true when the parties have explicitly agreed that the

arbitrator has the power to decide those issues, as the parties did here by


arbitrators on the admissibility of evidence are not subject to review by courts since such
action would „result on in waste of time, the interruption of the arbitration proceeding,
and encourage delaying tactics.”).
46
   See 21 WILLISTON ON CONTRACTS § 57:99 (4th ed. 2014) (“Since arbitrators have the
power to manage and conduct the arbitration hearing, they have wide latitude . . . to
determine what evidence should be considered, and to determine the admissibility,
relevance, materiality and weight of any evidence. Arbitrators . . . are in a better position
to determine the relevancy and materiality of evidence to the controversy. . . . [I]t should
not be a function of a court to hold itself open as an appellate tribunal to rule upon any
question of evidence that may arise in the course of arbitration. . . .”); see also John Wiley
& Sons, Inc. v. Livingston, 376 U.S. 543, 557 (1964) (“Once it is determined, as we have,
that the parties are obligated to submit the subject matter of a dispute to arbitration,
„procedural‟ questions which grow out of the dispute and bear on its final disposition
should be left to the arbitrator.”); Hoteles Condado Beach, La Concha & Convention Ctr.
v. Union De Tronquistas Local 901, 763 F.2d 34, 39 (1st Cir. 1985) (“The arbitrator is
the judge of the admissibility and relevancy of evidence submitted in an arbitration
proceeding.”).
47
   See, e.g., SBC Interactive, Inc. v. Corporate Media Partners, 714 A.2d 758, 762 (Del.
1998); see also Mehiel v. Solo Cup Co., 2005 WL 1252348, at *6 (Del. Ch. May 13,
2005) (“In the face of an unambiguous intent to arbitrate this dispute, I must conclude
that the parties‟ contentions concerning discovery do not raise questions of „substantive
arbitrability.‟ Thus, the scope of the arbitrator‟s authority to compel discovery is a
procedural question and one that must be addressed by the arbitrator, who will determine,
based upon the language of the contract, and the procedures the parties submit to, what
that authority is.”).
48
   See Howsam v. Dean Witter Reynolds, Inc., 537 U.S. 79, 84 (2002).
                                              17
incorporating the AAA International Rules, which provide that the arbitration

panel can decide issues of evidence and determine the limits of its own

jurisdiction,49 and by stipulating that the arbitrator “shall have the exclusive

authority” over discovery in the License Agreement.50

       But even if parties do not specifically provide that the arbitrator has the

power to decide procedural questions, it is implicit in the Tribunal‟s power to

decide a dispute that it can decide the evidentiary questions that inevitably arise.51

As the Court of Chancery aptly noted, “[a]llowing parties to seek judicial review

every time an arbitrator rules on . . . a procedural issue would frustrate the arbitral

process. If the Tribunal errs, LG can seek judicial review after the award becomes

final.”52

       The Seventh Circuit‟s reasoning in Trustmark Ins. Co. v. John Hancock

Life Ins. Co., in which the appeals court overturned a district court judgment that




49
   App. to Answer Br. at 140-44 (International Dispute Resolution Procedures Articles
15, 19 and 20). The AAA Rules are consistent with those of other international
arbitration bodies as well. See Konstantin Pilkov, Evidence in International Arbitration:
Criteria for Admission, http://arbitration-blog.eu/evidence-international-arbitration-
criteria-admission/ (last visited March 24, 2015) (citing various arbitration rules in
support of the proposition that they typically “give broad authority to arbitrators
regarding the consideration of evidence”).
50
   See App. to Opening Br. at 63 (License Agreement § 5.2).
51
   See 6 C.J.S. Arbitration § 161 (2015) (“A general submission of all matters and
differences between the parties gives the arbitrators the power to award or decide not
only with respect to all matters of account, claims, debts, or demands which the parties
may have against each other, but also all matters connected therewith or incidental
thereto.”).
52
   LG Elecs., Inc. v. InterDigital Commc’ns, Inc., 98 A.3d 135, 140 (Del. Ch. 2014).
                                              18
an arbitrator did not have the power to construe a confidentiality agreement, is

instructive.53 The Seventh Circuit explained:

       The district judge also erred in concluding that the arbitrators are
       powerless to construe the confidentiality agreement. True, that
       agreement lacks its own arbitration clause, but the parties did agree
       to arbitrate their disputes about reinsurance. Arbitrators who have
       been appointed to resolve a commercial dispute are entitled to
       resolve ancillary questions that affect their task. What‟s more, the
       confidentiality agreement—a standard form in insurance arbitration,
       signed while the arbitration was under way—is closely related to the
       substance of the first arbitration and presumptively within the scope
       of the reinsurance contracts’ comprehensive arbitration clauses,
       which cover all disputes arising out of the original dispute.54

       Just as in that case, the Tribunal here was authorized to resolve the ancillary

question of the admissibility of evidence in the proceeding before it based on the

plain language of the License Agreement.              And just as the Tribunal could

determine that otherwise relevant evidence was inadmissible on the grounds of

attorney-client privilege, for example,55 so too was it empowered to bar evidence

precluded from use by the NDA.56 The breadth of the arbitration clause in the


53
   Trustmark Ins. Co. v. John Hancock Life Ins. Co. (U.S.A.), 631 F.3d 869 (7th Cir.
2011).
54
   Id. at 874 (internal citations omitted) (emphasis added).
55
   See 21 WILLISTON ON CONTRACTS § 57:97 (4th ed. 2014) (“Arbitration rules often
provide that the arbitrator shall take into account applicable principles of legal privilege,
including those involving the confidentiality of communications between a lawyer and
client. An arbitrator may order the redaction of information allegedly protected by the
attorney-client privilege.”).
56
   Cf. SOC-SMG, Inc. v. Day & Zimmermann, Inc., 2010 WL 3634204, at *2 (Del. Ch.
Sept. 15, 2010) (“Any member of this court knows that the adjudication of disputes, and
the discovery issues necessarily related to them, often involves the resolution of questions
about the use of privileged information and of issues of attorney responsibility. For that
reason, it is not surprising that arbitrators have ruled on disqualification and privilege
motions and that courts have refused to intervene on an interlocutory basis to either first-
or second-guess those rulings. Rather, the interests of justice are served by charging the
                                                19
License Agreement in this case, compared to the arbitration clause in the contracts

at issue in Trustmark, does not require a different outcome: both of the respective

contracts provided for arbitration using the AAA rules, and both entitle the arbitral

tribunal to “decide for themselves those procedural questions that arise on the way

to a final disposition.”57

       Nor is there any conflict between the reality that the NDA by itself vested

the Tribunal with the authority to resolve the parties‟ dispute and the fact that the

scope of the Tribunal‟s powers is detailed in the separate License Agreement.

InterDigital does not contend that, absent the arbitration clause in License

Agreement, the parties would have to arbitrate any related dispute. But the issue

raised by the alleged violation of the NDA is a matter of the admissibility of

evidence in the arbitration proceeding, which is ultimately about the License

Agreement. The parties are bound by both agreements, and by the plain terms of

both, this dispute is properly before the Tribunal.


arbitrators with deciding the overall matter, including allegations of discovery abuse and
disqualification motions, in the first instance.”); see also Trustmark Ins. Co., 631 F.3d at
874 (observing that if “one or both of the contestants can get immediate review in a
federal district court” of every procedural ruling, it “would be the end of arbitration as a
speedy and (relatively) low-cost alternative to litigation.”).
57
   Trustmark Ins. Co., 631 F.3d at 874. As in Trustmark, the parties‟ arbitration clause in
the License Agreement provided broadly that any dispute “arising under” the Agreement
would be subject to arbitration. See, e.g., Orix LF, LP v. Inscap Asset Mgmt., LLC, 2010
WL 1463404, at *1 (Del. Ch. Apr. 13, 2010); CAPROC Manager, Inc. v. Policemen’s &
Firemen’s Ret. Sys. of City of Pontiac, 2005 WL 937613, at *2 (Del. Ch. Apr. 18, 2005);
Andarko Petroleum Corp. v. Panhandle Eastern Corp., 1987 WL 16508, at *2-3 (Del.
Ch. Sept. 8, 1987). Moreover, for purposes of the precise question before us—whether
the Tribunal is empowered to decide an issue of the admissibility of evidence relevant to
the dispute before it—the License Agreement provides the answer, regardless of the
precise scope of the arbitration clause.
                                              20
                2.      The Tribunal Can Provide Appropriate Relief

       LG next argues that the Tribunal cannot provide appropriate relief. But the

only relief LG sought in the Court of Chancery was relevant to the ongoing

arbitration, i.e., enjoining InterDigital from using the alleged confidential

communications as evidence in that proceeding. Although the Tribunal ultimately

determined that LG‟s claims were without merit, if it had ruled in LG‟s favor and

excluded the contested evidence, the case before the Court of Chancery would

have become moot.

       LG also contends that it sought relief against hypothetical future breaches

of the NDA, which cannot be addressed by the Tribunal. But those claims are not

yet ripe. As the Court of Chancery found, LG has not established that InterDigital

engaged in a “pattern of conduct” that suggests InterDigital will again “breach”

the NDA outside of the arbitration proceeding.58 The only claim of breach that LG

alleged before the Court of Chancery arose from InterDigital‟s response brief in

the arbitration, which the Tribunal was capable of addressing.59



58
   LG Elecs., 98 A.3d at 145.
59
   In addition to the reasons cited by the Court of Chancery, we note that an additional
factor supports its decision that this case should be dismissed: the Court of Chancery, as a
court of equity, does not have jurisdiction to hear an issue when the claimant has an
adequate remedy at law. See, e.g., El Paso Natural Gas Co. v. TransAmerican Natural
Gas Corp., 669 A.2d 36 (Del. 1995); Yuen v. Gemstar-TV Guide Int’l, Inc., 2004 WL
1517133, at *2 (Del. Ch. June 30, 2004) (“The court „will not „accept jurisdiction over‟
claims that are properly committed to arbitration since in such circumstances arbitration
is an adequate legal remedy.‟ This comports with Delaware‟s strong public policy
favoring arbitration and Delaware courts will interpret contracts as requiring arbitration if
they can reasonably do so.”). Here, the only claim ripe for injunctive relief or specific
performance could have been—and ultimately was—decided by the Tribunal. If LG
                                              21
        Because we agree with the Court of Chancery that the dispute is arbitrable,

and the Tribunal is capable of providing appropriate relief, we find that the second

prong of the McWane test was met.

   C.      The Court of Chancery Correctly Concluded that the Arbitration
                          Involves the Same Issues

        Finally, LG argues on appeal that the issues involved in the arbitration are

not “substantially or functionally identical” to those at issue in the Delaware

proceeding. This claim is without merit. The relief that LG seeks is to have

evidence excluded from the ongoing arbitration proceeding because it alleges that

the NDA prohibits the use of that evidence. The Tribunal can—and eventually

did—determine whether the contested evidence is admissible, based on the

parties‟ agreement to have an arbitrator decide evidentiary issues relevant to

disputes arising under the License Agreement.60

           D.      The McWane Factors Support Dismissing this Case

        Because we agree with the Court of Chancery that the arbitration

constitutes a “prior action,” the Tribunal is capable of doing prompt and complete

justice, and the arbitration involves the same parties and the same issues, we agree

that McWane applies, and thus the Court of Chancery‟s decision to dismiss this

case in favor of the first-filed proceeding. We therefore find that the Court of

Chancery did not abuse its discretion.



wishes to seek monetary damages for InterDigital‟s alleged breach after the Tribunal
renders its final verdict, it can do so in an appropriate court of law.
60
   App. to Opening Br. at 64 (License Agreement § 5.2(e)).
                                                22
    For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the Court of Chancery is hereby

AFFIRMED.




                                    23
VALIHURA, Justice, dissenting:

         I disagree with the Court of Chancery and the Majority, and, therefore, I

respectfully dissent.       Before addressing the points of divergence, I state my

agreement with the Majority on several basic points.

         First, the Court of Chancery and the Majority appropriately reiterate the

concerns expressed in various cases that, as a general matter, courts should accord

respect to arbitration proceedings by “hesitating to inject themselves into the

process.”61 The Majority correctly notes that if courts were to interject themselves

into every procedural dispute, the value of arbitration as an efficient dispute

resolution mechanism would be compromised.

         Second, as a general matter, arbitrators are typically vested with the power

to decide evidentiary and discovery issues relevant to the disputes pending before

them. I agree that this general view is consistent across state and federal courts.

         However, I disagree with the Majority‟s conclusion that the underlying

dispute arising under the NDA (the “Dispute”) is arbitrable and that an analysis

under the doctrine set forth in McWane Cast Iron Pipe Corp. v. McDowell-

Wellman Eng’g Co.62 was appropriate. The Majority ignores several cases that

require a contract to reflect clearly the parties‟ intention to require a matter to be

arbitrated before a party can be compelled to arbitrate. Instead, the Majority

61
     Majority Op. at 3.
62
     263 A.2d 281 (Del. 1970).


                                           1
contends that two independent reasons support the Court of Chancery‟s

determination that the arbitration tribunal (the “Tribunal”) should adjudicate the

Dispute. First, the Majority holds that “the terms of the NDA itself clarify that the

parties intended for a „tribunal‟ to have authority to enforce the agreement.”63

Second, the Majority contends that “the broad right to have the NDA enforced by

any „tribunal‟ is consistent with the accepted principle that arbitrators can decide

evidentiary issues relevant to disputes pending before them.” 64 Under the unique

circumstances presented here, I disagree with both prongs of the Majority‟s

reasoning.

       A Party May Only Be Compelled to Arbitrate a Dispute When a Contract
       Contains a Clear Intention to Arbitrate the Claim

       Well-settled law requires a contract to reflect clearly the parties‟ intention to

require a matter to be arbitrated before a party can be compelled to arbitrate. The

United States Supreme Court has explained that “arbitration is a matter of contract

and a party cannot be required to submit to arbitration any dispute which he has not

agreed to submit.”65 “This axiom recognizes the fact that arbitrators derive their




63
   Majority Op. at 12.
64
   Id. at 16.
65
   AT&T Techs., Inc. v. Commc’ns Workers of America, 475 U.S. 643, 648 (1986) (internal
quotation omitted); see also Howsam v. Dean Witter Reynolds, Inc., 537 U.S. 79, 83 (2002)
(“This Court has determined that „arbitration is a matter of contract and a party cannot be
required to submit to arbitration any dispute which he has not agreed so to submit.‟” (quoting
Steelworkers v. Warrior & Gulf Nav. Co., 363 U.S. 574, 582 (1960))).


                                                2
authority to resolve disputes only because the parties have agreed in advance to

submit such grievances to arbitration.”66

       Citing to another United States Supreme Court case, First Options of

Chicago, Inc. v. Kaplan,67 this Court, in DMS Props.-First, Inc. v. P.W. Scott

Assocs., Inc.,68 reiterated this well-settled principle:

       [T]he United States Supreme Court held that courts should not
       presume that the parties agreed to arbitrate arbitrability unless there is
       “clear and unmistakable evidence that they did so.” Thus, the legal
       presumptions are reversed when there is silence or ambiguity about
       who should decide arbitrability vis-à-vis when there is silence or
       ambiguity about the question of whether a particular merits-related
       dispute is within the scope of a valid arbitration agreement.69

       One respected treatise summarizes the importance of looking to the

contractual language to determine whether a claim is arbitrable:

       The decision to submit a dispute to arbitration must be contracted for
       expressly by the parties to the agreement. The range of issues to be
       arbitrated is restricted by the terms of the agreement. Despite a strong
       public policy favoring the submission of disputes to arbitration, courts
       are not allowed to do violence to the expressed intention of the parties
       or to ignore the fundamental rule that an agreement to submit a
       dispute to arbitration is contractual in nature. The agreement to
       arbitrate must be clearly intended by the parties. In other words, a
       party cannot be compelled to arbitrate a particular dispute unless the
       agreement expressly encompasses the subject matter of the dispute.70


66
   AT&T Techs., Inc., 475 U.S. at 648 (citing Gateway Coal Co. v. Mine Workers, 414 U.S. 368,
374 (1974)).
67
   514 U.S. 938, 943 (1995).
68
   748 A.2d 389 (Del. 2000).
69
   Id. at 392.
70
   Fletcher Cyclopedia of the Law of Corporations, 9A Fletcher Cyc. Corp. § 4724.10 (emphasis
added) (internal citations omitted).


                                              3
       The overarching principle is that arbitration is a matter of contract. Without

a clearly evidenced intention to arbitrate the Dispute, LG cannot be compelled to

arbitrate the Dispute. While the Majority ignores this well-established line of

authority, the Court of Chancery acknowledged it, including our decision in DMS.

But the Court of Chancery erred by holding that “[t]he NDA is . . . not

dispositive,” and that “[i]t neither empowers InterDigital nor entitles LG to insist

on a judicial forum.”71 Here, the absence of a clear intent to arbitrate the Dispute is

dispositive.

       Despite Complete Unanimity on the Point That There Is No Clear
       Expression of Intent to Arbitrate the Dispute, the Majority and the Court
       of Chancery Erroneously Require Arbitration

       One fact agreed upon by all who have examined this matter is the following:

the NDA does not contain a clear expression of intent to arbitrate disputes arising

under it. The Court of Chancery acknowledged this undisputed critical fact in

stating that: “LG is correct that the language is not sufficiently clear to constitute

an agreement to arbitrate the dispute.”72 The Majority also acknowledges this

point: “It is true that the NDA does not contain a clause requiring that any dispute




71
  LG Elecs., Inc. v. InterDigital Commc’ns, Inc., 98 A.3d 135, 139 (Del. Ch. 2014).
72
  LG Elecs., Inc., 98 A.3d at 139 (citing DMS Props.-First, Inc., 748 A.2d at 391 (“A party
cannot be forced to arbitrate the merits of a dispute . . . in the absence of a clear expression of
such intent in a valid agreement.”)).


                                                  4
regarding its enforcement or applicability be resolved in arbitration, as the Court of

Chancery recognized.”73

       It must follow that LG cannot be forced to arbitrate the Dispute, which all

agree arises under the NDA. Without a clear expression of intent to arbitrate an

issue, “a party . . . has a right to have the merits of [a] dispute adjudicated ab initio

in a court of competent jurisdiction.”74

       The Majority focuses on paragraph 9 of the NDA and erroneously concludes

that in it LG expressly agreed to arbitrate the Dispute. The Majority states:

       By its plain terms, the NDA can be enforced not just in any “court,”
       but also in any “agency” or “tribunal.” It is on this provision of the
       NDA that the Court of Chancery properly focused.75

       The Majority‟s reliance on the word “tribunal” in the NDA misses the mark

because the use of the word “tribunal” does not require arbitration. The issue here

is whether arbitration is required -- not whether it is foreclosed. Whether LG

could agree to arbitrate a claim arising under the NDA is irrelevant since LG has

73
   Majority Op. at 12.
74
   DMS Props.-First, Inc., 748 A.2d at 391. The Court of Chancery‟s decision in Medicis
Pharm. Corp. v. Anacor Pharms., Inc., 2013 WL 4509652 (Del. Ch. Aug. 12, 2013), supports the
proposition that substantive arbitrability is a threshold question that must be addressed before
any comity analysis can begin. There, the parties were in an arbitration proceeding (that was
filed first) involving a license agreement, when one party filed suit in the Court of Chancery
seeking specific performance of the same agreement. While the first-filed arbitration involved
the same parties and the same substantive issues, the Court of Chancery refused to dismiss the
case, finding that the equitable claim fell outside the bounds of the arbitration clause in the
license agreement. The agreement in Medicis allowed for arbitration of certain disputes, but
provided that each party would have the right to institute judicial proceedings in order to enforce
the instituting party‟s rights through specific performance, injunction or other similar equitable
relief.
75
   Majority Op. at 12.


                                                5
sought relief under the NDA against the allegedly breaching party (InterDigital) in

a judicial forum.

          Critical to the Majority‟s holding that the Dispute is arbitrable is its

conclusion that “the NDA was a bilateral agreement, and it specifically permitted

both parties to seek relief from „any court, agency, or tribunal.‟” 76 The Majority

offers three bases to support its conclusion -- the language of the NDA itself

(specifically, paragraph 9); the suggestion that LG agreed to arbitration by asking

the Tribunal to resolve the Dispute; and finally, LG‟s “concession” at oral

argument that the NDA is “bilateral.” However, each premise the Majority relies

upon is refuted by either the language of the NDA or the factual record presented

to us on appeal.

          Under Paragraph 9 of the NDA, an Allegedly Breaching Party Cannot
          Compel the Non-Breaching Party to Arbitrate a Dispute

          The Majority avoids the well-established “clear intent” rule as set forth

above by misconstruing the language of the NDA. Paragraph 9 of the NDA states

in relevant part:

          Although this Agreement does not contain or incorporate any formal
          dispute resolution procedure, any party shall have the right, in
          addition to all other remedies at law or in equity, to have the
          provisions of this Agreement specifically enforced by any court,
          agency, or tribunal having personal jurisdiction over the Party in
          alleged breach of this Agreement and to seek a temporary or
          permanent injunction or order prohibiting the allegedly breaching

76
     Id. at 12-13 (citing App. to Opening Br. at A30, NDA ¶ 9).


                                                  6
       Party (including the agents, officers, directors, employees, and
       attorneys as the case may be) from such unauthorized use or
       disclosure of any Settlement Communications or Confidential
       Information.77

In providing that the NDA “does not contain or incorporate any formal dispute

resolution procedure,” the parties obviously decided not to include in the NDA a

provision requiring arbitration of disputes arising under the NDA.78 The Majority

agrees that “[u]nlike the License Agreement, the NDA [does] not contain a specific

provision mandating arbitration.”79

       The NDA is not “bilateral” in the sense that the Majority contends, namely,

that the allegedly breaching party (e.g., the party accused of misuse of the

confidential information) can compel the non-breaching party to arbitrate. Rather,

a party has the right, under paragraph 9 of the NDA, to seek an order from a court

prohibiting the allegedly breaching Party from unauthorized use or disclosure of




77
  App. to Opening Br. at A30, NDA ¶ 9.
78
  Counsel for InterDigital appeared to agree in the proceedings below that the NDA does not
require arbitration:
        There is no threshold arbitrability issue here. We have not contended that the
        NDA has a mandatory arbitration clause. We don‟t make that argument. All
        we‟ve argued is that the arbitration tribunal is not prohibited by the absence of an
        arbitration clause from considering whether the NDA prevents introduction of
        evidence before it.
App. to Opening Br. at A239. Instead, counsel for InterDigital urged the Court of Chancery to
follow the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit‟s decision in Trustmark Ins.
Co. v. John Hancock Life Ins. Co., 631 F.3d 869 (7th Cir. 2011), and to allow the arbitrator to
construe the NDA to make evidentiary determinations. App. to Opening Br. at A240-42.
79
   Majority Op. at 6.


                                                7
Settlement Communications.80 Thus, the most faithful reading of paragraph 9 of

the NDA under our case law is that the non-breaching party can invoke its

contractual right to a judicial forum if it chooses, and neither party can compel

arbitration. LG consistently took this position in its briefing and argument before

this Court.81

        Both the Court of Chancery and the Majority Erroneously Conclude That
        LG Agreed or Conceded That the Tribunal Had the Power to Determine
        Whether the Dispute Was Arbitrable.

        The Majority also avoids the well-established “clear intent” rule by finding

that the parties agreed to submit the Dispute to arbitration. Yet the record simply

does not support this conclusion.

        In its April 19, 2013 opening brief to the Tribunal, LG stated that it “chose

not to present with this opening brief any witness statement related to negotiations


80
   See App. to Opening Br. at A30, NDA ¶ 9. For example, at argument, counsel for LG stated:
“We both have rights under the confidentiality agreement. But it‟s not bilateral in the sense that
if we invoke our right to go to a district court or a court that has jurisdiction, that they can raise it
elsewhere.” Transcript of Oral Argument at 38, LG Elecs., Inc. v. InterDigital Commc’ns, Inc.,
No. 475, 2014 (Del. Mar. 11, 2015).
81
   The Majority ignores LG‟s claim for injunctive relief in pressing its strained interpretation of
paragraph 9 of the NDA. It first states that LG sought “only” declaratory relief. Majority Op. at
10. This is incorrect as the trial court‟s rulings acknowledge, see App. to Opening Br. at A268;
LG Elecs., Inc., 98 A.3d at 136, and as the face of LG‟s verified complaint reveals. See App. to
Opening Br. at A14, A23-25. Then, focusing on a portion of paragraph 9 of the NDA, the
Majority argues that the right to declaratory relief was not limited to the non-breaching party.
However, paragraph 9, in providing that “any party shall have the right . . . to have the provisions
of this Agreement specifically enforced by any court, agency, or tribunal having personal
jurisdiction over the Party in alleged breach of this Agreement and to seek a temporary or
permanent injunction or order prohibiting the allegedly breaching Party . . . from such
unauthorized use,” necessarily means that the non-breaching party has the right to seek
injunctive relief in a court against the allegedly breaching party -- as LG did here.


                                                   8
leading to the execution of the present Agreement or subsequent to its execution”

because of the NDA the parties signed on May 9, 2012.82 As of April 19, 2013, the

record does not indicate that InterDigital had a different interpretation of the NDA.

InterDigital then wrote to LG on April 25, 2013, arguing that the NDA did not

preclude the submission of the communications at issue. On May 1, 2013, after

LG advised the Tribunal that it would not be relying on Settlement

Communications covered by the NDA, InterDigital requested the Tribunal to rule

on the issue.83

       In its May 3, 2013 letter to the Tribunal, LG responded and expressly stated

that the Tribunal should not interject itself in resolving the Dispute. Specifically,

LG stated:

       InterDigital gives no basis for its request that the Tribunal issue “an
       order confirming that InterDigital is permitted to submit witness
       testimony and documents as evidence of the parties‟ understanding of
       the proper interpretation of the PLA.” . . . In essence, InterDigital is
       asking the Tribunal to assert jurisdiction over an apparent dispute
       related to the NDA, to interpret the NDA, and to grant InterDigital
       leave to breach the NDA. But InterDigital fails to acknowledge that
       the NDA does not contain an arbitration clause.84




82
   App. to Opening Br. at A214-15.
83
   Specifically, InterDigital requested that the Tribunal enter “an order confirming that the 2012
NDA does not prevent the parties from submitting witness testimony and communications
between the parties as evidence of the proper interpretations of the PLA.” App. to Opening Br.
at A34.
84
   App. to Opening Br. at A48 (bold emphasis in original; italics emphasis added).


                                                 9
In the same letter, LG further argued that “[a]rbitral jurisdiction is a creature of

contract and the NDA does not provide for arbitral interpretation.”85 Thus, LG did

not agree to have the Tribunal resolve the Dispute.86

       Nor does the record support the Court of Chancery‟s conclusion that “[t]he

parties agree that the Tribunal at least has the power to determine if the underlying

dispute is arbitrable . . . .”87 For example, LG argued during oral argument before

this Court: “But one thing we do not agree on, we do not agree the tribunal has the

power to determine that the underlying dispute is arbitrable. We never agreed on

that. We‟ve been disputing that from the beginning.”88

       The Majority Errs by Concluding That LG Conceded at Oral Argument
       that the Tribunal May Resolve the Dispute

       Nor did LG concede at oral argument before this Court, as the Majority

contends, that the Tribunal had the power to resolve the Dispute. 89 The Majority



85
   Id.
86
   The Majority hints at the vulnerability of its position in stating that “even if LG‟s attempt to
raise the issue before the Tribunal did not constitute an official request to have the Tribunal
decide the issue, InterDigital‟s later response to the Tribunal did constitute such a request for
relief.” Majority Op. at 14. Yet, as shown above, paragraph 9 of the NDA is not “bilateral” in
the sense that the non-breaching party can be forced into an arbitral forum.
87
   LG Elecs., Inc., 98 A.3d at 138.
88
   Transcript of Oral Argument at 10, LG Elecs., Inc. v. InterDigital Commc’ns, Inc., No. 475,
2014 (Del. Mar. 11, 2015).
89
   The Majority states:
       As LG conceded at oral argument, the NDA was a bilateral agreement, and it
       specifically permitted both parties to seek relief from “any court, agency or
       tribunal.” As LG also conceded, the NDA‟s reference to a “tribunal” as one of
       three forums in which either party can seek “special[] enforce[ment]” was most
       likely to ensure that the NDA‟s terms could be interpreted and enforced by an


                                                 10
cites to the videotape of the oral argument twice.                   Neither a viewing of the

videotape nor a reading of the transcript of the oral argument, in my view, evinces

such a concession.90 Moreover, as noted above, LG did not agree that an alleged

breaching party could compel a non-breaching party to arbitrate disputes arising

under the NDA.

       There is logic to LG‟s insistence on its bargained-for contractual right to

have the Dispute heard in the Court of Chancery in that a judicial resolution here --

while admittedly inefficient -- allows the non-breaching party to prevent the other

party from tainting a proceeding with information that should be precluded. If the

purpose of the NDA is to keep Settlement Communications out of certain

proceedings,91 it defeats the purpose to have the adjudicators rule on their

admissibility -- and thereafter ask them to “unring the bell” if they conclude that

the submissions were inadmissible. LG understandably claims that it would be

irreparably harmed by having Settlement Communications disclosed in the

Tribunal for this reason. This argument caries some force. While judges in bench

trials, for example, are frequently asked to disregard evidence, the “taint” issue is

       arbitral tribunal, including the one that LG sought to form two months before it
       signed the NDA.
Majority Op. at 12-13.
90
  A transcription of these cited portions appear as Exhibit A hereto.
91
  For example, paragraph 1 of the NDA provides that, “[e]xcept as otherwise set forth in the
Agreement, Settlement Communications shall not be (a) used, referenced, or relied upon in any
existing or future legal, judicial, administrative or arbitration proceeding . . . .” App. to Opening
Br. at A27, NDA ¶ 1.


                                                 11
more pronounced in the arbitration context where the standard of review of an

evidentiary issue is a typically high hurdle on appeal. 92 As it turns out in this case,

that precise harm has come to pass -- the Tribunal did admit the challenged

documents into evidence over LG‟s objections. LG‟s counsel now maintains that

the decision is “effectively unreviewable.”93

       Similarly, based upon its flawed factual assumption that LG had conceded

that the Tribunal had power to determine the matter of arbitrability, 94 the Court of

Chancery erroneously concluded that “[t]his case therefore presents the rare

instance when both the arbitral tribunal and the court have jurisdiction such that

McWane could apply.”95 Had the trial court not erred in this regard, it would not

have applied McWane, as that was the basis for its application of McWane.

       No Delaware case has ever applied McWane to dismiss a suit in favor of a

first-filed arbitration. There is a logical reason for this absence of case law as the

Court of Chancery observed:



92
   During the argument below and to this Court, counsel for LG stated that the difficulty of
getting an erroneous decision as to the Settlement Communications overturned was a critical
reason for negotiating the NDA protections. App. to Opening Br. at A278-80.
93
   They maintain that overturning the Tribunal‟s decision would require a showing of “manifest
injustice.” Transcript of Oral Argument at 12-13, LG Elecs., Inc. v. InterDigital Commc’ns, Inc.,
No. 475, 2014 (Del. Mar. 11, 2015).
94
   In this regard, the Court of Chancery states, “[t]he parties agree that the Tribunal at least has
the power to determine if the underlying dispute is arbitrable, and the parties also agree that the
specific matter at issue in this case arises out of the NDA, which does not contain an arbitration
provision.” LG Elecs., Inc., 98 A.3d at 138.
95
   Id.


                                                12
       In most cases involving an existing arbitration, the defendants will
       move to dismiss the later-filed action on the grounds that the parties
       are required to arbitrate the dispute. The court will then rule on the
       issue of substantive arbitrability or, depending on the parties‟ contract,
       dismiss the action so that the arbitral tribunal can rule on that issue. If
       the dispute is arbitrable, McWane never comes up. If the dispute is
       not arbitrable, then the arbitral tribunal is not “capable of doing
       prompt and complete justice” and McWane does not apply.96

By erroneously concluding that the parties had agreed that the Tribunal has the

power to determine if the Dispute is arbitrable, the Court of Chancery avoided

what it described as a “Morton‟s fork.”97 Similarly, absent the Majority‟s error in

finding that LG had agreed to have claims arising under the NDA adjudicated by

an arbitrator, the Majority would be left with only the second basis for its decision,

which I believe is also incorrect under the unique circumstances presented here.

       The Rights Under the NDA Are Not Merely “Procedural” -- Rather, They
       Are Separately Bargained-For Substantive Rights

       The second “lynchpin” of the Majority‟s Opinion is that the “broad right to

have the NDA enforced by any „tribunal‟ is consistent with the accepted principle

that arbitrators can decide evidentiary issues relevant to disputes pending before

them.”98 This reasoning ignores the fact that sophisticated parties expressly agreed

in the NDA to have Settlement Communications treated in accordance with its

substantive terms. In addition, the License Agreement arbitration provision does


96
   Id.
97
   See supra text accompanying note 28.
98
   Majority Op. at 16.


                                           13
not sweep within its reach the issue of the use of “Settlement Communications” as

that term is defined in the NDA.99

       By its plain language, the NDA precludes Settlement Communications from

being “used, referenced, or relied upon in any existing or future legal, judicial,

administrative or arbitration proceeding.”100 Thus, the NDA‟s prohibition on the

use of Settlement Communications in any existing proceedings, to an objective

third party, would include the present arbitration that was pending when the parties

executed the NDA.101

       In this case, the Majority‟s decision vitiates the parties‟ bargained-for

substantive rights for the sake of efficiency. However, this Court has made clear

that absent a clear contractual intent to arbitrate, it is error to require arbitration in

order to avoid obvious inefficiency. For example, in Parfi Holding AB v. Mirror




99
   The arbitration provision of the License Agreement is narrow in scope and provides in
Sections 5.2:
        If a dispute arising under this Agreement has not been resolved by the non-
        binding procedures set forth in Section 5.1 within the time periods provided,
        either party may submit the dispute to arbitration administered by the AAA under
        its AAA International Rules and as set forth in this Section . . . .
On March 19, 2012, LG commenced the Arbitration pursuant to Article 5.2 seeking a declaration
that the License Agreement covers the patents asserted by InterDigital. App. to Opening Br. at
A63-64.
100
    App. to Opening Br. at A27, NDA ¶ 1.
101
    See Estate of Osborn v. Kemp, 991 A.2d 1153, 1159 (Del. 2010) (“Delaware adheres to the
„objective‟ theory of contracts, i.e., a contract‟s construction should be that which would be
understood by an objective, reasonable third party.”).


                                             14
Image Internet, Inc.,102 this Court set forth the steps necessary to assess the

arbitrability of a claim:

       First, the court must determine whether the arbitration clause is broad
       or narrow in scope. Second, the court must apply the relevant scope
       of the provision to the asserted legal claim to determine whether the
       claim falls within the scope of the contractual provisions that require
       arbitration. If the court is evaluating a narrow arbitration clause, it
       will ask if the cause of action pursued in court directly relates to a
       right in the contract. If the arbitration clause is broad in scope, the
       court will defer to arbitration on any issues that touch on contract
       rights or contract performance.103

       In Parfi, the issue was whether an underwriting agreement‟s broad

arbitration clause would encompass fiduciary duty claims raised by a stockholder

of a corporation when those same claims were based on the identical conduct that

was an alleged breach of an underwriting agreement and grounds for a claim of

fraudulent inducement into that agreement. We held that it was error for the Court

of Chancery to find that the fiduciary duty claims were arbitrable, despite the

obvious inefficiency of allowing these intertwined claims to proceed in two

separate forums.104 While the public policy of Delaware favors arbitration, we

have concluded that “[t]he policy that favors alternative dispute resolution

mechanisms, such as arbitration, does not trump basic principles of contract



102
    817 A.2d 149 (Del. 2002).
103
    Id. at 155.
104
    See also Medicis Pharm. Corp., 2013 WL 4509652 (because sophisticated parties failed to
provide a clear intention to arbitrate certain matters, certain claims were not subject to mandatory
arbitration while others were. The Court of Chancery noted that the result was not “optimal.”).


                                                15
interpretation.”105 Thus, “a party attempting to invoke arbitration will not prevail

by reciting the message that courts favor arbitration when the contract language

they rely on does not demonstrate the parties‟ intent to submit the dispute in

question to arbitration.”106

       Given that the NDA expressly and independently addresses the use of

Settlement Communications, it simply cannot be fairly said that disputes relating to

Settlement Communications are swept within the License Agreement‟s narrow

arbitration clause. The Court of Chancery also seemed to acknowledge this point

by characterizing the arbitration provision as not expansive enough to “sweep in”

the Dispute:

       I would feel a lot more comfortable . . . if your dispute resolution
       provision in the PLA said “arising out of or relating to.” I think it
       says “arising under.” It was a narrow, specific agreement-related
       clause as opposed to a more expansive clause that I thought could
       sweep in something like that.107

As we said in Parfi, “arbitration is a mechanism of dispute resolution created by

contract,” and “[a]n arbitration clause, no matter how broadly construed, can

extend only so far as the series of obligations set forth in the underlying

agreement.”108 Thus, I believe -- as the Court of Chancery seemed to acknowledge




105
    Id. at *3 (quoting Parfi Holding AB, 817 A.2d at 156).
106
    Id. at *9 (citation omitted).
107
    App. to Opening Br. at A295.
108
    Parfi Holding AB, 817 A.2d at 156.


                                               16
-- that the claims relating to the use of “Settlement Communications” are not

within the narrow scope of the License Agreement‟s arbitration provision.

       Therefore, I believe that Trustmark Ins. Co. v. John Hancock Life Ins. Co.,109

-- a case on which the Majority relies, is distinguishable.110 In Trustmark, the

parties entered into “comprehensive arbitration clauses” in which the “parties did

agree to arbitrate their disputes about reinsurance.”111 As a result, the United States

Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit found that the confidentiality agreement

was “presumptively within the scope of the reinsurance contract‟s comprehensive

arbitration clauses, which cover all disputes arising out of the original dispute.”112

Here, the arbitration clause in the License Agreement was narrowly drawn and the

parties agreed to arbitrate only disputes arising under the License Agreement.113




109
    631 F.3d 869 (7th Cir. 2011).
110
    Similarly, SOC-SMG, Inc. v. Day & Zimmerman, Inc., 2010 WL 3634204 (Del. Ch. Sept. 15,
2010), is distinguishable. There, the Court of Chancery held that an arbitrator could address
issues of alleged discovery abuse and alleged attorney misconduct. The issues arose directly
from breaches of an agreement that contained an arbitration clause. Id. at *2. Here, a separate
agreement, namely, the NDA, contains separately bargained-for substantive rights that form the
basis of the Dispute.
111
    Trustmark Ins. Co., 631 F.3d at 874.
112
    Id. (emphasis added).
113
    It is puzzling that the Majority, in observing that the Court of Chancery premised its ruling on
the NDA and not the License Agreement, characterizes LG‟s arguments as “confused.” Majority
Op. at 2. The Majority‟s second basis for its ruling relies heavily on the assertion that “the
arbitrator‟s power to resolve a dispute necessarily includes the power to resolve procedural
issues relevant to that dispute.” Id. at 16-17. Thus, it seems that the Majority itself claims that
the Dispute arising under the NDA (which the Majority erroneously characterizes as
“procedural”) must be resolved by relying upon the License Agreement‟s arbitration provision
and the AAA International Rules that it designates as the governing rules.


                                                17
       The Majority‟s comparison of the License Agreement‟s arbitration provision

with the one in Trustmark is flawed. The Majority states that, “[a]s in Trustmark,

the parties‟ arbitration clause in the License Agreement provided broadly that any

dispute “arising under” the Agreement would be subject to arbitration.”114

However, in Trustmark, the parties agreed to arbitrate “any dispute or difference

between the General Manager and the John Hancock relating to the interpretation

or performance of this agreement, including its formation or validity, or any

transaction . . . .”115 As the Court of Chancery correctly observed, the License

Agreement‟s “arising under” arbitration provision is far more narrow than

Trustmark‟s “relating to” provision, and does not sweep in the Dispute.116

       Relatedly, and because the NDA is a separate contract concerning

substantive rights regarding the use and treatment of confidential Settlement

Communications, I believe the Court of Chancery erred in characterizing the

Dispute as a purely “procedural” or “evidentiary” matter. The Majority similarly



114
    See Majority Op. at 20 n. 57 (citations omitted).
115
    Trustmark Ins. Co. v. John Hancock Life Ins. Co., 680 F.Supp.2d 944, 949 (N.D. Ill. 2010)
(emphasis added) , rev’d, 631 F.3d 869 (7th Cir. 2011).
116
    See App. to Opening Br. at A63, License Agreement § 5.2 Arbitration of Disputes (“If a
dispute arising under this Agreement has not been resolved by the non-binding procedures set
forth in Section 5.1 [Negotiation of Disputes] within the time periods provided, either party may
submit the dispute to arbitration. . . .” (emphasis added)); see also Douzinas v. American Bureau
of Shipping, Inc., 888 A.2d 1146, 1150 (Del. Ch. 2006) (implying that an arbitration provision
that contains the words “relating to” is broader than one that contains “arising under”). In
Douzinas, the Court of Chancery noted that “the Supreme Court [has] recognized that words like
„relate to‟ are to be read broadly.” Id. at 1152 n.32 (citing Elf Atochem North America, Inc. v.
Jaffari, 727 A.2d 286 (Del. 1999)).


                                               18
characterizes the Dispute as “procedural,” as an “incidental question” to the

licensing dispute, as an “evidentiary question,” or as an “ancillary question of

admissibility.”

       LG‟s breach of contract claim regarding the Dispute is not properly

characterized as a procedural matter that is merely incidental to the License

Agreement arbitration. Treating LG‟s claims as merely procedural or incidental

matters to be resolved by the Tribunal ignores the substance of the NDA‟s

bargained-for rights, including the ability to prevent “Settlement Communications”

from being “used, referenced, or relied upon in any existing . . . proceeding”117 --

which, on its face, would include the pending arbitration.118

       Thus, LG is not raising a discovery or admissibility dispute to the Court of

Chancery. It is asserting a breach of contract claim under the NDA. Resolution of

this breach of contract claim may be a necessary predicate to the proper use of

Settlement Communications before the Tribunal.                 But the breach of contract

dispute is a substantive matter that does not fall within the License Agreement‟s

provision relating to the Tribunal‟s power to determine evidentiary matters.

117
   App. to Opening Br. at A27, NDA ¶ 1.
118
   Courts have treated non-disclosure agreements as conferring upon the parties substantive
contractual rights. For example, in Martin Marietta Materials, Inc. v. Vulcan Materials Co., 56
A.3d 1072 (Del. Ch. 2012), aff’d, 68 A.3d 1208 (Del. 2012), the Court of Chancery held a trial
on the substantive contractual rights under a non-disclosure agreement implicated by a party
using and publicly disclosing information in aid of a hostile bid and proxy contest. The Court of
Chancery held that Martin Marietta breached the non-disclosure agreement, and accordingly,
held that “the victim of any breach of the confidentiality agreements should be entitled to
specific performance and injunctive relief should be respected.” Id. at 1075.


                                               19
          The Majority compounds that error in stating that “[h]ad the parties wanted

to limit the authority of the arbitral tribunal to determine evidentiary matters,

thereby limiting the power granted in the License Agreement itself, they could

have done so in the NDA.”119 It suggests that the absence of a clear intention to

arbitrate was an inadequate basis to reject the claim that the Dispute was arbitrable,

and that an exclusive forum provision, for example, might have added the clarity

that LG needed in order to prevail. But as this Court stated in DMS, if there is

ambiguity as to whether a particular merits-based dispute is within the scope of a

valid arbitration agreement, courts should not presume that the parties agreed to

arbitrate the matter.120 While well-established authority affords parties access to a

judicial forum in the absence of a clear intention to arbitrate, the Majority would

appear to now afford parties access to a judicial forum only if there were a clear

intention to have the matter resolved in a judicial forum (e.g., via an exclusive

forum provision). The Majority thereby upsets the settled expectations that parties

depend upon in entering into their contractual arrangements.

          The Majority‟s fears that a contrary ruling would doom arbitration as a

dispute resolution mechanism and flood the courts with discovery matters related

to pending arbitrations are not well-founded. This situation is fairly atypical and,

in that sense, does not threaten long-standing practices. What is threatened is the

119
      Majority Op. at 15.
120
      See DMS Props.-First, Inc., 748 A.2d at 392.


                                                 20
parties‟ freedom to freely contract around the general practices. While trumpeting

the virtues of arbitration, the Majority does violence to basic principles of freedom

of contract and to well-established lines of precedent regarding substantive

arbitrability.

       Because I believe that the Court of Chancery erred in the threshold

substantive arbitrability analysis, it should not have embarked on the McWane

analysis. Accordingly, I will not address it here.

       For the foregoing reasons, I respectfully DISSENT.




                                         21
Exhibit A
 IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE



LG ELECTRONICS, INC.,      )
                           )
                           )No. 475,2014
         Plaintiff Below, )
         Appellant,        )
                           )ON APPEAL FROM C.A.
v.                         )NO. 9747-VCL IN THE
                           )COURT OF CHANCERY
INTERDIGITAL               )OF THE STATE OF
COMMUNICATIONS, INC.,      )DELAWARE
INTERDIGITAL TECHNOLOGY    )
CORPORATION, and IPR       )
LICENSING, INC.,           )
                           )
         Defendants Below, )
         Appellees.        )


               March 11, 2015

APPEARANCES:
    JEREMY D. ANDERSON, ESQ.
    SCOTT A. ELENGOLD, ESQ.
    MICHAEL J. MCKEON, ESQ.
    JOSEPH   B.  WARDEN,   ESQ.
    FISH & RICHARDSON, P.A.
    For the Appellant

    NEAL C. BELGAM, ESQ.
    SMITH, KATZENSTEIN & JENKINS LLP

    -and-

    DAVID S. STEUER, ESQ.
    WILSON SONSINI GOODRICH & ROSATI, P.C.
    For the Appellees

               WILCOX & FETZER
      Registered Professional Reporters
1330 King Street - Wilmington, Delaware 19801
               (302) 655-0477
               www.wilfet.com
                                                                    10


1    with that.    But one thing we do not agree on,

2    we do not agree the tribunal has the power to

3    determine     that    the   underlying     dispute        is

4    arbitrable.       We never agreed on that.            We've

5    been disputing that from the beginning.

6                      JUDGE CHAPMAN:     Counsel, doesn't

7    the PLA say that any disputes, the tribunal

8    can decide evidentiary disputes?

9                      MR. MCKEON:     The    PLA    does     say

10   that.    And if this was about the PLA and we

11   were    talking    about    the   PLA,   that    would    be

12   perfectly acceptable.        But    the    dispute        at

13   issue here is about the NDA, the nondisclosure

14   agreement.

15                     CHIEF JUSTICE STRINE:         No.    But I

16   think what Judge Chapman is getting at is you

17   name an arbitrator to decide a dispute, and

18   the reality is, and parties love this.                 They

19   say that when it's convenient they want to go

20   to the arbitration because it's so efficient.

21                     Then they say but every single

22   thing that the arbitrator does is collateral,

23   like all the normal things that a judge or an

24   arbitrator has to do to actually decide the
                                                                   11


1    matter, which includes rule on issues of

2    admissibility, what evidence comes in.

3                   And        I    believe      what        Judge

4    Chapman's getting at is doesn't the arbitrator

5    have the power under this to make the normal

6    evidentiary rulings that are necessary to get

7    the case decided?

8                    MR. MCKEON:      So the answer to

9    that is yes.

10                   CHIEF JUSTICE STRINE:          And if the

11   arbitrator     rules      in   your    favor       on   the

12   contractual issue and keeps the evidence out,

13   you would have a complete remedy at law from

14   the   harm   you   were   seeking     to   avoid   in   the

15   Court of Chancery, right?

16                  MR. MCKEON:       Again,      we     dispute

17   the fact they have the power to adjudicate the

18   contract.     The evidence issue --

19                   CHIEF JUSTICE STRINE:          They have

20   the power to keep out evidence because it's

21   being admitted in violation of a privilege or

22   other thing.

23                  MR. MCKEON:       Certainly they have

24   that power, Your Honor.
                                                                12


1                   CHIEF JUSTICE STRINE:       And if

2    that was kept out, that was the only live harm

3    you were seeking to have the Court of Chancery

4    rectify, right?

5                   MR. MCKEON:    Well, Your Honor, I

6    take a step back and say we don't have our day

7    in   court   because,   in   fact,   as   you   may    be

8    aware, since the opinion below was issued, the

9    arbitration panel did pick up the issue and

10   determined that materials could come into the

11   case.    So it ruled against us.

12                  CHIEF JUSTICE STRINE:       Yes.

13                  MR. MCKEON:    And that was after

14   our proceeding below, subsequent to that.             In

15   fact, if you look at what they did --

16                  CHIEF JUSTICE STRINE:       And if

17   they were wrong at the end and you have FAA

18   review, that's potentially something you can

19   raise under that, right?

20                  MR. MCKEON:    You're right, Your

21   Honor.    But it's effectively unreviewable.

22   The manifest injustice, the standard on

23   reviewing that, when we believe that we had a

24   private contract right and they should never
                                                                  13


1    have even dealt with that contract, the

2    standard for review is quite difficult.

3                    So    that    is    why   we    were   in

4    Delaware, which we had a right to under our

5    contract that we negotiated that the Delaware

6    court     should      determine      that,      not    the

7    arbitration panel because we never agreed to

8    that.    And what's happened here fundamentally

9    is we've forgotten about --

10                   CHIEF JUSTICE STRINE:          Wait.   How

11   can you even invoke the jurisdiction of the

12   Court of Chancery, then?           Because if there's

13   a -- if the arbitrator keeping the evidence

14   out is an adequate remedy.

15                   MR. MCKEON:        Because we have a

16   specific right in this contract, Your Honor,

17   to go --

18                   CHIEF JUSTICE STRINE:          Specific

19   performance is only granted if, you know, it's

20   typically only granted when it's necessary.

21   If you could obtain the relief in arbitration,

22   why     would   the   Court   of     Chancery    grant    a

23   specific performance anyway?

24                   MR. MCKEON:        Because we have a
                                                                        36


1    Mr. Steuer.

2                      MR. MCKEON:         Thank you.         Just a

3    few points to follow up, if I may.

4                      On Medicis, of course there was a

5    judicial       carve-out,      and       which    entitled      the

6    parties to go enforce it in court.                  In         this

7    case the NDA, of course, the specific language

8    that     was    agreed    on        by    both     sides,       two

9    sophisticated parties, that we were entitled

10   to go and enforce it in court.

11                     CHIEF JUSTICE STRINE:             Okay.       But

12   you're     also       entitled       to     enforce       it      in

13   tribunal.       You    make     a     big     point      in     the

14   arbitration       going     in,      we're       suing    you     in

15   arbitration.       They can't use this information.

16                     I    asked        you     whether      it     was

17   bilateral or not.         They       send    back     and      say,

18   yes, you can, Tribunal.              You then say, no, you

19   can't.    Isn't that pending before a tribunal

20   first?

21                     MR. MCKEON:         The NDA issue, Your

22   Honor, we think --

23                     CHIEF JUSTICE STRINE:             The NDA

24   says you can go to a court, agency, or
                                                        37


1    tribunal.    I asked you whether it was

2    bilateral.   I think you said that it is

3    bilateral, and you then went and you sued them

4    in arbitration and said they can't do this.

5    These guys come back, your friends come back

6    and say, yes, we can.     It's not a violation.

7                   You come back to the arbitrator

8    and say, no, it's not, but you can't rule on

9    it.   We don't think you're a tribunal.

10                  You go to the Court of Chancery.

11   Court of Chancery says, you know what?

12   Arbitration tribunal is a tribunal.       It has

13   equitable authority.    It was the first

14   contractually named tribunal court or agency

15   seized with the question, and under McWane

16   we're not supposed to have two tribunals doing

17   the same thing at once.      And this is also

18   analogous to a well-settled line of law about

19   arbitrators getting to decide evidentiary

20   disputes and I'm just going to follow this

21   sort of pretty moderate course of action.

22                  MR. MCKEON:   So, your Honor, just

23   to respond to that, again, I think first of

24   all in terms of who raised it in the
                                                                     38


1    arbitration,        we     certainly      started         the

2    arbitration because, of course, they sued us.

3                   CHIEF JUSTICE STRINE:             But it

4    doesn't matter who raised it because unless

5    you're saying that you -- is there a language

6    in the contract that says you're the only one

7    who has rights?

8                   MR. MCKEON:        We both have rights

9    under the confidentiality agreement.               But it's

10   not bilateral in the sense that if we invoke

11   our right to go to a district court or a court

12   that has jurisdiction, that they can raise it

13   somewhere else.

14                  CHIEF JUSTICE STRINE:             You're the

15   first person in the -- you're the first party

16   in   the   tribunal      who   actually   said    this    is

17   relevant and nobody can bring this in, right?

18                  MR. MCKEON:        We referenced it,

19   Your Honor.    We        referenced       it     as      a

20   prophylactic measure saying --

21                  CHIEF JUSTICE STRINE:             And after

22   they said they were going to, you then said,

23   no, no, no, they can't.

24                  MR. MCKEON:        What we said was,
                                                            39


1    Tribunal, you don't have the power to deal

2    with this.

3                    CHIEF JUSTICE STRINE:      Because

4    you argued they were not a tribunal and --

5                    MR. MCKEON:    Absolutely.       They're

6    not --

7                    CHIEF JUSTICE STRINE:      That's

8    what I'm asking you.     If the Court of Chancery

9    was   correct    that   they   were,     doesn't   your

10   argument turn to contractual dust?

11                   MR. MCKEON:    No, Your Honor.

12   Remember, the Court of Chancery below --

13                   CHIEF JUSTICE STRINE:      No.     I

14   want to push you on this.

15                   MR. MCKEON:    Okay.

16                   CHIEF JUSTICE STRINE:      If the

17   arbitrable tribunal was a tribunal within the

18   meaning of that contract.

19                   MR. MCKEON:    No.   I   think   that's

20   incorrect because we have a right -- we have a

21   right --

22                   CHIEF JUSTICE STRINE:      That's

23   what I mean.     That means that even if one of

24   the named places where you can enforce this
                                                                       40


1    has already had the issue put before it, you

2    get to trump that and to take it to another

3    one.     And where in the contract does it say

4    that, your right of removal?

5                     MR. MCKEON:         Well,    your    Honor,

6    what I would say to answer that is we have to

7    go back to the fundamentals here.

8                     CHIEF JUSTICE STRINE:              That is

9    the fundamentals.         I   am     asking    you,    it's     a

10   very important thing.          The contract uses three

11   words.      You admit they're not exclusive.                You

12   admit you can use any of them.                You     haven't

13   really      spent   any       time    arguing       that      the

14   arbitration tribunal is not a tribunal.

15                    It's pending before the tribunal.

16   Why    is   it   that   you,       your    client,     is   the

17   special party under the contract who then gets

18   to lift one of the named deciders in favor of

19   its second -- its preferred forum?

20                    MR. MCKEON:         Well, Your Honor,

21   when you say we haven't argued, we haven't

22   argued it's not a tribunal.               There's          no

23   arbitration provision here, so there's no

24   rights to arbitrate this.             That's been our
                                                                       41


1    position.

2                     CHIEF JUSTICE STRINE:             No, no.       I

3    get that.      But it says under the NDA that you

4    can go to a tribunal for specific performance.

5    I asked you whether that was bilateral, which

6    means   they   can     also    invoke   it   and     say,    no,

7    this doesn't gag us.           You   then    put    the    issue

8    and said it does gag them.

9                     You     haven't        spent      any      time

10   arguing   they    are    not    a    tribunal      within    the

11   meaning of the NDA itself.             Wouldn't you admit

12   that the reason that the tribunal is in there

13   is because FTC proceeding covers what?                    What

14   word covers FTC proceedings?

15                    MR. MCKEON:         It's a government

16   agency.

17                    CHIEF JUSTICE STRINE:             Agency.

18                    MR. MCKEON:         Yes.

19                    CHIEF JUSTICE STRINE:             You've got

20   courts.     You have a tribunal.            Part     of     the

21   reason why you have a tribunal is what is one

22   of the obvious places they would have used

23   these documents given the relationship that

24   you had with them as a party?
                                                                  42


1                  MR. MCKEON:    Well, Your Honor --

2                  CHIEF JUSTICE STRINE:           Which

3    tribunal cover?

4                  MR. MCKEON:    Your Honor, you

5    know,   there's   international        tribunals,

6    there's --

7                  CHIEF JUSTICE STRINE:           Of what

8    kind?

9                  MR. MCKEON:    Maybe                     it's

10   arbitration, Your Honor.     But          I       think,

11   remember, the Court below held specifically in

12   this contract there was no clear manifestation

13   of intent to arbitrate. The Court held.                It's

14   not in this contract.    That's what they held.

15   So there is no arbitration right.

16                 According to the Court, the word

17   "tribunal" is there, and the Court dealt with

18   this.   And the Court said, you know what, yes,

19   there's no right here.      It's   not        under    this

20   law of this Court.   There's            no            clear

21   manifestation of that.      So   no,   there's        not    a

22   requirement to arbitrate.        That's       what      the

23   Court held.

24                 And the Court got that right.                 It
                                                        43
1    was absolutely right to hold that.      That is

2    why, Your Honor --

3                 CHIEF JUSTICE STRINE:      Thank you

4    very much.

5                 MR. MCKEON:   Thank        you.

6                 CHIEF JUSTICE STRINE:      And,

7    Counsel, anybody who argues a case involving

8    the word "arbitrability" before lunch is fully

9    entitled to enjoy their lunch.     So   thank     you

10   for your excellent arguments.

11                MR. MCKEON:   Thank you.     Thank

12   you very much.

13                (End of proceeding.)

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24
