Stay denied during arbitrability appeal
November 2, 2011In a case of considerable practical importance as to litigation about arbitration clauses and appellate procedure generally, the Fifth Circuit addressed a party’s motion for a stay of district court proceedings during an appeal about the arbitrability of the matter in Weingarten Realty v. Miller. The Court acknowledged a significant circuit split as to whether a notice of appeal automatically stayed district court decisions during an arbitrability appeal, with one school of thought (two circuits) holding that a case’s merit is a distinct matter from whether it is arbitrable, and another school (five circuits) holding that a notice of appeal automatically stays district court proceedings for efficiency reasons. Op. at 3-4. Recognizing that this issue turns on the application of Griggs v. Provident Consumer Discount, 459 U.S. 56 (1982), and its holding that a district court may adjudicate matters not involved in the appeal, the Court concluded that under prior Circuit precedent a notice of appeal did not create an automatic stay. Op. at 7. The Court went on to review the motion under the general four-factor test for a discretionary stay during appeal, and again declined to order a stay, primarily because it believed the movant had a low chance of success on the merits under the contract documents and the doctrine of equitable estoppel. Op. at 7-8.