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A.2d 704 (1995) (enforcing under UAA preliminary orders issued | | by arbitrator regarding sale and proceeds of property); see also | | III Macneil Treatise § 34.2.1.2. |
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| | | As a general proposition, courts are very hesitant to review | | interlocutory orders of an arbitrator. The Ninth Circuit in | | Aerojet-General Corporation v. American Arbitration | | Association, 478 F.2d 248, 251 (9th Cir. 1973) stated that | | "judicial review prior to the rendition of a final arbitration | | award should be indulged, if at all, only in the most extreme | | cases." The court concluded that a more lax rule would | | frustrate a basic purpose of arbitration of providing for a | | speedy disposition without the expense and delay of a court | | proceeding. In Harleyville Mutual Casualty Co. v. Adair, 421 | | Pa. 141, 145, 218 A.2d 791, 794 (Pa. 1966), the Pennsylvania | | Supreme Court held that to allow challenges to an arbitrator's | | interlocutory rulings would be "unthinkable." Massachusetts | | also rejected the appeal of an interlocutory order in | | Cavanaugh v. McDonnell & Co., 357 Mass. 452, 457, 258 N.E.2d | | 561, 564 (Mass. 1970), noting that to allow a court to review | | an arbitrator's interlocutory order "would tend to render the | | proceedings neither one thing nor the other, but transform | | them into a hybrid, part judicial and part arbitrational." | | Thus Section 18 requires a court to enforce the preaward | | ruling unless the ruling should be vacated under the standards | | for confirming, modifying, or vacating awards under Sections | | 23 and 24. |
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| | | Courts have considered more closely substantive challenges to | | preaward rulings of arbitrators on grounds of privilege or | | confidentiality. In Hull Municipal Lighting Plant v. | | Massachusetts Municipal Wholesale Electric Co., 414 Mass. 609, | | 609 N.E.2d 460 (1993), the defendant refused to turn over | | certain documents to the plaintiff, despite an arbitral | | subpoena requiring such, because the defendant claimed that | | portions of the documents contained attorney-client and work- | | product privileges. After the supervisor of public records had | | decided issues arising under the public records law, the court | | concluded that because the matters fell under Massachusetts | | public records law, the question of privilege was within the | | discretion of the judge and not the arbitrator. See also World | | Commerce Corp. v. Minerals & Chem. Philipp Corp., 15 A.D. 432, | | 224 N.Y.S.2d 763 (1962) (holding that court and not arbitrator | | decides whether documents of non-party to arbitration are | | protected as confidential); Civil Serv. Employees Ass'n v. | | Soper, 105 Misc. 2d 230, 431 N.Y.S.2d 909 (1980) (vacating | | award of arbitrator who incorrectly determined privilege of | | patient's confidential records); DiMania v. New York State | | Dept. of Mental Hygiene, 87 Misc. 2d 736, 386 N.Y.S.2d 590 | | (1976) (overruling decision of | | arbitrator regarding client's privilege of confidentiality); | | compare Great Scott Supermarkets, Inc. v. Teamsters Local 337, |
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