American Intern. Group, Inc. v. Cornerstone Bus., Inc.
This text of 872 So. 2d 333 (American Intern. Group, Inc. v. Cornerstone Bus., Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
AMERICAN INTERNATIONAL GROUP, INC., and AI Credit Corp., Appellants,
v.
CORNERSTONE BUSINESSES, INC., Cornerstone Team, Inc., Cornerstone of North Florida, Inc., Cornerstone Leasing, Inc., Stahl & Associates Insurance, Inc., and Patrick H. Mazza, Appellees.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Second District.
*334 Robert E. Biasotti, John R. Blue, and Rachel A. Ramsey of Carlton Fields, P.A., St. Petersburg, for Appellants.
John W. Frost, II, and Peter W. Van den Boom of Frost Tamayo Sessums & Aranda, P.A., Bartow, for Cornerstone Businesses, Inc., Cornerstone Team, Inc., Cornerstone of North Florida, Inc., and Cornerstone Leasing, Inc., Appellees.
No appearance for Appellees Stahl & Associates Insurance, Inc., and Patrick H. Mazza.
CASANUEVA, Judge.
This is an appeal from a nonfinal order that determined entitlement to arbitration. Appellants are affiliated with corporations that are currently in dispute with certain Appellees. Appellants contend that the circuit court erred in finding that they have waived the right to arbitration. We agree and reverse.
Background Facts
The genesis of this case is two contracts: the first involved cancelled insurance coverage sought by Appellees, the Cornerstone entities (Cornerstone); the second, a failed arrangement for financing the premium payment required to acquire the insurance coverage. Appellant American International Group, Inc. (AIG) is the parent corporation of Appellant AI Credit Corp. (AICC) and of several other corporations, including National Union Fire Insurance Co. of Pittsburgh, PA and Commerce & Industry Insurance Co. (National Union), which are not parties to this lawsuit. Cornerstone and National Union executed a payment agreement in connection with Cornerstone's purchase of general liability, automobile, and worker's compensation insurance coverage from National Union.
The payment agreement required that the total premium amount, approximately $1.2 million, be paid by a date certain and that it was not contingent on any financing arrangement Cornerstone might subsequently *335 make; it also contained an arbitration clause covering disagreements concerning the amount of the insured's payment obligation. Cornerstone began negotiations for a separate financing agreement with AICC for the money it required to pay the premium soon due to National Union. Appellee Patrick H. Mazza, an employee of Appellee Stahl and Associates Insurance, Inc. (Stahl), was the insurance agent who brokered Cornerstone's agreement with National Union for insurance coverage and with AICC for financing the premium.
Cornerstone paid Stahl approximately $300,000 as a down payment for its insurance policies, but, ultimately, Cornerstone and AICC could not agree on financing terms. When National Union did not receive all the consideration to which it was entitled under the payment agreement, it cancelled Cornerstone's insurance for nonpayment of premium. Cornerstone demanded that Stahl calculate the premium it owed for the time when the policies were in force to determine if there was any money remaining from its deposit. When Stahl failed to return any money to Cornerstone, Cornerstone filed a complaint against Mazza, Stahl, AICC, and AIG on various contractual, statutory, and tort bases.[1]
AICC and AIG filed a joint answer and affirmative defenses to Cornerstone's complaint. Their answer did not assert National Union's contractual right to arbitration under the payment agreement because neither AIG nor AICC were parties to that contract. Thereafter, the parties entered into a lengthy period of settlement negotiations, but they could reach no accord. Shortly after the settlement negotiations collapsed, National Union served a demand for arbitration on Cornerstone pursuant to the payment agreement. National Union did not file a copy of that demand in this case as it is not a party here and, in fact, has never appeared in this case.
After National Union served its arbitration demand on Cornerstone, AIG and AICC filed a motion to stay the proceedings pending arbitration of the claims between Cornerstone and National Union. They argued that the issues in this litigation were inextricably intertwined with the issue of how much money was owed between Cornerstone and National Union, which they claimed was clearly subject to arbitration under the payment agreement. Cornerstone then filed a motion in response, objecting to any stay of the proceedings, and a few days later filed another motion styled "Emergency Motion To Dismiss And/Or Stay Defendant American International Group, Inc.'s Demand For Arbitration." In a footnote in this emergency motion, Cornerstone acknowledged that the demand was, in fact, filed by National Union, noting that National Union had filed its demand as a "wholly owned subsidiary of AIG, on behalf of itself and each related insurer that provided coverage to Cornerstone," and concluding that National Union "for all intents and purposes is the same as AIG." Cornerstone argued that AIG had waived its right to arbitration by filing an answer and that there was no right to arbitrate in the first instance because no contract was ever created.
*336 After a hearing on the motions, the circuit court denied National Union's demand for arbitration, denied AIG's and AICC's motion to stay pending arbitration, and granted Cornerstone's motion to dismiss AIG's demand for arbitration. This nonfinal appeal followed.
The Demand for Arbitration and Waiver
We begin first by noting that National Union served its demand for arbitration on Cornerstone pursuant to the payment agreement and did not file its demand for arbitration in this case. We emphasize that although National Union is a wholly owned subsidiary of AIG, the arbitration clause was contained within the payment agreement between Cornerstone and National Union, not AIG. Cornerstone argues that AIG is the same entity as National Union, or at least an agent, because of several factors. For example, an "AIG Risk Management" logo appeared at the top of the payment agreement's first page; the instructions specified that the payments under the agreement were to be remitted to AIG in New Jersey; and the signature box on the final page was signed by the authorized representative of National Union under a rubric that proclaimed, "For us, National Union Fire Insurance Company of Pittsburgh Pa, on behalf of itself and other members of American International Group, Inc., first listed above." Furthermore, Cornerstone points out, one of the cancellation notices National Union sent to it carried an AIG logo. We agree with AIG that on this record the logos do nothing more than denote the affiliated relationship of these companies. Florida law is clear that the use of a logo or trademark symbol alone cannot create an apparent agency. Mobil Oil Corp. v. Bransford, 648 So.2d 119, 120 (Fla.1995); Ilgen v. Henderson Props., Inc., 683 So.2d 513, 514 (Fla. 2d DCA 1996). Here, even though the payment agreement bears AIG's logo, the text of the agreement makes clear that the agreement is between Cornerstone and National Union. On its face, AIG is not a party to that agreement. The same holds true for the AIG logo on one of the four cancellation notices. It merely announces an affiliated relationship and does not establish a principal/agent relationship.
Furthermore, even though National Union is a wholly-owned subsidiary of AIG, this does not make the two corporations interchangeable for purposes of bringing or defending a lawsuit.
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872 So. 2d 333, 2004 WL 784738, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-intern-group-inc-v-cornerstone-bus-inc-fladistctapp-2004.