Artrip v. Samons Construction Inc.

54 S.W.3d 169, 2001 Ky. App. LEXIS 591, 2001 WL 930001
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedAugust 17, 2001
Docket2000-CA-001615-MR
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 54 S.W.3d 169 (Artrip v. Samons Construction Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Artrip v. Samons Construction Inc., 54 S.W.3d 169, 2001 Ky. App. LEXIS 591, 2001 WL 930001 (Ky. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

OPINION VACATING AND REMANDING

COMBS, Judge:

Mitchell Artrip appeals a judgment affirming an arbitrator’s award in favor of the appellee, Samons Construction, Inc. The sole issue for this court’s consideration is whether the Boyd Circuit Court had subject matter jurisdiction to enforce *170 the arbitrator’s award rendered in Ohio pursuant to a contract that did not provide for arbitration to take place in Kentucky. After our careful review of Kentucky law and that of other jurisdictions construing the Uniform Arbitration Act, we conclude that the lower court did not have jurisdiction to enforce the award. Therefore, we vacate.

The underlying facts are not in dispute. The parties executed a contract on September 29, 1997, for the construction of an addition to Artrip’s business, Artrip Health Care. Their agreement provided for arbitration of disputes to be governed by the rules of American Arbitration Association without designating a location for the arbitration. A dispute arose, and Ar-trip filed a complaint in the Boyd Circuit Court alleging that Samons Construction failed to perform all the work required by the contract, that the work performed was done in a defective and unworkmanlike manner, and that the contract was not completed within the period required.

An agreed order placed the action in abeyance pending arbitration of the parties’ dispute. Upon conclusion of the arbitration, it required the parties to report to the court as to whether further proceedings were needed or whether all issues had been resolved and the matter could be dismissed. Arbitration proceeded in Cincinnati, Ohio, in March 1999 before Arbitrator Herbert Cox. Samons Construction was awarded $12,137 for amounts due under the contract; Artrip was denied any recovery on his claims.

In July 1999, Samons Construction filed a motion in the Boyd Circuit Court seeking a judgment conforming to the arbitrator’s award. Artrip objected and moved to vacate the award on the basis that it was “grossly deviant from applicable law.” The Boyd Circuit Court agreed that the arbitrator had misapplied the law; it vacated that portion of the award denying Artrip’s claim for damages attributable to the delay in completing the project and ordered that it be arbitrated by a local attorney. Although the new arbitrator found that there was a 115 day delay in completing the contract, he determined that the delay was caused by either Artrip or the architect. Artrip was again unsuccessful on his claim for damages.

On January 25, 2000, Samons Construction filed a renewed motion for confirmation of the arbitrator’s award and entry of a judgment in its favor. Relying on Tru Green Corporation v. Sampson, Ky.App., 802 S.W.2d 951 (1991), Artrip argued that the court lacked jurisdiction to enforce the arbitrator’s award since it was rendered outside the Commonwealth. In its order confirming the award, the Boyd Circuit Court noted that the facts in Tru, Green were “significantly distinguishable” from the instant case and concluded as follows:

This Court had jurisdiction over the parties and the subject matter prior to [Samons Construction’s] demand for arbitration, and, pursuant to its jurisdictional powers ordered binding arbitration in accordance with the terms and conditions of the parties’ contract. The contract did not specify a particular locale for the arbitration but allowed the parties to mutually agree on a location, and the parties chose the American Arbitration Association office in Cincinnati, Ohio, so as to avoid the additional cost of paying for the Arbitrator, a resident of Cincinnati, Ohio, to travel to Boyd County, Kentucky. This is supported by the fact that the parties and their counsel are the only ones who traveled to Cincinnati. All the other witnesses testified by evidentiary depositions which took place in Ashland, Boyd County, Kentucky with the transcripts of these depositions being submitted to the Arbitrator *171 for review. Unless the parties’ contract had provided a specific locale to hold the arbitration, it would not make sense nor would it be judicially prudent in this case to find that the state line between Kentucky and Ohio served as a jurisdictional boundary such that when the parties, as a matter of convenience only, crossed the Ohio River into Cincinnati for the arbitration, this court’s jurisdiction over the subject matter and its ability to enforce the arbitrator’s award was forever severed.

The trial court also cited Big Sandy Realty Co. v. Stansifer Motor Co., Ky., 253 S.W.2d 601 (1952), for the proposition that the court’s jurisdiction, once acquired, will not be adversely affected by subsequent events.

Relying on Gordon v. NKC Hospitals, Inc., Ky., 887 S.W.2d 360 (1994), Samons argues that Artrip waived the defense of lack of subject matter jurisdiction by failing to raise it in response to Sa-mons’s first motion to confirm the arbitrator’s award. We disagree. The circumstances in this case are wholly dissimilar from those in Gordon, a premises liability case in which defendant/hospital failed to alert the trial court of its “up-the-ladder” defense. The problem in Gordon was the failure to raise an affirmative defense, an omission which by its very nature implicated the issue of subject matter jurisdiction.

As explained by the Supreme Court in Shamrock Coal Company, Inc. v. Maricle, Ky., 5 S.W.3d 130, 133 (1999), the trial court in Gordon was unaware that workers’ compensation was involved and could not have discerned from either the complaint or the other pleadings that the subject matter fell beyond the scope of its jurisdiction. Shamrock reaffirmed the axiomatic principle that “subject matter jurisdiction cannot be created by waiver or conferred by agreement.” Id. It concerns the court’s authority to hear a particular kind of case inherent in the very essence of its jurisdiction (e.g., a court upon which civil jurisdiction alone is conferred lacks authority to enter a criminal conviction). Duncan v. O’Nan, Ky., 451 S.W.2d 626, 631 (1970).

This essential rule of jurisdiction applies in the case before us because Kentucky courts are only empowered to confirm arbitration awards when the parties’ agreement provides “for the arbitration itself to be in the Commonwealth.” Tru Green, at 953. Unlike the situation in Gordon, there was no failure on the part of Artrip to alert the trial court to those facts necessary for it to assess whether or not this particular case fell within the genre of arbitration matters which it was empowered to hear under the provisions of the Uniform Arbitration Act.

In this appeal, Artrip continues to argue that the issue of subject matter jurisdiction is governed by Tru Green, supra,

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Bluebook (online)
54 S.W.3d 169, 2001 Ky. App. LEXIS 591, 2001 WL 930001, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/artrip-v-samons-construction-inc-kyctapp-2001.