Astors' Beechwood v. People Coal Co.

659 A.2d 1109, 1995 R.I. LEXIS 187, 1995 WL 391082
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJune 30, 1995
Docket94-207-M.P., 94-208-M.P., and 94-213-M.P
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 659 A.2d 1109 (Astors' Beechwood v. People Coal Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Astors' Beechwood v. People Coal Co., 659 A.2d 1109, 1995 R.I. LEXIS 187, 1995 WL 391082 (R.I. 1995).

Opinion

OPINION

LEDERBERG, Justice.

These consolidated cases came before the Supreme Court on the petitions for certiorari of Grant Given d.b.a. Apple Construction Co. and Apple Construction Co. (collectively as “Apple”), Peoples Coal Company (Peoples), and Germain Plumbing & Heating, Inc. (Ger- *1111 main). These defendants sought the reversal of an order entered in the Superior Court granting the motions of the plaintiff, Astors’ Beechwood, to reject an arbitration award out of time and to grant relief from judgment. For the reasons stated below, we grant the petitions. The pertinent facts are as follows.

Facts and Procedural History

This case arose in 1989 out of a contract dispute. The plaintiff, a partnership with its place of business in Newport, Rhode Island, filed suit in Superior Court against, among others, Peoples and Germain. 1 In its complaint, plaintiff alleged that it had entered into a contract with Peoples for the purchase of an anthracite-fired steam boiler. The plaintiff further alleged that after Germain had installed the boiler, Astors’ Beechwood discovered that the boiler was defective. On August 18, 1992, the parties agreed to proceed with nonbinding arbitration under the auspices of the Superior Court’s Court-Annexed Arbitration Program. Later, on November 13, 1992, Peoples filed a third-party complaint against Apple, alleging that Apple was negligent in its design, construction, and installation of a coal bin which was part of the boiler.

Arbitration hearings were held in December 1998 and February 1994. The court-appointed arbitrator selected by the parties issued an award on February 8,1994 (filed in the Superior Court Arbitration Office on February 9, 1994), finding for plaintiff. The award for compensatory damages, however, was for $10,442 whereas plaintiffs complaint had alleged damages against Peoples and Germain in the amount of $250,000. The plaintiffs counsel received the arbitrator’s decision on February 10, 1994.

On that same day plaintiffs counsel received a phone call from Germain’s insurance adjuster offering to pay the full amount of the award. During the phone call, plaintiffs counsel told the adjuster that the arbitration awai'd was unacceptable to plaintiff. In a February 18, 1994 conference call with Ger-main’s and Apple’s legal representatives, plaintiffs attorney informed defendants’ counsel that the arbitration award was unacceptable and that, absent a settlement within the range of its monetary demand, plaintiff wished to proceed to trial. On February 22, 1994, plaintiffs counsel spoke with Peoples’ counsel and informed him that the arbitration award was unacceptable.

An entry on the docket sheet in the Superior Court case file stated that the judgment on the arbitration award was filed on March 2,1994. On March 3,1994, plaintiffs counsel received a notice dated March 2, 1994, from the Arbitration Division of the Superior Court stating that a fee was due for the entry of judgment on the arbitration award. The plaintiffs counsel immediately recognized that he had failed to file a written notice of rejection of the arbitration award. Therefore, on March 3, he hand-delivered a written notice of rejection of the arbitrator’s award to the Arbitration Division, and either faxed or hand-delivered copies to opposing counsel. Two days later, on March 5, 1994, the Arbitration Division returned the notice of rejection with a notation that it had been filed out of time.

Under the Superior Court Rules Governing Arbitration of Civil Actions, after the arbitration hearing is concluded (or after the receipt of the posthearing briefs, whichever is later), the arbitration awai’d must be filed within ten days. Super.RArb. 4(a). The arbitrator is also required to forward copies of the award to the counsel of record or to a pro se litigant. Super.RArb. 4(d). Arbitration Rule 5(a) states that “[a]ny party * * * who is dissatisfied with an arbitrator’s award may have a trial as of right upon filing a written rejection of the award on an approved form within 20 days after the arbitrator’s award has been filed.” (Emphases added.) If no party files a written rejection of the award within twenty days after the filing of the award, “the court shall enter judgment to include interest and costs, if any, on the arbitrator’s award.” Super.RArb. 6(b).

Unfortunately, in the case at bar there existed some confusion as to whether this *1112 procedure was followed. According to the listing of Superior Court docket events, judgment on the arbitration award was entered on March 2, 1994. However, the record in this case contains no other indication that judgment was entered by the trial justice pursuant to Rule 6(b) of the Rules of Arbitration. Indeed, the trial justice stated at the hearing on the motion for relief from judgment, “I don’t remember ever signing a judgment in this case, and * * * I would have remembered it because I know the travel of this ease, and I don’t see a judgment in here.”

In any event plaintiff claimed that it moved for leave to file the notice of rejection out of time on March 4, 1994, and on March 11, 1994, moved for relief from judgment pursuant to Rule 60(b) of the Superior Court Rules of Civil Procedure. At the same time plaintiffs counsel also filed an affidavit that stated:

“As evidence of mistake, inadvertence, and/or excusable neglect, I contend that the undersigned’s conduct following receipt of the arbitrator’s award, clearly and unequivocally communicated to all parties, and to the Court, Plaintiffs rejection of the arbitrator’s award, and was reasonable under the circumstances of this case. The undersigned overlooked, until not more than three days after the deadline therefor, the filing of a written rejection. No party or attorney was under any misapprehension as to the Plaintiffs position of proceeding with the prosecution of its claim at trial. This position was timely (i.e. within the twenty day period for rejection) orally communicated directly to opposing counsel, to the insurance carrier for one of the defendants, and to the Court. Opposing counsels’ knowledge of Plaintiffs posture is evidenced by the filing of new discovery requests following their receipt of said oral communication of rejection. No prejudice accrued to any party (except plaintiff) on account of said out-of-time filing of written notice of rejection.”

At a March 16, 1994 hearing before the trial justice, plaintiffs counsel stated:

“[M]y argument as made this morning applies to both my motion to file the rejection out of time and to my motion to vacate. * * * My neglect is not unexplained. I replied [sic] upon my oral communications with the Court and with opposing counsel. As to my own personal reasons for missing it, your Honor, I represent to the Court that for me it was an extremely busy time. I’m the managing partner of my firm which is a small firm, but I’m also the litigator in my firm. As the Court will know, during the period following the arbitration I tried before your Honor a jury-waived trial with the State on the other side. When I received the arbitrator’s award, I undertook what I considered to be reasonable communications with counsel on the other side to communicate to them our rejection of that award.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
659 A.2d 1109, 1995 R.I. LEXIS 187, 1995 WL 391082, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/astors-beechwood-v-people-coal-co-ri-1995.