Benjamin, Weill & Mazer v. Kors

195 Cal. App. 4th 40, 125 Cal. Rptr. 3d 469, 2011 Cal. App. LEXIS 537
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 5, 2011
DocketNo. A125732
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 195 Cal. App. 4th 40 (Benjamin, Weill & Mazer v. Kors) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Benjamin, Weill & Mazer v. Kors, 195 Cal. App. 4th 40, 125 Cal. Rptr. 3d 469, 2011 Cal. App. LEXIS 537 (Cal. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

[46]*46Opinion

KLINE, P. J.

This case involves a fee dispute between a law firm, respondent Benjamin, Weill & Mazer, a professional corporation (BWM), and its former client, appellant Nancy Hurwitz Kors. After Kors refused to pay the full amount billed her, BWM sued her for breach of the parties’ fee agreement. Based on the arbitration clause in the agreement, Kors moved to compel arbitration under the California Arbitration Act (CAA) (Code Civ. Proc., § 1280 et seq.).1 The court granted the motion and directed binding arbitration pursuant to the rules of the Bar Association of San Francisco (BASF). After the arbitrators ruled in its favor, BWM petitioned the court to confirm the award. Opposing the petition, Kors moved to vacate the award due to the chief arbitrator’s failure to disclose “matters that could cause a person aware of the facts to reasonably entertain a doubt that the proposed neutral arbitrator would be able to be impartial,” as required by the CAA (§ 1281.9, subd. (a)). The trial court denied Kors’s motion and confirmed the award. Kors appeals from that ruling.

As originally briefed, the questions presented on appeal were whether the trial court erred in rejecting Kors’s claim that section 1281.9 required the chief arbitrator to disclose certain business relationships and in denying her request for attorney fees incurred in enforcing the parties’ arbitration agreement. As in the trial court, the only question the parties addressed with respect to disclosure was whether the matters Kors pointed to were required to be disclosed under section 1281.9.

The fundamental problem in this case, however, arises from an internal inconsistency in the arbitration clause, which states that “[a]ny dispute pertaining to the fees owed under this agreement . . . shall, to the extent permitted by law, be submitted to binding arbitration pursuant to the rules of the Bar Association of San Francisco, and shall take place in San Francisco.” While the duty to arbitrate imposed by this provision is enforceable under the CAA (§ 1281), and was enforced by the trial court under that act, the arbitration process it mandates is not that contemplated by the CAA, but the different process prescribed by bar association rules promulgated under the Mandatory Fee Arbitration Act (MFAA) (Bus. & Prof. Code, § 6200 et seq.). Under the MFAA and the BASF Rules of Procedure, Attorney/Client Fee Disputes, Arbitration and Mediation (rev. Apr. 30, 2007) (BASF Rules), a law firm cannot require a client to submit to binding arbitration to resolve a [47]*47fee dispute before the dispute arises, as was done in this case. (Bus. & Prof. Code, § 6204, subd. (a); BASF Rules, rule 4.A.2,) Furthermore, the MFAA and BASF Rules do not appear to require arbitrators to make the disclosure mandated by section 1281.9. The briefs of the parties and our initial opinion did not adequately address these issues.

Before our initial opinion became final, we ordered rehearing on our own motion and directed the parties to file supplemental briefs on the applicability of the CAA disclosure requirement set forth in section 1281.9 to the arbitration in this case. Kors continued to maintain that that statute applied because the arbitration was under the CAA, and that it, or the standard it codifies, should apply in MFAA arbitrations as well. Kors pointed out that throughout the trial court and appellate proceedings related to her claim of nondisclosure, BWM had consistently acknowledged application of the CAA; the legal dispute was simply whether the chief arbitrator failed to provide the disclosure required by the CAA in section 1281.9, not whether section 1281.9 applied. BWM, however, changed its position, arguing for the first time that section 1281.9 cannot be applied to the arbitration conducted by BASF.2 BWM now argues that the arbitration was governed by the MFAA, not the CAA; that section 1281.9 does not apply in an MFAA arbitration; and that “Kors is estopped from challenging the consequences of the rules she deliberately chose” by moving to compel arbitration pursuant to the parties’ agreement. In response to our request for further briefing on the propriety of submitting this dispute for arbitration under BASF Rules, Kors argues that the portion of the arbitration provision calling for binding arbitration under the CAA should be enforced, but not the portion requiring arbitration under BASF Rules. BWM contends the arbitration provision is enforceable in its entirety and, in any event, any error by the trial court was invited by Kors and waived by her participation in the arbitration.

We shall conclude that the arbitration agreement is enforceable under the CAA and the trial court erred in directing arbitration pursuant to a process governed by the MFAA. In the circumstances of this case, Kors had the right to the disclosure required by section 1281.9. Because the trial court’s order for binding arbitration under BASF Rules erroneously deprived Kors of that right, we shall reverse the order confirming the arbitration award.

Kors also appeals from the order denying her request for an award of reasonable attorney fees for enforcing the arbitration agreement. We shall [48]*48conclude that this order was also erroneous and remand the matter to the trial court with directions to grant Kors’s request for reasonable fees incurred in enforcing the arbitration clause of the fee agreement, in this court as well as in the superior court.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

The Arbitration

In June 2004, Kors, a psychologist who serves as a professional adoption facilitator, was sued by Alette and Robert Temple after they learned that the putative birth mother they met through Kors had feigned her pregnancy and defrauded them out of several thousand dollars. In December 2004, Kors retained BWM to represent her. Five months later, after the parties clashed over a series of discovery and other disputes, the Temples voluntarily dismissed their complaint against Kors without prejudice. Kors thereafter filed a motion for an award of $224,564.74 in legal fees and costs under Family Code former section 8635, asserting that, by virtue of the dismissal, Kors was the prevailing party for purposes of that section. The trial court disagreed and denied the motion, and that ruling was affirmed by Division One of this court. (Temple v. Kors (Aug. 29, 2006, A112619) [nonpub. opn.].)

Kors had by that time paid BWM $227,537.75 in fees and costs, but had failed to pay a balance of $68,986.38 she had been billed by the firm. In March 2006, BWM served on Kors a notice of client’s right to arbitration under the MFAA. Kors applied for nonbinding fee arbitration under the MFAA pursuant to rules of the Contra Costa County Bar Association (CCCBA). BWM objected on the jurisdictional ground that no attorney who provided services to Kors in the Temple lawsuit ever maintained an office in Contra Costa County, also noting that Kors’s fee agreement with BWM specified that any fee dispute between the parties was to be resolved pursuant to the rules of the BASF. The CCCBA denied jurisdiction and, on May 1, 2007, BWM commenced this action for breach of contract in the Contra Costa Superior Court, seeking damages in the amount of $68,986.38.

Kors asked BWM to dismiss or stay the action and proceed to binding arbitration under the fee agreement. After BWM refused, Kors moved to enforce the arbitration clause under the CAA (§ 1281).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
195 Cal. App. 4th 40, 125 Cal. Rptr. 3d 469, 2011 Cal. App. LEXIS 537, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/benjamin-weill-mazer-v-kors-calctapp-2011.