Neely, Justice:
The Court granted this appeal for the purpose of settling the law of arbitration in this State. The exact issues before us were raised and discussed in the majority opinion by Justice Haden and the concurring opinion by this writer when the case first appeared before us two years ago. See, Board of Ed., etc. v. W. Harley Miller, Inc., _ W. Va. _, 221 S.E.2d 882 (1975). The basic issue before us now is to what extent and in what manner a court should enforce an arbitration award, which is rendered without fraud pursuant to a standard arbitration provision in a commercial contract.
This appeal is a certified question which asks whether the circuit court has jurisdiction to enforce an arbitration award upon a motion for summary judgment by the party prevailing at arbitration. The Circuit Court of Berkeley County held that it did not have such jurisdiction, and we reverse.
The factual context in which the issues were presented involves a dispute between the Berkeley County Board of Education (Board), as owner, and W. Harley Miller, Inc. (Miller), as contractor, over Miller’s excavation and removal of rock from the North Berkeley High [475]*475School construction site. Miller claimed the Board owed him a substantial sum of money above the agreed contract price for this work. The Board resisted Miller’s claim by asserting Miller did not follow the contract’s procedures for computing the volume of rock in place. To settle the dispute Miller demanded arbitration pursuant to a standard arbitration provision contained in the construction contract with the Board. That contract provision is:
“All claims, disputes and other matters in question arising out of, or relating to this Contract or the breach thereof, ... shall be decided by arbitration in accordance with the Construction Industry Arbitration Rules of the American Arbitration Association then obtaining unless the parties mutually agree otherwise. This agreement to arbitrate shall be specifically enforceable under the prevailing arbitration law. The award rendered by the arbitrators shall be final and judgment may be entered upon it in accordance with applicable law in any court having jurisdiction thereof.”
The Board responded to Miller’s demand for arbitration by filing a declaratory judgment action in the Circuit Court of Berkeley County and by seeking a preliminary injunction restraining Miller from proceeding to arbitration. The preliminary injunction issued against Miller, pending the outcome of the declaratory judgment action. Following the Circuit Court’s denial of Miller’s motion to dissolve the preliminary injunction, Miller appealed the injunction order to this Court where we reversed the circuit court and remanded the case with instructions to dissolve the preliminary injunction and to abate the action so that the parties could proceed to arbitration, Board of Ed., etc. v. W. Harley Miller, supra.
The dispute was then submitted to a duly selected panel of arbitrators, who rendered their award for $323,291.52 in favor of Miller in November 1976. After receiving the award, Miller filed a Petition to Enforce Award of Arbitrators in the abated declaratory judg[476]*476ment action. On motion of the parties, Miller’s petition was taken as a motion for summary judgment and the Board’s answer to the petition was taken as an affidavit in opposition to the summary judgment motion. The circuit court then refused to grant the motion for summary judgment, on the ground it lacked jurisdiction, and the circuit court certified the jurisdictional question to this Court.
I.
The Court has read a large number of conflicting cases on arbitration in this State,1 the mother Commonwealth of Virginia, and other jurisdictions. Arbitration, apparently, has an enormous potential both for good and for evil. As the concurring opinion recognized in the first Board v. Miller case, supra, litigation is a poor way to resolve controversies. It is expensive, time consuming, and tends to engender ill will which jeopardizes continuing business relationships. Consequently, where both parties are concerned with speedy, economical, conflict resolution, and harmonious business relations, they will often prefer arbitration to litigation, and incorporate this preference in their contracts. This writer in his concurring opinion in the first Miller case, supra, tended to emphasize the advantages of arbitration without giving sufficient attention to its disadvantages. Board v. Miller, supra, 221 S.E.2d at 886.
[477]*477Many of the disadvantages of arbitration are detailed in the factual contexts of earlier West Virginia cases which denied enforcement of arbitration agreements. While the results in these prior West Virginia cases may be correct, the legal reasoning is confusing and gives no clear answer to the problem at hand.
The early cases draw directly on Vynior’s Case, 8 Co. 80a, 81b (1609), decided by Lord Coke. This case is the basic authority for the proposition that at common law a submission to arbitration may be revoked.2 Kill v. Hollister, 1 Wilson 129 (K. B. 1746), followed up on Vynior’s Case by explaining the rationale for the doctrine of revo-cability: arbitration agreements, it seemed, ousted courts of their jurisdiction. This rationale has persisted into modern common law arbitration cases, with perhaps one significant modification, the doctrine of condition precedent. Scott v. Avery, 5 H. L. Cas. 811 (1856) is the foremost English authority on this doctrine, holding that parties may agree that no cause of action arise upon their contract until after there has been arbitration of contractual disputes. The Commonwealth of Virginia, before West Virginia became a state, had incorporated the doctrine of Scott v. Avery as well as the underlying doctrine of revocability into her common law which then passed into our own law. See, Condon v. South Side R. Co., 55 Va. (14 Gratt.) 302 (1858).
Very little illumination with regard to the proper rule for arbitration and the underlying social policy support[478]*478ing that rule can be gleened from the prior West Virginia cases because they talk in terms of “jurisdiction,” “conditions precedent”, “implied conditions precedent”, and “revocability”. Most of the prior West Virginia cases indulge in what this writer would call a rule selection process, and contain little cogent functional analysis.
II.
The basic problem in all arbitration cases could probably best be explained not in terms of legal characterizations such as “conditions precedent,” “ousting courts of their jurisdiction,” or “revocability,” but rather by a hypothetical case in the tradition of the ancient fableist Aesop. Let us assume for a minute that for some reason all the rabbits and all the foxes decided to enter into a contract for mutual security, one provision of which were that any disputes arising out of the contract would be arbitrated by a panel of foxes. Somehow that shocks our consciences, and it doesn’t help the rabbits very much either.
Now, what happens if we have the same contract with the same arbitration provision, except that disputes will be arbitrated by a panel of wolves? Is there such a community of interest among foxes and wolves that the wolves cannot be impartial? Possibly.
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Neely, Justice:
The Court granted this appeal for the purpose of settling the law of arbitration in this State. The exact issues before us were raised and discussed in the majority opinion by Justice Haden and the concurring opinion by this writer when the case first appeared before us two years ago. See, Board of Ed., etc. v. W. Harley Miller, Inc., _ W. Va. _, 221 S.E.2d 882 (1975). The basic issue before us now is to what extent and in what manner a court should enforce an arbitration award, which is rendered without fraud pursuant to a standard arbitration provision in a commercial contract.
This appeal is a certified question which asks whether the circuit court has jurisdiction to enforce an arbitration award upon a motion for summary judgment by the party prevailing at arbitration. The Circuit Court of Berkeley County held that it did not have such jurisdiction, and we reverse.
The factual context in which the issues were presented involves a dispute between the Berkeley County Board of Education (Board), as owner, and W. Harley Miller, Inc. (Miller), as contractor, over Miller’s excavation and removal of rock from the North Berkeley High [475]*475School construction site. Miller claimed the Board owed him a substantial sum of money above the agreed contract price for this work. The Board resisted Miller’s claim by asserting Miller did not follow the contract’s procedures for computing the volume of rock in place. To settle the dispute Miller demanded arbitration pursuant to a standard arbitration provision contained in the construction contract with the Board. That contract provision is:
“All claims, disputes and other matters in question arising out of, or relating to this Contract or the breach thereof, ... shall be decided by arbitration in accordance with the Construction Industry Arbitration Rules of the American Arbitration Association then obtaining unless the parties mutually agree otherwise. This agreement to arbitrate shall be specifically enforceable under the prevailing arbitration law. The award rendered by the arbitrators shall be final and judgment may be entered upon it in accordance with applicable law in any court having jurisdiction thereof.”
The Board responded to Miller’s demand for arbitration by filing a declaratory judgment action in the Circuit Court of Berkeley County and by seeking a preliminary injunction restraining Miller from proceeding to arbitration. The preliminary injunction issued against Miller, pending the outcome of the declaratory judgment action. Following the Circuit Court’s denial of Miller’s motion to dissolve the preliminary injunction, Miller appealed the injunction order to this Court where we reversed the circuit court and remanded the case with instructions to dissolve the preliminary injunction and to abate the action so that the parties could proceed to arbitration, Board of Ed., etc. v. W. Harley Miller, supra.
The dispute was then submitted to a duly selected panel of arbitrators, who rendered their award for $323,291.52 in favor of Miller in November 1976. After receiving the award, Miller filed a Petition to Enforce Award of Arbitrators in the abated declaratory judg[476]*476ment action. On motion of the parties, Miller’s petition was taken as a motion for summary judgment and the Board’s answer to the petition was taken as an affidavit in opposition to the summary judgment motion. The circuit court then refused to grant the motion for summary judgment, on the ground it lacked jurisdiction, and the circuit court certified the jurisdictional question to this Court.
I.
The Court has read a large number of conflicting cases on arbitration in this State,1 the mother Commonwealth of Virginia, and other jurisdictions. Arbitration, apparently, has an enormous potential both for good and for evil. As the concurring opinion recognized in the first Board v. Miller case, supra, litigation is a poor way to resolve controversies. It is expensive, time consuming, and tends to engender ill will which jeopardizes continuing business relationships. Consequently, where both parties are concerned with speedy, economical, conflict resolution, and harmonious business relations, they will often prefer arbitration to litigation, and incorporate this preference in their contracts. This writer in his concurring opinion in the first Miller case, supra, tended to emphasize the advantages of arbitration without giving sufficient attention to its disadvantages. Board v. Miller, supra, 221 S.E.2d at 886.
[477]*477Many of the disadvantages of arbitration are detailed in the factual contexts of earlier West Virginia cases which denied enforcement of arbitration agreements. While the results in these prior West Virginia cases may be correct, the legal reasoning is confusing and gives no clear answer to the problem at hand.
The early cases draw directly on Vynior’s Case, 8 Co. 80a, 81b (1609), decided by Lord Coke. This case is the basic authority for the proposition that at common law a submission to arbitration may be revoked.2 Kill v. Hollister, 1 Wilson 129 (K. B. 1746), followed up on Vynior’s Case by explaining the rationale for the doctrine of revo-cability: arbitration agreements, it seemed, ousted courts of their jurisdiction. This rationale has persisted into modern common law arbitration cases, with perhaps one significant modification, the doctrine of condition precedent. Scott v. Avery, 5 H. L. Cas. 811 (1856) is the foremost English authority on this doctrine, holding that parties may agree that no cause of action arise upon their contract until after there has been arbitration of contractual disputes. The Commonwealth of Virginia, before West Virginia became a state, had incorporated the doctrine of Scott v. Avery as well as the underlying doctrine of revocability into her common law which then passed into our own law. See, Condon v. South Side R. Co., 55 Va. (14 Gratt.) 302 (1858).
Very little illumination with regard to the proper rule for arbitration and the underlying social policy support[478]*478ing that rule can be gleened from the prior West Virginia cases because they talk in terms of “jurisdiction,” “conditions precedent”, “implied conditions precedent”, and “revocability”. Most of the prior West Virginia cases indulge in what this writer would call a rule selection process, and contain little cogent functional analysis.
II.
The basic problem in all arbitration cases could probably best be explained not in terms of legal characterizations such as “conditions precedent,” “ousting courts of their jurisdiction,” or “revocability,” but rather by a hypothetical case in the tradition of the ancient fableist Aesop. Let us assume for a minute that for some reason all the rabbits and all the foxes decided to enter into a contract for mutual security, one provision of which were that any disputes arising out of the contract would be arbitrated by a panel of foxes. Somehow that shocks our consciences, and it doesn’t help the rabbits very much either.
Now, what happens if we have the same contract with the same arbitration provision, except that disputes will be arbitrated by a panel of wolves? Is there such a community of interest among foxes and wolves that the wolves cannot be impartial? Possibly. Now what happens if disputes will be resolved by a panel composed of one squirrel, one elephant, and one wolf? One might conclude that squirrels look like rabbits, wolves look like foxes, and elephants ought surely to be impartial.
Animal law becomes procedurally very complex if for a moment we assume arguendo that we will absolutely prohibit an arbitration provision which provides for arbitration by a panel of foxes, and that we will also prohibit arbitration by a panel of wolves in recognition of their community of interest with foxes. What happens then if there is a sincere effort to obtain a fair panel of arbitrators, as for example the squirrel, elephant, and wolf, and the decision in a forthcoming dispute is expected legitimately to go against the rabbits?
[479]*479The rabbits, whom we may logically assume will have retained the services of some sharks to represent them, will go into court and plead “wolfery”, that is to say, that the elephant also has a community of interest with the foxes and wolves, so that for all intents and purposes it is the same as if he were a wolf, which is the same as a fox. The rabbits will obviously demand a hearing and a full-blown jury trial on the question of whether an elephant looks more like a squirrel or more like a wolf, and as soon as the law gives the rabbits a hearing, the foxes, relying in good faith on arbitration, might as well kiss themselves goodbye, because not only will they be forced to go to arbitration, but they will also be forced to go through the whole thing again in court either in the first instance when the rabbits seek to enjoin arbitration, or after arbitration when they, the foxes, seek to enforce their award. The purpose of arbitration, namely just, speedy, economical conflict resolution is defeated if the foxes must demonstrate the fairness of the procedure in order to disprove the allegation of “wolfery”.
However, if the courts attempt to avoid the problem of the frivolous plea of “wolfery”, by writing strong syllabus points making arbitration provisions absolutely binding and enforceable in all cases, then all the fox lawyers come out of the woodwork and begin writing arbitration provisions, with wolves for arbitrators, into all contracts, regardless of the nature of the transaction. If the foxes are blessed with a strong bargaining position they will be able to take advantage of unwary rabbits on all occasions and defeat the prosecution of just claims against themselves.
III.
A functional analysis of the West Virginia cases which do not favor arbitration demonstrates that this Court would not countenance an arbitration provision by which the parties agree that all disputes will be arbitrated by a panel chosen exclusively by one of the parties. This is the classic rabbits and foxes situation, with [480]*480the foxes stacking the arbitration panel in their favor. Such a contract provision is inherently inequitable and unconscionable because in a way it nullifies all the other provisions of the contract. While we do not have a case presenting that set of facts, we may conceptualize it as one extreme in a spectrum going from arbitration as a means of defeating just claims to arbitration as a speedy, economical means of conflict resolution. The concurring opinion in the first Miller case, supra, reaches the problem of defeating just claims in part by discussing the problem presented by arbitration provisions in contracts of adhesion where one party to a contract is confronted by another party which holds a monopolistic or oligopolistic position.
The West Virginia case of Kinney v. Baltimore & Ohio Employees’ Relief Assn., 35 W. Va. 385, 14 S.E. 8 (1891) is representative of a line of cases which are apparently predicated on the concept of fairness and disapprove arbitration. In that case a widow sued for death benefits payable because of the accidental killing of her husband on the railroad. Although the constitution of the relief association required that all disputes be submitted to arbitration, and the panel included one arbitrator selected by each party and a third selected by the first two, the court applied the common law principle that contracts to arbitrate are revocable. In Kinney the parties were a widow and a large association; the Court obviously concluded that arbitration served no useful purpose, and that somehow under these circumstances the arbitration procedure could only be used to defeat a just claim. More particularly, one can infer that the arbitration provision was not bargained for and that the policyholder had her legitimate expectations defeated by recourse to a provision which was meaningless to the untrained person. Generally in cases where arbitration has been rejected the facts are more compelling than the logic. See also: Lawson v. Williamson Coal & Coke Co., 61 W. Va. 669, 57 S.E. 258 (1907) and Kohlsaat v. Main Island Creek Coal Co., 90 W. Va. 656, 112 S.E. 213 (1922).
[481]*481However, West Virginia also has a line of cases which favors arbitration. These cases resulted from this Court’s development and extension of the doctrine of condition precedent, which, as it turns out, gives courts a convenient means to escape the rigid strictures of the common law revocability doctrine. A look at the facts and the results in these cases indicates that this Court has been using the doctrine of condition precedent to enforce arbitration agreements whenever a close examination of the agreements reveals their fundamental fairness. For a good example of this process, see Pettus v. Olga Coal Co., 137 W. Va. 492, 72 S.E.2d 881 (1952). It is the exact opposite of the rabbits and foxes situation, because both parties in Pettus were probably foxes.
In Pettus members of a labor union brought an action in court against their employer for overtime pay they claimed the employer wrongfully withheld. These employees did not comply with the provisions of their collective bargaining contract requiring disputes to be settled by arbitration, and the employer resisted their suit on this basis. The situation clearly called for the court to stay its hand so that labor contract grievance procedures could serve the legitimate purposes for which they were intended. Yet the common law doctrine of revocabi-lity indicated that the parties could freely bypass arbitration and proceed to court. The obvious solution was to apply the doctrine of condition precedent, which the Pettus court did. The doctrine was extended somewhat in Pettus since there was no language expressly conditioning a right of action on compliance with arbitration procedures. Thus the court was forced to find such a condition by implication, and stated the rule as follows:
“A contract providing a procedure for arbitration of disputes, and providing that ‘all claims, demands or actions growing therefrom or involved therein shall be by the contracting parties settled and determined exclusively by the machinery provided in the’ contract, creates a condition precedent to any right of action or suit arising under the contract.” Syllabus point 3, Pettus v. Olga Coal Co., supra.
[482]*482What Pettus really stands for, after the haze of its convoluted legal reasoning has settled, is that where there are two sophisticated parties, on the one hand unionized employees and on the other a major coal .company, and where the arbitration clause was bargained for and was intended by both parties to provide an effective alternative to litigation, then the courts should require both parties to proceed to arbitration.
Under the facts of the case before us what we have are two sophisticated parties, one a substantial contractor and the other a governmental unit; there is a standard arbitration clause providing for arbitrators to be selected through the American Arbitration Association from a panel of experienced and impartial arbitrators; the parties were represented by counsel, or should have been represented by counsel, and could have been represented by counsel; and, the dispute which arose under the contract is a standard rock excavation dispute which occurs with such predictable regularity that both developers and contractors routinely expect it. Furthermore, rock clause and similar common disputes are more susceptible to equitable resolution when the decision is made by arbitrators experienced in the building industry who can take notice of far more information than a common law judge could safely notice.
IV.
In spite of all the reasons for being suspicious of arbitration, the weight of modern, enlightened authority favors arbitration as a preferred means of conflict resolution.3 The process has probably been most fully [483]*483developed in the area of labor law,4 which is a unique area having rules which are not necessarily applicable [484]*484in other areas. Yet there is still something to be gleened by analogy from the labor situation. Fairly hard and fast general rules can be developed in labor law because the factual patterns recur with predictable regularity. Labor contracts are always entered into by business parties, i.e., on the one hand an organization of workers with a paid staff and experienced counsel, and on the other hand an industrial or commercial enterprise also with experienced counsel. Labor agreements usually result from real bargaining about the terms of the contract, particularly the “no strike” clause and the arbitration clause. Both union and management have a continuing interest in the solvency of the business enterprise which is providing profits to management and employment to workers, and both sides want to avoid work stoppages which will curtail profits on one side and eliminate wages on the other. Any attempt to develop a general rule about arbitration from labor law precedent must take account both of the nature of the parties to a labor contract and of the goals of those parties.
The case before us presents again the difficulty with which courts have wrestled for three hundred years. Experience seems to indicate that in formulating rules of arbitration one must either make the rule that an agreement to arbitrate is specifically enforceable and any cause of action is extinguished by the award of the arbitrators or merged into it, whenever it appears from a fair reading of the contract that the parties intended arbitration to be the exclusive means of resolving contractual disputes, or one must forget about arbitration as a viable alternative to the normal common law litigation process. As soon as the law attempts to incorporate protections for the unwary in the law of arbitration, then the entire purpose of arbitration is defeated, at least with regard to litigious, recalcitrant, or contumacious parties. In the hypothetical above, this is the case where the rabbits plead “wolfery” and demand a hearing with full-blown court proceedings, thus avoiding speedy, economical, conflict resolution.
[485]*485If we say, as this writer did in the concurring opinion in the first Miller case, supra:
“Procedures for arbitration can be spelled out in the contract. When such procedures are not spelled out fully the arbitrators should be free to use any procedure they see fit. The scope of agreements to arbitrate should be liberally construed. The parties contract for an arbitrator, not a procedure. Due process does not necessarily mean Anglo-American legal rules of evidence, nor winner-take-all substantive rules. Furthermore, once the parties have agreed to arbitrate, they ought not to be allowed to re-litigate the same issues in the courts. The system of review of arbitration awards should be set up to avoid delay caused by the losing party in arbitration challenging the award of the arbitrators, especially on mere procedural grounds! The strict rules governing an action at law have never been applicable to an arbitration proceeding, Boomer Coal & Coke Co. v. Osenton, 101 W. Va. 683, 133 S.E. 381 (1926). The parties should know this when they agree to arbitrate, and they should not be heard later to complain on an issue of procedure. Arbitration can, and almost inevitably does, decide the substance of the controversy with substantial justice regardless of procedure.”
then we have created a rule where the arbitration award is enforceable and there are no frivolous defenses which would be conducive to relitigation of the entire issue in the circuit court. However, we have then created a monster of equally frightful mien. Is it possible to devise any protection for the unwary which is not an invitation to a trial de novo under the guise of searching for procedural errors, prejudice on the part of arbitrators, and numerous other issues which will make arbitration a curse instead of a blessing? How can we create any defense other than fraud to an arbitration award without having the defenses eat the rule and frustrate the process?
[486]*486V.
If arbitration is ever to have a useful place in our jurisprudence, it is essential that we address the problem which we caricature as the contract between the rabbits and foxes, in which the foxes impose the clause that all disputes will be resolved by a panel of foxes, or by a panel of wolves. In real life we can envisage arbitration provisions being imposed upon consumers in contract situations where consumers are totally ignorant of the implications of what they are signing, and where consumers bargain away many of the protections which have been secured for them with such difficulty at common law.
To solve this problem we enounce a new rule of law which is generally consistent with the results in prior cases, but which conceptualizes the problem in different, functional terms. Where parties to a contract agree to arbitrate either all disputes or particular limited disputes arising under the contract, and where the parties bargained for the arbitration provision, then, arbitration is mandatory, and any causes of action under the contract which by the contract terms are made arbitrable are merged, in the absence of fraud, with the arbitration award and the arbitration award is enforceable upon a complaint setting forth the contract, the arbitration provision, and the award of the arbitrators upon motion for summary judgment made at the proper time.
The important words in the new rule are that the agreement to arbitrate must have been “bargained for.” The concurring opinion in the first Miller case, supra, spoke of the traditional contract of adhesion situation in which one party to a contract may be confronted by another party which holds either a monopolistic or oli-gopolistic position in some particular line of commerce. While this exception would appear to address the most likely avenue for abuse in the law of arbitration, there are two more which should be specifically mentioned. Whenever a party can bring an arbitration clause within the unconscionability provisions of § 2-302 of the Uni[487]*487form Commercial Code, W. Va. Code, 46-2-302 (1963), then that, too, would indicate that there was no meaningful bargaining with regard to the arbitration provision and should invalidate it. Furthermore, when arbitration is wholly inappropriate, given the nature of the contract, and could only have been intended to defeat just claims, the provision cannot be considered to have been bargained for.
The question of whether an arbitration provision is “bargained for” must, in order to make arbitration workable, always be a matter of law for the court to determine and never a question of fact. Under modern case law in other jurisdictions there is a strong presumption that an arbitration provision is part of the bargain. Therefore in West Virginia only if it appears from the four corners of a written contract or from the obvious nature of the contracting parties, or from the obvious nature of the activity covered by the contract, that the arbitration provision is so inconsistent with the other terms of the contract or so oppressive under the circumstances that it could not have been bargained for, should a court refuse to enforce the arbitration provision.5
The end result of the rule which we enounce today is that all arbitration provisions in all contracts which indicate that the parties intended to arbitrate their differences rather than litigate them are presumptively bind[488]*488ing, and specifically enforceable. Accordingly we hold in the case before us that the circuit court erred in not enforcing the arbitrators’ award.
VI.
The defendant Board, in the case at bar, alleges that the law of arbitration in West Virginia at the time it entered into the contract with Miller was such as to make the whole procedure of arbitration a nullity. Consequently, the Board argues that when the contract provision says that the award of the arbitrators shall be enforceable in accordance with general law, the clause is meaningless because the general law neither made arbitration a condition precedent to litigation nor made the award specifically enforceable.
The Court concedes that the law on arbitration has been unclear in this jurisdiction for a number of years; however, we are not persuaded that the collected precedent of this State when read together stood for the propositions that arbitration agreements were nullities and that arbitration awards would not be enforced. At least the Pettus case, supra, indicated that arbitration would be a condition precedent to litigation if such intention were thoroughly implied in the contract provision, and numerous other cases have indicated that arbitration awards would be enforced under appropriate circumstances.6 Consequently, we do not find compelling the Board’s argument that it relied to its detriment upon an obvious interpretation of this State’s decisional law at the time the contract was entered into. In order, however, to eliminate confusion in future cases resulting from conflicting and perplexing earlier cases which may have arrived at correct results, but through reasoning which by today’s functional standards is obsolete, we hereby [489]*489overrule the reasoning of all prior inconsistent West Virginia cases.7
[490]*490In addition, the arbitration provision in question was a fair one, it was bargained for, and it provided a reasonable method of conflict resolution. The Board owes Harley Miller money and should pay without further delay; the arbitration provision provided for two eventu[491]*491alities. First, in the event that a dispute arose, the parties agreed to arbitrate; second, if after arbitration one of the parties declined to abide by the arbitrators’ award, the other party could bring an action on the [492]*492award in court. If, indeed, the Board cynically entered into an agreement to arbitrate with the full intention of declining to fulfill its commitment and of deliberately defrauding the other party from a benefit bestowed by [493]*493the contract, then the Board can hardly be heard to complain that it relied “in good faith” upon the state of the decisional law. It did not rely in good faith. Ex turpi causa non oritur actio.
[494]*494For the foregoing reasons the judgment of the Circuit Court of Berkeley County on the certified question is reversed and the case is remanded to the circuit court with directions to enter judgment forthwith upon the award of the arbitrators.
Rulings on certified question reversed and remanded with directions.