Boyhan v. Maguire

693 So. 2d 659, 1997 WL 227445
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedMay 7, 1997
Docket96-0439
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 693 So. 2d 659 (Boyhan v. Maguire) 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.

Bluebook
Boyhan v. Maguire, 693 So. 2d 659, 1997 WL 227445 (Fla. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

693 So.2d 659 (1997)

George E. BOYHAN, Appellant,
v.
George J. MAGUIRE, Appellee.

No. 96-0439.

District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fourth District.

May 7, 1997.

Arthur J. England of Greenberg, Traurig, Hoffman, Lipoff, Rosen, Quentel, P.A., Fort *660 Lauderdale, and Geoffrey L. Jones of Jeck Harris Jones & Kaufman, L.L.P., Jupiter, for appellant.

John L. Avery, Jr., of the Law Office of John L. Avery, Jr., Jupiter, for appellee.

FARMER, Judge.

The losing party in an arbitration sought to have the arbitration decision vacated on the grounds of partiality by an arbitrator. The trial court found that appellant had failed to demonstrate "evident partiality" by the chairman of the arbitration panel. We affirm.

Boyhan, an engineer, signed a royalty agreement with his former employer providing that he would receive a percentage of income in exchange for his services in the construction of a paper mill in Alabama. Maguire was his accountant, who assisted Boyhan in obtaining the royalty agreement. Boyhan and Maguire entered into a separate agreement providing that Maguire would receive 15% of all royalties received as payment for his services in conjunction with the royalty agreement. The agreement between Boyhan and Maguire further spelled out Maguire's duties.

A disagreement arose between Boyhan and his former employer with respect to the royalties, resulting in arbitration of the dispute. The later arbitration between Boyhan and Maguire, which is the subject of this appeal, arose from Maguire's alleged unwillingness to aid Boyhan in the previous royalty arbitration. This, Boyhan claimed, was a breach of their agreement and resulted in a less advantageous settlement with his former employer.

The Boyhan-Maguire arbitration hearing was held in accordance with the rules of the American Arbitration Association (AAA) as provided by their agreement. During the hearing, a part of the transcript from the prior arbitration between Boyhan and his employer was offered into the record, consisting of the earlier panel's examination of Maguire. The chairman of the current arbitration panel commented on this evidence and a colloquy took place as follows:

"CHAIRMAN: Let me make an observation at this point. If at this juncture Mr. Maguire were to have said, `I confess all. I've come to make a deal wherein I'm going to get some money outside of the royalty agreement and I'm going to testify against Boyhan,' I would have assumed and it would be my opinion at this juncture that his having said that would have been predicated upon the fact that he'd been badgered, he'd been knocked about in a manner that nobody's been knocked around in this room today or this chamber on any of the days. This thing has gone beyond ridiculous, in my estimation, at this juncture. I don't know—I don't understand how that panel could have allowed this man to have been abused in the manner that he was.
"[Arbitrator] POPPLETON: These are the panel members asking the questions.
"CHAIRMAN: Just so you get some of the flavor of how I feel about this. This is one panelist talking. You talk about repetitiveness and redundancy, they've tried to elicit something from this gentleman over a period of now, what is it, 15 or 20 minutes, they've gone about it in 15 different ways and three people joining in this effort to inveigle something from him, and he's holding up not only admirably but unbelievably. Now you may proceed.
"[Arbitrator] CANTY: Also, you know, here you have a lawyer who has offered a deal, criticizing a person for not having accepted it.
"CHAIRMAN: Now, you got that. And not only that, there's some chicanery here in terms of some difficulties that I have with the ethics of the people involved.
"[Arbitrator] CANTY: Um-hum.
"CHAIRMAN: As an attorney, and I'll put it to you two gentleman, you have somebody come to you, you know what the deal is between him and another entity, your client, and that individual is trying to perhaps, as you might put it, sell his testimony, what do you do with that guy? And I'm using a word or a reference from habit that I've learned from Mr.—
"MR. AVERY [counsel for Maguire]: My bad manners.
*661 "CHAIRMAN:—Mr. Avery. What do you do with that gentleman, that chap? You kick him the hell out of your office, don't you?
"[Arbitrator] POPPLETON: Of course.
"CHAIRMAN: You distance yourself from that gentleman, don't you? Just so you have the flavor of my thinking, and I assume that my panelists concur with me.
"POPPLETON: I would have certainly kicked him out of my office.
"CHAIRMAN: You would have distanced yourself from him. Let me tell you, you would have, Mr. Jones, Mr. Jeck [co-counsel for Boyhan], as I understand you two gentlemen and your professionalism.
"MR. JONES: Absolutely. I would state that unequivocally. I'm only dealing with the record.".[1]

The attorneys then finished reading the transcript into the record, at which time another exchange transpired regarding Boyhan's attorney in the prior arbitration, Mr. Cooper:

"MR. AVERY: Okay. I would offer also at the panel's leisure for them to read the examination by Mr. Cooper to point out that there was no help coming from that juncture at that time; that clearly as Mr. Cooper admitted, he took this as an opportunity to use Mr. Maguire to further his case.
"CHAIRMAN: Well, let me make my position clear with Mr. Cooper in this matter at this juncture and even before when he was here. Mr. Cooper who is apparently perhaps going to be the successor to the president to the American Bar Association is somebody who has—who I have certain suspicions about in terms of his capabilities as a result of what I know about his involvement in this procedure, and I'm on record in this matter. All right, sir?
"MR. JONES: Very well. I'd just like to—
"[Arbitrator] CANTY: I want to expound a little bit. Now, there's a method that the law has that's available to people in arbitration to develop facts, and that is deposition. And you can order a person to be deposed, and at that point he is required to testify. But both sides have a shot at him. Nothing's hidden, no side deals, all that kind of thing. I mean, there's an apparent way that Mr. Greenwald should have known about but did not avail himself of."

After a brief discussion of unrelated matters, a lunch break ensued.

Upon resuming the hearing that afternoon, Boyhan's counsel immediately moved for the disqualification of the chairman, pursuant to Rule 19 of the AAA commercial arbitration rules. According to Boyhan's counsel, who read the rule into the record, Rule 19 provides as follows:

"Upon objection of a party to the continued service of a neutral arbitrator, the AAA shall determine whether the arbitrator should be disqualified and shall inform the parties of its decision which shall be conclusive."

After holding a separate hearing on the matter, the AAA denied the request to disqualify the Chairman.

On appeal, Boyhan seeks to invoke the language of section 682.13(b),[2] which requires the court to vacate an arbitration award when:

"there was evident partiality by an arbitrator appointed as a neutral

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Bluebook (online)
693 So. 2d 659, 1997 WL 227445, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boyhan-v-maguire-fladistctapp-1997.