Champion Home Builders Co. v. Johnson

993 So. 2d 875, 2008 Ala. LEXIS 90
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedMay 16, 2008
Docket1061760 and 1061762
StatusPublished

This text of 993 So. 2d 875 (Champion Home Builders Co. v. Johnson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Champion Home Builders Co. v. Johnson, 993 So. 2d 875, 2008 Ala. LEXIS 90 (Ala. 2008).

Opinion

On Applications for Rehearing

LYONS, Justice.

This Court’s opinion of January 25, 2008, is withdrawn, and the following is substituted therefor.

Champion Home Builders Company; Champion Homes of Boaz, Inc.; Homes of Merit, Inc.; CMH Manufacturing, Inc.; and Clayton Homes, Inc., all mobile-home manufacturers and sellers (hereinafter sometimes referred to collectively as “the mobile-home companies”), instituted two separate declaratory-judgment actions in separate judicial circuits1 against certain mobile-home owners who had previously instituted arbitration proceedings before [878]*878the American Arbitration Association (“the AAA”), seeking to prevent the homeowners from proceeding with claims before the AAA brought on behalf of other similarly situated mobile-home owners. The homeowners’ AAA proceedings sought class arbitration in Montgomery County for a class of Alabama mobile-home owners.

After filing the declaratory-judgment complaints in the Dale Circuit Court and the Geneva Circuit Court, the mobile-home companies asked the AAA and the law firm representing the homeowners in the AAA proceedings to stay those proceedings, which were being conducted in Montgomery County, pending the disposition of the declaratory-judgment actions. Those requests were denied, and the mobile-home companies filed motions in their separate declaratory-judgment actions asking the trial judge to stay the AAA proceedings in Montgomery County. The trial judge granted the mobile-home companies’ motions, and the homeowners petitioned this Court for a writ of prohibition or, alternatively, a writ of mandamus. We grant the petitions and issue the writs of mandamus.

I. Factual Background and Procedural History

A. Case no. 1061760

We first address the declaratory-judgment action brought in the Dale Circuit Court by Champion Home Builders Company; Champion Homes of Boaz, Inc.; and Homes of Merit, Inc. (“the Dale mobile-home companies”).

Sabrina Johnson, William Baker, Corine Crittenden, Albert Fritzke, Faye Fritzke, Larry Hutto, Sheila Hutto, Huey Nelson, and Cynthia Nelson (“the Dale homeowners”) filed their complaint in arbitration with the AAA on December 22, 2006, asserting various claims relating to allegedly improper design and manufacture of mobile homes they had purchased. The Dale homeowners requested that the AAA permit arbitration of claims on behalf of a class of “thousands of [Alabama] homeowners who unwittingly purchased manufactured homes built by [the mobile-home companies] that were fundamentally defective for the jurisdictions in which they lived,” and they alleged that “[t]he walls of their homes are literally rotting away as a result of a pervasive defect in their construction that [the mobile-home companies] have known about but failed to correct.” Dale homeowners’ petition at 6; arbitration complaint at 2.

On May 8, 2007, the Dale mobile-home companies commenced their declaratory-judgment action in the Dale Circuit Court against the Dale homeowners. The Dale mobile-home companies asked the trial court to declare that the Dale homeowners must individually arbitrate their previously instituted arbitration claims in accordance with the arbitration provision of each mobile-home company’s contract, a provision that contains a forum-selection clause that requires arbitration to take place in the jurisdiction of the original retail sale of the mobile home; to declare the Dale homeowners’ previously instituted class-action arbitration complaint to be contrary to Alabama law, impermissible, and a breach of the contracts between the Dale mobile-home companies and the Dale homeowners; and to compel the Dale homeowners to arbitrate their claims individually in the correct jurisdiction.

The Dale mobile-home companies state in their declaratory-judgment complaint that the arbitration agreement contained in the contracts executed by Johnson, Crit-tenden, and the Nelsons (“the Dale contract 1”) provides:

“ARBITRATION AND LIMITATION OF REMEDIES. It is agreed [879]*879that any controversy, claim or dispute between or among the Manufacturer, homeowner, independent dealer, finance company or any other person or entity arising from or relating to the Manufactured Home, its sale, transportation, setup, repair, installation, use, design, manufacture, financing, insurance, any other condition, the manufacturer’s limited warranty, any contract or any alleged promise, representation, agreement or instrument relating to or delivered in connection with the Manufactured Home, or any alleged breach thereof, and any claim based on or arising from an alleged tort or claim of any kind whatsoever, including any claim relating to the validity of this arbitration and limitation of remedies provision [collectively ‘Claim(s)’], and if the Claim(s) cannot be resolved through direct discussion or negotiations, the Claim(s) first shall be mediated as administered by the American Arbitration Association under its Commercial Mediation Rules before resorting to binding arbitration.

The Dale mobile-home companies further state in their declaratory-judgment complaint that “[t]he operative language of the Arbitration Agreements provided to the remaining defendants [Baker, the Fritz-kes, and the Huttos] is substantively the same [as the agreements provided to Johnson, Crittenden, and the Nelsons].” Complaint at 5. The materials submitted in this mandamus proceeding by the Dale homeowners and the Dale mobile-home companies include a document entitled “Manufacturer’s Limited Warranty & Arbitration Agreement.” Although the parties include this document as an exhibit without identifying it further, it appears to be the arbitration agreement provided to Baker, the Fritzkes, and the Huttos (“the Dale contract 2”). This document provides:

“ARBITRATION AGREEMENT: It is agreed that any controversy, claim or dispute between or among the Manufacturer, homeowner, independent dealer, finance company or any other person or entity arising from or relating to the Manufactured Home, its sale, transportation, setup, repair, installation, use, design, manufacture, financing, insurance, any other condition, the manufacturer’s limited warranty, any contract or any alleged promise, representation, agreement or instrument relating to or delivered in connection with the Manufactured Home, or any alleged breach thereof, and any claim based on or arising from an alleged tort or claim of any kind whatsoever, including any claim relating to the validity of this arbitration and limitation of remedies provision [collectively ‘Claim(s)’], and if the Claim(s) cannot be resolved through direct discussion or negotiations, — and unless the parties otherwise agree on a different mediation or arbitration process — then [880]

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Bluebook (online)
993 So. 2d 875, 2008 Ala. LEXIS 90, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/champion-home-builders-co-v-johnson-ala-2008.