El Dorado School District #15 v. Continental Casualty Company

247 F.3d 843, 2001 U.S. App. LEXIS 7688
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedApril 27, 2001
Docket00-2488
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 247 F.3d 843 (El Dorado School District #15 v. Continental Casualty Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
El Dorado School District #15 v. Continental Casualty Company, 247 F.3d 843, 2001 U.S. App. LEXIS 7688 (8th Cir. 2001).

Opinion

247 F.3d 843 (8th Cir. 2001)

EL DORADO SCHOOL DISTRICT #15, UNION COUNTY, AR, PLAINTIFF/APPELLEE,
v.
CONTINENTAL CASUALTY COMPANY, DEFENDANT/APPELLANT,
JIM EASLEY, INDIVIDUALLY AND DOING BUSINESS AS INDUSTRIAL COATING SYSTEMS, DEFENDANT,
THOMAS & PARKER WATERPROOFING COMPANY, DEFENDANT/APPELLANT.

No. 00-2488

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT

Submitted: February 15, 2001
Filed: April 27, 2001

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Western District of Arkansas.

Before Wollman, Chief Judge, Bright, and Morris Sheppard Arnold, Circuit Judges.

Wollman, Chief Judge

A contractor and its surety appeal from a district court1 order entering judgment on an arbitration award. We affirm.

I.

In the spring of 1997, El Dorado School District No. 15 in Union County, Arkansas, was the owner of an aging stadium with a leaky roof. After soliciting competing bids, the district contracted with Thomas & Parker Waterproofing Company for the application of XYPEX, a cement-based waterproofing compound, to the roof to solve the problem. Continental Casualty Company, acting as Thomas & Parker's surety, issued a $170,000 performance bond for the project, incorporating by reference the contract between the district and Thomas & Parker. The contract consisted of two standard forms and the parties' addendums. Under the contract, disputes would first be submitted in writing to the architect, and, if the parties were not satisfied with the architect's resolution of the problem, would then be subject to binding arbitration. The project was to be completed by September 1, 1997.

In the late fall of 1997, the district determined that it had become the owner of an aging stadium with a leaky roof coated with XYPEX. After concluding that Thomas & Parker had neither used the proper application method nor applied enough XYPEX to the outer roof surface, the district consulted with the architect to come up with a remedial plan and, after offering to negotiate for the remedial work to be performed by Thomas & Parker,2 hired another contractor to fix the problem by coating the underside of the roof with XYPEX. The record does not reflect the submission of a written claim to the architect. The district refused to pay Thomas & Parker the balance due under the original contract and filed suit in Arkansas state court against the appellants, Thomas & Parker and Continental, to recover the cost of the remedial work. The appellants removed the case to federal district court and filed a motion to dismiss or, in the alternative, to compel arbitration. The district court entered an order staying the action pending arbitration. The district made a demand for arbitration, and an arbitration proceeding was scheduled for December 15-17, 1999.

Prior to the hearing, the appellants filed a motion with the arbitrator to dismiss the arbitration, asserting (1) that by not properly submitting its claim to the architect, the district had failed to fulfill a condition precedent to arbitration; and (2) that the district's claims were barred by laches and waiver because of the delay in bringing the claim and because the district's proceeding with remedial work before arbitration commenced made it impossible to determine whether Thomas & Parker had fulfilled its contractual obligations. The arbitrator denied the motion, concluding that the dispute was appropriate for arbitration and that neither laches nor waiver applied. Thomas & Parker then counterclaimed for the remaining balance on the contract.

On December 13, 1997, appellants' then-counsel moved for a continuance because his eighteen-month-old son had been scheduled for an outpatient surgical procedure to alleviate a recurrent ear infection problem. The district objected on the grounds that the arbitration had been scheduled for almost three months, that the outpatient procedure was relatively minor, that significant preparations had been made and airline tickets purchased on the assumption that the arbitration would take place when scheduled, and that a last-minute continuance on the eve of arbitration would prejudice the district. The arbitrator denied the continuance on December 14. Appellants' counsel did not attend the arbitration and advised his clients not to do so. The arbitrator conducted the hearing and found in favor of the district on both its claim and Thomas & Parker's counterclaim, awarding the district damages in the amount of $206,409. Thereafter, on the district's motion, the district court entered judgment on the arbitrator's award.

II.

The appellants contend that the arbitration award should be vacated because the arbitrator "lacked jurisdiction" to consider the district's claim because of the district's failure to submit a written claim to the architect, which appellants argue is a condition precedent to arbitration. As noted earlier, the appellants raised this issue before the arbitrator, who denied their motion to dismiss. The appellants now contend that although the issue was appropriate for resolution by the arbitrator under the doctrine of procedural arbitrability, we should nonetheless set aside that determination because the failure of the condition precedent deprived the arbitrator of jurisdiction. As the district court noted, this is an unusual argument, considering that it was the appellants who filed the motion to compel arbitration on the grounds that the doctrine of procedural arbitrability reserved this question for the arbitrator.

The appellants concede that the question whether the contractual conditions precedent were met is a question of procedural, rather than substantive, arbitrability.

Our review of the challenged procedural arbitrability determinations must be conducted in light of the established principle that such issues should be left to the arbitrator to decide. This rule of deference is founded on the recognition that (1) procedural questions are often intertwined with the merits of the dispute and (2) the reservation of procedural issues for the courts provides an opportunity for serious delay and duplication of effort. In translating this rule of deference into a standard of review, we must therefore accord even greater deference to the arbitrator's decisions on procedural matters than those bearing on substantive grounds . . . . [A]n arbitrator's conclusions on substantive matters may be vacated only when the award demonstrates a manifest disregard of the law where the arbitrators correctly state the law and then proceed to disregard it, if the award is otherwise irrational, or if any of the explicit grounds for vacation or modification set forth in [the Federal Arbitration Act] are present . . . Given the narrow sweep of that standard it is difficult to articulate a standard of even lesser scope to apply for procedural challenges.

Stroh Container Co. v. Delphi Indus., Inc., 783 F.2d 743, 748-49 (8th Cir. 1986) (citations omitted).

Our disagreement with an arbitrator's interpretation of the law or determination of facts is an insufficient basis for setting aside his award. Hoffman v.

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247 F.3d 843, 2001 U.S. App. LEXIS 7688, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/el-dorado-school-district-15-v-continental-casualty-company-ca8-2001.