Industra/Matrix Joint Venture v. Pope & Talbot, Inc.

113 P.3d 961, 200 Or. App. 248, 2005 Ore. App. LEXIS 735
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedJune 15, 2005
Docket0112-12723; A121936
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 113 P.3d 961 (Industra/Matrix Joint Venture v. Pope & Talbot, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Industra/Matrix Joint Venture v. Pope & Talbot, Inc., 113 P.3d 961, 200 Or. App. 248, 2005 Ore. App. LEXIS 735 (Or. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

*250 SCHUMAN, P. J.

After denying plaintiffs petition to compel arbitration of this dispute over performance of a contract, the trial court granted defendant’s motion for summary judgment. Plaintiff appeals, arguing that an arbitrator, not the court, should have made the decision regarding arbitrability and that, in any event, even if the court was the proper forum for hearing the case, it erred in granting summary judgment. We agree with plaintiffs first contention and consequently reverse and remand.

Plaintiff is Industra/Matrix Joint Venture (plaintiff or Industra/Matrix), an entity consisting of Industra Service Corporation (Industra) and Matrix Service, Inc., (Matrix). Industra/Matrix was created for the limited purpose of entering into and performing two contracts with defendant Pope & Talbot, Inc., to install a bleaching system at defendant’s paper mill in Halsey. When the contract was formed, and at all times during its performance, both Matrix and Industra held licenses from the Oregon Construction Contractors’ Board (CCB), but Industra/Matrix, the joint venture, did not.

The parties executed the contracts, under which defendant was to pay plaintiff approximately $2 million for its services, in March and April 2000. The contracts contained identical provisions requiring the parties to arbitrate, with certain exceptions, “all disputes between the Owner and Contractor which are not settled satisfactorily” by preliminary measures short of arbitration, including submission of any dispute to a specified project engineer. The contracts also specified that, except as otherwise stated, “the provisions of The Arbitration Act of Oregon * * * shall apply to any arbitration hearings.”

Plaintiff completed the work in October 2000. During the course of the project, defendant submitted numerous change orders, and plaintiff had to adjust its work due to structural and equipment errors. The parties dispute whether plaintiff submitted claims to the engineer as required under the contracts. In any event, plaintiff submitted a claim summary in November 2000 requesting $1,892,538 in additional costs. Defendant refused payment, *251 and plaintiff filed a construction lien against defendant’s Halsey mill. After unsuccessful settlement attempts, plaintiff brought this action for breach of contract and quantum meruit, seeking $2,600,000 in damages — the amount plaintiff claimed it had expended in labor, materials, and equipment ($5,000,000) minus the amount defendant had paid ($2,400,000).

At the close of discovery, plaintiff petitioned the court to abate litigation and compel arbitration. ORS 36.315 (2001); ORS 36.310 (2001). 1 Plaintiff argued that, because the contracts governed the parties’ obligations with respect to a project involving interstate commerce — Matrix had headquarters in Oklahoma and Industra is based in the State of Washington — the Federal Arbitration Act (FAA), 9 USC sections 1 to 16, applied, notwithstanding the contracts’ Oregon choice of law provisions. Further, according to plaintiff, under the FAA and its case law, an arbitrator, rather than the court, decides whether contractual or statutory conditions precedent to arbitration have been met, as well as a claim’s merits. Thus, according to plaintiff, applicable law (the FAA) required the court to submit the entire matter to arbitration.

In response, defendant argued that the parties’ choice of Oregon law extended to all arbitration matters and that, under Oregon law, the court rather than the arbitrator must determine whether contractual conditions precedent to arbitration had been met. See Moresi v. Nationwide Mutual, 96 Or App 61, 64, 771 P2d 301 (1989), rev’d on other grounds, 309 Or 619, 789 P2d 667 (1990) (“[conditions that the parties agreed on about access to the arbitral forum” are matters for the court). According to defendant, the court therefore had authority to determine, and should determine, that plaintiffs failure to meet those conditions precedent foreclosed arbitration. In addition, defendant argued that, by bringing suit, plaintiff waived any right to demand arbitration that it might otherwise have had.

*252 The trial court concluded that plaintiff had not waived its right to demand arbitration. The court nonetheless denied that demand, reasoning that, under the contracts, the Oregon Arbitration Act, ORS 36.300 to 36.365 (2001) (OAA), applied to all aspects of the arbitration issue. Under that act, whether plaintiff met statutory or contractual conditions precedent was a decision for the court. Moresi, 96 Or App at 64. The court then determined that plaintiff had not met the prerequisites, based on three conclusions: First, plaintiff had not performed the contractual condition precedent of submitting claims to the project engineer; second, plaintiff had not complied with ORS 701.065(1), under which a contractor that does not have a CCB license may not commence an arbitration; and third, plaintiff was not “aggrieved” under ORS 36.310 because it did not make the necessary demand for arbitration.

Having successfully defeated plaintiffs demand for abatement and arbitration, defendant moved for summary judgment on the basis that plaintiff was barred from suing due to its failure to acquire a CCB license as a joint venture, a prerequisite to litigation under ORS 701.065(1). 2 Rejecting plaintiffs argument that it fell within an exception to the statute, the trial court granted defendant’s motion and dismissed plaintiffs claims.

On appeal, the parties renew the arguments they made below. Plaintiff contends that the trial court erred in refusing to compel arbitration and that, even if the conclusion was not error and the court was the proper adjudicator, its adjudication was substantively wrong because disputed issues of material fact exist as to whether plaintiff qualified *253 for an exemption from the CCB license requirement set forth in ORS 701.065(2). Based on our conclusion that the FAA applies, we agree with plaintiff that the trial court erred in refusing to abate litigation and compel arbitration. The trial court also necessarily erred in considering the merits of defendant’s summary judgment motion, which are also matters for the arbitrator. We therefore reverse and remand.

Because it is dispositive, we begin with the arbitra-bility question, or, more precisely, with the question whether the trial court should have compelled arbitration.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
113 P.3d 961, 200 Or. App. 248, 2005 Ore. App. LEXIS 735, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/industramatrix-joint-venture-v-pope-talbot-inc-orctapp-2005.