Joseph L. Wilmotte & Co. v. Rosenman Bros.

258 N.W.2d 317
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedNovember 8, 1977
Docket2-58870
StatusPublished
Cited by47 cases

This text of 258 N.W.2d 317 (Joseph L. Wilmotte & Co. v. Rosenman Bros.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Joseph L. Wilmotte & Co. v. Rosenman Bros., 258 N.W.2d 317 (iowa 1977).

Opinion

REES, Justice.

This is an appeal from the order and decree of the District Court of Wapello County, establishing and confirming a judgment in favor of plaintiff and against defendant entered by a Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York, which judgment was based on an arbitration award against the defendant. We find no reversible error and affirm the trial court.

In August of 1968 the defendant, Schwartz Enterprises, Inc., d/b/a Rosen-man Bros., placed an order for steel products with Edgar A. Baer, a steel broker of New Orleans. Baer, in turn, placed the order with plaintiff, a New York corporation. Acknowledgments of the order were sent by plaintiff to the defendant at defendant’s Ottumwa, Iowa, address, and in due course the acknowledgments of the order with the confirmation of defendant by and through defendant’s agent, L. J. Lynn, were returned to plaintiff. The record discloses Lynn was at all material times an employee of the defendant and was authorized to execute the confirmations of the orders.

In all, five acknowledgment documents were sent to the defendant from plaintiff, all of which were signed by Lynn and returned. On the top of the front of each of the acknowledgment documents the following language appeared: “We thank you for your above-mentioned order, placed with us through Edgar A. Baer, and are pleased to confirm having booked for your account, subject to the following conditions of sales shown on the reverse side, the following material.” (italics ours). Then follows a description of certain elements of the material ordered. On the reverse side referred to there were 11 general conditions of sale, and paragraph 10 reads as follows: “Any controversy or claim arising out of or related to this order and its acceptance shall be settled by arbitration in accordance with the rules, then obtaining, of the American Arbitration Association; and judgment may be entered upon the award rendered in the highest court of the forum, State or Federal.”

*320 Shipment of the several elements of the orders under the contracts of sale was made in due course to the defendant’s yards in Ottumwa, and after delivery of the several shipments defendant claimed certain portions of the material received at its yard were unacceptable and as a result only partial payment for the steel was made. Plaintiff disputed the contention that the material was unacceptable and demanded full payment for the steel.

On August 20, 1970 plaintiff filed a demand for arbitration with the American Arbitration Association (hereinafter AAA). In its demand plaintiff requested that the locale for arbitration be in New York City. A copy of the demand was sent to the defendant at Ottumwa, and on September 11, 1970 the defendant filed an answer to plaintiff’s demand for arbitration, claiming that partial payment was in fact made and that there were deficiencies or defects in the materials delivered, and requested that Ottumwa be fixed as the locale for the arbitration hearing.

It is true that the acknowledgments of sale upon which defendant’s confirmations by and through its agent Lynn appeared did not fix the locale for arbitration hearing. However, according to the terms of said documents, paragraph 10 of the conditions of sale provided that the rules of the AAA were to govern any arbitration of any dispute under the contract. The commercial arbitration rules of the AAA were admitted into the record on the trial of this case by stipulation of the parties and § 10 of said rules provides: “The parties may mutually agree on the locale where the arbitration is to be held. If the locale is not designated within seven days from the date of the filing the Demand or Submission, the AAA shall have the power to determine the locale. Its decision shall be final and binding. If any party requests that the hearing be held in a specific locale and the other party files no objection thereto within seven days after notice of the request, the locale shall be the one requested.”

There was no agreement between the parties as to the locale for arbitration, and the AAA, pursuant to its powers under § 10 of its rules, fixed New York City as the locale for arbitration, and rejected defendant’s request that the arbitration be had in Ottumwa.

On January 25,1971 defendant filed with the AAA an instrument designated “withdrawal from arbitration” and thereafter did not participate in the arbitration proceedings. The proceedings on the dispute continued without defendant’s participation in accordance with rule 29 of the Commercial Arbitration Rules which provides that unless the law provides to the contrary, the arbitration could proceed in the absence of any party who after due notice failed to be present or failed to obtain an adjournment. Arbitrators were chosen and a hearing on the dispute was held in accordance with AAA rules. On June 28, 1971 the arbitrators made an award to the plaintiff in the amount of $9,388.50 plus costs.

Following the award, the plaintiff instituted its action in a division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York and prayed that the court enforce the arbitration award that was made in its favor. Under § 39b of the AAA rules service of notice of or process in any arbitration proceedings or court action related thereto under the agreement for arbitration could be served by mail. The New York court directed that service of notice of the judicial proceedings be made by registered mail to the defendant which, in fact, was done. The defendant did not participate in the proceedings in the Supreme Court of New York and on September 30, 1971 judgment was entered by the New York court in favor of the plaintiff and against defendant on the arbitration award.

Suit was then instituted in the District Court of Wapello County, Iowa, for the establishment of the New York judgment as an enforceable judgment in Iowa. Defendant answered, denying any liability under the arbitration award or the New York judgment, and claimed that since the contracts between plaintiff and defendant for the purchase of the steel were Iowa contracts, Iowa law applied and that the agree *321 ments to arbitrate were invalid since they did not comply with § 679.2 of the Code or that defendant’s withdrawal from arbitration made the agreements to arbitrate a nullity since under Iowa common law a party to an arbitration agreement can withdraw at any time from an arbitration proceedings prior to the granting of an award. Also, defendant claimed that the arbitration agreement could not be enforced since the defendant had not agreed to it, contending that it had not expressly agreed to arbitrate and that the agent, Lynn, who had signed the contract for the defendant did not have the authority to enter into an arbitration agreement which would be binding on the defendant.

Defendant further contended by way of resistance to plaintiffs petition in the trial court that the defendant, through its board of directors, did not expressly agree to submit all of the disputes under the five contracts to arbitration and that the courts of the State of New York did not acquire in personam jurisdiction over the defendant since there was no physical presence in New York, the defendant never was engaged in business in New York and never expressly consented to be under the jurisdiction of the New York courts.

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Bluebook (online)
258 N.W.2d 317, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/joseph-l-wilmotte-co-v-rosenman-bros-iowa-1977.