Lamkin v. Morinda Properties Weight Parcel, LLC

440 F. App'x 604
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 19, 2011
Docket11-4022
StatusUnpublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 440 F. App'x 604 (Lamkin v. Morinda Properties Weight Parcel, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lamkin v. Morinda Properties Weight Parcel, LLC, 440 F. App'x 604 (10th Cir. 2011).

Opinion

ORDER AND JUDGMENT *

PAUL KELLY, JR., Circuit Judge.

Defendant Morinda Properties Weight Parcel LLC (Morinda) appeals from a dis *606 trict court order denying its motion to dismiss or to stay and refer this action to arbitration under Section 4 of the Federal Arbitration Act (FAA), 9 U.S.C. § 4. We have jurisdiction under 9 U.S.C. § 16(a)(1), and review the district court’s ruling de novo, Ansari v. Qwest Commc’ns Corp., 414 F.3d 1214, 1218 (10th Cir.2005). For reasons explained below, we reverse and remand with directions to refer the parties’ dispute to arbitration. We also hold that Morinda is entitled to attorney fees and costs incurred in enforcing its right to arbitrate, and direct the district court to determine the appropriate amount on remand.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Plaintiffs contracted to purchase two condominiums to be built by Morinda, and paid $256,400 in earnest money to reserve the properties. The two purchase contracts included a dispute resolution clause providing for a two-step process of formal mediation and (if necessary) binding arbitration:

15. DISPUTE RESOLUTION. The parties agree that any dispute arising prior to or after Closing, related to this Contract, whether based on a theory of tort, contract or warranty, shall first be submitted to mediation.... If mediation fails, the parties agree that all disputes arising out of or related to this Contract or the Property, whether based on a theory of tort, contract or wanunty shall then be submitted to mandatory binding arbitration which shall be conducted by the American Arbitration Association. Nothing in this Section 15 shall prohibit any party from seeking ... a judicial decree compelling arbitration or judicial enforcement of an arbitration award.

App. at 60-61, 72-73 (emphasis added). The contracts required Morinda to substantially complete construction within twenty-six months, id. at 62, 74, but the deadline could be extended for certain contingencies, id. at 59-60, 71-72. If Morinda defaulted, plaintiffs’ “sole and exclusive remedies” were rescission of the contract and return of their earnest money. Id. at 61, 73.

Eventually, delay in construction and disagreement over grounds for an extension of the deadline brought the parties into mediation, pursuant to the dispute resolution provision. When mediation failed to resolve the matter, plaintiffs did not commence arbitration proceedings but instead filed this diversity suit for breach of contract. Morinda moved in the alternative to dismiss the action or to stay it and compel arbitration. In response, plaintiffs argued that Morinda had waived its right to insist on arbitration when, through an email exchange, it initially agreed to accept service of plaintiffs’ complaint.

When the matter came on for hearing, the district court expressed doubt about plaintiffs’ waiver argument but interjected a different theory for rejecting arbitration: the provision specifying rescission and recovery of earnest money as buyers’ exclusive remedy for seller’s default nullified the arbitration provision. The court stated this point in two ways. First, it characterized arbitration as a “remedy” that, as such, was displaced by the exclusive-remedy provision when, as here, a buyer sued the seller for default. Second, it reasoned *607 that the presence of what was, in essence, a liquidated-damages clause meant that there was nothing to arbitrate when a seller was in default. As to the existence of the default, the court proposed to resolve that issue itself.

Morinda vigorously objected to this reasoning at the hearing and in a later supplemental memorandum of law. It argued that arbitration is not a contractual remedy in the sense used in the exclusive-remedy provision but, rather, an agreed upon process — substituting for litigation— to effectuate such remedies. Thus, to obviate arbitration by litigating the crux of a contract dispute (the seller’s alleged default), as the court proposed to do, would replace arbitration with the very litigation it was meant to supplant. Plaintiffs submitted a short supplemental memorandum in response, seeking to bolster the court’s analysis by citing several Utah cases referring to arbitration as a “remedy,” though none did so to equate and subordinate an arbitration clause to an ordinary contractual-remedy provision and thereby allow litigation of an otherwise arbitrable dispute.

The district court issued a brief order denying Morinda’s motion to compel arbitration. But in this order the court articulated yet another novel rationale for denying arbitration, based on its determination that no “dispute” existed to which the arbitration provision could attach. In essence, it held that to create a dispute sufficient to trigger arbitration, Morinda had to file a responsive pleading denying the allegation of breach/default in plaintiffs’ complaint:

The real estate purchase contracts between Plaintiffs and Defendant require arbitration of “all disputes arising out of or related to this Contract or Property, whether based on a theory of tort, contract or warranty....” Thus, whether an issue is referable to arbitration hinges upon whether there is a dispute. Plaintiffs allege contractual default by the Defendant. Defendant does not admit, deny, or otherwise address this allegation in its pleadings. Absent a response on the question of contractual default, no dispute has yet been raised, and absent a dispute there can be no issue to refer[ ] to arbitration.

App. at 237-38 (citations to record omitted).

ANALYSIS OF ARBITRABILITY

Morinda challenges and plaintiffs defend both the reasoning articulated by the district court at the hearing (regarding the effect of the exclusive-remedy provision on the arbitration clause) and the rationale stated in the district court’s order (regarding the need for a responsive pleading to create a dispute and thereby trigger the arbitration clause). We therefore address both points here. Morinda also contends that plaintiffs’ argument for waiver of arbitration fails. Because the operative facts are undisputed, we address that issue as well.

A. Lack of a Responsive Pleading and the Presence of a “Dispute”

Neither the district court nor plaintiffs cited any authority holding that an arbitra-ble dispute does not exist unless and until the defendant files a responsive pleading in litigation. On the contrary, “[a] defendant in a pending lawsuit may file a petition or motion to compel arbitration in lieu of an answer to the complaint,” Jay A. Grenig, Alternative Dispute Resolution § 23:3 at 574 (3d ed.2005) — as procedural summaries in arbitration cases uncontroversially reflect, see, e.g., Green Tree Fin. Corp. v. Randolph, 531 U.S. 79, 83, 121 S.Ct.

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Bluebook (online)
440 F. App'x 604, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lamkin-v-morinda-properties-weight-parcel-llc-ca10-2011.