Luvaas Family Farms v. Ferrell Family Farms

106 Wash. App. 399
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMay 29, 2001
DocketNo. 19000-5-III
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 106 Wash. App. 399 (Luvaas Family Farms v. Ferrell Family Farms) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Luvaas Family Farms v. Ferrell Family Farms, 106 Wash. App. 399 (Wash. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

Schultheis, J.

Ferrell Family Farms (Ferrell) and Luvaas Family Farms (Luvaas) owned almost 4,000 acres of farmland as tenants in common. They managed the land under a farming agreement. When Ferrell attempted to lease the land, Luvaas balked. Ferrell submitted the issue of leasing to arbitration. The arbitrators decided that leasing should be allowed, but also decided that the farming agreement could be terminated and the land partitioned. The superior court confirmed the arbitration award. On appeal, Ferrell contends the arbitrators exceeded their [401]*401authority in deciding issues that were not presented to them and in negating the express terms of the farming agreement. We agree, and reverse and remand.

Facts

Robert and Callie Ferrell were Garfield County farmers who entered into a partnership with their son and daughter-in-law, Lloyd and Helen Ferrell, and their daughter and son-in-law, Edna and Norman Luvaas, in the mid-1980s. When Robert and Callie died, the Ferrells and the Luvaases took ownership of the farmland as tenants in common. At the time of the commencement of this action, the Ferrells consisted of Helen, her son Donald, and her daughter Kathleen. The Luvaases consisted of Edna’s daughter, Joanne Robison, and Ms. Robison’s sister’s heirs.

In June 1981, the Luvaas family executed a limited partnership agreement. The partnership lists as one of its purposes the leasing of farm property. It also provides that the partnership will expire after 50 years. The Ferrells executed a limited partnership agreement in January 1982 with nearly identical terms.

Luvaas and Ferrell entered into a farming agreement in 1984. According to its opening statement, the agreement is intended

[t]o facilitate the efficient and successful management of their respective businesses, considering each party’s dependence upon the other .... Additionally, the individual partners of each party being related and desiring to maintain ownership and control over the properties, the parties also desire to impose restrictions and grant certain rights regarding the transfer of a party’s interest [in] the property covered by this agreement.

Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 6. The farming agreement establishes that each partnership will be represented by one or two owners, who have two votes each. In most cases, a majority vote will decide matters, but under certain circumstances, the agreement requires a unanimous vote. For [402]*402example, a unanimous vote is required for the “sale, exchange, assignment, conveyance, encumbrance or other transfer of both Owners’ interest in the Property, other than a sale or exchange in the ordinary course of business.” CP at 11. The agreement also waives the parties’ rights to partition the property:

Each Owner agrees that irreparable damage would be done the other Owner and the partners of the other Owner if any Owner should bring an action in Court for the partition or sale of the Property. Care has been taken in this Agreement to provide what the parties feel are fair and just payments to be made to an Owner whose relation with the Property is terminated for any reason. Accordingly, each of the Owners accepts the provisions of this Agreement as its sole entitlement on termination of its interest in the Property Each Owner hereby expressly waives any statutory or other rights which it may have to seek partition of the real estate and other property subject to this Agreement. Each future Owner, by acquiring an interest in the Property, whether by gift, bequest, devise, purchase or otherwise, expressly waives such right simultaneously with its acquisition, and acquires its interest subject to this Section 6.1.

CP at 15. Also relevant to this action, the agreement provides that in the event “any dispute” arises between the Owners, the dispute will be referred to arbitration. CP at 15-16.

Ms. Robison is the owner-representative of Luvaas and Donald Ferrell is the owner-representative of Ferrell. Acting under their direction, Gerald Magill was the farm manager for many years. In late 1998, Mr. Ferrell began to believe that Mr. Magill would be retiring soon. He asked one of the Luvaas partners, Debra Ledgerwood, if she and her husband, Ken, would be willing to lease the farm and run it for the families. Ms. Ledgerwood is Ms. Robison’s niece. Although the other Luvaas partners supported the lease, Ms. Robison opposed it. As a result, Ferrell filed a notice of demand for arbitration in July 1999. The notice states as follows: “Sole issue to be arbitrated: Whether or not to lease the Owners’ farm real properties to Ken & [403]*403Debbie Ledgerwood beginning September 1, 1999.” CP at 26.

In late July 1999, Ms. Robison filed a complaint for breach of contract and a motion to stay arbitration. The motion to stay arbitration was denied in August 1999 and the parties proceeded to arbitration later that month. Although the arbitration award approved the Ledgerwoods as tenants, it provided that Mr. Magill would continue as general manager through the 1999-2000 crop year. The parties were ordered to give leasing serious reconsideration as an option for the subsequent crop years. If, however, Luvaas and Ferrell could not reach an agreement by February 15, 2000, Ferrell was given the right to secure a suitable tenant for the farmland. The arbitration panel agreed to reconvene if the parties did not agree at that time to the suitability of the chosen tenant. At the end of this eight-page arbitration award, the panel added the language that is the subject of this appeal:

By awarding the above award, it is the hope of the Arbitration Panel the parties are able to resolve their differences in as amicable fashion as possible given the present circumstances. If this is not possible, in order that each party may control their own destiny, free from the other party, a termination of the Farming Agreement, coupled with a partition agreement, is available to either party.

CP at 47. The availability of the termination and partition options was established by the arbitrators’ deletion of the farming agreement provisions prohibiting termination or partition. The arbitrators found that these provisions probably constituted unreasonable restraints on the alienation of the property.

Ferrell moved to modify the arbitration award, arguing that the panel exceeded the scope of the arbitration when they did not confine themselves to the issue of the proposed lease. RCW 7.04.170(2) (authorizing modification if the arbitrators “have awarded upon a matter not submitted to them”). The superior court’s order confirming the arbitra[404]*404tors’ award and denying the motion to modify was entered in December 1999. This appeal followed.

Discussion

The purpose of arbitration is to avoid the expense and delay of litigation. Thorgaard Plumbing & Heating Co. v. County of King, 71 Wn.2d 126, 132, 426 P.2d 828 (1967); Westmark Props., Inc. v. McGuire, 53 Wn. App. 400, 402, 766 P.2d 1146 (1989). Although the duty to arbitrate arises from contract, the parties’ rights are governed by statute. Price v. Farmers Ins. Co.,

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Bluebook (online)
106 Wash. App. 399, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/luvaas-family-farms-v-ferrell-family-farms-washctapp-2001.