Mar v. Perkins

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 22, 2024
DocketB327665
StatusPublished

This text of Mar v. Perkins (Mar v. Perkins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mar v. Perkins, (Cal. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Filed 5/22/24 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION SEVEN

WINSTON MAR, B327665

Plaintiff and Respondent, (Los Angeles County Super. Ct. v. No. 22STCV26170)

LAWRENCE PERKINS et al.,

Defendants and Appellants.

APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, Maurice A. Leiter, Judge. Affirmed. Practus, Sana Swe and Andrew W. Heger for Defendants and Appellants. Cohen Williams, Marc S. Williams and Martin J. Chrisopher Santos for Plaintiff and Respondent.

__________________________

SierraConstellation Partners, LLC (Sierra) and Lawrence Perkins (collectively, Sierra defendants) appeal from an order denying their motion to compel arbitration of Winston Mar’s

1 action for buyout of his partnership interest. The trial court found the Sierra defendants failed to meet their burden to establish the existence of an arbitration agreement because Mar clearly stated that he refused to sign the arbitration agreement and Sierra could terminate his employment if it objected. On appeal, the Sierra defendants contend the trial court erred because Sierra notified Mar that his continued employment constituted assent to the arbitration agreement, and Mar continued his employment for 19 months before he left Sierra and filed this lawsuit. The Sierra defendants are correct that where an employer modifies its employment policy to require employees to arbitrate their disputes and clearly communicates to employees that continued employment will constitute assent to an arbitration agreement, the employees will generally be bound by the agreement if they continue to work for the company. However, where, as here, the employee promptly rejects the arbitration agreement and makes clear he or she refuses to be bound by the agreement, there is no mutual assent to arbitrate. We affirm.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

A. Mar’s Complaint On August 12, 2022 Mar commenced this action, asserting a cause of action for buyout of his partnership interest in Sierra pursuant to Corporations Code section 16405.1 Mar alleged that

1 Under Corporations Code section 16405, subdivision (b)(2)(B), a partner who dissociates from a partnership “may maintain an action against the partnership or

2 in June 2015 he and the Sierra defendants entered into a general partnership “to conduct business as a national interim management and advisory firm serving middle-market companies” facing “difficult business challenges.”2 On April 1, 2022 Mar provided the Sierra defendants with written notice of his dissociation from the partnership effective that date. In his notice, Mar stated the Sierra defendants were required to purchase Mar’s partnership interest within 120 days pursuant to Corporations Code section 16701, subdivisions (a) and (e). The Sierra defendants did not respond to Mar’s demand for payment or tender any payment for his partnership interest. Mar sought a determination of the buyout price of his partnership interest; an order directing the Sierra defendants to pay the buyout price plus interest; costs of suit; and reasonable attorneys’ fees and the fees and expenses of any appraisers and other experts.

B. The Sierra Defendants’ Motion To Compel Arbitration On November 29, 2022 the Sierra defendants filed a motion to compel arbitration.3 They argued Mar was an at-will employee

another partner” to “have the partner’s interest in the partnership purchased.” 2 Mar alleged he was a partner, which the Sierra defendants dispute. We treat Mar as an employee for purposes of this opinion and express no opinion on the merits of his cause of action. 3 The Sierra defendants styled their motion as a petition to compel arbitration. (See Code Civ. Proc., § 1281.2 [referring to a request to enforce an arbitration agreement as a “petition of a party to an arbitration agreement”].) However, because the pleading was filed in an existing lawsuit, we treat it as a motion

3 and was bound by the arbitration agreement in Sierra’s employee handbook because the handbook stated that Mar’s obligation to arbitrate was an express term of his employment. Further, Mar’s refusal to sign the handbook acknowledgment and standalone arbitration agreement was immaterial because Mar’s continued employment with Sierra for 19 months after Sierra added the mandatory arbitration agreement to its handbook created an implied-in-fact agreement to arbitrate between the parties.4 The Sierra defendants argued Mar’s claim fell within the scope of the arbitration agreement, and he was therefore required to arbitrate in accordance with federal and state law, which strongly favored arbitration. In support of their motion, the Sierra defendants submitted a declaration from Rebecca Waits, Sierra’s chief people officer, who started working at Sierra in October 2019. Waits stated that Perkins, Sierra’s chief executive officer, founded Sierra in January 2013. Mar began working at Sierra as a business

to compel arbitration. (See Villareal v. LAD-T, LLC (2022) 84 Cal.App.5th 446, 452, fn. 2 [treating petition to compel arbitration filed in existing action as motion to compel arbitration]; Phillips v. Sprint PCS (2012) 209 Cal.App.4th 758, 772 [“There is an ‘analytic distinction’ between a motion (or petition) to compel arbitration filed within an existing action, as here, and a petition to compel arbitration that commences an independent action.”].) Further undesignated statutory references are to the Code of Civil Procedure. 4 The Sierra defendants argued Mar worked for an additional 18 months at Sierra, but we count 19 months from the date Sierra proposed the arbitration agreement until he left Sierra.

4 advisor in July 2013. According to Waits, Mar is an at-will employee with the title of “Managing Director.” Mar was paid a salary, and he received an annual W-2 form from Sierra until his employment ended in 2022. In 2020 Sierra added a mandatory arbitration agreement to its employee handbook. On August 11, 2020 Waits emailed a copy of the handbook to all Sierra employees, including Mar, along with a separate arbitration agreement.5 Waits stated in her email, “Please print out and sign the acknowledgments for the handbook, non-harassment policy and binding arbitration policy.” (Boldface omitted.) Waits averred in her declaration that Mar called her “to say that he would not sign either document.” On August 17 and 21 Waits sent emails requesting that employees send their signed acknowledgments to her by August 21. On August 31 Waits emailed Mar, stating in part, “We know that you have received this Employee Handbook, and that you are aware of its terms, regardless of the fact that you have refused to sign for it. We are therefore advising you, by way of this memo, that whether or not you agree to sign the Acknowledgment of Employee Handbook, these are the rules of this Company and they do still apply to you, including the mandatory arbitration provisions. . . . [¶] We are just sending this memo to you to say that you do not have to sign the Employee Handbook. Regardless, because you have received the handbook and are aware of its terms, if indeed you elect to continue your employment with . . . us beyond today, August 31,

5 Waits’s August 2020 emails, including her August 31 email exchange with Mar, were attached as exhibits to Waits’s declaration.

5 2020[,] you will be deemed to have accepted the terms of these policies of the Employee Handbook, including the arbitration provisions, and will be bound by and held accountable to them, regardless of the fact that you have failed to sign it, and regardless of any express objections you may have noted.” Mar responded eight minutes later by email, “Again, I am not signing this handbook. And will not be bound by it.

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Bluebook (online)
Mar v. Perkins, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mar-v-perkins-calctapp-2024.