Maria Colacurcio v. Brent Frei

455 P.3d 192
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedDecember 30, 2019
Docket79981-9
StatusPublished

This text of 455 P.3d 192 (Maria Colacurcio v. Brent Frei) 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
Maria Colacurcio v. Brent Frei, 455 P.3d 192 (Wash. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

MARIA COLACURCIO, ) NO. 79981-9-I

Respondent, ) DIVISION ONE ) v. ) PUBLISHED OPINION BRENT FREI, ) ) Appellant. ) FILED: December 30, 2019

LEACH, J. — Brent Frei asks this court to modify a decision by a

commissioner of this court concluding that he does not have an immediate right

to appeal superior court orders that recused one arbitrator and appointed

another. Because Frei may not appeal these orders as of right, we deny the

motion to modify.

FACTS

On June 5, 2018, Maria Colacurcio sued her ex-husband, Brent Frei. She

claimed that during the mediation of their marriage dissolution case, Frei

committed securities fraud, breach of fiduciary duties, and other misconduct by

failing to disclose important financial information. The mediation produced a

settlement agreement that included an arbitration provision: No.79981-9-1/2

Williams . .or another agreed upon arbitrator (if the parties .

cannot agree, two of the above named arbitrator[ Is will decide upon a person to act) if none of the above are available to act. Colacurcio asked the court to decide that her claims were not subject to

this arbitration provision. Frei asked the court to compel arbitration. The trial

court granted Frei’s request and ordered arbitration before Dan Williams, who

had served as their mediator, “or another agreed upon arbitrator in compliance

with the parties’ CR 2A Agreement.” Neither party appealed the order.

Arbitration began before Williams.

Several months into arbitration, during a March 2019 deposition, Frei said

that during the mediation he disclosed to Williams information that Colacurcio

claimed Frel withheld from her. After the deposition, Colacurcio’s counsel sent a

letter to Williams, raising the concern that Frei’s statements made Williams a

material witness and undermined his ability to serve as arbitrator. Frei’s counsel

sent Williams a letter denying Williams’s importance as a witness and describing

Williams as “the appropriate person to arbitrate this dispute.” Williams then

suspended his involvement in the arbitration “absent further agreement or court

order.”

Colacurcio asked Frel to agree to proposed conditions under which

Williams could continue as arbitrator, to stipulate to a new arbitrator, or to provide

the names of acceptable replacements. Frei responded by asking the trial court

“to enforce [the] parties’ CR 2A agreement” and rule that Williams should -2- No. 79981-9-I /3

continue as arbitrator. In his request, he described the issue before the court as,

“Should the Court enforce the parties’ CR 2A agreement and retain Dan Williams

as Arbitrator?” He asserted that recusal was not appropriate given the

circumstances and Washington law and that Colacurcio’s request would

prejudice him improperly.

The same day Colacurcio asked the court to disqualify Williams and

appoint a new arbitrator. She suggested Judge Palmer Robinson (retired), Judge

Paris Kallas (retired), or attorney James Smith. Frei replied that it was premature

to consider replacement arbitrators and asked the court to maintain Williams. He

also rejected the three arbitrators Colacurcio suggested and named two

attorneys, Larry Besk and Teresa McNally.

The trial court disqualified Williams. It found that Frel’s alleged ex parte

communication with him was a central issue in the arbitration. The court ordered

James Smith to replace Williams. If Smith was not available or was unwilling to

serve, it ordered Judge Palmer Robinson to replace Williams. It concluded by

stating that the court case remained “stayed pending resolution of the parties’

arbitration.”

Frei asked the court to reconsider part of its decision, contending that the

parties had to agree to a replacement arbitrator. He also claimed that the court

should not appoint Smith because Frei’s counsel had consulted with Smith earlier

-3- No. 79981-9-1/4

about the case. He stated that “[s]electing a new arbitrator in accordance with

[the] CR 2A Agreement’s mandated procedures will not be a futile exercise given

that Mr. Frei is prepared to agree to the appointment of Judge Kallas.”

The trial court ruled that because of this communication, Smith should not

serve as arbitrator. It found “that the time for mutually agreeing on an alternative

[arbitrator] has passed, in that the parties had the opportunity to agree, and were

unable to do so.” It appointed Judge Robinson or, alternatively, Judge Kallas.

Frei filed a notice of appeal challenging the trial court orders that

disqualified Williams and appointed Robinson. Colacurcio moved to dismiss the

appeal, asserting that the orders were not appealable and the court should not

grant discretionary review.1 A commissioner of this court ruled that the

challenged orders were not immediately appealable.

Frei filed a motion to modify the commissioner’s ruling and asked this

court to stay the arbitration until we resolved the issue of who would be the

arbitrator. A commissioner stayed the arbitration and ordered that any note for a

hearing on a motion for discretionary review would be due 10 days after this

court’s decision on the motion to modify.

1According to her answer to his motion to modify, Colacurcio initially requested that he “re-characterize [his] filing as a notice for discretionary review,” which he did not do. -4- No. 79981-9-I I 5

ANALYSIS

Frei contends that RAP 2.2(a)(3) and ROW 7.04A.280(1)(a) provide him

with an immediate right to appeal the trial court’s orders removing Williams as

arbitrator and appointing a new arbitrator. We disagree.

This court reviews a motion to modify a commissioners ruling de novo.2

RAP 2.2 identifies the decisions that a party may appeal as a matter of right.

RAP 2.3 provides a procedure for requesting discretionary appellate review of a

superior court decision not appealable as a matter of right. This rule also

describes the considerations governing acceptance of discretionary review. Frei

has not filed a motion for discretionary review, so we consider only whether he

may appeal the challenged orders as a matter of right.

Frei relies on RAP 2.2(a)(3) and RCW 7.04.280(1)(a). RAP 2.2(a)(3)

allows a party to appeal “[amy written decision [by the superior court] affecting a

substantial right in a civil case that in effect determines the action and prevents a

final judgment or discontinues the action.” This rule allows appeal of the denial

of a motion to compel arbitration because it determines the action and affects

substantial rights.3 Frei contends that recusal of Williams is analogous because

it denies him the arbitration he contracted to receive.

2 State v. Vasguez, 95 Wn. App. 12, 15, 972 P.2d 109 (1998). ~ Stein v. Geonerco, Inc., 105 Wn. App 41, 44, 17 P.3d 1266 (2001) (citing Herzoq v. Foster & Marshall, Inc., 56 Wn. App. 437, 443, 783 P.2d 1124. (1989)). -5- No. 79981-9-116

Washington has adopted the uniform arbitration act (UAA).4 It governs the

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Bluebook (online)
455 P.3d 192, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maria-colacurcio-v-brent-frei-washctapp-2019.