Milo Corporation. v. Carlson-Miller, Unpublished Decision (7-12-2001)

CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 12, 2001
DocketNo. 78420.
StatusUnpublished

This text of Milo Corporation. v. Carlson-Miller, Unpublished Decision (7-12-2001) (Milo Corporation. v. Carlson-Miller, Unpublished Decision (7-12-2001)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Milo Corporation. v. Carlson-Miller, Unpublished Decision (7-12-2001), (Ohio Ct. App. 2001).

Opinions

JOURNAL ENTRY AND OPINION
This is an appeal and cross appeal from an order of Judge Christine McMonagle, a foreclosure action that denied cross-appellant Milo Corporation's (Milo) motion to lift a December 23, 1999 stay order imposed pending completion of an arbitration of claims against appellee The Barden Robeson Corp. (Barden). Appellant Steven C. Hardwick claims this order wrongfully requires him to arbitrate his third-party claims against Barden, while Milo claims its foreclosure action is not subject to arbitration and it cannot be forced into arbitration without its consent. For the following reasons we affirm.

On December 6, 1995, Hardwick of Columbus, Ohio and Mickey G. Miller and Joan Carlson-Miller (the Millers) of Broadview Hts., Ohio, entered into an agreement whereby in exchange for a loan of $38,000 and co-signing a construction loan for the building of a residence on the Millers' Akins Road lot, Hardwick would receive a 1/3 interest in the property and the greater of $10,000 or 50% of the profit from the sale of the home in addition to his loan and interest. On December 28-29, 1995, Hardwick and the Millers executed a Building Loan Agreement with Milo to lend them $275,000 in exchange for a promissory note secured by an open end mortgage on the Akins Road property. On January 3, 1996, the Millers executed a contract with Barden1 to provide materials for the construction of the Normandy model of a Barden home, a custom pre-engineered shell, with a delivery date of February 2, 1996. The contract listed the purchasers as Miller/Hardwick.

Although the Millers and Hardwick had assumed a completion date prior to August 1996, various construction delays were encountered and by June 20, 1997, with the home yet unfinished, Hardwick and the Millers had obtained an additional $137,800 in loans from Milo, secured by notes and mortgages, for a total indebtedness of $412,800. By that time Milo had advised the Millers that it was taking over coordination of finishing the home. Apparently, due to a number of problems encountered with materials, city building code requirements and contractors/subcontractors, the structure remains unfinished to this day.

On June 26, 1999, the Millers notified Barden they had made a demand for arbitration, as required under their contract, with the American Arbitration Association and alleged damages of $500,000:

arising from [Barden's] breach of a contract to design and provide a material package for the construction of a personal residence. In addition [the Millers] seek treble damages and attorney fees under the Ohio Consumer Sales Practices Act and the Federal Magnuson Moss Consumer Warranty Act.

On August 4, 1999, Milo filed this complaint for money damages and foreclosure against the Millers, Hardwick and various public and private lien holders. On August 22, 1999, Hardwick answered and counterclaimed incorporating a third-party complaint against Barden alleging that Milo and Barden were alter egos and joint venturers and their acts and omissions are attributable and imputable to one another. He claimed to be an intended beneficiary to the contract between the Millers and Barden and contended that Milo and Barden are in breach of their oral and/or written contracts with defendant Hardwick. His nine counts alleged, among others, fraud, negligent misrepresentation, breach of contract, breach of fiduciary duty and lender liability. The Millers did not answer the complaint.

On November 1, 1999, Barden filed a motion to stay the proceedings on the basis that, because Hardwick sued it as a third-party beneficiary to the Miller contract containing the arbitration clause, he should join in the AAA arbitration. Additionally, it asserted that he was a partner with the Millers and, therefore, subject, under agency principles, to the arbitration provision. Hardwick opposed the stay asserting he could not be forced to arbitrate under a contract he had not signed. Although he denied he was a partner with the Millers, Hardwick claimed that partnership law did not operate to compel him to arbitrate his claims against Barden, and that Barden had waived its right to arbitrate by noticing a witness for deposition after moving for the stay. Additionally, he argued that many of his claims did not arise out of the Miller-Barden materials contract and, therefore, were not arbitrable in any event.

On December 23, 1999, the following order was journalized.

THIRD PARTY DEFT. BARDEN AND ROBESON MOTION FILED 11/1/99 TO STAY PROCEEDINGS IS GRANTED. CASE STAYED UNTIL ARB. PROCEEDINGS COMPLETED. COUNSEL TO NOTIFY COURT OF COMPLETION OF ARB. PROCEEDINGS. CASE TO BE REACTIVATED UPON NOTICE OF COUNSEL * * * VOL 2413 PAGE 297 * * * NOTICE ISSUED. DISPOSED OTHER 12/23/99.

Hardwick, however, never joined the Miller-Barden arbitration and, because of disputes over the scope of the arbitration proceedings and the Millers' refusal to pay the required deposits to the arbitration panel, the AAA has suspended those proceedings indefinitely until all deposits are made. On April 27, 2000, Barden filed a motion with the AAA to dismiss the arbitration for failure to prosecute, but it appears the panel has not addressed it.

On June 6, 2000, Milo filed a motion to lift the December 1999 stay order so that its foreclosure claims could proceed. Barden responded that any relief given to Milo should be limited to Milo's foreclosure claims against Hardwick and the Millers, and should not apply to any of Hardwick's claims involving Barden. It contended that Hardwick had never joined the arbitration as ordered and the Millers had intentionally frustrated the progress of the AAA proceedings. Hardwick, in reply to Milo's motion, claimed that he was never ordered to join the Miller-Barden arbitration and had merely been waiting for that arbitration to conclude so that once the stay was lifted he could pursue his claims against Milo and Barden in court.

On July 12, 2000, the following order was journalized:

AS FOUND PREVIOUSLY BY THIS COURT, BARDEN ROBISON [sic] IS ENTITLED TO HAVE THE THIRD-PARTY CLAIMS AGAINST IT ARBITRATED. SOME OF THESE CLAIMS ALLEGE THAT BARDEN ROBISON AND PLTF ARE ALTER EGOS AND HAVE COMMITTED FRAUD. IF THESE CLAIMS ARE PROVED, PLTF WOULD NOT PREVAIL ON ITS CLAIMS IN THIS CASE. BARDEN ROBISON OBJECTS TO LIFTING THE STAY AS TO THE CLAIMS AGAINST IT.

SINCE BARDEN ROBISON AND PLTF ARE ALLEGED TO BE ALTER EGOS, THE STAY PENDING ARBITRATION CANNOT BE LIFTED AS TO PLTF'S CLAIMS AND NOT AS TO CLAIMS AGAINST BARDEN ROBISON. ACCORDINGLY, PLTF'S MOTION TO LIFT STAY IS DENIED. OSJ VOL 2483 PG 0505 * * *. NOTICE ISSUED.

Hardwick and Milo filed an appeal and cross appeal.

In his assignment of error, Hardwick asserts:

THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN HOLDING IN ITS JULY 12, 2000 ORDER THAT DEFENDANT STEVEN P. HARDWICK IS REQUIRED TO ARBITRATE HIS CLAIMS AGAINST THIRD-PARTY DEFENDANT BARDEN ROBESON. (JULY 12, 2000 DOC. NO. 6, ORDER.)

Hardwick contends he never agreed to arbitrate his claims against Barden, he never signed any document containing an arbitration clause, and he cannot be bound by the Millers' agreement to such a contract provision even if he was their partner. While we agree, in principle, that a party cannot be required to submit to arbitration any dispute which he has not agreed to so submit,2 Hardwick based his claims against Barden on the very contract he disavowed and, therefore, positioned himself within an exception to that rule.

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Bluebook (online)
Milo Corporation. v. Carlson-Miller, Unpublished Decision (7-12-2001), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/milo-corporation-v-carlson-miller-unpublished-decision-7-12-2001-ohioctapp-2001.