Presby v. Pen Bay Builders

CourtSuperior Court of Maine
DecidedJune 6, 2001
DocketKENcv-98-54
StatusUnpublished

This text of Presby v. Pen Bay Builders (Presby v. Pen Bay Builders) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Presby v. Pen Bay Builders, (Me. Super. Ct. 2001).

Opinion

STATE OF MAINE SUPERIOR COURT

CIVIL ACTION KENNEBEC-; ss. DOCKET NO. CV-98,54- DAVID PRESBY,

Plaintiff ve DECISION AND ORDER PEN BAY BUILDERS, et al, Defendants

In this matter, the parties seek to affect an arbitrator's amended decision which sought to resolve litigation pending between them over a dispute concerning two contracts to perform commercial painting projects. For his part, the plaintiff first filed an application to confirm the arbitrator's award and then, later, filed a motion to modify the award. Between these two filings, the defendants filed an objection to the confirmation, seeking vacation of the award, but did not respond to the motion to modify.

By way of procedural history, the complaint in this matter was filed on February 25, 1998, but, on the parties’ agreement, the case was referred to an arbitrator on July 24, 2000. The arbitrator, Roger Katz, Esq., issued his decision on October 10, 2000, after two days of hearings. In response to three objections to this decision by the parties, the arbitrator modified the decision in an order dated December 4, 2000.

The first two motions before the court may be considered together as the first seeks confirmation of the award as a pro forma step to give the award its full legal effect, and the second objects to that result and seeks vacation of the award.

The defendants’ application to vacate the arbitrator's award articulates no

objection to his decision except as to the award of attorney's fees which it complains were "... procured by undue means and by misconduct .. ." and therefore ought to be vacated because this court is required to vacate an award "... where: [t]he award was | procured by corruption, fraud or other undue means;..." 14 M.R.S.A. § 5938(1) (1979).

The factual and procedural history relied upon by the defendants in making this claim is straightforward, but does not support their claim that the award of attorney's fees was procured by “undue means.” Id. In his decision of October 10, 2000, the arbitrator determined as a matter of law that the plaintiff was entitled to an award of reasonable attorney's fees as the substantially prevailing party in a proceeding to recover payment in a case involving a dispute over a construction contract. He then noted that the plaintiff had already submitted an affidavit to support an award of attorney's fees but that the defendants should have an opportunity to comment on or object to the affidavit and therefore gave them 10 days to do so. The defendants promptly accepted that invitation and challenged the legal basis for the award and the sufficiency of the affidavit itself. Thereafter, on October 24, 2000, the plaintiff filed a response to this challenge, and on November 20, 2000, in further response to correspondence to both attorneys from the arbitrator requesting plaintiff's counsel to submit a more detailed affidavit, filed a second affidavit and application for attorney's fees. The arbitrator then issued his modified decision on December 4, 2000, ordering the award of attorney's fees in the sum requested in the plaintiff's November 20 filing. The defendants claim they never received this November 20, 2000 application and affidavit and that, by virtue of that alleged omission, the award must be found to have been procured by "undue means” as it resulted from an ex parte submission.

As the proponent of a vacation of an arbitrator's award, the defendant ".. . has

the burden of demonstrating one of the specific statutory grounds requiring the court to vacate the award." Pelletier & Flanagan v. Court Fac. Auth., 673 A.2d 213, 215 (Me. 2996) (citing Concord Gen. Mut. Ins. Co. v. Northern Assur. Co., 603 A.2d 470, 472 (Me. | 1992)). As noted, the statutory ground on which the defendants rely in this effort is the requirement that an arbitrator's award be vacated "... where: the award was procured by ... other undue means.” 14 M.R.S.A. § 5938(1)(A) (1979). The record, however, falls short of demonstrating that the award of attorney's fees was procured by the plaintiff by any untoward conduct by the arbitrator or plaintiff's counsel. Most significantly, the arbitrator made it clear that, in his view, the plaintiff was entitled to attorney's fees and was prepared to award them pending input from the defendant. This determination was made before the filing of the second affidavit and the procedural events on which the defendants rely had occurred. As such, no claim can be made that this decision was improperly influenced and, in this court's view, was legally correct in any case as the statute unambiguously requires the award of attorney's fees to the substantially prevailing party in a proceeding under the relevant chapter governing recovery of payments in a construction contract dispute. 10M.R.5.A. § 1118(4) (1996). Nevertheless, the defendants argue that because the arbitrator relied on the second affidavit from plaintiff's counsel, which allegedly was never sent to them, the award was made on an ex parte basis which amounts to an award "procured by .. . undue means.” This court, of course, is in no position to resolve the factual dispute surrounding this event. The defendants’ counsel claims he never received the second affidavit; plaintiff's counsel claims he sent it and points to his cover letter to the

arbitrator accompanying the second affidavit which notes a copy was sent to defendants’ counsel.! See Objection to Plaintiff's Confirmation . . ., Exhibit G, p. 2. From this lean record, the court cannot conclude that the defendants have met their burden of persuasion that the arbitrator acted on ex parte information in fashioning his award of attorney's fees.

Even if it could be established that the second affidavit was sent to the arbitrator ex parte, this second submission differed from the first only in that it appears to have added the hours which apparently represented time devoted to the case from the date of the order of October 10, 2000, until the submission of the second affidavit on November 20, 2000, as well as $3.40 of additional costs. This second affidavit also attached an hourly billing summary which had been sent to the plaintiff by his attorney. Apparently this was offered as substantiation for the figures cited in the second affidavit. In any case, this affidavit, except for the noted updated hourly charges, is substantially the same as the first affidavit to which the defendants had objected unsuccessfully as to its legal basis and its format.* All this being so, it must be concluded that the award of attorney's fees was inevitable, that the ultimate sum awarded was not significantly different from the amount the defendants had an

opportunity to contest, and any changes were rationally related to the small time spent

1 One may speculate that plaintiff's counsel's letter of November 16, 2000, which accompanied his second affidavit, was sent to defendants’ counsel's former firm as was the arbitrator's order of December 4, 2000. Apparently, some time in the autumn of 2000, Mr. Mancini, defendants’ counsel, moved from the firm of Cloutier & Briggs in Camden to Drummond & Drummond in Portland. See Objection to Plaintiff's Confirmation . . . Exhibit F.

2 The defendants objected to the first affidavit's form and the legality of awarding fees on October 18, 2000, but the arbitrator advised the parties that he would be awarding attorney's fees nonetheless via correspondence dated November 13, 2000. See “Objection to Plaintiffs Application . .

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Presby v. Pen Bay Builders, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/presby-v-pen-bay-builders-mesuperct-2001.