PRIME PROPERTIES, INC. v. Leahy

228 P.3d 617, 234 Or. App. 439, 2010 Ore. App. LEXIS 280
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedMarch 24, 2010
Docket071011594, A138138
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 228 P.3d 617 (PRIME PROPERTIES, INC. v. Leahy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
PRIME PROPERTIES, INC. v. Leahy, 228 P.3d 617, 234 Or. App. 439, 2010 Ore. App. LEXIS 280 (Or. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

*441 ROSENBLUM, J.

Defendant appeals a judgment based on an arbitrator’s award of damages in plaintiffs favor. Defendant assigns error to the trial court’s denial of his petition to vacate the arbitration award and the court’s entry of the judgment. He argued to the trial court that, because plaintiffs attorney was represented in an unrelated matter by an attorney in the arbitrator’s law firm, the court was required to vacate the award under ORS 36.705 based on “evident partiality” by the arbitrator. The court ruled that defendant had not made a timely formal objection to the arbitrator’s participation and, moreover, that defendant had failed to establish evident partiality. Defendant appeals. We conclude that defendant sufficiently objected to the arbitrator’s participation, but that the record supports the trial court’s finding as to evident partiality. Accordingly, we affirm.

We take the following facts from the record. The arbitration at issue arose from a real estate transaction between the parties. The transaction led to a dispute between the parties, the details of which are not material to this case. As a result of the dispute, plaintiff filed a claim for damages with Arbitration Services of Portland (ASP), in accordance with an arbitration provision in the earnest money agreement. The parties selected an arbitrator, Batchelor, from a list provided by ASP, and an arbitration hearing was scheduled for August 1, 2007. About two weeks before the hearing, plaintiff brought in a new attorney, Mutnick, to represent him at the hearing. Around the same time, Mutnick, who was personally involved in an unrelated legal matter, hired another lawyer, Glade, to represent him in that matter. Glade is a partner in Batchelor’s law firm.

At the beginning of the hearing on August 1, Batchelor informed the parties that he had become aware of the relationship between Mutnick and Glade. He gave the parties an opportunity to speak privately with their respective attorneys, after which defendant objected to Batchelor’s continued service as arbitrator. Batchelor overruled the objection, but, in the presence of the parties’ attorneys, he called the ASP administrator, Damis, and explained the situation. Damis agreed that Batchelor could continue as the *442 arbitrator. The hearing then resumed with no further objection by defendant. Batchelor issued a written decision on August 28, 2007. He ruled in plaintiffs favor and awarded plaintiff approximately $66,000 in damages.

Plaintiff thereafter petitioned the trial court to confirm the arbitration award. Defendant responded with a petition to vacate the award. He argued that the representation of plaintiffs attorney by Batchelor’s law firm caused “evident partiality” under ORS 36.705(l)(b)(A), and that that statute required the court to vacate the award.

At the hearing on the parties’ respective petitions, the court described the relationship between Batchelor’s law firm and Mutnick as an “apparent conflict” and an “actual conflict” and expressed surprise that the arbitration had gone forward. However, the court noted that, aside from defendant’s oral objection to Batchelor’s continued participation, “nothing formal took place” until after the award was issued. The court opined that defendant’s counsel “should have acted sooner to do something instead of waiting for an award and then have it not go his way and then complain.” The court then ruled on defendant’s petition:

“[T]he language of the statute is may vacate the award under the circumstance if it’s evident partiality.
“I don’t find that. I — and it’s may, not shall. And given the duration of time that passed between the arbitration happening and any kind of formal objection taking place beyond the oral objection, I don’t find — I’ll make two findings.
“One, I think that there — there’s a time delay that’s not reasonable, and so for that reason, I’m denying the motion to vacate.
“And then the second piece is that on the record that’s before me, I don’t see anything that would lend itself to an objective finding of evident partiality on behalf of Mr. Batchelor. And so * * * for those two reasons, I’m denying the motion.”

The court entered an order confirming the arbitration award and, ultimately, a judgment in conformity with the award. This appeal followed.

*443 Defendant challenges both bases for the trial court’s ruling. Because the court articulated independent bases for denying defendant’s petition to vacate the award, to prevail on appeal, defendant must show that both bases were erroneous. We begin with the court’s finding that defendant delayed unreasonably in objecting formally to Batchelor’s service as arbitrator. Defendant argues that he used the sole mechanism for objecting that was available to him before the award was made, namely, ASP’s Arbitration Rule 12, which provides:

“Arbitrator Challenge Procedure. At any time prior to the rendering of the award, but as soon as practicable after acquiring such information, any party may challenge an arbitrator on the basis of partiality, bias, financial or personal interest in the result of the arbitration, or past or current relationship with any party, a party’s representatives, a party’s attorney, a witness, or another arbitrator (if any). The challenging party shall inform ASP of such information in writing and serve a copy thereof on the other parties. If the arbitrator denies such information or denies that it would affect the arbitration and therefore declines to resign, ASP shall determine whether the arbitrator should be disqualified, and the decision of ASP shall be conclusive on the parties.” 1

(Boldface in original.) Defendant acknowledges that the rule requires that the objection be made in writing, but he asserts that, under ORS 36.650(6), which requires only substantial compliance with the procedural rules of an arbitration organization as a condition precedent to vacatur by a court, his oral objection was sufficient under the circumstances.

We agree. Defendant’s oral objection at the arbitration proceeding and the events that followed satisfied the purposes of Rule 12. Defendant informed Batchelor and plaintiff of his objection to Batchelor’s service and gave Batchelor and plaintiff the opportunity to express their respective positions. Batchelor’s call to Damis informed ASP *444 of the objection. Under the rule, Damis’s determination that Batchelor should not be disqualified was conclusive, so defendant filing his objection in writing would have served no purpose. Under the circumstances, defendant substantially complied with the rule. Furthermore, there was no other mechanism for objecting other than a petition to vacate the award under ORS 36.705

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
228 P.3d 617, 234 Or. App. 439, 2010 Ore. App. LEXIS 280, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/prime-properties-inc-v-leahy-orctapp-2010.