Quach v. Cal. Commerce Club, Inc.

CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 25, 2024
DocketS275121
StatusPublished

This text of Quach v. Cal. Commerce Club, Inc. (Quach v. Cal. Commerce Club, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Quach v. Cal. Commerce Club, Inc., (Cal. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF CALIFORNIA

PETER QUACH, Plaintiff and Respondent, v. CALIFORNIA COMMERCE CLUB, INC., Defendant and Appellant.

S275121

Second Appellate District, Division One B310458

Los Angeles County Superior Court 19STCV42445

July 25, 2024

Justice Groban authored the opinion of the Court, in which Chief Justice Guerrero and Justices Corrigan, Liu, Kruger, Jenkins, and Evans concurred. QUACH v. CALIFORNIA COMMERCE CLUB, INC. S275121

Opinion of the Court by Groban, J.

Private parties may agree to resolve their disputes in arbitration rather than in court. If a party to an arbitration agreement files a complaint in court raising a claim covered by the agreement, the defendant can file a motion asking the court to stay the lawsuit and send the dispute to arbitration. A defendant who instead litigates the case risks losing the contractual right to compel arbitration. One way a contractual right may be lost is by waiver. Outside the arbitration context, a California court will find waiver when the party seeking to enforce a known contractual right has intentionally relinquished or abandoned that right. (Lynch v. California Coastal Com. (2017) 3 Cal.5th 470, 475 (Lynch).) In the arbitration context, however, our cases have added a requirement: to find waiver, we have required that the party seeking to avoid arbitration show prejudice. (See St. Agnes Medical Center v. PacifiCare of California (2003) 31 Cal.4th 1187, 1203 (St. Agnes).) To explain our adoption of this additional, arbitration-specific requirement, we relied on a policy favoring arbitration over litigation as a form of dispute resolution. (Id. at p. 1204.) Until recently, most federal appellate courts similarly applied an arbitration-specific rule that required a showing of prejudice to establish waiver. Our California rule is based upon these federal cases. In Morgan v. Sundance, Inc. (2022) 596 U.S.

1 QUACH v. CALIFORNIA COMMERCE CLUB, INC. Opinion of the Court by Groban, J.

411 (Morgan), the United States Supreme Court rejected this rule. Morgan clarified that the federal “ ‘policy favoring arbitration’ ” is about putting arbitration agreements on equal footing with other contracts, not about favoring arbitration. (Id. at p. 418.) Accordingly, the Supreme Court held that, under federal law, a court must apply the same rules that apply to any other contract when determining whether a party to an arbitration agreement has lost the right to enforce the agreement. (Ibid.) Because our state-law arbitration-specific prejudice requirement is based upon the federal precedent that Morgan overruled, we now abrogate it. California policy, like federal policy, puts arbitration agreements on equal footing with other types of contracts. Accordingly, under California law, as under federal law, a court should apply the same principles that apply to other contracts to determine whether the party seeking to enforce an arbitration agreement has waived its right to do so. The Court of Appeal below applied an arbitration-specific prejudice requirement to overrule the trial court’s order denying California Commerce Club’s motion to compel arbitration. We now reverse. I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND Peter Quach filed this suit in 2018, after California Commerce Club (Commerce Club), which operated the casino where Quach had worked for almost 30 years, terminated his employment. Quach’s complaint alleges claims for wrongful termination, age discrimination, retaliation, and harassment and demands a jury trial. Before Quach filed his complaint, Commerce Club provided him with a copy of the signature page of a form

2 QUACH v. CALIFORNIA COMMERCE CLUB, INC. Opinion of the Court by Groban, J.

arbitration agreement he had signed in 2015, while he was working at the casino. The agreement provided for binding arbitration of employment-related disputes. Rather than filing a motion to compel arbitration, Commerce Club answered Quach’s complaint and initiated discovery, propounding form interrogatories, special interrogatories, requests for admission, and a request for production of documents. In its answer, Commerce Club asserted as an “affirmative defense” that Quach “should be compelled to arbitrate” any claims he had agreed to arbitrate. However, Commerce Club’s counsel did not raise the issue of arbitration with Quach’s counsel or with the court in any other way. On the form Commerce Club submitted as its first case management conference statement, it requested a jury trial, did not check the box indicating it was willing to participate in “binding private arbitration,” and did not list a motion to compel arbitration in the space provided for listing motions it expected to file before trial, instead indicating that it only intended to file a “dispositive motion.” (See JCC form CM-110, July 1, 2011.) At the case management conference, the court set a trial date. Thereafter, both sides posted jury fees and continued to engage in discovery. Commerce Club responded to Quach’s initial discovery requests and propounded a second set of special interrogatories. In response to a discovery request, Commerce Club again provided Quach a copy of the signed signature page of his arbitration agreement. Although trial court proceedings were delayed due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Commerce Club continued to actively participate in discovery, engaging in meet and confer over discovery disputes and taking Quach’s deposition by videoconference for a full day.

3 QUACH v. CALIFORNIA COMMERCE CLUB, INC. Opinion of the Court by Groban, J.

Then — 13 months after Quach filed his lawsuit — Commerce Club filed a motion to compel arbitration under the Federal Arbitration Act, 9 U.S.C. § 1 et seq. (FAA) “and/or” the California Arbitration Act, Code of Civil Procedure, sections 1281 et seq. (CAA).1 Attempting to explain its delay, Commerce Club asserted that it had just located a complete copy of Quach’s arbitration agreement. It argued that Quach was not prejudiced by the delay because there had been only “minimal discovery” due to the pandemic’s impact on Commerce Club’s access to information and witnesses. Quach opposed the motion, arguing that Commerce Club had waived its contractual right to compel arbitration. He pointed out that Commerce Club had provided him a copy of the signed signature page of his arbitration agreement before he even filed his lawsuit and that the first page of the two-page agreement contained boilerplate language that was the same in all the arbitration agreements Commerce Club had its employees sign in 2015. Quach argued that Commerce Club’s delay was prejudicial because Quach had spent significant time and money on the litigation and had lost the advantage of arbitration as a way to obtain an expedited resolution of the dispute. The trial court denied Commerce Club’s motion. It found that Commerce Club “knew of its right to compel arbitration” and instead of moving to compel arbitration, propounded a “large amount” of written discovery, spent “significant” time meeting and conferring “over many months,” and took Quach’s

1 All subsequent statutory references are to the California Code of Civil Procedure unless otherwise specified.

4 QUACH v. CALIFORNIA COMMERCE CLUB, INC. Opinion of the Court by Groban, J.

deposition, demonstrating “a position inconsistent [with the intent] to arbitrate” and causing “prejudice.” Commerce Club appealed and a divided Court of Appeal reversed. (Quach v. California Commerce Club, Inc. (2022) 78 Cal.App.5th 470 (Quach).) The majority held that Commerce Club did not waive its right to compel arbitration, concluding that the trial court’s finding that Quach had shown prejudice was not supported by substantial evidence. (Quach, at p. 478; id. at p. 484, citing St.

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Quach v. Cal. Commerce Club, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/quach-v-cal-commerce-club-inc-cal-2024.