J-A05020-16
NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
STRAUSSER ENTERPRISES, INC. IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA Appellee
v.
SEGAL AND MOREL, INC., SEGAL AND MOREL AT FORKS TOWNSHIP II, LLC, SEGAL AND MOREL AT FORKS TOWNSHIP III, LLC, SEGAL AND MOREL AT FORKS TOWNSHIP IV, LLC AND KENNETH SEGAL
Appellants No. 176 EDA 2015
Appeal from the Order December 8, 2014 In the Court of Common Pleas of Northampton County Civil Division at No(s): C48CV20104518 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
STRAUSSER ENTERPRISES, INC. IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA Appellee
v.l
SEGAL AND MOREL, INC., SEGAL AND MOREL AT FORKS TOWNSHIP II, LLC, SEGAL AND MOREL AT FORKS TOWNSHIP III, LLC, SEGAL AND MOREL AT FORKS TOWNSHIP IV, LLC AND KENNETH SEGAL
Appellants No. 761 EDA 2015
Appeal from the Order Entered February 6, 2015 In the Court of Common Pleas of Northampton County Civil Division at No(s): C48CV20104518 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- J-A05020-16
STRAUSSER ENTERPRISES, INC. IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA Appellee
SEGAL AND MOREL, INC, SEGAL AND MOREL AT FORK TOWNSHIP II, LLC, SEGAL AND MOREL AT FORK TOWNSHIP III,LLC, SEGAL AND MOREL AT FORK TOWNSHIP IV,LLC, AND KENNETH SEGAL
Appellants No. 1251 EDA 2015
Appeal from the Judgment Entered March 20, 2015 In the Court of Common Pleas of Northampton County Civil Division at No(s): C48CV20104518
BEFORE: OLSON, J., OTT, J., and STEVENS, P.J.E.*
MEMORANDUM BY OTT, J.: FILED JULY 06, 2016
In these consolidated appeals, Segal and Morel, Inc., Segal and Morel
at Fork Township II, LLC, Segal and Morel at Fork Township III, LLC, Segal
and Morel at Fork Township IV, LLC, and Kenneth Segal (collectively
“Segal”), appeal from the orders entered December 8, 2014, February 6,
2015, and the judgment entered March 20, 2015, in the Northampton
County Court of Common Pleas, confirming an arbitration award entered in
favor of Strausser Enterprises, Inc. (“Strausser”), and entering judgment on
____________________________________________
* Former Justice specially assigned to the Superior Court.
-2- J-A05020-16
that award.1 On appeal, Segal contends the trial court erred when it: (1)
determined the arbitration panel rendered a valid award despite the fact that
the decision was not unanimous, and the panel failed to resolve all issues;
(2) improperly limited the scope of the arbitration panel on remand from a
prior decision of this Court; (3) denied Segal’s petition to vacate the award
when the arbitration panel, on remand, failed to conduct a hearing, or
deliberate on all issues; and (4) denied Segal’s request to permit discovery
and conduct a hearing on the petition to vacate.2 For the reasons that
follow, we affirm the judgment entered at Docket No. 1251 EDA 2015, and
dismiss, as moot, the appeals docketed at Nos. 176 EDA 2015 and 761 EDA
2015.
The factual and procedural history underlying this appeal were aptly
summarized by a panel of this Court in a prior appeal:
The pertinent background underlying this matter can be summarized as follows. “The parties to this action ... were at one time engaged in a number of agreements relative to the development of real estate in Northampton County.”[3] The ____________________________________________
1 The appeals were consolidated by this Court for disposition. See Order, 6/23/2015. As will be discussed infra, the appealable, final order was the March 20, 2015, entering judgment on the arbitration award. 2 We have consolidated and reordered Segal’s issues on appeal for purposes of disposition. 3 The arbitration panel’s Majority Opinion, issued September 26, 2012, explained the parties’ background as follows: [Strausser] is an owner and developer of certain real estate located in Forks Township, Pennsylvania known at The (Footnote Continued Next Page)
-3- J-A05020-16
parties agree that the contract which governs their relationship requires them to submit their disputes to common law arbitration.
On May 6, 2010, Strausser filed a “Petition to Compel the Appointment of an Arbitrator to Serve as if Appointed by [Segal].” On May 28, 2010, the trial court ordered Thomas Wallitsch to serve as an arbitrator as if [Segal] appointed him. [Segal] sought reconsideration of the May 28, 2010 order. On November 9, 2010, the trial court issued an order in response to [Segal’s] petition for reconsideration, directing [Segal] to name an arbitrator to hear Strausser’s breach of contract claims.
Thereafter, Strausser filed an arbitration complaint. Strausser included in this complaint a request for counsel fees that _______________________ (Footnote Continued)
Riverview Estates and The Riverview Country Club (“Riverview”). Segal and Morel, Inc. (“Segal, Inc.”) is a builder and developer. Segal and Morel at Forks Township II, LLC [], Segal and Morel at Forks Township III, LLC [], Segal and Morel at Forks Township IV, LLC [] (Collectively “the Segal Entities) are single purpose Pennsylvania limited liability companies. Kenneth Segal (“Mr. Segal” is an owner of, and the president of, Segal, Inc. Mr. Segal is also an owner of, and the managing member of, [the Segal Entities]. Mr. Segal controls all of the Segal Entities.
Riverview has been subdivided into a number of different parcels to be developed, in phases, into various types of residential homes such as single family dwelling, townhouses and condominiums, as well as a golf course and country club. [Strausser] entered into a series of agreements with Segal, Inc. to sell off some phases of the project, while retaining certain other phases. … Segal, Inc. assigned its rights under the [] agreements to [the Segal Entities].
Under the Agreements of [S]ale, [Strausser] was to perform all of the site work (meaning all of the work that is on or under the ground including sanitary sewer, storm sewer, water lines, utilities, curbs and topsoil). Segal was to do all of the above-ground, or “vertical” construction.
Majority Opinion, 9/26/2012, at 1-2 (record citaitons omitted). The claims before the arbitration panel arose from the parties’ agreements of sale.
-4- J-A05020-16
Strausser incurred in litigating its petition to compel arbitration. [Segal] refer[s] to the arbitration panel that considered this complaint as “the Redding Panel.” It also is important to note that, prior to the arbitration proceedings in front of the Redding Panel, the parties litigated several issues in front of a different arbitration panel. [Segal] refer[s] to this initial panel of arbitrators as “the Walters Panel.”[4]
The Redding Panel conducted hearings in late February and early March of 2012. In a document dated September 26, 2012, two of the three arbitrators ruled in favor of Strausser (Majority Decision). In addition to awarding Strausser monetary damages, the Majority Decision stated, inter alia, that it included “[a]n order [sic] for a subsequent hearing to determine the amount of [Strausser’s] counsel fee award[.]” The Majority Decision also noted, “In the event that the panel determines that it needs [Segal’s] profit/lot to determine damages, the parties have agreed to present that evidence at a later phase of this proceeding....”
The Majority Decision was accompanied by an opinion in support thereof (Majority Opinion). Regarding Strausser’s claim for counsel fees, the Majority Opinion stated that Strausser prevailed with respect to its petition to compel and the litigation in front of the Redding Panel. The Majority Opinion, therefore, concluded that, pursuant to the parties’ agreement, Strausser is entitled to reimbursement of its counsel fees. The Majority Opinion asserted, “We will hold a subsequent hearing to determine the amount of the counsel fee award.”
4 The Walters Panel found in favor of Segal in its claims against Strausser and awarded Segal more than $1,000,000. See Praecipe to Enter Judgment, 4/24/2008; Praecipe to Enter Judgment, 3/23/2009. The decision of the Walters Panel was joined by both Segal’s named arbitrator, Joel Scheer, Esq., and the neutral arbitrator, Thomas L. Walters, Esq. Strausser’s named arbitrator, Joseph Corpora III, Esq., dissented from all claims denying Strausser relief and awarding Segal monetary damages. See Arbitration Opinion, 12/11/2007; Arbitration Opinion, 4/16/2008. Likewise, Scheer dissented with regard to a claim denying Segal damages. Id. Despite the fact that the decision was not unanimous, Segal praeciped to enter judgment on the award.
-5- J-A05020-16
The lone dissenting arbitrator, Joel M. S[c]heer, did not sign the Majority Decision.[5] Instead, he authored a dissenting opinion dated October 10, 2012 (Dissenting Opinion).
On October 26, 2012, [Segal] filed a “Motion to Stay and Setting of Date for Filing of Petition to Vacate Arbitration Award.” In this motion, [Segal] acknowledged that they had thirty days from the date the arbitrators’ award became final in order to file a petition to vacate the award and, thus, challenge the award. [Segal] averred that they received copies of the Majority Decision, the Majority Opinion, and the Dissenting Opinion on October 24, 2012. [Segal] argued that the earliest deadline to file a petition to vacate was November 9, 2012, which was thirty days from the date Mr. S[c]heer signed the Dissenting Opinion.
On November 5, 2012, Strausser filed a petition to confirm the arbitration award. The following day, the trial court denied [Segal’s] “Motion to Stay and Setting of Date for Filing of Petition to Vacate Arbitration Award.” [] Segal [then] filed a “Petition to Vacate Majority [Decision] and Opinion, and to Preclude Entry of Judgment Pending Resolution of Petition.” …
[Segal also] filed a response to Strausser’s petition to confirm the arbitration award. Therein, [Segal] averred, inter alia, that the trial court could not confirm the Majority Decision because it does not constitute a final award for purposes of common law arbitration. In this regard, [Segal] highlighted that the Majority Decision did not dispose of Strausser’s claim for counsel fees and that the Majority Decision noted that the parties had agreed to present evidence regarding damages at a later proceeding.
On November 21, 2012, Strausser filed a motion to strike [Segal’s] allegedly untimely-filed petition to vacate the arbitration award. [Thereafter, Segal filed a motion requesting the trial court certify its order for appeal. The court granted Segal’s motion. However, in February of 2013, this Court denied Segal’s petition for permission to appeal.]
5 We note that Segal’s appointee, Scheer, was the only arbitrator to serve on both the Walters and Redding Panels.
-6- J-A05020-16
On April 19, 2013, the trial court entered an order [which] granted Strausser’s motion [] to strike [Segal’s] petition to vacate and, thus, struck the petition. Next, the court granted Strausser’s petition to confirm the arbitration award. As to its action in this regard, the court concluded, inter alia, that, because Strausser’s claim for counsel fees is ancillary “to the issues in the case,” … the unresolved nature of the claim does not impact the finality of the arbitrators’ decision. Lastly, the court directed the prothonotary to enter a judgment in conformity with this order.
On April 22, 2013, Strausser filed a “Praecipe to Enter Judgment in Conformity with the Court's April 19, 2013 Order.” That same day, judgment was entered in favor of Strausser in the amount of $15,699,721.00. [Segal] timely filed a notice of appeal.
Strausser Enterprises, Inc. v. Segal & Morel, Inc., 89 A.3d 292, 293-
295 (Pa. Super. 2014) (internal citations and footnotes omitted).
On appeal, a panel of this Court concluded “the trial court lacked the
authority to enter an order confirming the Redding Panel’s decision and to
enter judgment in conformity with that order.” Id. at 300. Specifically, the
panel determined “Strausser’s claim for counsel fees [was] unresolved.” Id.
at 298. The panel opined:
[T]he Redding Panel concluded that Strausser is entitled to counsel fees in connection with Strausser’s successful litigation of its petition to compel and its arbitration claims. The Redding Panel, however, has yet to determine the amount of fees to which Strausser is entitled and clearly has indicated that an additional hearing is needed in order to reach this determination. In order to set the amount of fees due to Strausser, the Redding Panel certainly will have to make factual determinations and possibly will have to rule on legal issues. Moreover, because the Redding Panel only concluded that Strausser is entitled to counsel fees in connection with Strausser’s successful litigation of its petition to compel and its arbitration claims, we reject the trial court’s assertion that “the award of counsel fees in the instant case clearly cannot be ascertained until the case is
-7- J-A05020-16
complete, thereby necessitating that the award be confirmed and the proceedings closed prior thereto.”
Id.6 Accordingly, the panel vacated both the order confirming the
arbitration award and the judgment entered upon the award, and remanded
the matter to the trial court. Id. at 300. The panel explicitly directed: “On
remand, the trial court shall remand to the Redding Panel in order to allow
the panel to complete its work.” Id.
Upon remand, Judge Craig Dalley, who had presided over the matter
since 2012, disqualified himself sua sponte, and the case was reassigned to
President Judge Stephen Baratta. See Order, 5/21/2014. On May 23,
2014, the trial court entered an order stating, “this matter is hereby
REMANDED to the arbitration panel comprised of Edward Redding, Esquire,
Walter Weir[,] Jr., Esquire and Joel Scheer, Esquire for disposition of
[Strausser’s] outstanding claim for attorneys’ fees.” Order, 5/23/2014.
Segal then sought clarification of the court’s May 23rd order, and requested
the court appoint new arbitrators. On June 12, 2014, the trial court entered
the following order, clarifying its May 23rd order:
This matter is hereby REMANDED to the arbitration panel comprised of Edward Redding, Esquire, Walter Weir[,] Jr., Esquire and Joel Scheer, Esquire (“the Redding Panel”) “in order to allow the panel to complete its work,” consistent with the limited directives contained in the Superior Court of Pennsylvania’s Order of April 1, 2014. ____________________________________________
6 The panel also rejected the trial court’s assertion that the issue of counsel fees was an ancillary claim that did not affect the order’s appealability. Id. at 299.
-8- J-A05020-16
Order, 6/12/2014.
However, before the matter was remanded to the Redding Panel,
Strausser wrote to the panel and withdrew its outstanding claim for
attorneys’ fees. Segal responded to Strausser’s letter by requesting a
conference, and stating its position that there were other outstanding issues
for the panel to resolve. However, the Redding Panel did not respond to
Segal’s request, and on August 4, 2014, the Majority issued a supplemental
opinion, concluding that, after Strausser withdrew its claim for counsel fees,
“all matters submitted by the parties have been decided … these proceeding
are concluded and [its] earlier Award in the amount of $15,699,721 stands
as the Final Award of this Panel.” Supplemental Opinion, August 4, 2014, at
5. Arbitrator Scheer issued a supplemental dissenting opinion advocating
that “this entire matter should have been remanded to the Walters Panel[.]”
Dissent to Supplemental Opinion, 8/8/2014, at 3.
On September 2, 2014, Segal filed a petition to vacate the arbitration
award, followed by an amended petition on November 3, 2014. The trial
court conducted a hearing on November 7, 2014, and, on December 8,
2014, entered an order denying all of Segal’s outstanding motions.
Thereafter, on December 30, 2014, Strausser filed a petition to reinstate
confirmation of and enter judgment on the arbitration award. On January 7,
2015, Segal filed an appeal from the trial court’s December 8, 2014, order.
See Docket No. 176 EDA 2015.
-9- J-A05020-16
On January 20, 2015, Segal filed a petition in opposition to Strausser’s
request that the trial court confirm the supplemental majority arbitration
award. However, on February 6, 2015, the trial court entered an order,
reaffirming that its December 8, 2014, order “was intended to be a final
Order making this matter [ripe] for review by the Superior Court. The intent
of our Order was that Judge Dally’s original confirmation was not disturb[ed]
under the Rule of Coordinate Jurisdiction.” Order, 2/6/2015. Segal filed a
timely appeal of that order. See Docket No. 761 EDA 2015.
Thereafter, on March 20, 2015, Strausser filed a praecipe for the entry
of judgment on the arbitration award. Judgment was entered on the docket,
and a third notice of appeal followed.7 See Docket No. 1251 EDA 2015.
In its first issue on appeal, Segal argues the trial court erred in
determining the Redding Panel entered a valid arbitration “award.”
Specifically, Segal asserts that the award is not enforceable because it was
7 We note that the third appeal, from the March 20, 2015, entry of judgment, is the proper appeal to preserve all of Segal’s claims on appeal. Therefore, we dismiss the appeals at Docket Nos. 176 EDA 2015 and 761 EDA 2015, as they were not final orders, and the issues are now ripe for review under the appeal at Docket No. 1251 EDA 2015. See Seay v. Prudential Prop. & Cas. Ins. Co., a Subsidiary of Prudential Ins., 543 A.2d 1166, 1168 (Pa. Super. 1988) (holding the 30-day appeal period begins to run from the entry of judgment on an arbitration award, and not from the entry of the order confirming the award), appeal dismissed as improvidently granted, 565 A.2d 159 (Pa. 1989).
- 10 - J-A05020-16
not rendered unanimously, and because the Redding Panel did not resolve
all issues on remand.
As a panel of this Court stated in the earlier appeal:
Whether the arbitrators’ decision constitutes an award for purposes of common law arbitration presents a question of law. “Our standard of review over questions of law is de novo and to the extent necessary, the scope of our review is plenary as [the appellate] court may review the entire record in making its decision.”
Strausser, supra, 89 A.3d at 297 (internal citations omitted).
In the present case, there is no question the parties agreed to settle
their disputes through common law arbitration. See Levy v. Lenenberg,
795 A.2d 419, 422 (Pa. Super. 2002) (“An agreement to arbitrate a dispute
that does not state that the Uniform Arbitration Act applies is conclusively
presumed to be an agreement to common law arbitration.”). The long-
standing general rule of common law arbitration is that the arbitrators’
decision must be unanimous.8 See Weaver v. Powel, 23 A. 1070 (Pa.
1892); Sukonik v. Shapiro, 5 A.2d 108 (Pa. 1939). Nevertheless, our
courts have consistently recognized an exception to this general rule when
the parties agree, by “express terms or by fair implication” to be bound by a
majority decision. Weaver, supra, 23 A. at 1070. See Rosenbaum v.
8 Conversely, when proceeding under statutory arbitration, the general rule is that the parties agree to a majority decision, “unless otherwise prescribed by the agreement or provided [in the Arbitration Act].” 42 Pa.C.S. § 7306. See also 42 Pa.C.S. § 7307(a)(5).
- 11 - J-A05020-16
Drucker, 31 A.2d 117, 118 (Pa. 1943) (“The parties may agree that the
award may be made by a majority of the arbitrators. Such intent may be
gathered from the very fact of submission and from the attendant
circumstances.”).
The relevant arbitration clause in the present case provided as follows:
In the event of any dispute arising under or from this or any previous Addendum or the Agreements of Sale between the parties, then the parties agree that any such dispute shall be subtmitted to binding arbitration. Each party shall name an arbitrator, the two of whom shall name the third arbitrator, and a hearing shall be held promptly thereafter. Their decisions shall be final and binding and may be entered as a judgment in the Court of Common Please (sic) of Northampton County. In the event that any party fails or refuses to name an arbitrator after five days notice to do so, then either party shall have the immediate right to apply to said Court for the appointment of such arbitrator. The arbitrator shall have the right to award counsel fees to the prevailing party.
Petition to Compel the Appointment of an Arbitrator to Serve as if Appointed
by the Respondents, 5/6/2010, Exhibit D, Third Addendum to Agreements of
Sale dated July 5, 2001 and April 25, 2003, at ¶ 24 (emphasis supplied)
(hereinafter “Arbitration Clause”).
Segal argues that because the arbitration clause at issue does not
indicate the parties’ intention to be bound by a majority decision, the
general rule requiring unanimity applies. See Segal’s Brief at 30. Segal
claims the manner in which the arbitrators were chosen in the present case
is the same as in Weaver, supra, where the Supreme Court reversed an
- 12 - J-A05020-16
arbitration judgment entered upon a non-unanimous decision. See id. at
30-31.
Moreover, Segal contends that nothing in the parties’ conduct implied
their intent to be bound by a majority decision. To the extent the trial court
relied on Segal’s acquiescence to a non-unanimous decision issued by the
prior arbitration panel, the “Walters Panel,” Segal claims the court erred
because (1) only one of the named Segal entities herein was involved in the
prior arbitration proceedings, and (2) Segal had no reason to challenge the
Walters Panel award because the ruling was issued in its favor. See id. at
32, 34. Furthermore, Segal asserts the trial court also erred in considering
the parties’ actions during the Walters Panel because the trial court had
already determined that the Walters Panel “was extinguished and therefore
had ‘no authority with respect to this case[.]’” Id. at 33, quoting Trial Court
Opinion, 11/9/2010, at 7.
The trial court succinctly disposed of this claim as follows:
Given the terms of the parties’ arbitration clause, and the circumstances, inclusive of their prior course of conduct with regard to the clause, the Court finds that it made a fair inference as to the parties’ consent to be bound by a majority award.
Order of Court, 12/13/2012, at 11.
We agree with the conclusion of the trial court that the terms of the
parties’ arbitration clause, as well as their conduct, evidenced an intent to be
bound by a majority decision. First, we note the arbitration clause at issue
provided that each party would name an arbitrator, and those two
- 13 - J-A05020-16
arbitrators would choose a third arbitrator. See Arbitration Clause. While
this was the same procedure the Supreme Court determined required a
unanimous ruling in Weaver, supra,9 subsequent case law has reflected a
more relaxed view of the unanimity requirement.
In Sukonik, supra, the Supreme Court again recognized that,
generally, common law arbitration awards must be unanimous, but found
evidence which demonstrated the parties agreed “by fair implication” to be
bound by a majority award. Sukonik, supra, 5 A.2d at 109. The Court
cited the arbitration agreement, which provided, in pertinent part, that
disputes “shall be submitted to a committee of three parties, one selected by
each of the parties to this agreement and a third disinterested party selected
by the two disputees.” Id. (citation omitted and emphasis in original). In
that case, the two arbitrators selected by the parties were their attorneys,
and had already attempted to settle the dispute to no avail. Id. The Court
stated, “Clearly, therefore, the submission must have contemplated an
award by only two of the arbitrators.” Id. at 110.
In Rosenbaum, supra, an issue was initially submitted to an
arbitration panel, which decided the controversy. Rosenbaum, supra, 31
A.2d at 118. However, when the parties failed to abide by the panel’s ____________________________________________
9 See Weaver, supra, at 1071 (“In our case each party named an arbitrator, the two persons named were to select a third, and the arbitrators thus chosen were to view the premises, and make an award under their hands and seals.”).
- 14 - J-A05020-16
directives, the matter was referred back to the same arbitrators. Id. The
losing party later complained because the second ruling was signed by only
two of the three arbitrators. However, the Supreme Court concluded: “[i]t
is manifest that these arbitrators were originally named, and thereafter
renamed, not only because of their peculiar knowledge [of the issues
involved], but because certain of the arbitrators were obviously partisan in
their views.” Id. Therefore, the Court found “it is a fair implication that the
parties agreed and understood that any award could be made by a majority
of the arbitrators.” Id.
Here, we find no reason to disagree with the trial court’s determination
that the parties agreed, by fair implication, to be bound by a majority award.
First, the procedure used to appoint the arbitration panel herein - where
each party named an arbitrator and the two named arbitrators choose a
third - carries with it an implication that arbitrators named by each party will
be partisan and the third arbitrator will be neutral. We recognize that the
Supreme Court in Weaver came to a different conclusion. However, as
noted above, that conclusion appears to have been modified by the Court’s
subsequent decisions in Sukonik and Rosenbaum.10 ____________________________________________
10 Segal claims that the Legislature’s 1982 amendments to the Pennsylvania Uniform Arbitration Act, 42 Pa.C.S. § 7301 et seq., “manifests the continuing requirement of a unanimous decision for common law arbitration awards[.]” Segal’s Brief at 26. We do not disagree. Sections 7306 and 7307(a)(5) of the Act specifically provide for majority decisions in statutory arbitrations, but were not made applicable to common law arbitrations. See 42 Pa.C.S. § (Footnote Continued Next Page)
- 15 - J-A05020-16
Moreover, in the present case, unlike in Weaver, we find that the
parties’ conduct demonstrated by “fair implication” that they intended to be
bound by a majority award. Sukonik, supra, at 109. Significantly, we note
the prior arbitration award, rendered by the Walters Panel in favor of
Segal, was joined by only two of the three arbitrators – the neutral
arbitrator and the arbitrator named by Segal. Segal did not hesitate to
confirm and enter judgment on that award. Although Segal argues the prior
arbitration involved different parties, we find this contention hollow. The
Segal entities named in that dispute were Segal and Morel, Inc. and Segal
and Morel at Forks Township VII, LLC. As explained in the Majority Opinion,
Segal and Morel, Inc. is the parent corporation of a number of single
purpose limited liability companies created for the development of The
Riverview Estates in Forks Township, including Segal and Morel at Forks
Township VII, LLC, which was named in the prior dispute, and Segal and
Morel at Forks Township II, LLC, Segal and Morel at Forks Township III, LLC,
Segal and Morel at Forks Township IV, LLC, which are named in the present
dispute. See Majority Opinion, 9/26/2012, at 1. Furthermore, Kenneth
Segal is an owner and the president of all the aforementioned corporations.
_______________________ (Footnote Continued)
7342(a). However, as will be discussed infra, we find, in the present case the parties agreed by “fair implication” that they intended to be bound by a majority award. See Rosenbaum, supra.
- 16 - J-A05020-16
Therefore, we find the parties involved in this dispute are in privity with
those involved in the prior dispute.11
Segal contends, however, that we should not consider anything that
occurred during the Walters Panel proceedings for two reasons. First, it
emphasizes the trial court determined “the Walters Panel was functus
officio—i.e., the Panel was extinguished and therefore had ‘no authority with
respect to this case[.]’” Segal’s Brief at 33 (emphasis in original and citation
omitted). Second, Segal claims that even if we could consider the prior
proceedings, Segal could not have challenged the non-unanimous award
issued by the Walters Panel because it was not an aggrieved party. Id. at
34. We disagree with both of Segal’s contentions.
Segal’s citation to the trial court’s statement that the Walters Panel
had “no authority” in this case is taken out of context. The trial court made
this comment in a November 9, 2010, opinion which was issued in response
to Segal’s motion for reconsideration of the court’s May 2010 order naming
Wallitsch to serve as Segal’s designated arbitrator in the Redding Panel
proceedings. Segal had claimed the first arbitration panel, the Walters
11 Segal complains that Kenneth Segal should not have been found jointly and severally liable because he was not a party to any arbitration agreement with Strausser. Segal’s Brief at 32. However, Kenneth Segal’s liability, or lack thereof, was an issue for the arbitration panel. As we will discuss, infra, this Court’s review of a common law arbitration award is extremely limited. See 42 Pa.C.S. § 7341.
- 17 - J-A05020-16
Panel, retained jurisdiction over the issues presented. Trial Court Opinion,
11/9/2010, at 4. The court disagreed, finding the Walters Panel had issued
a final award and was “functus officio.” Id. at 5-6. However, because it was
“unclear whether [Segal] in fact received notice” of Strausser’s petition to
appoint an arbitrator, the court granted Segal’s motion for reconsideration,
and directed it to appoint an arbitrator within five days. Id. at 4. Segal
thereafter, once again, named Scheer to arbitrate the claims arising from
the parties’ land development project. The trial court correctly determined
the Walters Panel was exhausted, and that the new claims should be
presented to a new arbitration panel. It did not comment on whether the
parties’ actions during the Walters Panel arbitration were relevant in
determining whether the parties agreed to accept a non-unanimous ruling.
Furthermore, with respect to Segal’s complaint that it could not have
challenged the non-unanimous award rendered by the Walters Panel
because it was not an aggrieved party, we find this argument specious. The
Walters Panel did not find for Segal on all its claims. Specifically, the panel
denied Segal’s request for reimbursement of a $13,000 contribution it had
made to the Homeowners Association. See Arbitration Opinion, 12/11/2007,
at 13-14. The Walters Panel Majority determined this amount was not
recoverable, and Segal’s named arbitrator, Scheer, dissented on this issue.
See Dissent, 12/11/2007. Therefore, Segal was an “aggrieved party” with
regard to this claim for relief, and could have challenged the arbitrator’s
decision. Moreover, if Segal believed a non-unanimous decision was not
- 18 - J-A05020-16
permitted under the parties’ arbitration clause, it could have asserted that
the arbitration process was tainted by an “irregularity.” 42 Pa.C.S. § 7341.
Its failure to do so supports our conclusion that the parties’ actions support
the fair implication that they intended to be bound by a majority decision.
Consequently, while the issues raised during the present proceedings
were distinct from those raised during the Walters Panel, the claims arose
from the same land development project, and were subject to the same
arbitration clause. Furthermore, Segal named the same arbitrator, who
had ruled in its favor during the Walters Panel, to the Redding Panel.
Accordingly, we find no basis to disturb the determination of the trial court
that the parties agreed, by “fair implication,” to be bound by a non-
unanimous decision.
Segal also asserts the Redding Panel’s award was not a final award
because the panel failed to resolve all issues. Segal asserts it wrote to the
Redding Panel twice after remand and requested a conference “to discuss
various issues related to the arbitration.” Segal’s Brief at 36. However, the
panel never responded to its request, but rather, on August 11, 2014, issued
the supplemental opinion and dissent.
It is well-established that “the sine qua non of an award is its finality
in disposing of all the matters submitted by the parties to the arbitrator for
his or her decision.” Fastuca v. L.W. Molnar & Associates, 10 A.3d 1230,
1240 (Pa. 2011). However, the only unresolved issue Segal identifies in its
brief is a request for counsel fees it incurred “in litigating [Strausser’s]
- 19 - J-A05020-16
unsuccessful attempt to confirm the Majority Order and Opinion as an
‘award.’”12 Id. See Strausser, supra, 89 A.3d at 300. Segal bases this
request upon the following language in the arbitration provision: “The
arbitrator shall have the right to award counsel fees to the prevailing party.”
Arbitration Clause. Segal further asserts this was not a new claim, because
it had requested counsel fees, in addition to judgment in its favor, in its
answer to Strausser’s arbitration complaint. See Segal’s Petition to Vacate
Arbitration Decision, 9/2/2014, Exhibit 26, Answer with New Matter, at 9.
Strausser argues, however, that based upon this Court’s opinion, the
only issues left unresolved upon remand were the amount of Strausser’s
counsel fees and whether the Redding Panel “needed additional information
to complete its damages award.” Strausser’s Brief at 13. When Strausser
withdrew its claim for counsel fees, and the Panel determined it did not need
additional information to determine damages,13 Strausser asserts the
Redding Panel had “decided all issues from the original submission[,] … the
arbitrators’ jurisdiction was exhausted and the award was ripe for ____________________________________________
12 We note that in a July 2014 letter to the Redding Panel requesting a conference, Segal listed several issues which it characterized as “unclear and unresolved.” Letter, 7/24/2014, at 1. However, almost all of those issues concerned legal challenges to the panel’s decision. See id. at 1-3 (asserting, inter alia, certain claims were barred by res judicata or the statute of limitations). As we will discuss infra, the mandate of the remand decision was clear and limited. Segal was not entitled to re-litigate claims that were already decided. 13 See Supplemental Opinion, 8/4/2014, at 4-5.
- 20 - J-A05020-16
confirmation.” Strausser’s Brief at 15 (footnote omitted). Moreover,
Strausser argues that Segal’s claim for counsel fees was not authorized
under the arbitration clause. We agree.
A review of the remand opinion reveals this Court did not intend for
the Redding Panel to re-open the arbitration proceedings and re-litigate the
issues it had already decided. Rather, the Court explained that the only
issues still unresolved were the amount of Strausser’s counsel fees and
whether the Panel required Segal’s profit per lot calculations to determine
damages. Specifically, the Court opined:
Strausser’s claim for counsel fees is unresolved. Thus, pursuant to Fastuca, the Redding Panel’s decision does not constitute a common law arbitration award. Our conclusion in this regard is bolstered by the footnote in the Majority Opinion. It is unclear exactly what the Redding Panel was contemplating when it noted, “In the event that the panel determines that it needs [Segal’s] profit/lot to determine damages, the parties have agreed to present that evidence at a later phase of this proceeding....” [Segal’s] Petition to Vacate Majority [Decision] and Opinion, and to Preclude Entry of Judgment Pending Resolution of Petition, 11/9/2012, Exhibit T, at n. 1. However, a reasonable interpretation of this footnote indicates that the Redding Panel must decide whether it needs [Segal’s] “profit/lot to determine damages” and whether “a later phase” of arbitration is necessary.
Strausser, supra, 89 A.3d at 298-299. While this Court may not have
clearly articulated its intent in the remand directive – “[o]n remand, the trial
court shall remand the matter to the Redding Panel in order to allow the
- 21 - J-A05020-16
panel to complete its work”14 - a review of the entire opinion reveals the
panel’s limited directive. Thus, when Strausser withdrew its claim for
counsel fees, and the Redding Panel Majority decided it did “not need any
additional ‘profit/lot [calculations] to determine damages[,]’” the panel had
resolved all issues pending before it. Supplemental Opinion, 8/4/2014, at 4-
5. The Redding Panel Majority, therefore, properly declared that the “earlier
Award in the amount of $15,699,721 stands as the Final Award of this
Panel.” Id. at 5. Accordingly, we find the arbitration award entered
following the remand by this Court was a final award, and Segal is entitled to
no relief on this claim.
Similar to its last claim, Segal also contends the trial court improperly
limited the scope of the arbitration panel on remand. In support of this
assertion, Segal points to the following. After this Court filed its opinion on
April 1, 2014, the trial court entered an order on May 23, 2014, which
stated: “AND NOW, this 23rd day of May 2014, this matter is hereby
REMANDED to the arbitration panel comprised of Edward Redding, Esquire,
Walter Weir Jr., Esquire and Joel Scheer, Esquire for disposition of
[Strausser’s] outstanding claim for attorneys’ fees.” Order, 5/23/2014.
Segal responded by seeking clarification of the court’s May 23, 2014, order
and the appointment of new arbitrators. Thereafter, on June 12, 2014, the
14 Strausser, supra, 89 A.3d at 300.
- 22 - J-A05020-16
trial court entered an order, clarifying its previous order, and stating that the
matter would be remanded to the Redding Panel “‘in order to allow the panel
to complete its work,’ consistent with the limited directives contained in the
Superior Court of Pennsylvania’s Order of April 1, 2014.” Order, 6/12/2014.
Segal contends the trial court had no authority to, first, direct the
Redding Panel to consider only the outstanding claim for counsel fees, and
second, instruct the Panel to comply with the “limited directives” in this
Court’s Opinion. Segal’s Brief at 50-51. Segal further argues the trial
court’s actions “resulted in significant prejudice,” namely,
[t]he Supplemental Opinion discloses that Arbitrators Redding and Weir were operating under the mistaken impression that this Court or the Trial Court somehow constrained the Redding Panel’s ability on remand to consider issues other than: (1) awarding attorneys’ fees to [Strausser]; and (2) the need for profit/lot information to properly calculate damages.
Id. at 51. Accordingly, Segal claims the award should be vacated.
In addressing this claim, the trial court stated:
We believed that the Superior Court’s remand was clear, specific, and required no interpretation. As we read the Superior Court’s Order, it was specific as to the nature of the remand – there was no award addressing Strausser’s claim for attorney’s fees[.] … Thus, we issued no directive to the Redding Panel other than to comply with the Superior Court’s directive to accept the remand.
Trial Court Opinion, 8/21/2015, at 12.
As we explained supra, we agree with the trial court’s interpretation of
the remand opinion. What Segal fails to acknowledge is that the Redding
Panel Majority did not limit its scope of review based upon the trial court’s
- 23 - J-A05020-16
directives. Rather, the Majority looked to this Court’s opinion, and
determined the only unresolved issues were those involving Strausser’s
attorneys’ fees and the method by which to calculate the damage award.
See Supplemental Opinion, 8/4/2014, at 4. Accordingly, we reject Segal’s
contention that the trial court improperly limited the Redding Panel’s
authority on remand.
Next, Segal argues the trial court erred in denying its petition to
vacate the arbitration award. Specifically, it contends the Redding Panel
denied Segal’s right to a hearing and failed to deliberate on all issues.
When considering a common law arbitration award, we must bear in
mind our statutorily limited scope of review.
Judicial review of a common law arbitration proceeding is prescribed by statute, under a provision of the Pennsylvania Judicial Code:
§ 7341. Common law arbitration
The award of an arbitrator in a nonjudicial arbitration ... is binding and may not be vacated or modified unless it is clearly shown that a party was denied a hearing or that fraud, misconduct, corruption or other irregularity caused the rendition of an unjust, inequitable or unconscionable award.
42 Pa.C.S. § 7341. In accordance with this provision, our scope of review is extremely narrow. “The arbitrators are the final judges of both law and fact, and an arbitration award is not subject to a reversal for a mistake of either.” Prudential Property and Cas. Ins. Co. v. Stein, 453 Pa.Super. 227, 683 A.2d 683, 685 (1996). Neither we nor the trial court may retry the issues addressed in arbitration or review the tribunal's disposition of the merits of the case. Rather, we must confine our review to whether the appellant was deprived of a hearing or whether “fraud, misconduct, corruption or other irregularity”
- 24 - J-A05020-16
tainted the award. The appellant bears the burden to establish both the underlying irregularity and the resulting inequity by “clear, precise, and indubitable” evidence. Chervenak, Keane & Co., Inc. v. Hotel Rittenhouse Assocs., Inc., 328 Pa.Super. 357, 477 A.2d 482, 485 (1984). In this context, “irregularity refers to the process employed in reaching the result of the arbitration, not to the result itself.” Id. A cognizable irregularity may appear in the conduct of either the arbitrators or the parties. Paugh v. Nationwide Ins. Co., 278 Pa.Super. 108, 420 A.2d 452, 458 (1980).
McKenna v. Sosso, 745 A.2d 1, 4 (Pa. Super. 1999), appeal denied, 759
A.2d 924 (Pa. 2000). “A trial court order confirming a common law
arbitration award will be reversed only for an abuse of discretion or an error
of law.” Toll Naval Associates v. Chun-Fang Hsu, 85 A.3d 521, 525 (Pa.
Super. 2014) (citation omitted).
As noted above, Segal first contends the award must be vacated
because the Redding Panel denied Segal a full and fair hearing on remand.
Segal emphasizes it “requested a conference before [the p]anel to discuss
open items on five separate occasions[,]” however, the panel did not
respond to those requests, and instead, issued a supplemental opinion
adopting its earlier award as final. Segal’s Brief at 40. Segal asserts:
Thus, [this] claim of error with regard to the Redding Panel’s post-remand conduct is premised upon a procedural deficiency – the actual denial of a hearing, as opposed to such hearing’s fullness or fairness – and has nothing to do with the merits of the controversy or the fact that Arbitrators Redding and Weir “agreed” with [Strausser].
Id. at 42-43.
Again, we find Segal is entitled to no relief. While the denial of a
hearing is one of the few bases upon which a party may attack a common
- 25 - J-A05020-16
law arbitration award, we conclude, here, Segal was not denied an
arbitration hearing. Indeed, Segal does not contend the panel failed to
conduct a hearing before the entry of the initial arbitration “award.”
Rather, Segal complains only about the denial of a hearing upon remand.
However, as noted above, the remand order from this Court was limited to
two issues, namely, the amount of Strausser’s counsel fees and whether the
panel required Segal’s profit per lot calculations to determine damages.
After Strausser withdrew its claim for attorneys’ fees, and the Majority
decided it did not need to conduct further damage calculations, it had
“complete[d] its work,” and there was no need for a hearing or telephone
conference. Strausser, supra, 89 A.3d at 300. Accordingly, the trial court
properly denied Segal’s petition to vacate the award on this basis.
Compare Andrew v. CUNA Brokerage Servs., Inc., 976 A.2d 496, 498-
499, 502-503 (2009) (arbitration panel entered award finding plaintiff’s
claims time-barred by statute of limitations after conducting only a pre-
hearing telephone conference; Superior Court vacated award and remanded
case, holding panel’s failure to conduct a “hearing to consider evidence and
testimony as to whether [plaintiff’s] causes of action are timely” constituted
“the denial of a full and fair hearing.”).
Segal also contends the trial court erred in denying its motion to
vacate the award because the Redding Panel failed to deliberate on all
issues. See Segal’s Brief at 43. In support of this claim, Segal points to
Arbitrator Scheer’s comments in his October 2012, dissent in which he
- 26 - J-A05020-16
stated the Majority Opinion “was never distributed by the Chairperson for
comment” and there was “no deliberation with respect to which party might
be liable.” Dissent, 10/10/2012, at 1, 3. Segal notes that Arbitrator Scheer
made a similar comment in his supplemental dissent where he stated
Arbitrator Weir circulated a draft supplemental opinion, which Arbitrator
Redding joined without further deliberation. See Dissent to Supplemental
Opinion, 8/8/2014, at 1. Accordingly, Segal asserts “Arbitrator Redding and
Weir’s exclusion of Arbitrator Scheer was a procedural irregularity that
resulted in an unjust, inequitable, and unconscionable decision[.]” Segal’s
Brief at 46.
However, we find Segal has not established by “‘clear, precise, and
indubitable’ evidence” an irregularity that “tainted the award.” McKenna,
supra, 745 A.2d at 4 (citation omitted). Arbitrator Scheer, in his original
dissent, did not express that the arbitrators failed to deliberate at all on the
issues. Rather, he stated the majority opinion was not distributed for
comment before it was filed. See Dissent, 10/10/2012, at 1. As he
explained in his supplemental dissent, after both he and Arbitrator Weir
submitted proposed draft adjudications, Arbitrator Redding signed Arbitrator
Weir’s draft without requesting “further deliberations between the panel
members, [or] further comment by the parties to discuss a final draft[.]”
Dissent to Supplemental Opinion, 8/8/2014, at 2. This statement, however,
does not establish that the parties did not discuss the issues. It simply
indicates there was no further deliberations after the proposed drafts were
- 27 - J-A05020-16
distributed.15 Cf. Goeller v. Liberty Mutual Ins. Co., 568 A.2d 176, 178
(Pa. 1990) (reinstating the order of the trial court directing the parties to
convene a new arbitration panel when “[t]he record indicate[d], and it [was]
not disputed, that one of the members of the panel in this case was denied
his opportunity to deliberate.”). Accordingly, we find the trial court did not
err or abuse its discretion when it denied Segal’s petition to vacate the
arbitration award.
In its last issue, Segal contends the trial court erred in denying its
request for a hearing and discovery. Segal attached a rule to show cause to
its petition to vacate the arbitration award in contemplation that the trial
court would conduct an evidentiary hearing on its claims. Although the court
executed the Rule and scheduled a hearing for December 15, 2014, it
subsequently entered the order denying Segal’s petition before the
scheduled hearing. See Order, 12/8/2014. Segal asserts:
[T]he Trial Court’s failure to hold a hearing in this matter deprived [Segal] of [its] right to develop an evidentiary record concerning disputed issues of fact raised by the Petition to Vacate and [Strausser’s] Responses thereto, including whether the parties to the Third Addendum intended to be bound by a decision made by only a majority of arbitrators.”
Segal’s Brief at 49.
15 Perhaps, at that point, it was evident the arbitrators’ views on the issues were so disparate that no compromise was possible.
- 28 - J-A05020-16
Segal also complains the trial court would not permit it to conduct
discovery on Arbitrator Redding’s possible misconduct. Indeed, Segal notes
that, in October of 2014, Arbitrator Redding “pled guilty to conspiracy to
defraud financial institutions in connection with numerous real estate
transactions.” Segal’s Brief at 20. It asserts this fact “underscored the
fundamental premise of the Petition to Vacate, namely, that the individuals
presiding over the arbitration did not carry out their duties in accordance
with the law.” Id. at 50. Segal argues the trial court prematurely rejected
its claim without affording it “the opportunity to develop that argument
through discovery.” Id.
In its opinion, the trial court noted Segal’s claim that the court denied
it an opportunity “to make a record is disingenuous … [as Segal] had no
evidence to proffer.” Trial Court Opinion, 8/21/2015, at 17. It commented
that during various hearings and court listings, Segal never appeared with
witnesses or requested “to make an evidentiary presentation.” Id.
Furthermore, with respect to its denial of Segal’s request for discovery, the
court offered the following explanation:
We feel compelled to note that [Segal has] been dancing around a claim that something nefarious occurred when the majority of the panel issued an award against [it]. However, there has been no proffer of fraud, misconduct or corruption.
We have heard numerous presentations, generally repetitive, with regard to these claims. The only issues that have been developed are the following claims: (1) Two of the arbitrators, one appointed by Strausser (Weir) and the neutral arbitrator (Redding), improperly issued a majority award without the consent of the dissenting arbitrator, Scheer. (2) Significant
- 29 - J-A05020-16
portions of the majority opinion are alleged to have been lifted or plagiarized from the Strausser Brief. (3) After the completion of the Redding Panel’s work, Mr. Redding plead (sic) guilty in Federal court to fraud/theft; however, the conviction was wholly unrelated to the parties and the dispute.
None of these issues support an interference with the arbitration process. This nonjudicial arbitration process was contracted by the parties. These parties specifically sought to exclude this dispute from our jurisdiction. We understand that [Segal] strongly feel[s] as though the Redding Panel’s decision was not supported by the record and erroneous. Unfortunately for [Segal], a weak work product or a mistaken determination of the factual or legal issues is not enough for Court intervention.
Based on the proffers made by [Segal], it was clear that the discovery was a fishing expedition and nothing more. Without a proffer supporting fraud, misconduct, or other irregularity causing an unconscionable award, we were unwilling to allow post-award discovery related to the entry of a common law arbitration award.
Id. at 15-16.
We find no error or abuse of discretion on the part of the trial court.
Once again, Segal fails to acknowledge the very limited bases for judicial
review of a common law arbitration award. See McKenna, supra, 745 A.2d
at 4 (review of common law arbitration award limited to “whether the
appellant was deprived of a hearing or whether ‘fraud, misconduct,
corruption or other irregularity’ tainted the award.”) (citation omitted).
We note Segal’s petition to vacate was based on the following claims:
(1) the award was rendered in a non-unanimous decision; (2) Segal was
denied a hearing upon remand from this Court; (3) the arbitrators failed to
deliberate on all issues; (4) the arbitrators failed to give full consideration to
all of the evidence presented by Segal; and (5) Arbitrator Redding pled
- 30 - J-A05020-16
guilty to federal crimes after the final award was entered. See generally,
Petition to Vacate Arbitration Decision, 9/2/2014, and Addendum to Petition
to Vacate, 11/3/2014. As we have determined supra, the first three
arguments are without merit, and the court properly disposed of them
without conducting a hearing. See supra at 13-19 (non-unanimous award
was proper), 25-26 (arbitrators were not required to conduct a hearing upon
remand); and 26-28 (arbitrators properly deliberated on remaining issues
upon remand). Further, Segal’s contention that the arbitrators failed to give
full consideration to the evidence it presented seeks to undermine the
factual and legal basis of the award, which is not a proper reason upon
which to vacate a common law arbitration award. It is well settled that
“arbitrators are the final judges of both law and fact, and an arbitration
award is not subject to reversal for a mistake of either.” McKenna, supra,
745 A.2d at 4 (citation omitted).
Consequently, Segal’s only basis for vacating the award which could
have, arguably, supported its request for a hearing and discovery, was its
claim that Arbitrator Redding was unqualified to serve on the panel because
he was under federal investigation for fraud. Segal contends this fact
demonstrated an “irregularity” in the arbitration process, and it should have
- 31 - J-A05020-16
been permitted to “develop that argument through discovery.”16 Segal’s
Brief at 50.
We find the trial court properly denied Segal’s request to conduct
discovery, and agree its application was nothing more than a “fishing
expedition.” Trial Court Opinion, 8/21/2015, at 16. There is no allegation
that Redding’s criminal activities were, in any way, connected to the instant
arbitration hearing or the parties herein, or tainted the proceedings in such a
way as to disadvantage Segal. In fact, Segal does not explain in its brief
what it hoped to uncover through discovery, save for “the opportunity to
develop”17 its argument, nor does it state what evidence it intended to
present during an evidentiary hearing. Accordingly, we find no basis to
disturb the ruling of the trial court.
Judgment affirmed at Docket No. 1251 EDA 2015. Appeals at Docket
Nos. 176 EDA 2015 and 761 EDA 2015 are dismissed as moot.
16 We note that Segal takes care in its brief not to allege the arbitration award was based on fraud. Indeed, as the trial court explained during the November 7, 2014, hearing, Segal did not allege fraud in its petition to vacate. N.T., 11/7/2014, at 10. Further, the court commented: “There has to be, at the very least, clear evidence of fraud or bias in order to entitle somebody to drag a post-award proceeding out, delay it, and take discovery.” Id. at 9. Here, there has been no evidence at all that the award was fraudulently obtained by Strausser. 17 Segal’s Brief at 50.
- 32 - J-A05020-16
Judgment Entered.
Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq. Prothonotary
Date: 7/6/2016
- 33 -