Suarez v. Super. Ct.

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 24, 2024
DocketD082429
StatusPublished

This text of Suarez v. Super. Ct. (Suarez v. Super. Ct.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Suarez v. Super. Ct., (Cal. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Filed 1/24/24

CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION ONE

STATE OF CALIFORNIA

ONECIMO SIERRA SUAREZ, D082429

Petitioner,

v. (Super. Ct. No. 37-2022-00000615- CU-OE-CTL) THE SUPERIOR COURT OF SAN DIEGO COUNTY,

Respondent;

RUDOLPH & SLETTEN, INC.,

Real Party in Interest.

ORIGINAL PROCEEDING in mandate. Kenneth J. Medel, Judge. Petition granted. Moon Law Group, Kane Moon, Allen Feghali, and Edwin M. Kamarzarian, Attorneys for Petitioner. Nida & Romyn, Robert Nida, Matthew J. Luce, and William Schubert, Attorneys for Real Party in Interest. No appearance for Respondent. Concerned with the fairness of adhesion contracts in the consumer and employment context that require the arbitration of disputes, beginning in 2019 the Legislature enacted protections against delays in the arbitration process as a result of businesses and employers failing to pay the necessary fees before the arbitration can proceed. (Stats. 2019, ch., 870 (Sen. Bill No. 707) § 1.) Amendments to these statutes in 2021 (Stats. 2021, ch. 222 (Reg. Sess. 2021–2022)) “obligate a company or business [that] drafts an arbitration agreement to pay its share of arbitration fees by no later than 30 days after the date they are due, and specify that the failure to do so constitutes a ‘material breach of the arbitration agreement.’ ” (Gallo v. Wood Ranch USA, Inc. (2022) 81 Cal.App.5th 621, 629 (Gallo).) A material breach waives the contractual right to arbitration and the consumer or employee is permitted to litigate the dispute in court if he or she so chooses. After plaintiff Onecimo Sierra Suarez sued his employer for alleged wage and hour violations, the employer successfully moved to stay the court action and proceed to arbitration as provided in the employment agreement that the employer drafted. When the employer waited more than 30 days to pay its share of the arbitrator’s initial filing fee, Suarez unsuccessfully moved to vacate the arbitration stay. He now seeks writ relief directing the trial court to find that the employer has waived its right to arbitration pursuant to

Code of Civil Procedure sections 1281.97 et seq.1 We agree and grant the petition.

1 Undesignated statutory references are to the Code of Civil Procedure unless otherwise indicated. 2 FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Suarez is the plaintiff in a pending civil action in San Diego Superior Court. His claim asserts wage and hour violations against his former employer, defendant and real party Rudolph & Sletten, Inc. (R&S). In late October 2022, on R&S’s motion, the superior court stayed the action and ordered the parties to arbitration. Then, in accordance with that order, Suarez filed his demand for arbitration, initiating the arbitration proceeding. Less than a month later, on December 2, 2022, the arbitration provider,

JAMS, Inc.2 issued an e-mail invoice for the initial filing fee to Suarez and R&S marked, “due upon receipt.” The total fee due was $1,750, allocated $400 to Suarez and $1,350 to R&S. Though it was not required, JAMS followed up on December 19, 2022 to request a status of payment. It is undisputed that R&S did not pay its share of the JAMS invoice until January 4, 2023. Within the next two weeks both parties filed competing motions in the superior court. R&S sought to compel compliance with the court’s earlier arbitration order, while Suarez filed a motion to vacate the stay of his civil action. Suarez contended that R&S had waived its right to arbitrate the dispute by failing to pay its share of the arbitration filing fee within 30 days as required by section 1281.97. R&S disagreed, asserting that it had until the close of business on January 5, 2022 to pay the invoice, making its January 4 payment timely. While conceding that its payment would normally have been due on January 1, 2023—30 calendar days after December 2, 2022—R&S argued that sections 12 and 1010.6 operated in tandem to extend the due date until January 5. The superior court agreed

2 JAMS stands for Judicial Arbitration and Mediation Services. 3 with R&S, granting the motion to compel compliance with the existing arbitration order and denying Suarez’s motion to lift the stay. We issued an order to show cause to review this issue of first impression.

DISCUSSION

The nub of this dispute is the calculation of a statutory deadline for payment of arbitration filing fees, and whether any failure to meet that deadline constituted a material breach of the arbitration agreement. The superior court determined that the statutory deadline prescribed by section 1281.97 was extended by operation of other unrelated statutes such that R&S made timely payment. R&S seeks to defend the court’s reasoning, but also argues that even if it missed the deadline, for various other reasons it was not in material breach of the arbitration agreement.

A. The grace period for payment of arbitration fees by R&S was not extended to January 5, 2023.

The Legislature enacted sections 1281.97 and 1281.98, recognizing that a “ ‘company’s failure to pay the fees of an arbitration provider’ ” in a timely manner “ ‘hinder[ed] the efficient resolution of disputes and contravene[d]

public policy.’ ”3 (De Leon v. Juanita’s Foods (2022) 85 Cal.App.5th 740, 750 (De Leon).) Section 1281.97 requires that the provider transmit an invoice to the parties specifying “the full amount owed and the date that payment is due,” generally indicating the invoice is “due on receipt.” (Id., subd. (a)(2).)

3 The primary difference between sections 1281.97 and 1281.98 is that “section 1281.97 concerns a failure to timely pay ‘the fees or costs to initiate’ an arbitration proceeding,” whereas “section 1281.98 concerns a failure to timely pay ‘the fees or costs required to continue’ an arbitration proceeding.” (De Leon, supra, 85 Cal.App.5th at p. 750, quoting §§ 1281.97, subd. (a)(1), 1281.98, subd. (a)(1).) Because this case focuses on initial fees, we will refer primarily to section 1281.97. 4 It also allows a grace period for payment of “30 days after the due date.” (Id., subd. (a)(1).)

This legislation was aimed at a very specific problem—the “procedural limbo and delay workers and consumers face when they submit to arbitration, pursuant to a mandatory arbitration agreement, but the employer fails or refuses to pay their share of the arbitration fees.” (Assem. Com. on Judiciary, Analysis of Sen. Bill No. 707 (2019–2020 Reg. Sess.) as amended May 20, 2019, p. 11 (Assembly Report).) Prior to the enactment, state law did “not provide clear guidance for courts and litigants in the event a drafting party fails to properly pay to commence arbitration in a timely manner.” (Id., at p. 6.) “That problem was fixed with the ‘material breach and sanction provisions’ of the statute, which constitute a ‘strict yet reasonable method to ensure the timely adjudication of employee and consumer claims that are subject to arbitration.’ ” (De Leon, supra, 85 Cal.App.5th at p. 757, quoting Assembly Report, at p. 9; see also Doe v.

Superior Court (2023) 95 Cal.App.5th 346, 357 (Doe).4) R&S does not take issue with the Legislature’s intent that the time limits in section 1281.97 be strictly enforced. Rather, it contends that two different provisions of the Code of Civil Procedure operated to extend the 30-

4 The overriding moral of this story may be to pay your bills on time. As the Doe court explained, “One of the Legislature’s main objectives was to deter employers from strategically withholding payments of arbitration fees so that they could no longer stymie the ability of employees to assert their legal rights. To do this, the Legislature established strict breach provisions for nonpayment . . . .

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