The Kentucky Shakespeare Festival, Inc. v. Brantley Dunaway

490 S.W.3d 691, 2016 Ky. LEXIS 255, 2016 WL 3371085
CourtKentucky Supreme Court
DecidedJune 16, 2016
Docket2016-SC-000002-I
StatusUnknown
Cited by82 cases

This text of 490 S.W.3d 691 (The Kentucky Shakespeare Festival, Inc. v. Brantley Dunaway) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Kentucky Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Kentucky Shakespeare Festival, Inc. v. Brantley Dunaway, 490 S.W.3d 691, 2016 Ky. LEXIS 255, 2016 WL 3371085 (Ky. 2016).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT BY

JUSTICE VENTERS

Movant, Kentucky Shakespeare Festival, Inc. (KSF), seeks interlocutory relief following the Court of Appeals’ denial of its CR 65.07 motion for an order to compel the Jefferson Circuit Court to confirm what KSF calls an “arbitration award” arising from an employment contract between KSF and Respondent, Brantley Dunaway. Upon review of KSF’s motion and Dunaway’s response, we decline to grant relief because We are persuaded that the dispute was not subject to an arbitration agreement and no “arbitration award” existed to be confirmed by the circuit court.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

In May 2011, KSF, a nonprofit theatrical organization, hired Brantley Dunaway to serve as its director. KSF and Dunaway entered into an Employment Agreement which provided Dunaway with an annual salary to be supplemented with bonus payments each fiscal year if certain revenue increases were achieved. Two years later, amid accusations of impropriety, KSF terminated Dunaway’s employment. In connection with the termination, the parties negotiated a Severance and Release Agreement (Severance Agreement) that included a provision requiring KSF to pay Dunaway the 2013 fiscal year bonus calculated in accordance with the Employment Agreement.

Section 5 of the Employment Agreement contained the provisions for Dunaway’s bonus compensation. Section 5(e) is the provision that KSF proffers as an agreement to arbitrate. The following portions of Section 5 are relevant to our review:

5(a): In addition to the Base Salary, [KSF] agrees to pay [Dunaway] an amount equal to ten percent (10%) of the year over year increase in net revenues for education programming for each fiscal year of this employment agreement, computed beginning October 1, 2012, for the fiscal year from October 1, 2011, to September 30, 2011....
5(b): In addition to the Based Salary, [KSF] agrees to pay [Dunaway] an amount equal to ten percent (10%) of the year over year increase in net revenues for non-educational, non-grant revenues for each fiscal year of this employment agreement, computed beginning October 1, 2012, for the fiscal year from October 1, 2011, to September 30, 2011....
5(e): Sound accounting principles will be used to determine the increases for each fiscal year, and state and federal income taxes will not be deducted. The parties agree to abide by the determination of the independent firm of certified public accountants currently employed by *693 [KSF] to prepare the financial statement for the fiscal year in question in case of a dispute as to the true amount of the net profits, and each party agrees to accept such determination as final.

(Emphasis added).

The independent accounting firm referred to in Section 5(e) was Deming Malone Livesay & Ostroff (“DMLO”). It is not clear whether the parties attempted to calculate the 2013 bonus before the dispute developed, but it is clear that a dispute arose, and pursuant to Section 5(e), DMLO was called upon to determine the “true amount of the net profits” from which the bonus pay would be calculated. 1 On February 10, 2014, KSF informed Dunaway by letter as follows:

[DMLO] recently completed their audit of Kentucky Shakespeare’s financial records for Fiscal Year 2013. As part of' that audit, and as required by the employment contract in effect between you and Kentucky Shakespeare during FY13, DMLO calculated your performance bonus in accordance with the net revenue formulas in your contract as applied in prior years. They have calculated that no bonus is due. The detail of that calculation is attached.

After KSF informed Dunaway that he was not entitled to a bonus for the 2013 fiscal year, Dunaway filed suit for breach of contract. 2 In response to Dunaway’s suit, KSF asserted no claim that Duna-way’s bonus calculation was governed by an arbitration agreement, nor did it assert that the bonus issue had already been resolved by binding arbitration. KSF did not file a counterclaim seeking a judicial confirmation of an arbitration award for the 2013 bonus issue. The first reference to “arbitration” came nearly a year after the suit was filed when, in June 2015, KSF filed a “Motion for Partial Summary Judgment and Declaratory Relief.” The declaratory judgment component of KSF’s motion requested a declaration that, pursuant to the terms of the Employment Agreement and the Severance Agreement, the parties must abide by KSF’s accounting firm’s “determination that Dunaway is not entitled to a Fiscal Year 2013 bonus” because that determination was a binding “arbitration award.”

Neither Section 5 nor any other part of the Employment Agreement specifically refers to “arbitration,” nor does it mention submitting bonus disputes to.an arbitrator or any other process of alternative dispute resolution. The Severance Agreement explicitly provided that the venue for any proceeding involving the Severance Agreement would be a “court of competent jurisdiction for Jefferson County, Kentucky.”

The Jefferson Circuit Court denied KSF’s motion for declaratory relief, holding that Section 5(e) was not an agreement to forgo litigation and arbitrate any bonus dispute, and thus KSF was not entitled to an order of the court confirming DMLO’s “arbitration award.” KSF then sought interlocutory relief in the Court of Appeals pursuant to CR 65.07. The Court of Appeals agreed with the circuit court, concluding that Section 5(e) constituted an agreement for an appraisement rather *694 than an agreement to arbitrate. 3 Unsuccessful at the Court of Appeals, KSF brought this action pursuant to CR 65.09, which provides: “Any party adversely affected by an order of the Court of Appeals in a proceeding under Rule 65.07 or Rule 65.08 may ... move the Supreme Court to vacate or modify it.” KSF petitions this Court for a “declaration confirming the arbitration award rendered by the accounting firm[.]” For the reasons stated below, we decline to do so.

II. ANALYSIS

KSF petitions this Court for an order compelling the Jefferson Circuit Court to “issue a declaration confirming the arbitration award rendered by the accounting firm of Deming, Malone, Livesay & Ostroff.” Based upon our review of the record, we are persuaded that no arbitration agreement existed between KSF and Dunaway. We are satisfied that no arbitration proceeding occurred, and there is no arbitration award to be confirmed.

As it did before the Court of Appeals, KSF claims before this Court that Section 5(e) of the Employment Agreement contains an agreement to arbitrate any dispute about Dunaway’s annual salary bonus. The critical language of Section 5(e) is this sentence:

The parties agree to abide by the determination of the independent firm of certified public accountants currently employed by [KSF] to prepare the financial statement for the fiscal year in question in case of a dispute as to the true amount of the net profits, and each party agrees to accept such determination as final.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
490 S.W.3d 691, 2016 Ky. LEXIS 255, 2016 WL 3371085, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-kentucky-shakespeare-festival-inc-v-brantley-dunaway-ky-2016.