Timothy McHale v. Taylored Services LLC

705 F. App'x 99
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedJuly 12, 2017
Docket16-3196
StatusUnpublished

This text of 705 F. App'x 99 (Timothy McHale v. Taylored Services LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Timothy McHale v. Taylored Services LLC, 705 F. App'x 99 (3d Cir. 2017).

Opinion

OPINION *

ROTH, Circuit Judge

This case involves the modification of an arbitration award. Timothy McHale requested arbitration regarding his termination from Taylored Services, LLC, alleging that he was fired without cause and without severance, in violation of his employment agreement. Taylored claimed that McHale was fired for cause and that he waived any right to severance by violating the restrictive covenants required by the agreement. The Arbitrator awarded McHale severance but did not award attorney’s fees to either party. McHale moved to partially confirm and partially modify the award, and the District Court modified the award to grant McHale attorney’s fees. Taylored now appeals the District Court’s modification of the award. We will reverse.

I.

McHale was hired by Taylored as its Chief Operating Officer in June 2011. In November 2012, McHale signed an employment agreement (Agreement) which included terms for termination and an arbitration clause. Section 5(c) of the Agreement provided that Taylored was able to terminate McHale immediately for cause if, inter alia, McHale “engag[ed] in any conduct amounting to ... gross negligence .... ” Under Séction 5(d), Taylored could also terminate McHale without cause as long as, inter alia, Taylored provided written notice and paid McHale severance. Section 5(d) also provided that “[njotwith-standing any other term of this Agreement, or of the Employee Release, [Tay-lored] shall have no obligation to pay any severance compensation to [McHale] following any breach” of the Section 7 restrictive covenants. In relevant part, Section 7 required that upon termination, McHale would not take, or would promptly return, all company property in his control.

The Agreement also specified that disputes arising out of the Agreement would be resolved by arbitration. Section 17 specified that “arbitration shall be the exclusive process for the resolution of any claim, action, dispute or controversy of any kind or nature, at law or in equity, as between or among Employer and Employee and related to, arising from or otherwise with respect to this Agreement or the subject matter hereof.” The only matters not required to be arbitrated involved Tay-lored’s right to pursue equitable remedies in the event of actual or threatened breach *101 of the restrictive covenants outlined in Section 9. Section 17 also provides that “[t]he prevailing party shall be entitled to ... reasonable attorneys’ fees and expenses ,..

McHale was terminated on July 19, 2013, purportedly for gross negligence in hiring illegal aliens through a staffing agency. McHale kept his company laptop for several months after termination, despite numerous requests for its return. In October 2013, Taylored filed suit in the Superior Court of New Jersey, requesting return of the laptop. In November 2013, Taylored reported that McHale had returned the laptop and dismissed the action. On April 13, 2014, McHale initiated arbitration, alleging that he was terminated without cause and seeking, among other things, severance. Taylored denied liability, both because McHale was terminated for cause and because McHale violated the Section 7 restrictive covenants.

The Arbitrator issued an opinion finding that 1) Taylored breached the Agreement by firing McHale without cause, and 2) McHale violated the restrictive covenant in Section 7. The Arbitrator awarded McHale severance. The Arbitrator then stated that “[b]ased upon my equitable power afforded by the arbitration provision in the employment agreement, I treat the breach of the restrictive covenant requiring return of the laptop as a counterclaim.” 1 Reasoning that “[McHale] prevailed on his breach of the employment claim and [Taylored] prevailed on the breach of restrictive covenant counterclaim[,]” the Arbitrator could not “find that one party prevailed ‘more’ than the other” and did not award attorney’s fees to McHale. 2

To challenge the Arbitrator’s Award, McHale filed a Verified Complaint for Summary Action in the New Jersey Superior Court. Taylored Services removed this complaint to the District Court. McHale then moved to partially confirm and partially modify the Award. The District Court held that “[w]hether McHale breached a restrictive covenant by maintaining possession of the company issued [laptop] was unrelated to the core underlying claim.” The District Court also emphasized the distinction between an affirmative defense and a counterclaim and held that the Arbitrator could not create a counterclaim out of an affirmative defense. Based on this conclusion, the District Court modified the arbitration award by awarding McHale attorney’s fees. This appeal followed.

II. 3

A court has limited authority to vacate or modify an arbitration award. Under N.J.S.A 2A: 23B-24, a court may modify an award if “the arbitrator made an award on a claim not submitted to the arbitrator and the award may be corrected without affecting the merits of the decision upon the claims submitted[.]” 4 These grounds *102 are very narrowly construed. In Trotina Printing, Inc. v. Fitzpatrick & Associates., Inc., the New Jersey Supreme Court adopted a standard that narrowed the grounds for modification to those listed in the previous arbitration statute. 5 The standard clarified that “parties are free to expand the scope of judicial review by providing for such expansion in their contract ... [such as] that such awards may be reversed either for mere errors of New Jersey law, substantial errors, or gross errors of New Jersey law and define therein what they mean by that.” 6 Lower courts have interpreted this standard as not allowing review for mistakes of law, unless parties have contracted otherwise. 7

We understand McHale to make three arguments as to why the Arbitrator erred in considering the restrictive covenant issue. First, McHale suggests that the Agreement requires that restrictive covenant claims be brought in court. However, Sections 17 and 9 of the Agreement merely allow Taylored to also seek injunctive re~ lief from a court for a breach of the restrictive covenant. The current issue, whether McHale breached the restrictive covenant, is not a claim for injunctive relief and is clearly covered by the broad language and scope of the arbitration clause in Section 17. 8

Second, McHale argues that even if the claim were theoretically arbitrable, the claim was not actually submitted to the Arbitrator. McHale cites Habick v. Liberty Mutual Fire Insurance Company, in which the plaintiff submitted her personal injury protection claim to an arbitrator to decide whether an accident necessitated knee replacement surgery for the plaintiff.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
705 F. App'x 99, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/timothy-mchale-v-taylored-services-llc-ca3-2017.