DOCTOR’S ASSOCIATES INC. V. CARBONELL
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DOCTOR’S ASSOCIATES INC.,
Plaintiff/Counter-Defendant-Appellant,
v.
JOSE LUIS CARBONELL and
VICTORIA CARBONELL,
Defendants/Counter-Plaintiffs-Appellees,
and
JOSE LUIS CARBONELL and
VICTORIA CARBONELL,
Third Party
Plaintiffs-Appellees,
v.
CAROL ENGLISH,
Third Party
Defendant-Appellant.
COURT OF APPEALS OF NEW MEXICO
APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF GRANT COUNTY, Henry
Quintero, District Judge
Gordon Davis Johnson & Shane P.C.,
John M. Dickey, El Paso, TX, for Appellants Doctor’s Associates, Inc. and Carol
English
Scott Hulse P.C., Casey S. Stevenson, El
Paso, TX, for Appellees
JAMES J. WECHSLER, Judge. WE CONCUR:
JONATHAN B. SUTIN, Judge, RODERICK T. KENNEDY, Judge
AUTHOR: JAMES J. WECHSLER
{1} Appellants
Doctor’s Associates, Inc. (DAI) and Carol English appeal the district court’s
order denying their motion to compel arbitration. We affirm.
{2} DAI and Jose Luis
Carbonell and Victoria Carbonell were parties to a franchise agreement under
which DAI, as franchisor, granted the Carbonells, as franchisees, the right to
operate a Subway restaurant in Silver City, New Mexico. English was DAI’s
development agent. The parties’ rights and responsibilities were largely
governed by a franchise agreement, which contained an arbitration clause. As
relevant to this appeal, the scope of the arbitration clause provided that
“[a]ny dispute, controversy or claim arising out of or relating to this
[a]greement or the breach thereof shall be settled by arbitration.”
{3} Following the
procedures established in the franchise agreement, on April 11, 2012, DAI
submitted a demand for arbitration to the American Dispute Resolution Center,
Inc. Prior to a scheduled hearing before an arbitrator, the parties entered
into a stipulated award, resolving the need for arbitration. The arbitrator
approved the stipulated award.
{4} In the stipulated
award, the Carbonells admitted to violating the franchise agreement by failing
to adhere to certain requirements of the franchisor’s operations manual. They
agreed to “transfer the restaurant in accordance with the standard transfer
procedures established by [DAI] to a buyer approved by [DAI] within ninety (90)
days[.]” The stipulated award additionally contained the following provisions:
6. This
Award is the Final Award. It is effective immediately, without the necessity of
further hearing and can be confirmed in any court having jurisdiction.
9. The
[p]arties agree and understand that this Stipulated Award contains the entire
understanding of the parties.
{5} The transfer did
not take place within the specified period. On May 7, 2013, DAI filed an action
in district court, alleging that the Carbonells had breached the stipulated
award and requesting that the court confirm “the arbitration award as set forth
in the [s]tipulated [a]ward.” It subsequently filed an amended complaint. The
Carbonells filed an answer, counterclaim, and third-party complaint. In their
counterclaim and third-party complaint, they claimed that DAI breached the
franchise agreement and the stipulated award and, with English, a third-party
defendant, had engaged in a civil conspiracy and fraudulent misconduct in
connection with the Carbonells’ transfer of the restaurant. English filed an
answer to the third-party complaint.
{6} On November 27,
2013, DAI and English moved the district court to compel arbitration based on
the arbitration clause of the franchise agreement. In response, the Carbonells
argued that the matter was properly before the district court because their
counterclaim did not arise from the franchise agreement, but from the
stipulated award that did not contain an arbitration clause. Because their
counterclaim and cross-claims referred to the franchise agreement in addition
to the stipulated award, the Carbonells asserted that they would seek leave to
amend the counterclaim and third-party complaint “to clarify that their claims
arise only from” the stipulated award. The Carbonells reiterated this position
at the beginning of their argument on the motion.
{7} After hearing
argument on the motion, the district court issued an order denying the motion.
It concluded that there was no agreement to arbitrate because the Carbonells’
claims arose from the stipulated award, not from the franchise agreement or
through arbitration, the stipulated award did not require arbitration, and the
stipulated award did not contain language incorporating the arbitration
requirements of the franchise agreement.
ABSENCE OF AGREEMENT TO
ARBITRATE
{8} The issue on
appeal, as it did in the district court, centers on whether the Carbonells’
claims are based on the stipulated agreement or the franchise agreement. As
explained by the district court, a court cannot compel arbitration in the
absence of an enforceable agreement to arbitrate.
Alexander v. Calton &
Assocs., Inc.,
2005-NMCA-034, ¶ 9,
137 N.M. 293,
110 P.3d 509. We decide
this issue as a matter of contract.
See Clay v. N.M. Title Loans, Inc.,
2012-NMCA-102, ¶ 14,
288 P.3d 888 (“[The general] rule is that arbitration is a
matter of contract and a party cannot be required to submit to arbitration any
dispute which he has not agreed so to submit.” (internal quotation marks and
citation omitted)). In doing so, we seek to fulfill the intent of the parties and
look to the plain meaning of the contractual language when possible.
Id.
¶¶ 14, 20;
Santa Fe Techs., Inc. v. Argus Networks, Inc.,
2002-NMCA-030,
¶ 52,
131 N.M. 772,
42 P.3d 1221. We review de novo the district court’s denial
of the motion to compel arbitration.
Cordova v. World Fin. Corp. of N.M.,
2009-NMSC-021, ¶ 11,
146 N.M. 256,
208 P.3d 901.
{9} There is no
question that the parties had a valid, enforceable arbitration clause as
contained in the franchise agreement. It was broad in scope and required the
parties to settle by arbitration “[a]ny dispute, controversy or claim arising
out of or relating to” the franchise agreement. However, although a broad
arbitration clause requires a broad interpretation as to its scope, the claims
at issue must bear a “‘reasonable relationship’ to the contract in which the
arbitration clause is found.”
Clay,
2012-NMCA-102, ¶ 14;
Santa Fe
Techs.,
2002-NMCA-030, ¶¶ 52, 55.
{10} The franchise
agreement arbitration provision clearly applied to disputes arising from the
franchise agreement and led the parties to pursue arbitration arising from
their dispute concerning the operations of the Carbonells’ restaurant. The
question before us, however, is not as simple. When the parties proceeded to
arbitrate the operations dispute, they entered into another agreement: the
stipulated award.
{11} Appellants argue
that the stipulated award flows from the franchise agreement because the
franchise agreement governed the entire relationship of the parties. According
to Appellants, “[a]ll claims arise out [of] or relate to the . . . [f]ranchise
[a]greement and simply could not have arisen in the absence of the parties’
franchise relationship.”
{12} Although we agree
with Appellants that the parties intended the franchise agreement to govern
their relationship, we do not agree that the parties could not vary their
relationship such that all consequences of their actions would be controlled by
the franchise agreement merely because it was the first agreement between them.
See Clay,
2012-NMCA-102, ¶ 22 (citing with approval
Aiken v. World
Fin. Corp. of S.C., 644 S.E.2d 705, 708 (S.C. 2007), that “applying what
amounts to a but-for causation standard essentially includes every dispute
imaginable between the parties, which greatly oversimplifies the parties’
agreement to arbitrate claims between them” and stating that “[s]uch a result
is illogical and unconscionable.” (alteration, internal quotation marks, and
citation omitted)).
1 The stipulated award, which,
according to DAI, “could not have arisen in the absence of the parties’
franchise relationship[,]” varied the parties’ relationship. It added another
express, written agreement between them. We thus must examine the stipulated
award in addition to the franchise agreement in order to determine the intent
of the parties regarding arbitration.
See CC Hous. Corp. v. Ryder Truck
Rental, Inc.,
1987-NMSC-117, ¶ 6,
106 N.M. 577,
746 P.2d 1109 (“When
discerning the purpose, meaning, and intent of the parties to a contract, the
court’s duty is confined to interpreting the contract that the parties made for
themselves, and absent any ambiguity, the court may not alter or fabricate a
new agreement for the parties.”).
{13} The parties
expressed in the stipulated award the provisions of the franchise agreement
that would pertain to their agreement under the stipulated award. In this
regard, the stipulated award incorporated provisions of the franchise agreement
that were necessary to carry out the terms of the stipulated award and for the
Carbonells to continue to operate the restaurant pending a transfer, such as
those pertaining to the termination of the franchise agreement, insurance
requirements, the applicability of the operations manual, and non-compete provisions.
The transfer was to follow DAI’s standard transfer procedures. The parties
stated in the stipulated agreement: “The [p]arties agree and understand that
this [s]tipulated [a]ward contains the entire understanding of the parties.”
The stipulated award does not contain a provision requiring arbitration.
{14} Based on the
parties’ language, as expressed in both their franchise agreement and
stipulated award, we conclude, as did the district court, that the parties did
not intend the arbitration clause of the franchise agreement to apply to claims
that arose out of the stipulated award.
See Clay,
2012-NMCA-102, ¶ 14
(requiring a reasonable relationship between the claims at issue and the
contract containing the arbitration clause). The parties varied their
relationship with the stipulated award. Most importantly, they included the
merger clause in which they expressed the intent that the stipulated award was
“the entire understanding.” They designated the aspects of the franchise
agreement that they believed were appropriate while the Carbonells operated the
restaurant pursuant to the stipulated agreement. Thus, although the franchise
agreement still provided the background for the parties’ relationship, the
parties focused on the stipulated award to complete their relationship.
{15} Appellants argue
that the arbitration clause of the franchise agreement remained in effect after
the stipulated award because “[i]t would be unnecessary and duplicative to
again include the arbitration provision” in the stipulated award. In this
regard, Appellants point to the provisions of the stipulated award that
required continued compliance with the franchise agreement for insurance and
non-compete protections. They contend that such provisions “make clear that the
Carbonells were expected to continue to comply with the terms of” the franchise
agreement. However, we consider these provisions to be inconsistent with an
intent that the provisions of the franchise agreement continued in effect
without mention in the stipulated award. If the parties made such an
assumption, it would not have been necessary to specifically state that the
insurance and non-compete provisions had continued effect.
See Bank of N.M.
v. Sholer,
1984-NMSC-118, ¶ 6,
102 N.M. 78,
691 P.2d 465 (“A contract must
be construed as a harmonious whole, and every word or phrase must be given
meaning and significance according to its importance in the context of the
whole contract.”).
{16} Appellants further
assert that the Carbonells’ claims “specifically relate to the termination and
attempted transfer” of the franchise agreement.
2
But, the Carbonells’ claims pertain to the transfer of the Carbonells’ Silver
City restaurant and other restaurants, which was the express subject matter of
the stipulated award. Appellants do not otherwise specifically tie the
Carbonells’ claims to the franchise agreement. We conclude that the parties did
not intend for the arbitration clause of the franchise agreement to apply to
the Carbonells’ claims.
See Benz v. Town Ctr. Land, LLC,
2013-NMCA-111,
¶ 31,
314 P.3d 688 (“The purpose, meaning, and intent of the parties to a
contract is to be deduced from the language employed by them; and where such
language is not ambiguous, it is conclusive.” (alteration, internal quotation
marks, and citation omitted)).
{17} Appellants
additionally state that the language of the stipulated award “contains the
entire understanding of the parties[,]” was a “boilerplate merger clause[,]”
and contend that it was insufficient to supersede the arbitration clause of the
franchise agreement. Appellants rely on
Riley Manufacturing Co. v. Anchor
Glass Container Corp., 157 F.3d 775 (10th Cir. 1998), in this regard.
{18} In
Riley, the
parties entered into a manufacturing agreement that included an arbitration
clause.
Id. at 776-77. After a copyright dispute arose, the parties
entered into mutual releases and a settlement agreement.
Id. at 777. In
the settlement agreement, the parties agreed to reestablish a business
relationship.
Id. at 778. The settlement agreement contained a merger
clause, stating that the settlement agreement constituted the entire agreement
of the parties and “cancels, terminates and supersedes any and all prior
representations and agreements relating to the subject matter thereof.”
Id.
(internal quotation marks omitted). The Tenth Circuit addressed the merger
clause in the context of a subsequent lawsuit, concluding that the merger
clause canceled provisions that related to the subject matter of the settlement
agreement, the specific copyright designs at issue in the original threatened
lawsuit as well as the continuing use of the plaintiff’s copyright designs, but
that the arbitration clause of the manufacturing agreement would apply to other
issues that were not the subject matter of the settlement agreement.
Id.
at 778, 783. The Tenth Circuit also expressed the presumption that an
arbitration provision is presumed to survive the expiration of the parties’
contract unless there is “some express or implied evidence that the parties
intend to override this presumption[.]”
Id. at 781. It noted that there
is no longer a presumption if the parties “express or clearly imply an intent
to repudiate post-expiration arbitrability” or “the dispute cannot be said to
arise under the previous contract.”
Id.
{19} Appellants argue
from
Riley that the merger provision in this case is insufficient to
repudiate the arbitration provision of the franchise agreement because it
neither expressly nor clearly implies that arbitration does not apply. However,
we do not believe that
Riley affects our reasoning in this case for
three reasons.
{20} First, the holding
in
Riley relied on the specific language in the settlement agreement and
the facts of that case. Second, even if we were to apply a presumption of
survival absent evidence to the contrary, (1) we can reasonably imply from the
language of the stipulated award that the parties did not intend for the
arbitration provision of the franchise agreement to apply to a breach of the
stipulated award, and (2) the present dispute did not arise from the franchise
agreement. Third, although the parties’ intent would have been more clearly
stated if they had included language in the stipulated award similar to the
cancellation language in
Riley, in construing the intent of the parties,
we cannot disregard the language that they did use.
See Montoya v. Villa
Linda Mall, Ltd.,
1990-NMSC-053, ¶ 8,
110 N.M. 128,
793 P.2d 258 (“It is
black letter law that, absent an ambiguity, a court is bound to interpret and
enforce a contract’s clear language and cannot create a new agreement for the
parties.”).
STIPULATED AWARD AS ARBITRATION
AWARD
{21} The district court
found that the stipulated award “was entered into in lieu of arbitration. It
was not reached through arbitration, or facilitated by an arbitrator.”
Appellants assert that the district court erred in these findings. They address
these findings on appeal, although they question their relevance. We do not
address Appellants’ argument in this regard because it does not affect our
determination of the appeal.
{22} We affirm the order
of the district court denying the motion to compel.
RODERICK T. KENNEDY, Judge