BROWN et al. v. RAC ACCEPTANCE EAST, LLC.
S17G1097
Supreme Court of Georgia
January 29, 2018
Reconsideration denied March 5, 2018
303 Ga. 172
NAHMIAS, Justice.
FINAL COPY; Cеrtiorari to the Court of Appeals of Georgia — 340 Ga. App. XXV. Mitchell L. Albert III, for appellants. Taylor English Duma LLP, Matthew R. Rosenkoff, Glianny Fagundo Toro; Littler Mendelson, Robert F. Friedman, for appellee.
After RAC Acceptance East, LLC swore out a warrant for Mira Brown‘s arrest for theft by conversion of furniture that she had rented from RAC, Brown filed a lawsuit against RAC alleging malicious prosecution and other torts. The trial court entered an order granting RAC‘s motion to compel Brown to arbitrate her claims pursuant to the arbitration agreement incorporated into the parties’ rental agreement. The Court of Appeals affirmed that order, concluding that whether RAC had waived its right to demand arbitration by its conduct in initiating the related criminal proceeding against Brown was a matter for the court to decide and that the trial court had correctly ruled that RAC did not waive arbitration. We granted certiorari, and we now affirm the Court of Appeals’ judgment on the ground that the delegation provision in the parties’ arbitration agreement clearly gave the arbitrator, not the courts, the authority to determine that RAC did not waive by prior litigation conduct its right to seek arbitration, and the arbitrator‘s decision on the wаiver question cannot be
1.
The record shows the following undisputed facts. In January 2012, Brown entered into a rental-purchase agreement with RAC to rent a bedroom set. The rental agreement incorporated by reference an attached arbitration agreement, which Brown also executed. The arbitration agreement says: “Either [Brown] or [RAC] may require any Claim to be arbitrated. Either [Brown] or [RAC] may do so before or after a lawsuit has been started over the Claim . . . .” A section of the arbitration agreement titled “What Claims Are Covered” says, with emphasis supplied:
“Claim” means any claim, dispute or controversy between you and us that in any way arises from or relates to the Rental-Purchase Agreement or the leased property, except “Claim” does not include any claim or action by either party seeking judicial determination of that party‘s right to possession of the leased merchandise, provided that such a claim or action does not involve a request for monetary relief of any kind.
“Claim” has the broadest possible meaning and, except as set forth above, includes initial claims, counterclaims, cross-claims and third-party claims. It includes disputes based upon contract, tort, fraud and other intentional torts, constitution, statute, regulation, ordinance, common law and equity (including any claim for injunctive or declaratory relief other than a declaration of a party‘s right to possession). It also includes disputes about the validity, enforceability, arbitrability or scopе of this Arbitration Agreement or the Rental-Purchase Agreement.
In September 2014, Brown filed a complaint agаinst RAC in the Superior Court of Fulton County (the “trial court“), asserting tort claims for malicious prosecution and arrest, negligent and intentional infliction of emotional distress, invasion of privacy, false imprisonment and arrest, and slander and libel. The complaint alleged among other things that RAC filed an arrest warrant application that falsely accused her of theft by conversion, that RAC told her
RAC filed a motion to stay Brown‘s lawsuit and compel arbitration, arguing that the parties’ arbitration agreement required Brown to arbitrate her claims. Brown objected, arguing among other things that RAC “waived any potential right to arbitration when [it] applied for and obtained a warrant for [her] arrest.” In January 2015, the trial court entered an order granting RAC‘s motion, staying the lawsuit, and compelling arbitration. The court noted that Brown acknowledged the existence of the arbitration agreement and the applicability of the Federal Arbitration Act (FAA),
An arbitration hearing was then held under the auspices of the American Arbitration Association. Brown arguеd among other things that Taft required a finding that RAC had waived its right to demand that she arbitrate her tort claims. In December 2015, the arbitrator ruled that “[w]hile it is a close question, . . . [RAC] did not waive arbitration in this action” by using the criminal warrant procedure. The arbitrator then ruled in favor of RAC on each of Brown‘s tort claims.
In January 2016, RAC filed a motion in the trial court to confirm the arbitrator‘s award, and in February the court entered a confirmation order and a final judgment in favor of RAC. Brown then appealed, arguing among other things that the trial court erred in its initial order staying the lawsuit and
2.
In this Court, Brown does not dispute that she signed the arbitration agreement with RAC, that the FAA governs the agreement, or that the agreement‘s broad dеfinition of a “Claim” for which either party may demand arbitration encompasses her tort claims against RAC. Instead, citing Taft, Brown contends that she had the right to have her tort claims decided in court because RAC waived its right to enforce the arbitration agreement through its
(a) RAC asserts that pursuant to the parties’ arbitration agreеment, the dispute about enforceability was properly submitted to arbitration. That is correct. A dispute about the enforceability of an arbitration agreement is a classic “‘gateway’ question[ ] of ‘arbitrability.‘” Rent-A-Center, West, Inc. v. Jackson, 561 U. S. 63, 68-69 (130 SCt 2772, 177 LE2d 403) (2010) (citations omitted). See BG Group, PLC v. Republic of Argentina, 572 U. S. 25, 33-34 (134 SCt 1198, 1206-1208, 188 LE2d 220) (2014) (discussing various gateway, or “threshold,” issues of arbitrability). And as the United States Supreme Court explаined in First Options of Chicago, Inc. v. Kaplan, 514 U. S. 938 (115 SCt 1920, 131 LE2d 985) (1995), “the question ‘who has the primary power to decide arbitrability’ turns upon what the parties agreed about that matter.” Id. at 943 (emphasis in original).
“Courts should not assume that the parties agreed to arbitrate arbitrability,” Kaplan, 514 U. S. at 944, and “‘in the absence of an agreement to
Arbitration agreements these days often contain what is known in arbitration law as a “delegation provision” — that is, “an agreement to arbitrate threshold issues concerning the arbitration agreement.” Rent-A-Center, 561 U. S. at 68. In this case, the delegation provision clearly assigns responsibility for resolving “disputes about the validity, enforceability, arbitrability or scope of this Arbitration Agreement” to the arbitrator. And Brown‘s conduct-based
Thus, as the trial court correctly recognized in its order compelling arbitration, the broad delegation provision contained in the parties’ arbitration agreement constitutes the clear and unmistakable evidence necessary to displace the usual presumption that the threshold issue of arbitrability should be decided by the court rather than the arbitrator. See, e.g., Rent-A-Center, 561 U. S. at 68-69 & n.1 (holding that an arbitration agreement saying “‘[t]he Arbitrator . . . shall have exclusive authority to resolve any dispute relating to the . . . enforceability . . . of this Agreement‘” was a clear and unmistakable delegation оf arbitrability); Losey, 320 Ga. App. at 393 (holding that language in a fee agreement‘s arbitration clause covering disputes about “‘the scope of this arbitration provision and its enforceability’ . . . constitute[d] clear and unmistakable evidence that the parties agreed that the arbitrator would decide the issue of arbitrability“); Jones v. Waffle House, Inc., 866 F3d 1257, 1267 (11th Cir. 2017) (finding thаt language similar to that in Brown and RAC‘s arbitration agreement “clearly and unmistakably evinces the parties’ intent to arbitrate all gateway issues“).
(c) As RAC points out, Brown did not challenge the arbitratоr‘s ruling rejecting her waiver-by-conduct argument on any ground permissible under the FAA. See
Brown‘s argument would be that the arbitrator erred in his legal conclusion that Taft does not require a finding that RAC waived its right to arbitration of her tort claims. But in Hall Street, a case involving what the primary dissent described as “a rather glaring error of law” by the arbitrator, 552 U. S. at 594 (Stevens, J., dissenting), the United States Supreme Court squarely rejected the argument that the FAA allows courts to conduct “general review for an arbitrator‘s legal errors” in deciding whether to enforce an arbitration award, id. at 585 (majority opinion). The Supreme Court emphasized that the FAA authorizes a court to vacate an arbitration award only for “egregious departures from the parties’ agreed-upon arbitration: ‘corruption,’ ‘fraud,’ ‘evident partiality,’ ‘misconduct,’ ‘misbehavior,’ [and] ‘exceed[ing] . . . powers,‘” and noted that “‘[f]raud’ and a mistake of law are not cut from the same cloth.” Id. at 586 (quoting
Brown did not (and does not) allege that any such “extreme arbitral conduct” infected the arbitrator‘s award in favor of RAC. Hall Street, 552 U. S. at 586. See also Oxford Health Plans, 569 U. S. at 568 (“Under the FAA, courts may vacate an arbitrator‘s decision ‘only in very unusual circumstances.‘” (citation omitted)); USW Local 200 v. Wise Alloys, LLC, 807 F3d 1258, 1272 (11th Cir. 2015) (“‘An arbitrator‘s result may be wrong; it may appear unsupported; it may appear poorly reasoned; it may appear foolish. Yet, it may not bе subject to court interference.‘” (citation omitted)). Accordingly, a challenge to the arbitrator‘s award based on Taft would fail, regardless of the merits (or lack thereof) of the arbitrator‘s legal conclusion that Taft did not require a finding that RAC waived its right to enforce the arbitration agreement by swearing out an arrest warrant against Brown. Under the circumstances of this case, the Court of Appeals had no need to decide if Taft would apply, nor does this Court.3
(d) Thus, the Court of Appeals reached the right result, albeit for the wrong reason, so we affirm the Court of Appeals’ judgment upholding the trial court‘s order staying Brown‘s lawsuit and compelling arbitration.
Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur.
