Lead Opinion
This is an appeal from a denial of appellants’ request for injunctive relief seeking to enjoin its former employee, Selma Carson, from invoking her right to arbitrate under the arbitration provision in the parties’ 1972 employment contract.
At the outset, we note that our review of a decree denying a preliminary injunction is limited to a consideration of whether there were any apparently reasonable grounds for the action of the court below. Hospital Association of Pennsylvania v. Commonwealth Department of Public Welfare,
In November, 1972, Carson contracted with appellant, Buttonwood Farms, to serve as its Executive Director and Chief Administrative Officer. The contract entered into provided Carson a minimum annual salary of $20,000, fringe benefits, retirement compensation and life insurance, and covered all terms and conditions of her employment, including a right to severence benefits. The contract detailed at paragraph five sets forth conditions of breach that would result in involuntary termination and forfeiture of compensation:
5. Forfeiture of compensation to EMPLOYEE subsequent to termination shall result solely upon the following*316 conditions of breach by EMPLOYEE and for no other reason or reasons:
a) Conviction of EMPLOYEE for any felony in any court of record;
b) Intentional misappropriation of EMPLOYER’S funds and assets as may be determined by any final court of record;
c) Voluntary resignation from employment prior to age sixty.
The forfeiture of compensation by EMPLOYEE shall not be deemed a forfeiture of retirement funds vested in her and shall relate solely to subsequent salaries provided for hereunder.
The contract at paragraph ten also contains a provision providing for the arbitration of disputes:
10. In the event of any dispute arising out of or by reason of this Agreement, the parties agree to submit such dispute or disputes to the American Arbitration Association in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, in accordance with the Rules of that Association and the parties agree to be firmly bound to the decision or award rendered by the arbitrators. Costs of the arbitration shall be borne by the EMPLOYER in such disputes as are based on alleged defaults of EMPLOYER otherwise, as to other disputes exclusive of allegations of an EMPLOYER’S breach, the costs shall be borne equally between the parties.
Carson served without incident as Executive Director until June of 1978 when concern was expressed by appellant’s Board of Directors regarding her unauthorized expenditure of monies for repairs and improvements to one of appellant’s facilities. Subsequently, the Board of Directors recommended that she take a sabbatical leave for a one year period beginning July 1, 1978, or, as an alternative, accept a position as Director of Development for the 1978-79 fiscal year. This recommendation became a one-page written agreement between the parties and was entered into on August 17, 1978. The agreement, in addition to providing Carson the option of a sabbatical or a position as Director of
Appellant contends that the lower court erred in deciding that the provision to arbitrate contained in the 1972 agreement remained operative because any duty to arbitrate was discharged by the 1978 agreement. Appellant urges that the parties entered into a substituted agreement or novation, which has the effect of extinguishing all rights and duties under the earlier agreement. See, Restatement of Contracts § 424 (1932); Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 379, § 280 (1979).
The required essentials of a novation are “the displacement and extinction of a valid contract, the substitution for it of a valid new contract, ..., a sufficient legal consideration for the new contract, and the consent of the parties____” (emphasis supplied). Yoder v. T.F. Scholes, Inc.,
Instantly, the record presents no clear evidence of the parties’ intention to supplant the 1972 contract. The 1978 one-page document fails to provide expressly that it supersedes the original agreement between the parties. See generally Schuster v. Gilbertson Coal Company,
We further think that it would be unreasonable to conclude that Carson would assent to a substituted contract or novation and give up her right to arbitrate as provided for by the 1972 agreement. The circumstances surrounding this case make this point. Appellant’s dissatisfaction with Carson’s performance as Executive Director in 1978 gave it few viable alternatives; they could dismiss her involuntarily
Finding no clear or manifest abuse of discretion nor palpable legal error committed by the lower court, we affirm the lower court order.
Order affirmed.
Notes
. Although our colleague is correct that as a technical matter the instant case is moot inasmuch as the parties did proceed to arbitration, the issue that underlies the present dispute remains controverted. Effective resolution of the dispute and fair treatment of the parties compels us to review and address whether an agreement to arbitrate was entered into between the parties. (Appellants do not contest the fact that the dispute here would be arbitrable if an agreement to arbitrate existed.)
The instant appeal is from the lower court’s order of August 6, 1982, denying appellants’ request for a preliminary injunction to enjoin arbitration that was scheduled to proceed on August 17, 1982. Appellants further requested the lower court to stay the arbitration pending appeal to our Court. This request was denied by the lower court on August 11, 1982. Appellants filed a notice of appeal to our Court, and made application to our Court to enjoin the scheduled arbitration during the pendency of the instant appeal. Our Court denied this motion on August 16, 1982. Arbitration under the rules of the American Arbitration Association proceeded as scheduled, and an award was rendered on August 23, 1982 in favor of appellee. Appellant thereafter filed a petition in the lower court seeking to vacate the arbitrator’s award, and appellee filed a petition in the lower court seeking to confirm the award and to enter judgment. The lower court, sua sponte, questioned its jurisdiction to act upon these peti
We think appellants are entitled to judicial review of the issue raised herein. Through no procedural error on their part, appellants’ efforts to stay the scheduled arbitration in order to put before an appellate tribunal the issue presented herein, were rendered futile by the lower court and this Court. See generally, Lincoln University of the Commonwealth System of Higher Education v. Lincoln University Chapter of American Assoc. of University Professors,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
Rather than affirm the trial court’s order, I should dismiss the appeal. I think that the issue of whether the trial court erred in denying a preliminary injunction is moot. The record discloses that the arbitration was scheduled for August 17, 1982, and both parties agree that it has been held.
Moreover, I am unable to agree with the majority’s determination that appellants will be unable to secure review of this issue unless it is considered on this appeal. It is for the court to determine whether an agreement to arbitrate was entered into and whether the dispute involved falls within the scope of the arbitration provision. See Flightways Corp. v. Keystone Helicopter Corp., 459 Pa.
