This case arises from a construction dispute. The contract between the general contractor and subcontractor provided for arbitration pursuant to the Federal Arbitration Act. When a complaint was filed, Appellant Sean Barnes, the general contractor, and Appellant Wando E., the property owner, sought to enforce the construction contract’s arbitration clause. The trial court refused to compel arbitration on the basis that the contract did not sufficiently impact interstate commerce. We find the trial court erred in finding the parties’ transaction had an insufficient nexus to interstate commerce and reverse.
I.
Appellant Wando E., LLC, owns property along the Wando River in Berkeley County, South Carolina. Wando E. retained Appellant Sean Barnes to serve as the general contractor for the construction of a marina. Barnes, in turn, hired Respondent Cape Romain as a subcontractor for the project. Barnes and Cape Romain entered into a standard form con
Section 5.1 of the Contract requires an affirmative election among various methods of dispute resolution. Parties must select arbitration, litigation in court, or “other.” Barnes and Cape Romain checked the box beside arbitration, selecting it as the binding method of dispute resolution for any subsequent claim. Specifically, article 21 of the Contract provides that all “[cjlaims, disputes and other matters in question arising out of or relating to this Contract” shall be subject to arbitration. Further, section 19.2 of the Contract expressly provides that if arbitration is selected as the method of dispute resolution, the Federal Arbitration Act
Several months into construction, the project engineer refused to certify further payments, raising concerns about certain angled pilings and misaligned dock sections.
Appellants moved to dismiss and compel arbitration, arguing that because all of the claims relate to Cape Romain’s performance under the Contract, the claims should be arbitrated. Cape Romain opposed dismissal and arbitration, arguing Wando E. was not a party to the Contract and, thus, may not compel arbitration and that the arbitration clause is not enforceable under the FAA because the transaction did not impact interstate commerce.
II.
Appellants argue the trial court erred in finding the arbitration provisions of the Contract cannot be enforced because the parties’ transaction did not involve interstate commerce. We agree.
We find arbitration pursuant to the FAA is proper because the underlying marina construction transaction falls within the purview of Congress’s commerce power. “Generally, any arbitration agreement affecting interstate commerce ... is subject to the FAA.” Landers v. Federal Deposit Ins. Co.,
Under the reach of the Commerce Clause, “Congress has authority to regulate (1) ‘the use of the channels of interstate commerce,’ (2) ‘the instmmentalities of interstate commerce, or persons or things in interstate commerce ... ’ and (3) ‘those activities having a substantial relation to interstate commerce.’ ” United States v. Gould,
Here, despite noting the following facts, the trial court concluded the parties’ transaction did not involve interstate commerce: (1) that certain raw materials used in constructing the marina originated in Ohio; (2) that Cape Romain transported the raw materials on its equipment and barges through the navigable waterways of the Charleston Harbor and up the Wando River to the project site; and (3) that the marina was constructed in navigable waterways under a permit issued by the Army Corps of Engineers. In analyzing the
We initially observe that the materials used in constructing the dock were instrumentalities of interstate commerce, as they were manufactured or fabricated in Ohio and transported to South Carolina to be used in constructing the marina. In addition, Cape Romain consulted with an out-of-state engineering and survey company in connection with the installation of the dock sections. This Court has previously held that incorporating out-of-state materials and consulting with out-of-state professionals in connection with a construction project
Regarding channels of interstate commerce, as noted, the construction site is located on the Wando River — i.e., within a channel of interstate commerce — as evidenced by the need for the Army Corps of Engineers to issue a federal permit before construction could begin.
Even if we were to view this case only through the third category of the federal commerce power — regulation of activities having a substantial relation to interstate commerce — the record demonstrates that the activities implicated in this marine construction project bear on interstate commerce in a
Because the transaction did involve interstate commerce, we turn to the question of whether arbitration should be compelled under the Contract.
“Arbitration is contractual by nature.... ” Thomson-CSF, S.A. v. Am. Arbitration Ass’n,
Section 19.2 of the Contract expressly invokes the FAA and such contractual provisions should be enforced in accordance with their unambiguous terms. See Dean Witter,
Initially, we note Cape Romain has never challenged the arbitrability of the mechanics’ lien claim — only the applicability of the FAA. Moreover, the issues involved in Cape Romain’s mechanics’ lien claim against Wando E. are completely dependent on the breach of contract dispute between Cape Romain and Barnes. See Sea Pines Co. v. Kiawah Island Co.,
As a final matter, the trial court found Wando E. could not compel arbitration because it was not a party or signatory to the Contract between Cape Romain and Barnes. While Wando E., as a non-contracting party, may lack standing to compel arbitration, Barnes certainly has standing to do so. Appellants are correct that, in any event, Wando E. could join arbitration, once compelled pursuant to Barnes’ motion.
The Contract provides:
§ 21.6 Any party to an arbitration may include by joinder persons or entities substantially involved in a common question of law or fact whose presence is required if complete relief is to be accorded in arbitration provided that the party sought to be joined consents in writing to such joinder.....
§ 21.7 The foregoing agreement to arbitrate and other agreements to arbitrate with an additional person or entity duly consented to by parties to the Agreement shall be*128 specifically enforceable under applicable law in any court having jurisdiction thereof.
(emphasis added).
Applying state-law principles of contract interpretation, we find as a matter of law that Wando E. is an entity who is “substantially involved in a common question of law or fact whose presence is required if complete relief is to be accorded in arbitration.” Therefore, under the unambiguous terms of the Contract between Barnes and Cape Romain, Wando E. may properly be joined as a party to the arbitration proceedings. See Auto-Owners Ins. Co. v. Carl Brazell Builders, Inc.,
III.
We therefore conclude the trial court erred in denying the motion to compel arbitration. Because arbitration will proceed, the trial court proceedings shall be stayed pending the outcome of arbitration. See Adkins v. Labor Ready, Inc.,
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Notes
. 9U.S.C. §§ 1-16(2012).
. Pursuant to article 15 of the Contract, Cape Romain was not entitled to be paid until the project engineer certified the work was completed properly.
. Cape Romain also alleged a quantum meruit claim in the alternative against both defendants.
. We summarily reject Cape Romain’s contention that this matter is not immediately appealable. An order denying arbitration is immediately appealable. Towles v. United Healthcare Corp.,
.
.
. The permit references federal regulations regarding the Department of the Army’s regulatory authority over navigable waters and states the purpose of the project is to construct a marina to provide docking space for boats (instrumentalities of interstate commerce) and access to navigable waters (channels of interstate commerce).
. Our finding is not precluded by section 21.2 of the Contract, which addresses mechanics’ lien claims and allows a party to "proceed in accordance with applicable law to comply with the lien notice or filing deadlines.” See S.C.Code § 29-5-90 (lien must be filed within 90 days of ceasing to furnish labor or materials); S.C.Code § 29-5-120 (suit to enforce the lien must be commenced within six months after ceasing to furnish labor or materials or the lien is dissolved). Reading section 21.2 in conjunction with the Contract as a whole (particularly the balance of article 21), we find section 21.2 does not alter the agreement to arbitrate all "[cjlaims disputes and other matters in question arising out of or relating to this Contract”; rather, section 21.2 merely creates a narrow exception permitting a party to preserve a mechanics' lien through timely filings. Indeed, nothing in the Contract excludes the mechanics' lien claim from the scope of the arbitration clause. To find otherwise would be to construe the Contract to defeat its very purpose: the resolution of all related disputes in one, agreed-upon forum— arbitration. See Zabinski,
