This matter has been before us on two prior occasions and this court has set forth the basic facts in its prior decisions. See
Carter v. Cathedral Avenue Cooperative, Inc.,
This appeal involves a dispute over the procedure described in an arbitration provision — whether one party’s failure to name an arbitratоr within the thirty days allowed under the arbitration clause contained in a lease mandates that a court order arbitration before a single arbitrator or is itself an arbitra-ble issue to be ruled on by the three member panel the lease’s arbitration clause provides.
Briefly, Hopе H. Carter and John Hemp-hill, Jr. (the “Landlords”) are parties to a ninety-nine year ground lease with the Cathedral Avenue Cooperative, Inc. (the “Tenant”). In November 1984, the Landlords notified the Tenant of their intention to increase the ground rent. A dispute ensued, and on April 12, 1985, the Landlords demanded of the Tenant that the dispute regarding the rent increase be resolved in accordance with the arbitration provisions of *1048 the ground lease. The Landlords in this letter named an arbitrator. In response, the Tenant filed a civil action seeking an injunction to enjoin the operation of the arbitration clause in the lease. The trial court granted a temporary restraining order and then a permanent injunction, precluding the Landlords from arbitrating the rent dispute.
In
Carter II, supra,
On May 22, 1990, the Landlords notified the Tenant that they intended to arbitrate all of the issues in dispute before the sole arbitrator named in their April 12, 1985 letter. The Landlords asserted that the Tenant had waived its right to appoint an arbitrator by letting the thirty-day time period in the arbitration clause expire. 1
The parties dispute whether the Landlords’ May 22, 1990, letter constituted a new dеmand for arbitration, giving the Tenant thirty days to appoint an arbitrator, or whether the Tenant had waived its choice of an arbitrator because, despite the ongoing litigation during the proceeding five years, any tolling of the thirty days since the original April 12, 1985, demand for arbitration had expired.
The Landlords moved in the trial court to compel arbitration before a sole arbitrator— the person they had chosen under the arbitration clause. The trial court ruled that the arbitration should proceed before a three-member arbitration panel and that thе panel could decide the issue of the timeliness of the arbitration selection. Importantly to this appeal, the court’s order dated November 21, 1990, also states “that this Order is without prejudice to the right of the Applicants to submit to the arbitrators the question of whether Mr. Kevin Curnyn [named by the Landlords] should act as the sole arbitrator due to the Cooperative’s [Tenant] alleged failure to appoint its arbitrator in a timely fashion.” We affirm the trial court.
The Landlords argue that the trial court erred in not ordering arbitration before a
single
arbitrator under the terms of the arbitration clause in the lease agreement. They argue that the trial court relied upon
Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. v. Barnard,
In
Carter II, supra,
In case any dispute, disagreement, difference, or question shall arise at any time hereafter between the Landlоrd and the Tenant, or any person claiming under either of them, in connection with or in relation to the value of any property, ability or capacity of any property to produce net rentals, the amount of insurance coverage, the lawful use of the demised premises or the Improvements or any matter which is expressly referable to arbitration under the terms herеof, then such dispute, disagreement, difference or question shall be submitted to and determined by arbitration at the choice of either the Landlord or the Tenant. [Emphasis added.]
As we noted in Carter II:
To be sure, the arbitration clause in the instant case is less expansive than a clause providing for arbitration of “any diffеrences arising with respect to the interpretation of this contract or the performance of any obligation hereunder,” [AT & T Technologies v. Communications Workers,475 U.S. 643 , 650,106 S.Ct. 1415 , 1419,89 L.Ed.2d 648 (1986)]; or providing that “any controversy or claim arising out of or resulting from this agreement or the breach thereof, shall be settled by arbitration,” Sindler v. Batleman, [416 A.2d 238 , 239 (D.C.1980)], in that the parties agreed that only certain delineated areas of controversy would be subject to arbitration. However, in specifying these areas, the agreement sweepingly brought within the ambit of arbitrable issues “any dispute, disagreement, difference or question” arising “in connection with оr in relation to” the specified areas.
The Supreme Court, in
John Wiley & Sons, Inc. v. Livingston,
*1050
In addition, many courts have determined that issues of timing under an arbitration clause are procedural issues to be determined by the arbitrators and not thе courts.
See, e.g., Washington-Baltimore Newspaper Guild, Local 35 v. Washington Post,
The instant case, like all these cases, involves a determination of the conditions for conducting an arbitration. These conditions, including whether a party has waived the three-member panel by failing to name an arbitrator within 30 days, are all part of the arbitration process itself and thus subject to arbitration. Consistent with our analysis in Carter II we again conclude that the instant dispute regarding the composition of the arbitration panel is a “dispute, disagreement, difference or question” arising “in connection with or in relation to” an arbitrable issue and therefore is embraced by the arbitration clause. 4 Our conclusion is consistent with the arbitration clause аnd the general philosophy that encourages arbitration and that arbitration clauses should be broadly construed.
In sum, the trial court correctly determined that the issue whether the Tenant waived its option to have the rent dispute resolved before a three-member arbitratiоn panel by failing to name its arbitrator within thirty days is an issue to be resolved by a panel of three arbitrators. Therefore, the decision of the trial court must be and is
Affirmed. 5
Notes
. That section of the lease reads in part:
There shall be three (3) arbitrators, one named in writing by the Landlord, one named in writing by the Tenant, and the third chosen by these two arbitratоrs. If such two arbitrators shall fail to choose a third within fifteen (15) days, then such third arbitrator shall be promptly appointed by a judge of the United States District Court for the District of Columbia or the nearest comparable successor of such court. Such appointment shall be made on the application of either the Landlord or Tenant within five (5) days' written notice to the other. Should the party demanding arbitration fail to name an arbitrator within ten (10) days of his demand, his right of arbitration shall cease. Should the other party fail to choose an arbitrator within thirty (30) days, then the arbitrаtor so first appointed shall have power to proceed to arbitrate, to determine the matters of dispute, disagreement, difference or question as if he were an arbitrator appointed by both the parties hereto for that purpose, and his award in writing shall be final. In case there are three (3) arbitrators selected as above mentioned, an award in writing signed by any two of them shall be final. The expense of any such arbitration shall be borne equally by the Landlord and the Tenant. Judgment upon any award hereunder may be entered in any court having jurisdiсtion thereof. [Emphasis added.]
. The
Texas Eastern
court is not alone in concluding that one party has not waived its right to a three-member arbitration when a time-specific waiver clause has expired.
See New England Reinsurance Corp. v. Tennessee Ins. Co.,
. We note also the dissent in
Employers Ins. of Wausau v. Jackson,
. Our conclusion in this case is not inconsistent with
Universal Reinsurance Corp., supra
note 2, or
Employers Ins. of Wausau, supra
note 2. In those cases the courts looked to the specific language of the arbitration clauses and determined that time was of the essence and the arbitration agreement should be strictly construed. Here, we are also strictly construing the arbitration agreement which contemplates that the arbitrators determine
procedural
aspects of arbitrable issues. The arbitration clause in this case also potentially avoids the perplexing issue of whether "having all the arbitrators selected by one party renders the proceeding
per se
partial.”
Universal Reinsurance Corp., supra
note 2,
.The Tenant makes several procedural challenges to the instant appeal,
viz,
that thе trial court's order was not final; that the appeal was actually dismissed and is now being raised by an improper procedure; and, that the final award entered by the three-member arbitration panel renders the present appeal moot. As to the jurisdictional issue, D.C.Code § 11 — 721(а)(1) (1989) provides that this court has jurisdiction of ap
*1051
peals from “all final orders and judgments of the Superior Court of the District of Columbia.” "The provisions of the District of Columbia Uniform Arbitration Act are applicable only to agreements to arbitrate which were made subsequent to the adоption of the Act.”
American Fed’n of Gov't Employees v. Koczak,
This case does not arise in an interlocutory context because all aspects of this case had been dismissed prior to the requеst for an order to compel arbitration before a sole arbitrator.
See Brandon v. Hines,
As to the asserted impropriety of the taking of the appeal, the instant appeal is properly before this court because the original appeal taken earlier was dismissed withоut prejudice to being brought again.
Finally, the final arbitration award does not make moot the instant appeal because the arbitration award is not before this court for review and thus can only impact upon any appeal that might be taken in the future from any trial court order if a challenge is made to the arbitration award.
