Lead Opinion
Opinion by
The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia filed a motion in the Court of Common Pleas asking that the American Arbitration Association be ordered to consolidate two arbitration disputes arising under construction contracts for a new hospital. The appellants intervened in the proceedings and contested the consolidation. The Court of Common Pleas ordered that arbitration of the disputes be consolidated and this appeal followed.
In connection with the construction of the project, The Children’s Hospital had entered into four contracts with four prime contractors, (one) with Baltimore Contractors, Inc. for the general work, (two) with J. J. White, Inc. for the heating and ventilating work, (three) with W. V. Pangborne & Company, Inc. for the electrical work, and (four), with Herman Goldner Co., Inc. for the plumbing work. Each prime contract contained identical provisions with respect to General Conditions. One of these conditions was paragraph 10.1.1 which provides as follows: “The Contractor shall
The four Contractors being uncertain as to the allocation of responsibility for the safety precautions jointly requested the Architect for an interpretation of Article 10.1.1 to determine their respective responsibilities for them. The Architect’s determinations included the following: “[t]hat protection required by law and regulations regarding safety barriers at edges of and penetrations through floors is part of the General Contractor’s work.”
The General Contractor disputed this interpretation, and filed a written demand for arbitration against the Hospital with the American Arbitration Association as arbitrator, alleging that it had spent $110,594.08 in providing safety measures for the project and claiming that the other prime Contractors were responsible for a portion of the cost of this work. The Hospital in writing, called upon Contractors 2, 3 and 4, the Intervenors, to defend the arbitration proceeding which defense the Intervenors refused. The Hospital then demanded of the Intervenors arbitration of the dispute with the American Arbitration Association and asked the Association to join the Intervenors as additional defendants to the arbitration proceedings brought by the General Contractor.
The American Arbitration Association replied to the Hospital’s demand that “inasmuch as these parties will not agree to be joined in this matter, the Association does not have the authority to make these parties a part of the proceedings.” Upon receiving this communication from the American Arbitration Association, the Hospital filed its motion for consolidation of arbitration proceedings. The General Contractor does not object to the consolidation of both arbitration proceedings.
Prom the provisions of the contracts it is apparent that settlement of all claims, disputes relating to the contracts (with certain exceptions not pertinent herein), are to be decided by arbitration. They “shall be decided ... in accordance with the Construction Industry Rules of the American Arbitration Association then obtaining unless the parties mutually agree otherwise.”
The Construction Industry Rules are silent as to the consolidation of the arbitration of disputes. They neither provide for consolidation nor do they provide against it.
It is the policy of the law to favor the settlement of disputes by arbitration and to promote the swift and orderly disposition of claims. In the instant case, all the parties have agreed to arbitration of any disputes arising relating to any of their contracts. Arbitration involving all four prime contractors before the American Arbitration Association as arbitrators
The insistence by the Intervenors that the allocation of responsibilities for safety precautions be arbitrated separately as to each prime contractor so frustrates the arbitration proceedings as to be tantamount to a refusal to arbitrate.
Where the language of a contract is clear, the Court will not read into it that which is not necessarily implied. Cornman v. Graeber Stringing & Wiring Machine Company,
All four Contractors have entered into contracts with the Hospital for the construction of a new hospital building;
All four Agreements have identical provisions with respect to arbitration proceedings;
All four Contractors jointly requested the Architect’s interpretation of what their responsibility for the safety precautions are.. The disputes all arose out of the Architect’s decision and not to consolidate these arbitrations would injure the Hospital with respect to one of the benefits of its contracts.
Consolidation is merely a procedural device commonly used in adjudications to avoid multiplicity of hearings, the loss of time of participants and the possibility of unjust differences in results because the factfinders may not have the whole picture at least until the last hearing. Consolidation fosters the orderly and speedy disposition of disputes — a goal obviously intended by the parties. As we said in Van Campen Corp. v. Building and Construction Trades,
Not to consolidate these two arbitrations
Order affirmed.
Notes
The one involving the Hospital and the General Contractor, the other involving the Hospital and Contractors 2, 3 and 4.
Concurrence Opinion
Concurring Opinion by
I believe a caveat is in order about the application of the Act of April 25, 1927 (The Arbitration Act) to this case.
“The rule has been reiterated in many recent decisions that the provisions of the Act of 1927 are applicable only if the agreement specifically refers to the Act or there is other evidence justifying the conclusion that both parties agreed either expressly or impliedly that the provisions of the Act should apply. Keller v. Local 249,
In the contract in the present case the language is precisely the same as it was in the contract in La
Jurisdictional defects cannot be waived on appeals from common law arbitrations under uninsured motorist insurance coverage, even when they are waived explicitly. Allstate Ins. Co. v. Taylor,
