In this divorce case, plaintiff, Mary Cipriano, appeals two orders of the Macomb Circuit Court addressing an arbitrator’s award of property and spousal support. In Docket No. 291377, Mary Cipriano appeals by delayed application for leave to appeal granted a December 4, 2008, order of the circuit court denying her motion to vacate, modify, or correct the arbitration award and confirming the arbitrator’s award. In Docket No. 292806, Mary Cipriano appeals by leave granted a June 15, 2009, order of the circuit court reducing the amount of the monthly payment that the arbitrator ordered defendant, Salvatore Cipriano, to pay Mary Cipriano from $5,500 to $3,870, while not changing the total amount awarded by the arbitrator. Because the procedures used during arbitration and the final arbitration award did not violate the parties’ arbitration agreement, we affirm the circuit court’s order confirming the arbitrator’s award. But because Salvatore Cipriano and the circuit court did not provide any grounds under MCR 3.602(K)(2) to modify the arbitration award, we reverse the circuit court’s order reducing Salvatore Cipriano’s installment payments and remand for the court to reinstate the $5,500 monthly payments.
I. BASIC FACTS
In November 1993, the trial court issued an order for divorce, awarding 55 percent of the marital property to Mary Cipriano and $66,000 a year to her in periodic alimony that was to be paid in $5,500 monthly installments. After several appeals in this Court and years of further proceedings below, this Court determined that Mary Cipriano was also entitled to 55 percent, plus interest, of the increase in the value of Salvatore Cipriano’s interest in Peter Cipriano Enterprises (PCE)
Rather than hold a hearing with the friend of the court, the parties agreed to submit to binding arbitration. In September 2008, the arbitrator’s final award ordered Salvatore Cipriano to pay $485,155 (Mary Cipriano’s interest in PCE) in installments, without interest on the award, and terminated his alimony obligation effective May 2007. The arbitrator granted credit for Salvatore Cipriano’s alimony payments from May 2007 through September 2008, and determined that Cipriano would continue to pay $5,500 a month until he paid an additional $391,655 to satisfy the $485,155 award.
Mary Cipriano moved to vacate, modify, or correct the arbitration award, arguing that the arbitrator failed to follow the law-of-the-case doctrine, impermissibly modified spousal support retroactively, and altered the award after ex parte communications from Salvatore Cipriano. In December 2008, the trial court entered an order confirming the arbitrator’s award and denying Mary Cipriano’s motions. That order is the subject of
II. OVERVIEW
Domestic-relations arbitration is governed by the specific statutory scheme set forth in the domestic relations arbitration act (DRAA).
The DRAA delineates the circumstances in which a court must vacate an arbitration award. MCL 600.5081(2) provides:
If a party applies under this section, the court shall vacate an award under any of the following circumstances:
(a) The award was procured by corruption, fraud, or other undue means.
*368 (b) There was evident partiality by an arbitrator appointed as a neutral, corruption of an arbitrator, or misconduct prejudicing a party’s rights.
(c) The arbitrator exceeded his or her powers.
(d) The arbitrator refused to postpone the hearing on a showing of sufficient cause, refused to hear evidence material to the controversy, or otherwise conducted the hearing to prejudice substantially a party’s rights.
In order for a court to vacate an arbitration award because of an error of law, the error must have been so substantial that, but for the error, the award would have been substantially different.
III. EX PARTE COMMUNICATION
A. STANDARD OF REVIEW
Mary Cipriano argues that the trial court should have vacated the arbitrator’s award because the arbitrator received communications from Salvatore Cipriano after the arbitration hearing and before the arbitrator’s award. This Court reviews de novo a circuit court’s decision to enforce, vacate, or modify an arbitration award.
B. ANALYSIS
Mary Cipriano does not support her argument that the trial court should have vacated the arbitrator’s award because of Salvatore Cipriano’s ex parte contacts with the arbitrator by specifying under which subdivision of MCL 600.5081(2) the award should have been vacated. On July 28, 2008, the arbitrator sent the parties an excerpt of his
Citing Hewitt v Village of Reed City,
The rule is very strict in excluding any communication to an arbitrator, made ex parte after the ease is submitted; and when such communication, which may affect the result, is made, it is not usual to enter into an inquiry as to whether the arbitrator was in fact influenced by it or not.[9]
Mary Cipriano suggests that there is a rule that ex parte contact with the arbitrator must result in the award’s being vacated. However, the cases she cites in support of such a rule were based on ex parte contact that violated agreements by the parties regarding the procedures for their arbitration. Further, as Detroit v Detroit Lieutenants’ & Sergeants’ Ass’n
In Miller v Miller, the Supreme Court ruled that it was permissible for an arbitrator to gather information by shuttling between the parties located in separate rooms, questioning and listening to them, and reviewing voluminous material the defendant submitted three days after the hearing, before the arbitrator modified the award and issued the final binding award.
This case is similar to Miller because information was obtained through contact with only one party and
Further, Mary Cipriano has not shown that any misconduct of the arbitrator prejudiced her rights or that the arbitration award was procured by undue means.
Additionally, the arbitrator was already in possession
IV SPOUSAL-SUPPORT modification
a. standard of review
Mary Cipriano argues that the trial court should have vacated the arbitrator’s award because it was an error of law to modify retroactively the spousal-support payments beginning in May 2007 and to convert spousal-support payments that had been made from May 2007 to October 2008 into installment payments for the property award. This Court reviews de novo a circuit court’s decision to enforce, vacate, or modify an arbitration award.
B. ANALYSIS
An arbitrator exceeds his or her powers if the arbitrator acts in contravention of controlling law.
Except as otherwise provided in this section, a support order that is part of a judgment or is an order in a domestic relations matter is a judgment on and after the date the support amount is due as prescribed in [MCL 552.605c], with the full force, effect, and attributes of a judgment of this state, and is not, on and after the date it is due, subject to retroactive modification. No additional action is necessary to reduce support to a final judgment. Retroactive modification of a support payment due under a support order is permissible with respect to a period during which there is pending a petition for modification, but only from the date that notice of the petition was given to the payer or recipient of support.
Mary Cipriano argues that the clear language of MCL 552.603(2) prohibits retroactive modification of spousal support. However, the clear language of MCL 552.603(2) also allows for the retroactive modification of support orders from the date of notice of a petition for modification of support. The retroactivity of a modification is a matter within the court’s discretion; however, the modification may not take effect before the time the petition to modify was filed.
V LAW-OF-THE-CASE DOCTRINE
A. STANDARD OF REVIEW
Mary Cipriano contends that the arbitrator exceeded his powers by issuing an award in contravention of controlling law because the award violated the law-of-the-case doctrine. This Court reviews de novo a circuit court’s decision to enforce, vacate, or modify an arbitration award.
B. ANALYSIS
The law-of-the-case doctrine holds that an appellate court’s ruling on a particular issue binds the appellate court and all lower tribunals with respect to that issue.
However, the law-of-the-case doctrine does not apply to arbitration proceedings. The law-of-the-case doctrine binds the appellate court and all lower tribunals with
Further, this Court has consistently held that arbitration is a matter of contract and that the arbitration agreement is the agreement that dictates the authority of the arbitrators.
VI. MODIFICATION OF INSTALLMENT PAYMENTS
A. STANDARD OF REVIEW
Mary Cipriano argues that the trial court impermissibly modified the arbitration award by reducing the monthly amount that the arbitrator awarded. This Court reviews de novo a circuit court’s decision to enforce, vacate, or modify an arbitration award.
B. ANALYSIS
More than nine months after the arbitration award, the trial court, on Salvatore Cipriano’s motion, reduced the monthly $5,500 payments to Mary Cipriano to $3,870 a month. Salvatore Cipriano argued that the trial court had the equitable power to modify the installment payments pursuant to MCL 600.6221 and
Additionally, MCR 3.602(E)(2) provides the grounds for modification of an arbitration award:
On motion made within 91 days after the date of the award, the court shall modify or correct the award if:
(a) there is an evident miscalculation of figures or an evident mistake in the description of a person, a thing, or property referred to in the award;
(b) the arbitrator has awarded on a matter not submitted to the arbitrator, and the award may be corrected without affecting the merits of the decision on the issues submitted; or
(c) the award is imperfect in a matter of form, not affecting the merits of the controversy.
Salvatore Cipriano asked the trial court to invoke its equitable powers in order to modify the monthly payments. Yet the court gave no grounds as a reason for modifying the award. Significantly, neither Salvatore Cipriano nor the trial court referred to any of the provisions of MCR 3.602(E)(2) to justify modification of the award. Even though the trial court did not change the total amount of the property award, the matter had been submitted to binding arbitration, and the arbitra
Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded. We do not retain jurisdiction.
Cipriano v Cipriano, unpublished opinion per curiam of the Court of Appeals, issued July 25, 2006 (Docket No. 259818), p 2 (Cipriano III).
MCL 600.5070 et seq.
MCL 600.5071; Harvey v Harvey, 257 Mich App 278, 284; 668 NW2d 187 (2003).
Hendrickson v Moghissi, 158 Mich App 290, 298; 404 NW2d 728 (1987).
NuVision v Dunscombe, 163 Mich App 674, 684; 415 NW2d 234 (1987).
Washington v Washington, 283 Mich App 667, 672; 770 NW2d 908 (2009).
Bayati v Bayati, 264 Mich App 595, 597-598; 691 NW2d 812 (2004).
Hewitt v Village of Reed City, 124 Mich 6; 82 NW 616 (1900).
9 Id. at 8.
Id. at 8-9.
Id. at 8.
Id.
Detroit v Detroit Lieutenants’ & Sergeants’ Ass’n, unpublished opinion per curiam of the Court of Appeals, issued February 17, 2005 (Docket No. 250424), pp 2-3 (Murray, P.J., concurring).
Washington, 283 Mich App at 672.
MCL 600.5072(1)(e).
Miller v Miller, 474 Mich 27, 32; 707 NW2d 341 (2005).
Id.
Id.
Id. at 29, 35.
Id. at 33, 35.
MCL 600.5081(2)(c); see Miller, 474 Mich at 30 (stating that an arbitrator exceeds his or her powers if the arbitrator acts beyond the material terms of the contract from which the arbitrator derives his or her authority).
MCL 600.5081(2)(a),(b), and (d); Miller, 474 Mich at 30-31.
Albion Pub Sch v Albion Ed Ass'N/MEA/NEA, 130 Mich App 698, 701; 344 NW2d 55 (1983).
Washington, 283 Mich App at 672.
Bayati, 264 Mich App at 597-598.
Miller, 474 Mich at 30.
Varga v Varga, 173 Mich App 411, 417; 434 NW2d 152 (1988).
Bayati, 264 Mich App at 597-598.
Ashker v Ford Motor Co, 245 Mich App 9, 13; 627 NW2d 1 (2001).
The arbitration award extinguished this obligation.
Ashker, 245 Mich App at 13.
Black’s Law Dictionary (8th ed).
MCL 600.5001(1).
NuVision, 163 Mich App at 684.
MCL 600.5081(3).
Reeves v Cincinnati, Inc (After Remand), 208 Mich App 556, 560; 528 NW2d 787 (1995).
Miller, 474 Mich at 32, quoting Rowry v Univ of Mich, 441 Mich 1, 10; 490 NW2d 305 (1992).
MCL 600.5072(1) (e); Miller, 474 Mich at 32.
Washington, 283 Mich App at 672.
Bayati, 264 Mich App at 597-598.
MCL 600.6221 provides, “The judge may, on motion of either party, following due notice to the other, alter the amounts and times of payment of the installments from time to time when he may deem it advisable and fair.”
