An attorney who had recommended that his clients and his law firm's retirement plan invest in two real estate companies sought to arbitrate claims *847by his clients and the retirement plan against the companies, their parent company, and the parent company's chief executive officer. Only the lawyer's clients, the retirement plan, and the two real estate companies signed the operative arbitration agreements. After the two real estate companies agreed to arbitration, the trial court granted a petition to compel the nonsignatory parent company and its officer to arbitrate, and subsequently granted a petition to confirm the resulting arbitration award in favor of the attorney's clients.
To resolve the ensuing appeals and cross-appeals in this action, we hold (1) an attorney does not have standing to petition to compel arbitration of his clients' claims; (2) a signatory to an arbitration agreement can compel a nonsignatory parent company of a signatory subsidiary on an agency theory where (a) the parent controlled the subsidiary to such an extent that the subsidiary was a mere agent or instrumentality of the parent and (b) the claims against the parent arose out of the agency relationship; (3) the arbitrator did not exceed his authority by substituting the attorney's clients as the real parties in interest in the arbitration; and (4) the arbitrator did not exceed his authority by denying attorneys' fees to a party that prevailed in the arbitration. The last holding requires us to part company with DiMarco v. Chaney (1995)
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
A. The Investments
In 2008 Thompson National Properties, LLC (TNP) created two subsidiary limited liability companies to raise funds from accredited investors for various real estate investments. The companies, TNP 2008 Participating Notes Program, LLC (the 2008 Program) and TNP 12% Notes Program, LLC (the 12% Program),
Mark Cohen, an investment advisor and attorney, recommended the Programs to his clients based on Cohen's prior business dealings with Anthony Thompson, the managing member and chief executive officer of TNP. More than 30 of Cohen's clients invested up to $200,000 each in one or both of the Programs. Cohen also invested his law firm's retirement plan, the Cohen & Burnett P.C. Profit Sharing 401(k) Plan (the Plan), of which Cohen served as trustee, in the 12% Program. Cohen did not personally invest in either Program, but he received fees and commissions for the investments by his clients and his firm's retirement plan.
B. The Programs' Defaults and Cohen's Arbitration Demands
The Programs defaulted on the promissory notes in 2012. On June 25, 2012 Thompson, acting in his capacity as CEO of TNP, sent a letter to noteholders in the 12% Program advising them the Program would defer all interest payments through the end of 2012 while TNP pursued "exciting new ventures" and hired an investment banking firm to raise additional capital for "significant transactions that would allow TNP to receive greater fee revenue." Neither the Programs nor TNP made payments on the notes after June 25, 2012.
On July 12, 2012 Cohen submitted two statements of claims and demands for arbitration to the American Arbitration Association (AAA) based on an arbitration provision in the subscription agreement for each Program. The arbitration provision stated: "I hereby covenant and agree that any dispute, controversy or other claim arising under, out of or relating to this Agreement or any of the transactions contemplated hereby, or any amendment thereof, or *849the breach or interpretation hereof or thereof, shall be determined and settled in binding arbitration in Los Angeles, California,[
Cohen's statement and demand against the 2008 Program identified the claimant as Cohen, "individually and as a representative of his client noteholders," and the respondents as the 2008 Program, TNP, and Thompson. The statement and demand against the 12% Program identified the claimants as the Plan and Cohen, "individually and as a representative of his client noteholders," and the respondents as the 12% Program, TNP, and Thompson. Cohen alleged the terms of TNP's guaranty gave "a third-party attorney or agent" the ability to bring an action to enforce the arbitration provision in the subscription agreements.
Both Programs agreed to arbitrate, but "decline[d] to submit to arbitration claims brought by [Cohen] in his representative capacity." TNP and Thompson did not agree to arbitrate because neither had signed an arbitration agreement with Cohen or the noteholders.
C. The Petition To Compel Arbitration
Cohen and the Plan filed a petition to compel arbitration against TNP and Thompson in the superior court. They contended that "Petitioners and TNP are parties" to the 2008 Program and 12% Program private placement memoranda, even though Cohen did not invest in either Program and the Plan invested only in the 12% Program. Cohen and the Plan requested an order *850enforcing the arbitration provision in the Programs' subscription agreements against TNP and Thompson because the arbitration claims were based on the respondents' collective breach of those agreements and TNP's guaranty and because Thompson was the alter ego of TNP and the Programs. To support their allegation that Thompson controlled the Programs, Cohen and the Plan submitted "official correspondence" sent to investors in the 12% Program signed by Thompson in his capacity as CEO of TNP. Cohen and the Plan also argued that "litigating the controversy in multiple forums would be a colossal waste of judicial resources."
In response, TNP and Thompson argued Cohen and the Plan failed to show TNP or Thompson was a signatory to any arbitration agreement with Cohen or the Plan. Indeed, TNP and Thompson argued Cohen and the Plan had not provided a signed copy of any agreement, but had merely attached unsigned form agreements to the *351petition. TNP and Thompson also argued that Cohen did not have standing to bring claims on behalf of his clients and that TNP's guaranty gave standing to represent investors only to a representative appointed or elected by a majority of the noteholders. TNP and Thompson argued that, because Cohen's clients did not represent a majority of noteholders, the guaranty did not give Cohen standing to bring an action or proceeding on their behalf. TNP and Thompson denied Thompson was an alter ego of TNP or the Programs and argued the limitation of liability provisions of the 2008 Program notes insulated Thompson from any obligation to arbitrate.
In reply, Cohen and the Plan argued for the first time that Cohen could enforce the arbitration agreement between his clients and the Programs because he was an agent for his clients. Cohen and the Plan cited Westra v. Marcus & Millichap Real Estate Investment Brokerage Co., Inc. (2005)
The trial court issued a tentative ruling that would have allowed Cohen to enforce the arbitration agreements between his clients and the Programs *851because Cohen was an agent for his clients. The tentative ruling also would have compelled TNP and Thompson to arbitrate because they were agents for the Programs.
Counsel for Cohen and the Plan argued that, because Cohen had acted as an agent for his clients for many years, "he had the authority, their explicit authority to bring this action." Counsel contended that Cohen and the Plan had "raised the law of agency" and "the law of alter ego" and that these were two of "many theories under which TNP and Mr. Thompson should be compelled to arbitrate." With regard to TNP, counsel for Cohen and the Plan argued the guaranty required TNP to participate in the arbitration. The court volunteered that "agency law probably bound Mr. Thompson." Counsel for TNP and Thompson said she was not prepared to respond to that argument because Cohen and the Plan had not raised it in their pleadings. The court therefore granted TNP and Thompson leave to file a brief *352addressing why the court should not compel TNP and Thompson to arbitrate as agents of the Programs.
In their post-hearing brief, TNP and Thompson argued Cohen and the Plan had not presented evidence of an agency relationship between TNP or Thompson and the Programs. They acknowledged TNP and Thompson had authority to execute agreements on behalf of the Programs, but argued TNP and Thompson did not become liable for the Programs' obligations merely by signing documents on behalf of the Programs. TNP and Thompson distinguished Westra , supra ,
The trial court granted the petition. The court concluded it could not determine whether TNP and Thompson were alter egos of the Programs "on this record," but found they acted as agents for the Programs. In support of this ruling, the court found (1) Thompson "took a number of actions" on behalf of the Programs, including informing investors the 12% Program would not make interest payments for the remainder of 2012 and submitting to investors a proposed modification of the terms of the 12% Program; (2) Thompson, TNP, and the Programs were all affiliated entities because Thompson was TNP's Chief Executive Officer, TNP was the parent company of both Programs, and *852Thompson was the managing member of both Programs;
D. The Arbitration Award
The arbitration occurred in Los Angeles from March 31, 2014 to April 2, 2014. According to Cohen and the Plan, the parties stipulated to the amounts owed to each noteholder. The primary issues for the arbitrator were whether Thompson was an alter ego of TNP and the Programs, whether Cohen's role in recommending the investments to his clients affected his and his clients' rights to recover, and whether Cohen had standing to bring claims on behalf of his clients.
On July 14, 2014, after the arbitration hearing but before the award, Cohen, "individually and as a representative for Cohen & Burnett, P.C., a Virginia corporation, individually and as a representative of their client noteholders, and as a trustee for [the Plan]," along with Cohen's individual clients, filed with the arbitrator a document titled "Notice of Motion and Motion for Leave To File Amended Caption."
The arbitrator issued his award on September 4, 2014. The arbitrator granted the motion to amend the caption to include Cohen's clients as the real parties in interest. The arbitrator found that neither Cohen, in his individual capacity, nor Cohen & Burnett, P.C. was a real party in interest, but did find that Cohen was a real party in interest as trustee of the Plan. The arbitrator also found that the Programs, TNP, and Thompson "have known all along the names and amounts invested by the real parties in interest .... Under the rules of the [AAA], the caption has been amended so that a just and equitable award can be made to the real parties in interest, and not their representatives nor to parties who have not invested in either [Program]."
The arbitrator rejected Cohen's argument that the guaranty gave him standing to bring claims on behalf of the investors. Instead, as argued by the Programs, TNP, and Thompson, the arbitrator concluded the guaranty allowed only a representative who represents a majority of all investors in the notes to bring a representative action. Thus, the arbitrator ruled, the powers Cohen received from his clients as their attorney "conferred on him the right to oversee litigation," but not "to bring litigation on their behalf as their representative."
The arbitrator ruled the Programs breached the terms of their contracts with the investors by defaulting on their obligations to make interest and principal payments under the notes. The arbitrator awarded Cohen's clients individual awards equal to the amounts unpaid under the notes plus interest. The arbitrator concluded, however, neither Cohen nor Cohen & Burnett, P.C. was entitled to an award, even though Cohen & Burnett, P.C. "advanced substantial fees for the litigation brought on behalf of Cohen's clients." The arbitrator also denied the Plan an award because "[i]t was not an innocently injured investor. It could not have relied upon misrepresentations made by Cohen, unlike Cohen's clients." The arbitrator stated the awards were "based on breach of contract, and no other cause of action."
The arbitrator also ruled TNP was liable for the amounts owed to Cohen's *354clients "because it guaranteed the Notes, and therefore breached its contractual obligations." The arbitrator also found Thompson was personally liable *854as an alter ego of the Programs and TNP. The arbitrator concluded: "Thompson moved substantial moneys between each of the Programs and numerous other entities controlled by him, and also between the Programs and his wife and him. ... [T]he respondents failed to provide timely, sufficient accounting records to explain or justify the millions of dollars which were transferred in and out of the Programs at Thompson's sole discretion." The arbitrator also found "Thompson drained the Programs and their guarantor, TNP, of all funds necessary to fulfill their obligations under the Notes." Thus, "[t]o allow Thompson to render insolvent the Programs and their guarantor, TNP, in order to avoid their contractual obligations, would be an inequitable result."
The arbitration agreement for both Programs included a provision stating "[t]he prevailing party shall be entitled to an award of its reasonable costs and expenses, including, but not limited to, attorneys' fees, in addition to any other available remedies." The arbitrator concluded that the "attorneys' fees and costs paid by Cohen & Burnett, P.C. to the attorneys (Law Offices of Gerard Fox, Inc.) for Cohen's clients who invested in the Programs [were] reasonable." The arbitrator nevertheless denied the clients' request for attorneys' fees and costs because "the attorneys' fees and costs were paid in advance by a party who is not a real party in interest as a claimant" and "were not paid by a prevailing party." The arbitrator found Cohen, his firm, and the Plan were "not prevailing parties." The arbitrator also found the attorneys' fees and costs "were advanced by a party whose founding partner, Cohen, was culpable for advising his clients to invest in the Programs."
With respect to Cohen, the arbitrator found "[i]f any fraudulent misrepresentations did occur, Cohen probably made them to his clients, assuring them that the investments were safe based solely on Thompson's record, rather than on the [private placement memoranda], which contained all the information upon which the investors were entitled to rely. The [private placement memoranda] clearly show that the Programs involved Notes issued by new limited liability companies with no other assets, and that the Notes were guaranteed by TNP, a new entity with insufficient assets to meet its obligations under its guaranty once all the Notes were issued." The arbitrator also suggested Cohen "promised to advance his clients' attorneys' fees and costs" to avoid legal action against himself for recommending "unsuitable investments to his clients," most of whom were over 70 years old and retired. The arbitrator concluded that "[a]warding attorneys' fees and costs to the law firm whose founding partner is a culpable party, who profited from his mistaken advice, would be a gross injustice and violate the equitable principle of unclean hands." The arbitrator directed that "[a]ll fees, expenses and compensation shall be borne equally by claimants (50%), jointly and severally, and by respondents (50%), jointly and severally."
*855E. Postarbitration Proceedings
The Programs, TNP, and Thompson filed a petition to vacate the arbitration award in the superior court. They argued the arbitrator exceeded his authority by issuing an award against nonsignatories TNP and Thompson, finding Thompson was an alter ego of TNP and the Programs, and permitting Cohen to litigate claims on behalf of his clients. Cohen, Cohen & Burnett, P.C., the Plan, and Cohen's clients (collectively, the Cohen Parties)
*355filed three cross-petitions to "correct and confirm as corrected" the arbitration award. Two of the cross-petitions argued the arbitrator exceeded his authority by denying the prevailing parties attorneys' fees and by denying the Plan an award for the 12% Program's breach of contract. The third cross-petition argued the arbitrator made a mistake in the amount of the award for one investor.
The court denied the petitions to vacate and to correct the award (with the exception of correcting the award for the individual investor) and granted the petitions to confirm. In its statement of decision, the court ruled that "no grounds exist to correct the award as requested by cross-petitioners or vacate the award as requested by petitioners." The court entered judgment on July 1, 2015. The Cohen Parties filed a motion for attorneys' fees and costs incurred in connection with the petition to vacate and cross-petitions to correct and confirm the award. The court denied the motion.
The Programs, TNP, and Thompson filed a timely notice of appeal. The Cohen Parties filed a timely notice of cross-appeal and an appeal from the order denying their motion for attorneys' fees and costs. We consolidated the appeals.
DISCUSSION
I. Cohen Did Not Have Standing To Bring the Petition To Compel Arbitration, and The Plan Had Standing Only for Its Claims Against the 12% Program
A. Applicable Law and Standard of Review
" 'Standing' derives from the principle that '[e]very action must be prosecuted in the name of the real party in interest.' " ( City of Santa Monica v. Stewart (2005)
*856City of Santa Monica v. Stewart , at pp. 59-60,
Someone who is not a party to a contractual arbitration provision generally lacks standing to enforce it. (See Ronay Family Limited Partnership v. Tweed (2013)
*356see Goonewardene v. ADP, LLC (2016)
The rules are the same for third parties who are agents of a party to a contract. "[A]n agent for a party to a contract not made with or in the name of the agent is not a real party in interest with standing to sue on the contract." ( Powers v. Ashton (1975)
*857We review de novo the trial court's determination that Cohen (and impliedly, the Plan) had standing to enforce the arbitration agreements. ( M & M Foods, Inc. v. Pacific American Fish Co., Inc. (2011)
B. Cohen Did Not Have Standing To Compel Arbitration as an Agent of His Clients
Cohen concedes that he did not hold a note issued or sold by either Program and that he was not a party to either Program's subscription agreement. Cohen does not argue he had any personal legal interests or rights under the subscription agreements, and he and his firm (perplexingly) admitted neither of them has ever been a party to this case. And as trustee of the Plan, Cohen concedes the Plan invested only in the 12% Program. Yet Cohen asserts he had standing to petition the court to compel TNP and Thompson to arbitrate because he had an agency relationship with his clients, on whose behalf he contends he brought the petition.
TNP and Thompson contend the fact that Cohen's clients appointed him to be their representative did not give Cohen standing to compel TNP and Thompson to arbitrate. TNP and Thompson also contend the Plan lacked standing to compel them to arbitrate disputes arising from the 2008 Program because the Plan invested only in the 12% Program. TNP and Thompson are right on both counts.
Even if Cohen acted as an agent for his clients, he did not have standing to bring a "representative petition" to compel arbitration on their behalf. Cohen was not a party to the subscription agreements, nor does he identify any substantial, personal interest in the agreements. He does not claim to be a third party beneficiary, his clients did not assign him the notes or any of their rights under the subscription agreements, and he identifies no statute *357giving him standing to enforce the subscription agreements on behalf of his clients. He was perhaps an attorney-in-fact or an investment manager, neither of which gave him standing to enforce the agreements. (See JSM Tuscany, LLC v. Superior Court (2011)
Cohen appears to conflate standing to enforce an arbitration agreement with the enforceability of an arbitration agreement by or against a nonsignatory. As discussed in part II, in some circumstances California law allows nonsignatory agents of a party to an arbitration agreement to enforce that agreement, and in other circumstances it requires nonsignatory agents of contracting parties to submit to arbitration. That does not suggest, however, that an agent who is not a third party beneficiary of an arbitration agreement and who does not have any actual and substantial interest in the agreement has standing to enforce it. Although standing is "closely connected ... to the ultimate determination whether to compel arbitration," standing is still a preliminary requirement for justiciability. ( Bouton v. USAA Casualty Ins. Co. (2008)
As stated, however, while the Plan did not invest in the 2008 Program, it did invest in the 12% Program. Therefore, the Plan had standing to petition to compel TNP and Thompson to arbitrate its claims relating to that Program.
II. The Trial Court Properly Granted the Plan's Petition To Compel TNP To Arbitrate, but Erred in Granting the Plan's Petition to Compel Thompson To Arbitrate
A. Applicable Law and Standard of Review
"A party to an arbitration agreement may petition the court to compel other parties to arbitrate a dispute that is covered by their agreement." ( Jones v. Jacobson (2011)
"Whether an agreement to arbitrate exists is a threshold issue of contract formation and state contract law." ( Avila , supra ,
" 'Whether an arbitration agreement is binding on a third party (e.g., a nonsignatory) is a question of law subject to de novo review.' " ( Benaroya v. Willis (2018)
B. A Signatory Can Sometimes Compel a Nonsignatory To Arbitrate as an Agent or Principal of a Signatory
" 'There are circumstances in which nonsignatories to an agreement containing an arbitration clause can be compelled to arbitrate under that agreement. As one authority has stated, there are six theories by which a nonsignatory may be bound to arbitrate: "(a) incorporation by reference; (b) assumption; (c) agency; (d) veil-piercing or alter ego; (e) estoppel; and (f) third-party beneficiary." ' " ( Benaroya v. Willis , supra ,
Not every agency relationship, however, will bind a nonsignatory to an arbitration agreement. (See *860Jensen v. U-HaulCo. of California (2017)
But equity, without more, is not enough. ( Jensen , supra ,
1. Principals Binding Agents
An agency relationship between an employer or company (the principal) and its individual employee or officer (the agent) does not normally bind the individual to an arbitration agreement entered into by the employer or company. "Persons are not normally bound by an agreement entered into by a corporation in which they have an interest or are employees." ( Suh , supra ,
Similarly, courts generally do not compel corporate officers and directors to arbitrate claims arising from contracts signed in their representative capacities. (See Benasra v. Marciano (2001)
*360Benasra v. Marciano , at p. 990,
There are exceptions to the general rule. For example, courts have compelled nonsignatory officers and employees to arbitrate claims alleged against them in their individual capacities even if they did not sign an arbitration agreement, or signed only as representatives of their employers or principals, where the officer or employee personally benefitted from the underlying contract. (See, e.g., RN Solution, Inc. v. Catholic Healthcare West (2008)
2. Agents Binding Principals
The opposite issue, whether an arbitration agreement signed by an agent also binds the agent's nonsignatory principal, is less commonly litigated. And cases involving a subsidiary company allegedly signing an arbitration agreement as the agent for its parent company are rare. In general, a parent company is not liable on a contract signed by its subsidiary "simply because it is a wholly owned subsidiary." ( *862Northern Natural Gas Co. v. Superior Court (1976)
In a parent-subsidiary relationship, the agency doctrine may bind a parent to the contracts of its subsidiary where, in addition to owning the subsidiary, the parent company exercises "sufficient control over the [subsidiary's] activities" such that the subsidiary becomes a "mere agen[t] or 'instrumentality' of the parent." ( 9 Witkin, Summary of Cal. Law (11th ed. 2017) Corporations, ยง 19, p. 821 ; see Laird v. Capital Cities/ABC, Inc. (1998)
One of the few cases in which a party sought to bind a nonsignatory parent of a signatory subsidiary to an arbitration agreement on an agency theory (and we found no such published cases in California) is E.I. DuPont de Nemours v. Rhone Poulenc Fiber (3d Cir. 2001)
Similarly, California law permits a nonsignatory defendant to compel a signatory plaintiff to arbitrate where there is a connection between the claims alleged against the nonsignatory and its agency relationship with a signatory. (See *864Dryer v. Los Angeles Rams (1985)
As DuPont acknowledges, this connection may also make it equitable for a signatory to compel a nonsignatory to arbitrate so long as another signatory had authority to bind the nonsignatory to the arbitration agreement. (See DuPont , supra ,
C. The Trial Court Properly Compelled TNP To Arbitrate
The trial court found TNP acted as an agent or principal of the Programs (although the court did not say which one). The court ruled that, in either case, TNP was "clearly in a principal/agency relationship" with the Programs and was their guarantor. TNP challenges the trial court's order compelling it to arbitrate based on its agency relationship with the Programs, but it does not challenge the court's factual finding that an agency relationship existed with the Programs. (See Secci v. United Independent Taxi Drivers, Inc. (2017)
TNP acted as the 12% Program's agent by signing the subscription agreement as the "Managing Member." As stated, however, this action, without more, was not enough to bind TNP to the arbitration agreement. (See Jensen , supra , 18 Cal.App.5th at pp. 304-305,
The claims alleged against TNP arose directly from its agency relationship with the 12% Program and were well within the scope of the arbitration provision in the subscription agreement. Indeed, the arbitration provision required arbitration of any claim "arising under, out of or relating to this Agreement or any of the transactions contemplated hereby," including, for example, TNP's obligations as guarantor. The guaranty, like the subscription agreement, was an exhibit to the private placement memorandum, thus making the guaranty a "transaction[ ] contemplated" by the subscription agreement. And the claims alleged against TNP were " 'based on the same facts and are inherently inseparable' " from the claims alleged against the 12% Program. ( DuPont , supra ,
D. The Trial Court Erred in Compelling Thompson To Arbitrate
The trial court also found Thompson was bound by the arbitration provision of the subscription agreement because he was "in a principal/agency relationship" with the Programs. As with TNP, Thompson does not contend substantial evidence does not support the trial court's agency finding. Instead, he argues his agency does not bind him to the arbitration agreement. And he is correct. There was no evidence suggesting the general rule, that a representative who signs a contract as a corporate officer or agent is not a party to the contract in his or her personal capacity, did not apply to Thompson. (See Ronay Family Limited Partnership v. Tweed , supra , 216 Cal.App.4th at pp. 837-838,
The Plan argues it can compel Thompson to arbitrate either because he was an agent of the 12% Program who "accepted the benefits" of the notes or because he was a third party beneficiary of the notes. As evidence of the "benefits" Thompson received, the Plan cites the arbitration award, in which the arbitrator found "Thompson drained the Programs and their guarantor, *867TNP, of all funds necessary to fulfill their obligations under the Notes."
III. The Trial Court Properly Confirmed the Arbitration Award
The trial court's order confirming the arbitration award and denying the petitions to vacate made TNP and Thompson liable for the arbitration awards against both Programs. Because we reverse the court's orders compelling Thompson to arbitrate all claims alleged against him and compelling TNP to arbitrate claims alleged by Cohen regarding the 2008 Program, our review of the trial court's order granting the petition to confirm and denying the petitions to vacate is limited to (1) the claims alleged by the Plan against the 12% Program and TNP and (2) the claims alleged by Cohen's clients (added as claimants by the arbitrator) against both Programs and against TNP with *868regard to the 12% Program only. All parties contend the arbitrator exceeded his authority in one way or another.
A. Applicable Law and Standard of Review
"The legal standards governing judicial review of arbitration awards are well established." ( Sargon Enterprises, Inc. v. Browne George Ross LLP (2017)
The California Arbitration Act (ยง 1280 et seq.) provides limited grounds for judicial review of an arbitration award. Courts are authorized to vacate an award if it was "(1) procured by corruption, fraud, or undue means; (2) issued by a corrupt arbitrator; (3) affected by prejudicial misconduct on the part of the arbitrator; or (4) in excess of the arbitrator's powers." ( Richey , supra ,
Arbitrators may exceed their powers when they act in a manner not authorized by the contract or by law, act without subject matter jurisdiction, decide an issue that was not submitted to arbitration, arbitrarily remake the contract, uphold an illegal contract, issue an award that violates a well-defined public policy, issue an award that violates a statutory right, fashion a remedy that is not rationally related to the contract, or select a remedy not authorized by law. ( O'Flaherty v. Belgum , supra , 115 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1055-1056,
*869Jordan v. Department of Motor Vehicles (2002)
" ' "In determining whether an arbitrator exceeded his [or her] powers, we review the trial court's decision de novo, but we must give substantial deference to the arbitrator's own assessment of his [or her] contractual authority." ' " ( Greenspan v. LADT LLC (2010)
B. The Arbitrator Did Not Exceed His Powers by Adding Cohen's Clients as Claimants to the Arbitration
TNP and the Programs contend the arbitrator exceeded his authority by adding Cohen's clients as claimants in the arbitration. TNP and the Programs argue that such a "substitution of parties in an action should not [be] permitted where it will prejudice existing parties" and that the arbitrator's action prejudiced them.
As a preliminary matter, we have serious concerns about whether the notice of appeal filed by TNP and the Programs gives us jurisdiction to review this argument. TNP and the Programs did not appeal from the judgment; they appealed from the order granting the petition *367to compel arbitration. The notice of appeal stated TNP and the Programs "hereby appeal from the Order on Plaintiffs' Motion to Compel Binding Arbitration filed January 30, 2013, which order was made final and appealable by the entry of judgment on July 1, 2015." Normally, "[a]n order granting a petition to compel arbitration is not appealable, but is reviewable on appeal from a subsequent judgment on the award." ( Jenks v. DLA Piper Rudnick Gray Cary US LLP (2015)
In any event, there is no merit to the argument by TNP and the Programs that the arbitrator exceeded his authority by adding Cohen's clients as claimants to the arbitration. " ' "The powers of an arbitrator derive from, and are limited by, the agreement to arbitrate." ... Thus, in determining whether the arbitrator[ ] exceeded the scope of [his] powers here, we first look to the parties' agreement to see whether it placed any limitations on the arbitrator['s] authority.' " ( Greenspan v. LADT LLC , supra ,
*368Moreover, TNP and the Programs conceded that adding Cohen's clients as parties to the arbitration was within the scope of the arbitrator's powers by submitting the issue to the arbitrator. (See J.C. Gury Co. v. Nippon Carbide Industries (USA) Inc. (2007)
C. The Arbitrator Did Not Exceed His Powers by Not Awarding Damages to the Plan
The Plan contends the arbitrator exceeded his authority under the arbitration agreement by refusing to award the Plan damages for breach of contract. The arbitrator found the Plan "was not an innocently injured investor" because it "could not have relied upon misrepresentations made by Cohen, unlike Cohen's clients." The arbitrator essentially found Cohen's unclean hands barred the breach of contract claim by his law firm's profit-sharing plan.
Rule R-47(a) of the AAA Commercial Arbitration Rules and Mediation Procedures provides in part: "The arbitrator may grant any remedy or relief that the arbitrator deems just and equitable and within the scope of the agreement of the parties." The Supreme Court has described this rule as " 'a broad grant of authority to fashion remedies' [citation], and as giving the arbitrator 'broad scope' in choice of relief [citations]." ( Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. v. Intel Corp. (1994)
Nothing in the 12% Program's arbitration provision or Rule R-47 of AAA Commercial Arbitration Rules and Mediation Procedures "indicates an intent to place any special restrictions on the arbitrator's discretion to fashion remedies." ( *369Advanced Micro Devices , supra ,
The Plan argues "the Arbitrator had no jurisdiction to make any findings as to Cohen because Cohen never agreed to arbitrate." The Plan cites Luster v. Collins (1993)
*873Moreover, the record does not support Cohen's contention he did not agree to arbitrate. Cohen initiated the arbitration, referring (falsely) to himself as a "Claimant." And when the Programs filed a counterclaim against Cohen for misrepresentation and indemnification, Cohen did not *370object to arbitrating the counterclaim.
D. The Arbitrator Did Not Exceed His Powers by Denying the Prevailing Parties' Request for Attorneys' Fees
The arbitration provision in the subscription agreements entitled the prevailing party "to an award of its reasonable costs and expenses, including, but not limited to, attorneys' fees." The arbitrator concluded the amount of the fees paid to the attorneys who represented Cohen and (later) Cohen's clients was reasonable, but the arbitrator did not award attorneys' fees to the clients as the prevailing parties because "the attorneys' fees and costs were not paid by a prevailing party." As stated, the arbitrator found that Cohen, whose law firm had advanced the attorneys' fees and costs, was "culpable for advising his clients to invest in the Programs" and that Cohen's firm and the Plan were not prevailing parties. The arbitrator concluded: "Awarding attorneys' fees and costs to the law firm whose founding partner is a culpable party, who profited from his mistaken advice, would be a gross injustice and violate the equitable principle of unclean hands." The Plan contends the arbitrator exceeded his authority by refusing to award the clients their attorneys' fees as prevailing parties and effectively "rewriting" the subscription agreements.
1. Applicable Law
As discussed, a court may correct or vacate an arbitration award where the arbitrator exceeds his or her authority under the arbitration agreement or a submission to arbitration. ( Gueyffier , supra ,
The Plan contends the terms of the arbitration agreement limited the arbitrator's authority by requiring him to award the prevailing parties attorneys' fees. The Plan relies on DiMarco , supra ,
This holding of DiMarco has not fared well in the decades since the court's decision. In Moshonov , supra ,
In Moore v. First Bank of San Luis Obispo (2000)
*875Eight years later, in Gueyffier , supra ,
Safari Associates , supra ,
*876We agree with the court in Safari Associates that, in light of Moshonov , Moore , and Gueyffier , the reasoning of DiMarco is not persuasive. Indeed, even the court that decided DiMarco has acknowledged that subsequent Supreme Court opinions have "expressed ambivalence about the DiMarco decision." ( Century City Medical Plaza v. Sperling, Isaacs & Eisenberg (2001)
*3732. The Subscription Agreements Did Not Restrict the Arbitrator's Power To Deny Attorneys' Fees to the Prevailing Party
The parties submitted the issue of attorneys' fees to the arbitrator.
The subscription agreements did not explicitly and unambiguously limit the arbitrator's power to interpret the agreements in this manner. (See Gueyffier , supra ,
The attorneys' fees provision here did not do that. To construe it otherwise would "intrude upon the 'broad powers' [citation] of the arbitrator to decide" questions of contract interpretation and would "improperly expand the 'narrow limitation on arbitral finality.' " ( Safari Associates , supra ,
IV. The Trial Court Erred by Denying Attorneys' Fees to the Prevailing Parties in the Postarbitration Court Proceedings
The Cohen Parties filed a motion for attorneys' fees incurred in litigating the petition to vacate and the cross-petitions to correct the award. The trial court denied the motion, suggesting it agreed *374with the arbitrator's ruling and reasons for denying an award of attorneys' fees. The court stated, "I think the arbitrator had the authority and the analysis to do what was done in the arbitration. I'm just going to leave it the way it is and deny the motion for attorneys' fees." The court did not appear to have considered whether the Cohen Parties were prevailing parties in postarbitration proceedings. The Plan and Cohen's clients correctly contend the trial court erred.
A. Applicable Law
Section 1293.2 provides "[t]he court shall award costs upon any judicial proceeding under this title [governing arbitration] as provided in Chapter 6 (commencing with Section 1021) ... of this code." Section 1033.5, subdivision (a)(10)(A), provides that items recoverable as costs include attorneys' fees when authorized by contract. "The judicial proceedings covered by this provision include petitions to confirm or vacate an arbitration *878award." ( Marcus & Millichap Real Estate Investment Brokerage Co. v. Woodman Investment Group (2005)
"The award of costs pursuant to section 1293.2, including attorney fees when authorized by contract, is mandatory." ( Marcus & Millichap , supra ,
Postarbitration proceedings are distinct from arbitration proceedings, and it may be that the prevailing party in the arbitration is not the prevailing party in postarbitration proceedings. ( Marcus & Millichap , supra , 129 Cal.App.4th at pp. 514, 516,
B. The Trial Court Erred in Denying the Request by the Plan and Cohen's Clients for Attorneys' Fees Incurred in the Postarbitration Proceedings
The Cohen Parties requested attorneys' fees after the trial court confirmed the *375arbitration award and denied two of the Cohen Parties' cross-petitions to correct the award. As discussed, the subscription agreements included a mandatory attorneys' fees provision, and the Plan and Cohen's clients were *879prevailing parties in the postarbitration proceedings because they successfully defeated the petition to vacate the award and successfully confirmed the monetary awards in favor of Cohen's clients. (See Marcus & Millichap , supra ,
Because the Plan and Cohen's clients were the prevailing parties, the mandatory language of the contractual attorneys' fees clause and section 1293.2 entitled them to reasonable attorneys' fees incurred in the postarbitration judicial proceedings. Their entitlement to fees, however, was limited to attorneys' fees incurred in opposing the petition to vacate and bringing the cross-petition to correct the award in favor of the client investor whose award was inadvertently misstated and corrected. The Plan and the clients did not prevail on their other two cross-petitions. Therefore, we remand to the trial court with directions to determine the appropriate amount of attorneys' fees to be awarded. (See Corona v. Amherst Partners , supra ,
DISPOSITION
The judgment is vacated. The matter is remanded with directions for the trial court (1) to vacate the order compelling Thompson and TNP to arbitrate and to enter a new order denying the petition to compel Thompson to arbitrate and granting the petition to compel TNP to arbitrate claims involving the 12% Program only; (2) to vacate the order confirming the arbitration award and to enter a new order confirming the award against the Programs and against TNP with respect to the 12% Program only; and (3) to vacate the order denying the motion for attorneys' fees for postarbitration court proceedings and to enter a new order granting reasonable fees in an amount to be determined by the trial court. The motion to strike and request for judicial notice are denied. The parties are to bear their costs on appeal.
We concur:
PERLUSS, P. J.
FEUER, J.
Notes
We refer to the 2008 Program and the 12% Program collectively as "the Programs," and to each as a "Program."
Cohen contended he received "only a part" of the commissions paid to Pacific West Securities, Inc., a "broker-dealer" that purchased the notes for Cohen's clients and for whom Cohen was a "registered representative." Cohen claimed he paid his portion of the commissions to another entity, which then "rebated the commissions" to Cohen's clients.
The subscription agreement for the 12% Program specified arbitration in Irvine, California. None of the parties involved in the eventual arbitration in Los Angeles appears to have demanded arbitration in Irvine.
The record does not include executed copies of the subscription agreements, but both Programs submitted to arbitration and apparently did not contest the existence of a valid arbitration agreement with each noteholder.
The guaranty for each Program stated, in relevant part: "Guarantor acknowledges that the Noteholders may, by simple majority vote or consent, appoint one of them or a third-party attorney or agent, to prosecute the Noteholders' rights hereunder and such party shall be entitled to bring any suit, action or proceeding against the undersigned for the enforcement of any provision of this Guaranty on behalf of all Noteholders and it shall not be necessary in any such suit, action or proceeding to make each Noteholder a party thereto."
The tentative ruling is not included in the record on appeal, but the arguments by counsel at the hearing on the petition to compel and the court's ultimate ruling indicate the grounds on which the court based its tentative decision.
The private placement memoranda identify Thompson as the managing member of TNP, not of the Programs.
It is unclear whether Cohen & Burnett, P.C. had been added as a claimant to the arbitration before the motion for leave to amend the caption. The initial statements of claims and demands for arbitration identified only Cohen as a claimant in the demand against the 2008 Program and only Cohen and the Plan as claimants in the demand against the 12% Program.
Undesignated statutory references are to the Code of Civil Procedure.
Cohen submitted letters he sent on behalf of his firm to each of his clients with a subject matter line stating, "Re: Power of Attorney, Allocation, and Waiver of Conflicts Agreement." The letters concluded with a signature block for the recipient below the following statement: "I agree with the above terms and appoint Cohen & Burnett, P.C. as my Agent under the terms set out above, I agree to the settlement or judgment award allocation, and I waive any conflicts of interest involved in Cohen & Burnett, P.C. in acting as my Agent on this matter."
TNP and Thompson do not challenge the existence of an arbitration agreement between the Plan and the 12% Program.
These courts distinguish this application of the agency exception to the general rule that only a party to an arbitration agreement may be compelled to arbitrate from the exception for third party beneficiaries. (See RN Solution , at p. 1520,
The court in Sonora Diamond distinguished the agency theory of liability from the alter ego theory by explaining that "the question is not whether there exists justification to disregard the subsidiary's corporate identity, the point of the alter ego analysis, but instead whether the degree of control exerted over the subsidiary by the parent is enough to reasonably deem the subsidiary an agent of the parent under traditional agency principles." (Sonora Diamond , supra ,
Where a nonsignatory relies on the estoppel exception to invoke an arbitration agreement, courts generally ask whether " ' "the causes of action against the nonsignatory are 'intimately founded in and intertwined' with the underlying contract obligations." ' " (DMS Services, LLC v. Superior Court , supra ,
The Plan did not present any evidence showing Thompson was an intended third party beneficiary of the notes or of any agreement between the noteholders and the 12% Program.
Because we conclude the Plan could not compel Thompson to arbitrate, we do not address Thompson's argument that the arbitrator exceeded his authority by making him personally liable for the arbitration award as an alter ego of the Programs and TNP. Although we vacate the order confirming the arbitration award to the extent it applies to Thompson, nothing in this opinion affects the clients' ability to ask the trial court to add Thompson as a judgment debtor as the alter ego of the Programs and TNP. (See Greenspan v. LADT LLC (2010)
Our reversal of the judgment against Thompson and TNP in connection with the 2008 Program moots some of these arguments. In addition, by not raising it in the trial court, TNP and the Programs forfeited their argument that the terms of TNP's guaranty precluded an award against TNP in favor of fewer than all the noteholders and in a proceeding that was not authorized by a majority vote of the noteholders. (See, Richey , supra ,
Rule R-6(b) of the AAA Commercial Arbitration Rules and Mediation Procedures states, "Any new or different claim or counterclaim, as opposed to an increase or decrease in the amount of a pending claim or counterclaim, shall be made in writing and filed with the AAA, and a copy shall be provided to the other party, who shall have a period of 14 calendar days from the date of such transmittal within which to file an answer to the proposed change of claim or counterclaim with the AAA. After the arbitrator is appointed, however, no new or different claim may be submitted except with the arbitrator's consent." (AAA Commercial Arbitration Rules and Mediation Procedures (effective Oct. 1, 2013), available at https://www.adr.org/sites/default/files/CommercialRules_Web.pdf, as of January 29, 2019.)
TNP and the Programs also suggest the arbitrator should have dismissed or stayed the arbitration after determining Cohen lacked standing and allowed the parties to return to court "for a determination of who the proper parties were and which claims they were entitled to arbitrate." The Plan, however, was a claimant and had standing to pursue its claims even if Cohen did not.
According to Cohen and the Plan, the Programs abandoned the counterclaim before the arbitrator issued his award.
The arbitration agreement provided that "plaintiff borrowers agreed to pay the Bank's 'collection costs,' including '... attorneys' fees,' " and it incorporated deeds of trust that "entitl[ed] the Bank, but not the borrowers, to reasonable attorney fees '[i]f Lender institutes any suit or action to enforce any of the terms of this Deed of Trust.' " (Moore , supra ,
The record does not include many of the parties' submissions to the arbitrator, but the motion to correct the award of the arbitrator filed by the Cohen Parties referred to their supplemental closing brief to the arbitrator, in which they requested an award of reasonable attorneys' fees and costs.
The court in Carole Ring looked to Civil Code section 1717 to determine whether a party was the "prevailing party" for purposes of awarding postarbitration attorneys' fees. (Carole Ring , supra ,
