Opinion
The instant case is an appeal from an order denying a petition to compel arbitration of a medical malpractice claim. *1229 Plaintiff Russell Coon (respondent herein) filed a complaint in Kern County Superior Court against defendant (appellant herein) George Nicola, Jr., M.D. Appellant treated respondent on or about April 4,1990, for injuries sustained by respondent in a fall down a mine shaft several days earlier on March 31, 1990.
Respondent eventually brought an action against Ridgecrest Community Hospital, R.C.W. Jones, Jr., M.D., H.W. Green, M.D. and George Nicоla, Jr., M.D. alleging negligently rendered medical care to respondent beginning on or about March 31, 1990. Subsequent to being served with the complaint, appellant filed and served his answer which consisted of a general denial and several affirmative defenses. The fourth affirmative defense asserted the right to have the negligence claim decided pursuant to a written agreement requiring that resolution of the issues raised in respondent’s complaint be determined in a binding arbitration proceeding.
Appellant requested that respondent stipulate to a stay of the proceedings and to submission of their dispute to arbitration according to the terms of the agreement. Respondent refused to so stipulate, and appellant filed and served a petition to compel arbitration.
The petition was heard on August 21, 1991, in the Superior Court of Kern County. The trial court denied the petition from which order appellant appeals.
The issues before us are: (1) does California Code of Civil Procedure section 1295, 1 addressing arbitration agreements in medical malpractice actions, preclude retroactive arbitration agreements; (2) may parties contract to submit precontract claims to arbitration; (3) are such pre-agreement arbitration agreements afforded the legislative conclusion of section 1295, subdivision (e); (4) is the retroactive agreement in the present case a contract of adhesion; and (5) was respondent’s signing of the arbitration agreement invalid as a contract of adhesion because he claims he was affected by analgesic drugs which had been prescribed for pain.
Facts
After initial treatment of respondent at Ridgecrest Community Hospital for his injuries, appellant performed surgery on respondent for a fractured wrist. Postsurgical radiographs were taken which indicated a previously undiagnosed “middle shaft radius fracture” of respondent’s left arm. Appellant told respondent of the missed diagnosis following surgery, but also told respondent it was “going to be alright [sic].”
*1230 On a subsequent visit to appellant’s office the following week, respondent signed a physician-patient arbitration agreement covering appellant’s care of resрondent. The agreement provided that claims regarding prospective care were to be covered by an arbitration agreement but also included a provision concerning pre-agreement treatment: “Article 6: Retroactive Effect: If patient intends this agreement to cover services rendered before the date it is signed (for example, emergency treatment) patient should initial below: Effective as of date of first medical services.”
It is not disputed that respondent signed the agreement and separately initialed the clause expressly agreeing to arbitrate disputes stemming from the care appellant rendered prior to the office visit. Subsequent to the signing of the arbitration agreement, respondent continued treatment with appellant.
Discussion
In the argument before the superior court, respondent maintained the statutory authority for physician-patient arbitration agreements does not authorize enforcement of retroactive agreements and that appellant’s attempt to enforce the agreement was unconscionable. Cоunsel for respondent submitted his client’s declaration concerning the signing of the arbitration agreement: “As I said, I was discharged from the hospital on or about April 5. About a week later I returned for a follow-up visit to see Dr. Nicola at his office. I have viewed Petitioner’s Exhibit ‘A’. I have absolutely no memory of discussing that particular ‘agreement’ or of signing it, although I do remember that nurses would often bring me several papers at once to sign on a clip-board. The nurse would lift up each page and I would sign where she told me to sign. It was my understanding that I was just signing insurance рapers and so I did what they told me to do. If I had known that one of those ‘papers’ was going to take away my legal rights, I would not have signed it.”
Counsel for appellant argued that section 1295 did not preclude retroactive arbitration agreements and that the retroactive provision was not a contract of adhesion.
The superior court ruled in an order after hearing of petition to compel arbitration:
“The court finds that the provision in the medical arbitration agreement sought to be enforced by Defendant, George A. Nicola, calls for a retroactive application of the agreement’s waiver of jury trial rights. The court finds that the Code of Civil Procedure, § 1295 does not authorize or mandate *1231 the language found in Article 6 of the medical arbitration agreement here involved. The court further finds that under subsections (a), (c), and (e) of § 1295, the medical arbitration agreement at issue here is, therefore, not insulated from attack as being a contract of adhesion or as being an unconscionable contract to the extent it seeks to govern the rights of the parties retroactively from the date on which it was purportedly signed by рlaintiff. The court further finds that the declaration of plaintiff and respondent, Russell Coon, submitted with the opposing papers shows that respondent was in a heavily medicated state at the time the alleged agreement was purportedly signed.
“The court further finds that the relative bargaining position of the parties at the time the purported agreement was entered into was grossly unequal. The court further finds that this inequality was attributable to the plaintiffs medicated state.
“On the basis of the findings recited above, the court enters the following order:
“That petitioner, George A. Nicola’s, petition to compel arbitration and motion to remove case from civil active list be denied.”
This Court Finds That Code of Civil Procedure Section 1295 Does Not Preclude Retroactive Arbitration Agreements
Section 1295, states:
“(a) Any contract for medical services which contains a provision for arbitration of any dispute as to professional negligence of a health care provider shall have such provision as the first article of the contract and shall be expressed in the following language: ‘It is understood that any disputе as to medical malpractice, that is as to whether any medical services rendered under this contract were unnecessary or unauthorized or were improperly, negligently or incompetently rendered, will be determined by submission to arbitration as provided by California law, and not by a lawsuit or resort to court process except as California law provides for judicial review of arbitration proceedings. Both parties to this contract, by entering into it, are giving up their constitutional right to have any such dispute decided in a court of law before a jury, and instead are accepting the use of arbitration.
“(b) Immediately before the signature line provided for the individual contracting for the medical services must appear the following in at least 10-point bold red type:
*1232 “Notice: by Signing This Contract You Are Agreeing to Have Any Issue of Medical Malpractice Decided by Neutral Arbitration And You Are Giving Up Your Right to a Jury or Court Trial. See Article I of This Contract.’
“(c) Once signed, such a contract governs all subsequent open-book account transactions for medical services for which the contract was signed until or unless rescinded by written notice within 30 days of signature.”
The provisions of section 1295 were incorporated into the instant contract.
Respondent claims on appeal that the wording in section 1295, subdivision (c) referring to subsequent transactions clearly precludes any authorization of a retroactive application of an arbitration agreement. Section 1295 states that all medical malpractice arbitration agreements must include specific provisions such as the specific wording in subdivision (a), the 10-point bold red tyрe provision in subdivision (b), and the ability to rescind the contract by written notice within 30 days of signing the agreement as required by subdivision (c). However, nothing in the wording of the statute states that medical malpractice arbitration agreements may not also include additional provisions. In fact the wording of subdivision (a) is indicative of this when it requires mandatory language to be set forth in the “first article of the contract.” The implication here is that other articles may be added depending upon the needs of the parties. There is also no specification in section 1295 as to what particular method of arbitration is to be used, but rather, according to section 1281.6, if a method of appointing an arbitrator is specified in the agreement, such method shall be used. If not specified, the parties may agree, or if they cannot agree, the court shall appoint the arbitrator. Such freedom in the wording of the statute itself indicates that additional provisions in a medical malpractice arbitration agreement are allowed.
In addition, the courts have consistently found a strong public policy favoring arbitration agreements. In
Madden
v.
Kaiser Foundation Hospitals
(1976)
We find nothing in the statute which, by its terms, expressly or implicitly precludes a retroactive arbitration agreement.
*1233 Parties May Contract to Submit Pre-contract Claims to Arbitration
The question then becomes whether parties may contract to submit precontract claims to arbitration. Section 1281 states: “A' written agreement to submit tо arbitration an existing controversy or a controversy thereafter arising is valid, enforceable and irrevocable, save upon such grounds as exist for the revocation of any contract.” “Controversy” as defined in section 1280, subdivision (c), “means any question[ ] arising between parties to an agreement whether such question is one of law or of fact or both.”
We conclude section 1281 et seq. applies to medical malpractice arbitration agreements to the extent they do not conflict with the specific provisions of sectiоn 1295. In
Rosenfield
v.
Superior Court
(1983)
The Pre-agreement Arbitration Claim Is Not Afforded the Legislative Conclusion of Section 1295, Subdivision (e)
Appellant claims the pre-agreement arbitration claim is subject to the legislative conclusion of section 1295, subdivision (e), which states: “Such a contract is not a contract of adhesion, nor unconscionable nor otherwise improper, where it complies with subdivisions (a), (b) and (c) of this section.” The terminology above as to “such a contract” refers only to the agreement between the parties to arbitrate disputes arising out of services rendered as provided for in section 1295. If certain language is followed as specified in 1295, subdivisions (a), (b), and (c), the agreement to arbitrate is exempted from attack as a contract of adhesion.
Such language would not, however, shield the agreement from attack on the validity of consent. In
Ramirez
v.
Superior Court
(1980) 103 Cal.App.3d
*1234
746 [
However, since retroactivity of an agreement is not addressed by the working of section 1295, it follows that the legislative conclusion of section 1295, subdivision (e) is inapplicable to the contract provisions at issue here. As such, a retroactive agreement is subject to revocation on grounds that exist for revocation of any contract and such a provision could be found to be a contract of adhesion dependent on the circumstances.
The Present Agreement Is Not a Contract of Adhesion
The present agreement is, however, not a contract of adhesion. “Contract of adhesion” is a term which “signifies a standardized contract, which, imposed and drafted by the party of superior bargaining strength, relegates to the subscribing party only the opportunity to adhere to the contract or reject it.”
(Neal
v.
State Farm Ins. Cos.
(1961)
In
Graham
v.
Scissor-Tail, Inc.
(1981)
Even assuming that some may see the patient/physician relationship by its very nature as being unequal, in order to be considered a contraсt of
*1235
adhesion, the consideration is whether the terms of which adherent was unaware are beyond the reasonable expectations of the ordinary person or are oppressive or unconscionable.
(Wheeler, supra,
Although the definition of “unconscionable” has not been precise, “ ‘[u]nconscionability has generally been recognized to include an absence of meaningful choice on the part of one of the parties together with contract terms which are unreasonably favorable to the other party’. . . . Phrased another way, unconscionability has both a ‘procedural’ and a ‘substantive’ element. . . .” (A
& M Produce Co.
v.
FMC Corp.
(1982)
In
Chretian
v.
Donald L. Bren Co.
(1984)
Although the appellant in the present case drafted the arbitration form, standardized forms such as life or accident insurance forms or leases, are common and accepted in modern daily life.
(Neal, supra,
In essence, in determining whether a contract is unconscionable or includes terms beyond the reasonable expectations of the ordinary person involves an analysis of many of the factors to be discussed below. We would
*1236
need to consider whether there was no opportunity to question the terms of the agreement
(Steven
v.
Fidelity & Casualty Co.
(1962)
Madden, supra,
The court did find a contract of adhesion in
Spence
v.
Omnibus Industries, supra,
In marked contrast to Spence, the agreement in the present case was on a separate one-page document entitled “Physician-Patient Arbitration Agreement” and all wording provisions of section 1295 including the requirement of the 10-point red bold face type were followed. The arbitration agreement in issue also included a provision which allowed for revocation of the *1237 agreement if made within 30 days of signing the agreement as required by section 1295, subdivision (c). Respondent did not take advantage of this provision, and in fact he continued receiving treatmеnt from appellant for approximately nine months.
The agreement itself carried no buried terms; all terms were laid out very clearly in the arbitration agreement form. Further, the retroactive effect provision of the agreement was addressed in a distinct clause, and this was the only clause respondent was asked to initial, making it more obvious rather than less obvious or hidden.
In many cases of adhesion contracts, “the weaker party lacks not only the opportunity to bargain but also any realistic opportunity to look elsewhere for a more favorable contract; he must either adhere to the standardized agreement or forego the needed service.”
(Madden, supra,
Most significantly, the present case does not limit appellant’s liability in any way but merely provides for a different forum in which to settle disputes. In
Doyle
v.
Guiluicci
(1965)
In
Graham, supra,
None of the above mentioned factors concerning the present case can be construed as unconscionable or oppressive, and each provision would seem to fall within the reasonable expectations of both pаrties. As such, the agreement cannot be construed as a contract of adhesion.
Respondent’s Signing of Arbitration Agreement Is Not Invalid
In support of its finding that this was a contract of adhesion, the trial court found that the relative bargaining position of the parties at the time the purported agreement was entered into was grossly unequal, and that this inequality was attributable to the respondent’s medicated state. The only evidence in the record as to respondent’s medicated state comes from the respondent’s declaration in which he stаted that he took Vicodin several times a day for about nine weeks following his release from the hospital, and that the Vicodin, like the Demerol which he had had in the hospital, made him feel “very sleepy and somewhat disoriented.” There is nothing in the record as to the effect of the pain medication on the respondent other than his own statement. Respondent does not claim that he could not read, or even that he did not understand the agreement, and there is no indication in the record that respondent was not able to comprеhend what he was signing.
Most importantly, there is also no indication in the record that appellant knew respondent was disoriented, and no indication that appellant took advantage of the situation. Respondent makes no claim that appellant was aware respondent was disoriented. They point to no specifics to verify that appellant took advantage of respondent. In
Yeng Sue Chow
v.
Levi Strauss & Co., supra,
As stated in
Madden, supra,
If the arbitration agreement in the present case is not a contract of adhesion, “Ordinarily when а person with capacity of reading and understanding an instrument signs it, he may not, in the absence of fraud, imposition or excusable neglect, avoid its terms on the ground he failed to read it before signing it.”
(Bauer
v.
Jackson
(1971)
The denial of submitted order to compel arbitration is reversed. Costs to appellant.
Buckley, J., and Brown (G. A.), J., * concurred.
