Opinion
Granada Healthcare and Rehabilitation Center, LLC, Devin M. Shelby, Skilled Healthcare Group, Inc., and Skilled Healthcare, LLC, appeal an order denying their petition to compel arbitration. We affirm.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
On September 15, 2004, 83-year-old decedent Ruth Fitzhugh was admitted to Granada Healthcare and Rehabilitation Center, LLC (Granada), to receive convalescent and custodial care for her recently repaired fractured hip. She was transferred and admitted to an acute-care hospital for treatment of a fractured femur on November 27, 2004. She died in the hospital on December 4, 2004.
In their second amended complaint, decedent’s spouse, plaintiff George Fitzhugh, as her successor in interest and individually, and decedent’s two adult sons, plaintiffs John and Frank Fitzhugh, alleged causes of action for elder abuse, fraud, violations of the Patients Bill of Rights contained in title 22, section 72527 of the California Code of Regulations, and wrongful death. They claimed that decedent’s fractured femur was sustained when she fell while she was a resident of Granada. The complaint named as defendants Granada and Skilled Healthcare Group, Inc., and its wholly owned subsidiary, *472 Skilled Healthcare, LLC, entities alleged to have directed, owned, operated, administered, and/or managed Granada, and Devin Shelby, as the administrator of Granada’s facility and an agent or employee of Granada during the decedent’s stay at the facility.
Defendants petitioned to stay the litigation and compel arbitration of plaintiffs’ claims due to provisions of two agreements between Granada and decedent, signed by plaintiff George Fitzhugh, as decedent’s “Legal Representative/Agent.” One agreement requires binding arbitration of medical malpractice claims. The other agreement provides for binding arbitration of “any claim . . . arising out of the provision of services by the Facility, the admission agreement, the validity, interpretation, construction, performance and enforcement thereof, or which allege violations of the Elder Abuse and Dependent Adult Civil Protection Act, or the Unfair Competition Act, or which seek an award of punitive damages or attorney’[s] fees.” Each of the agreements expressly states that decedent did not waive her right under Health and Safety Code section 1430 to bring a lawsuit in court against the facility for violations of the Patients Bill of Rights contained in title 22, section 72527 of the California Code of Regulations. Each of the agreements also states: “This arbitration agreement binds the parties hereto, including the heirs, representatives, executors, administrators, successors, and assigns of such parties.”
Plaintiffs opposed the petition arguing that defendants waived any right to arbitration, that George Fitzhugh was fraudulently induced into signing the arbitration agreements, that the claims brought pursuant to Health and Safety Code section 1430 and for wrongful death were not subject to arbitration, and that the court should deny the petition in its discretion because individual claims by decedent’s survivors were not subject to arbitration and because proceedings in separate forums could result in inconsistent rulings on common issues of law and fact.
Defendants’ petition was denied on several grounds. The court determined the claims for violations pursuant to Health and Safety Code section 1430 and for wrongful death were not subject to the arbitration agreements. Even assuming decedent’s claims were subject to arbitration, the individual claims of plaintiffs George, John, and Frank Fitzhugh, were not, and the court exercised its discretion to deny the petition due to the possibility of conflicting rulings on common issues of law or fact were the claims to proceed in different forums. Finally, the court concluded that nothing in the record *473 suggested plaintiffs named third parties, or raised issues outside the arbitration agreement, to purposely avoid arbitration. Defendants timely appeal from the order denying their petition .to compel. (Code Civ. Proc., § 1294, subd. (a).)
DISCUSSION
Defendants argue that the court erred, as a matter of law, when it refused to compel arbitration under the terms of the arbitration agreements executed by plaintiff George Fitzhugh in his capacity as agent for decedent. Defendants argue the court should have factually determined whether George Fitzhugh was acting as an agent, and ask us to, remand the matter for a determination of that issue. Remand is not warranted because the ruling may be affirmed for the reasons stated by the court without addressing George Fitzhugh’s role as decedent’s purported agent. 1
Defendants do not dispute that each of the arbitration agreements excludes from arbitration a patient’s claims brought pursuant to Health and Safety Code section 1430, subdivision (b), 2 for violations of the Patients Bill of Rights under title 22, section 72527 of the California Code of Regulations. We are not persuaded by defendants’ argument that any cause of action authorized by Health and Safety Code section 1430, subdivision (b) may not survive the death of a patient. “Except as otherwise provided by statute, a cause of action for or against a person is not lost by reason of the person’s death, but survives subject to the applicable limitations period.” (Code Civ. Proc., § 377.20, subd. (a).) We assume the Legislature was aware when it *474 added subdivision (b) to section 1430 of the Health and Safety Code in 1982 (Stats. 1982, ch. 1455, § 1, pp. 5598, 5599), that survival causes of action for violations of statutory rights were permitted under Probate Code former section 573, the predecessor to Code of Civil Procedure section 377.20. Since there is no contrary statutory provision, the death of a patient or resident does not abate any cause of action pursuant to Health and Safety Code section 1430, subdivision (b). Thus, any cause of action pursuant to Health and Safety Code section 1430, subdivision (b) survived decedent’s death and was not subject to arbitration.
Neither was the cause of action brought by plaintiffs George, John and Frank Fitzhugh, individually, for decedent’s wrongful death, subject to the arbitration agreements.
(Buckner v. Tamarin
(2002)
We are not persüaded that
Herbert v. Superior Court
(1985)
Pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure section 1281.2, subdivision (c), “the court may, in its discretion, refuse to compel arbitration or may stay arbitration where ‘there is a possibility of conflicting rulings on a common issue of law or fact.’ ”
(Henry
v.
Alcove Investment, Inc.
(1991)
Upholding the court’s order in this case does not undermine public policy favoring enforcement of valid arbitration agreements. Neither will arbitration agreements cease to be enforceable so long as plaintiffs “toss in” a cause of action alleging violations of the Patients Bill of Rights. Accepting these arguments by defendants would minimize the Legislature’s expression of public policy that under no circumstances may a patient or resident waive his or her right to sue for violations of rights under the Patients Bill of Rights, or other federal and state laws and regulations, which would include the existing Elder Abuse and Dependent Adult Civil Protection Act (Welf. & Inst. Code, § 15600 et seq.). (Health & Saf. Code, § 1430, subd. (b), see Assem. Com. on Health, analysis of Assem. Bill No. 2791 (2003-2004 Reg. Sess.) as amended Apr. 1, 2004, pp. 1, 3-4.)
5
In providing for the “private, civil enforcement of laws against elder abuse and neglect,” under the Elder Abuse and Dependent Adult Civil Protection Act in 1991, “ ‘[T]he Legislature declared that “infirm elderly persons and dependent adults are a disadvantaged class, that cases of abuse of these persons are seldom prosecuted as criminal matters, and few civil cases are brought in connection with this abuse due to problems of proof, court delays, and the lack of incentives to prosecute these suits.” ([Welf. & Inst. Code,] § 15600, subd. (h), added by Stats. 1991, ch. 774, § 2.)’ .... [T]he Senate Rules Committee’s analysis of Senate Bill No. 679 [states:] ‘in practice; the death of the victim and the difficulty in finding an attorney to handle an abuse case where attorneys fees may not be awarded, impedes many victims from suing successfully, [f] This bill would address the problem by: . . . authorizing the court to award attorney’s fees in specified cases; [and by] allowing pain and suffering damages to be awarded when a verdict of intentional and reckless abuse was handed down after the abused elder dies.’ (Sen. Rules Com., Analysis of Sen. Bill No. 679 (1991-1992 Reg. Sess.) as amended May 8, 1991, p. 3.)”
0Delaney v. Baker
(1999)
*477 DISPOSITION
The order denying defendants’ petition to compel arbitration is affirmed.
Parrilli, Acting P. J., and Poliak, J., concurred.
Appellants’ petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied July 18, 2007, S153385.
Notes
Consequently, we express no opinion regarding the decision in
Flores v. Evergreen at San Diego, LLC
(2007)
We note that at the time the arbitration agreements were signed, Health and Safety Code section 1430 provided, in relevant part: “A resident or patient of a skilled nursing facility . . . or intermediate care facilities . .. may bring a civil action against the licensee of a facility who violates any rights of the resident or patient as set forth in the Patients Bill of Rights in Section 72527 of Title 22 of the California Administrative Code.” (Health & Saf. Code, former § 1430, subd. (b).) By Statutes 2004, chapter 270, section 2,. Health and Safety Code section 1430, subdivision (b), was amended to read, in pertinent part: “A current or former resident or patient of a skilled nursing facility ... or intermediate care facility ... may bring a civil action against the licensee of a facility who violates any rights .of the resident or patient as set forth in the Patients Bill of Rights in Section 72527 of Title 22 of the California Code of Regulations, or any other right provided for by federal or state law or regulation.” (Health & Saf. Code, § 1430, subd. (b).)
Defendants’ reliance on
Hogan v. Country Villa Health Services
(2007)
4 The
Herbert
court also noted that it would be “obviously unrealistic to require the signatures of all the heirs, since they are not even identified until the time of death, or they might not be available when their signatures are required. Furthermore, if they refused to sign they should not be in a position possibly to delay medical treatment to the party in need.”
(Herbert, supra,
See footnote 2, ante.
