This dispute arises out of the efforts of appellees John and Teresa Dodds to collect an arbitration award from C & C General Builders, Inc., a construction company ■with which the Dodds contracted for demolition and renovation work. After obtaining an arbitration judgment in their favor and then learning that C & C would be unable to pay the award, the Dodds brought a claim seeking to pierce C & C’s corporate veil to reach C & C’s alleged shareholders, Carlos and Alex Giron (see note 4, infra). The Girons moved to compel arbitration of this claim, and the trial court denied their motion. This appeal followed. Finding no error, we affirm.
I. Facts and Procedural History
In March 2007, John and Teresa Dodds entered into a contract with C & C General Builders, Inc. (C & C) for the demolition and renovation of a residential building the Dodds owned in Northwest Washington, D.C. C & C is a construction company run by Carlos Giron and his son, Alex Giron, C & C’s president and vice president, respectively. Article 9 of the contract between the Dodds and C & C contains an arbitration clause, providing: “Any controversy or claim arising out of or relating to this contract, or the breach thereof, shall be settled by arbitration administered by the American Arbitration Association under its Construction Industry Arbitration Rules, and judgment on the award rendered by the arbitrator(s) may be entered in any court having jurisdiction thereof.”
Under the contract, the Dodds were required to make weekly progress payments for 23 weeks, the agreed-upon period for completing the construction. The Dodds made payments through May 3, 2008, amounting to 70 percent of the contract price. They then received a consultant report concluding that the project was only 40 percent complete and that C & C would not be able to complete it by August 2008 as scheduled. When confronted with these facts, the Girons demanded that the progress payments continue. The Dodds refused, and the Girons abandoned the job site.
In September 2008, the Dodds filed a four-count complaint against Carlos and Alex Giron as individuals, alleging breach of contract, negligent supervision of contract, breach of fiduciary duty, and slander of title. In response to the Girons’ motion to compel arbitration, the Superior Court ordered the parties to proceed with arbitration and stayed the case pending the outcome of arbitration. The Dodds filed a statement of claim with the American Arbitration Association, making essentially the same allegations as those made in then-original complaint. After the Girons filed a request for dismissal but before the arbitrator ruled on that request, the Dodds amended their statement of claim to add C & C as a defendant on the theory that C & C was an undisclosed principal. In an interim order, the arbitrator dismissed the claims against Carlos and Alex Giron, finding that the Dodds knew they had con
On August 21, 2009, after receiving a letter from counsel for the Girons stating that C & C was “asset-less” and would not pay the award, the Dodds filed a motion in the trial court to confirm the arbitration award. Soon after, on September 20, 2009, the Dodds filed a motion for leave to file an amended complaint. Both motions were granted. In their amended complaint, the Dodds sought to pierce C & C’s corporate veil and hold Carlos and Alex Giron individually liable for the award. The Dodds alleged that the Girons “treated the assets and the funds of the corporate entity as their own[,] ... failed to observe corporate formalities[,] ... intermingled corporate and personal funds and [were] now attempting to use the corporate shell to shield themselves from liability....” Specifically, the Dodds claimed that the Girons “wrongfully and fraudulently converted” for their own use the Dodds’ progress payments intended to be used toward completion of the project. The Girons filed a motion to reconsider the order granting leave to file an amended complaint or, in the alternative, to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction and failure to state a claim. The trial court denied this motion and the Girons appealed. This court dismissed the appeal as having been taken from a nonfinal order. Giron v. Dodds, 10-CV-1129 (D.C. Nov. 2, 2010). The Girons then filed a motion to compel arbitration for a second time, and the trial court denied that motion in a January 6, 2011 order. Relying heavily on Schattner v. Girard, Inc.,
The Girons appeal the trial court’s denial of their motion to compel arbitration, contending that the court should have ordered the parties to proceed with arbitration because, they argue, the allegations in the amended complaint are subject to the arbitration agreement in the contract and have in fact already been decided in arbitration. The Girons further challenge the trial court’s reliance on Schattner, arguing that its reasoning is inapplicable to the facts here.
II. Jurisdiction and Standard of Review
At the outset, we note that unlike the Girons’ earlier appeal from the trial court’s denial of their motion to dismiss the Dodds’ amended complaint, this appeal is properly before us. We have held that “the denial of a motion to compel arbitration under [the District of Columbia Uni
Under the District’s arbitration act, a written agreement to “submit to arbitration any existing or subsequent controversy arising between the parties to the agreement is valid, enforceable, and irrevocable except upon a ground that exists at law or in equity for the revocation of a contract.” D.C.Code § 16-4406(a) (Supp. 2011). “[U]pon a showing that an arbitration agreement exists” with respect to a particular issue, Hercules, supra,
III. Discussion
A. The Trial Court’s Jurisdiction Over the Dodds’ Amended Complaint
There is no dispute that a valid arbitration agreement existed between the Dodds and C & C, and on appeal neither party challenges the arbitrator’s jurisdiction over the Dodds’ original complaint against C & C. We consider only whether the trial court erred by asserting jurisdiction over the Dodds’ amended complaint against the Girons without ordering the parties to proceed once again with arbitration.
The Girons argue that the Dodds’ amended complaint is “merely a continuation” of their original complaint, which was previously ordered to arbitration, and that it therefore falls within the scope of the arbitration agreement. In support of this argument, the Girons point to several allegations that they claim are the same as those submitted in arbitration. In particular, the Girons emphasize an accusation that appeared in both the Dodds’ original complaint and the amended statement of claim that the Girons “diverted funds from the progress payments for uses other than the renovations under the contract.” According to the Girons, the allegations in the Dodds” amended complaint that the Girons treated corporate assets as their own, failed to observe corporate formalities, and intermingled corporate and personal funds is just a “re-hash[ing]” of the allegation that the Girons diverted funds.
“[A]n arbitration award is not self-executing,” and a party seeking to enforce it “may ask the court to confirm the award and enter judgment accordingly.” Brandon v. Hines,
In this case, we conclude that the Dodds’ claim to pierce the corporate veil does not involve a new dispute “arising out of or relating to this contract, or the breach thereof’; it instead arises out of the Dodds’ efforts to collect the arbitration award rendered in their favor. The Dodds have already submitted their contract claims against C & C to arbitration, and having been awarded a money judgment, they now seek to hold C & C’s shareholders individually liable for the arbitration award on the theory that those shareholders essentially looted C & C.
We find additional support for this conclusion from federal cases in which the courts have asserted jurisdiction over actions to collect an arbitration award through piercing the corporate veil.
The Girons argue not only that the Dodds’ amended complaint belongs in arbitration but that the allegations contained therein are “nearly identical” to those already submitted in arbitration against the Girons as individuals, and therefore the Dodds are precluded from bringing these same claims again. The Girons are correct that a party whose claims have been— or should have been — decided in arbitration “may not then bring the same claims under new labels.” Hogue v. Hopper,
The arguments advanced by the Girons further suffer from an internal inconsistency. By arguing that the claims in the Dodds’ amended complaint should have
B. The Trial Court’s Reliance on Schattner
In its order denying the Girons’ motion to compel arbitration, the trial court based its entire analysis on Schattner, supra,
Robert Schattner, a dentist and inventor, prevailed in arbitration against Girard, Inc., a company with which he had a licensing agreement. When he sought to confirm the arbitrators’ award in federal district court, he requested that the court pierce the company’s corporate veil to hold the president and CEO individually liable. Schattner, supra,
According to the Girons, the trial court erred in applying Schattner here because Schattner is “not about whether a court has jurisdiction to hear” a veil-piercing claim and “the Schattner court based its entire ruling” on the fact that the plaintiff “was a shareholder of the defendant corporation.” It is the Girons who misread Schattner. The Schattner court did not create a rule limited to minority shareholders seeking to pierce the corporate veil; it proposed a broader rule that would not exclude minority shareholders from piercing the corporate veil to collect an arbitration award. Schattner includes many significant facts analogous to the case here. Like Robert Schattner, the Dodds arbitrated their claims and were awarded a money judgment. Also like Schattner, the Dodds sought to confirm their arbitration award in trial court when it became clear that C & C would not pay. Finally, both Schattner and the Dodds sought to enforce the arbitration judgment through a claim to pierce the corporate veil to impose shareholder liability. With these key similarities and with little precedent from this court as a guide, the trial judge did not err
Accordingly, we affirm the trial court’s order taking jurisdiction over the Dodds’ amended complaint without ordering the parties to proceed once again with arbitration.
So ordered.
Notes
. The District of Columbia Uniform Arbitration Act was repealed effective July 1, 2009 by D.C. Law 17-111 (2007). It was replaced— with no changes material to this case — by the Revised Uniform Arbitration Act (RUAA), which is codified in Chapter 44 of D.C.Code Title 16. The prior act was not immediately repealed, and it applied to agreements made before February 27, 2008, when the RUAA went into effect, until July 1, 2009, when the prior act ceased to apply to any agreements. See Menna v. Plymouth Rock Assurance Corp.,
. "A party seeking to disregard the corporate entity must prove by affirmative evidence that there is (1) unity of ownership and interest, and (2) use of the corporate form to perpetuate fraud or wrong.” Lawlor v. District of Columbia,
. Because the Federal Arbitration Act is "substantially similar to the District’s act,” we may look to federal precedent for guidance. Hercules, supra,
