Opinion
This is an appeal by defendant Alcove Investment, Inc. (Alcove), from an order staying arbitration of plaintiff’s claims against Alcove during the pendency of this litigation. We affirm.
Facts and Proceedings Below
The following facts are taken from the record on the motion to stay arbitration including the verified first amended complaint and deposition of plaintiff, Roland H. Henry. 1
At the time of the events giving rise to this lawsuit Mr. Henry was a functionally illiterate elderly widower who had only one leg and was *61 confined to his bed and a wheelchair with crippling arthritis. 2 Henry was blind in one eye and had only limited vision in the other. Born in 1905 in rural East Texas, Henry left school at an early age and began to work full time at the age of 12. Prior to retirement, Henry supported himself by selling homemade tamales from a lunch wagon. In 1961, Henry and his wife purchased a home on East 108th Street in the Watts area of Los Angeles. Mr. Henry continued to reside in the house after Mrs. Henry died in 1977. By 1981 Mr. Henry owned the house free and clear.
The complaint alleges defendant Alex Hazan and other individual defendants working with mortgage loan brokers such as Alcove defrauded Mr. Henry out of thousands of dollars through phony home improvement transactions. The fraud involved obtaining or forging Mr. Henry’s signature on various blank contracts and loan documents then filling in these documents to reflect much higher amounts than Mr. Henry agreed to pay for the home improvements.
The specific facts involving Alcove are as follows. Building on a prior transaction with Mr. Henry involving recarpeting his home, defendant Hazan or someone working with him approached Mr. Henry about some additional home improvements. This time, the offered improvements were to consist of some roof repairs to a small building at the rear of Henry’s home and painting Henry’s living room and hallway. Henry was told this work would be done by Kazan’s company for $1,000 and Hazan would arrange a loan in the amount of $4,000 to finance the work and to provide Henry with some cash. Henry was again asked to sign blank loan documents after being told to trust the salesman. The documents were later filled in to show a loan for $10,942 instead of the $4,000 Mr. Henry thought he was borrowing. Among the documents Mr. Henry signed was a loan request form prepared by Alcove. The loan request form contained an arbitration clause.
When Mr. Henry failed to make payments on the Alcove loan, Alcove initiated foreclosure proceedings against Henry’s home.
In October 1989, Mr. Henry filed suit against Hazan, Alcove, and other defendants to obtain injunctive relief halting foreclosure proceedings against his home, to cancel certain instruments that had been fraudulently recorded against title to Henry’s home, and to obtain damages for the defendants’ fraud. The complaint alleged that in defrauding Mr. Henry in the home *62 improvement transaction Hazan and other individual defendants acted as agents of Alcove.
Alcove answered Mr. Henry’s complaint. It made no mention of the arbitration clause in its answer. However, approximately six months after tiling its answer to the complaint, Alcove initiated arbitration proceedings with the American Arbitration Association under authority of the arbitration clause in Mr. Henry’s loan request.
Counsel for Mr. Henry advised Alcove’s counsel and the American Arbitration Association Mr. Henry would not participate in arbitration because the arbitration clause was void and unenforceable. Alcove did not petition the trial court for an order to compel arbitration but it made clear to Mr. Henry it intended to pursue the arbitration. Therefore Mr. Henry brought a motion to stay arbitration based on five separate grounds: (a) the stay was warranted under Code of Civil Procedure section 1281.2, subdivision (c) due to the possibility of conflicting rulings on common issues of law and fact; (b) Henry’s execution of the document containing the arbitration clause was obtained by fraud; (c) Alcove had waived any right it might have had to insist on arbitration pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure section 1281.2, subdivision (a); (d) Henry did not knowingly waive his right to a jury trial; and (e) the arbitration clause was contained in a contract of adhesion and should not be enforced.
The trial court granted the motion to stay arbitration on all the grounds raised by Mr. Henry. This appeal followed. For the reasons discussed below we find the stay of arbitration was properly based on the possibility of conflicting rulings on common issues of law or fact. (Code Civ. Proc., § 1281.2, subd. (c).) Therefore, we do not address the other grounds for a stay urged by Mr. Henry.
I. An Appeal May Be Taken From an Order Granting a Motion to Stay Arbitration Under Code of Civil Procedure Section 1281.2.
Henry contends Alcove’s appeal must be dismissed as taken from a nonappealable interlocutory order. We disagree. For the reasons explained below we hold an order staying arbitration under Code of Civil Procedure section 1281.2 3 should be treated the same as an order denying a petition to compel arbitration which is appealable under section 1294, subdivision (a). 4
*63
The appealability of an order staying arbitration was upheld in
The Energy Group, Inc.
v.
Liddington
(1987)
Addressing the issue of appealability of the stay order, the court, in
TEG,
noted “[a]n order denying a petition to compel arbitration is an appealable order” under section 1294, subdivision (a). “[W]e chose to treat the court’s order [staying arbitration] as, in effect, denying the petition to compel arbitration, thereby rendering it an appealable order.” (
We agree with the reasoning of
TEG,
that an order staying arbitration is the functional equivalent of an order refusing to compel arbitration. We note the advantages of arbitration include “a presumptively less costly, more expeditious manner” of resolving disputes.
(Keating
v.
Superior Court
(1982)
II. The Trial Court Did Not Abuse Its Discretion in Staying Arbitration.
Under section 1281.2 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.” (See discussion, ante, at p. 99.)
We first address Alcove’s contention the “conflicting rulings” ground for staying arbitration under section 1281.2 is inapplicable to the present case. Alcove’s argument is as follows: credit transactions involving real estate affect interstate commerce
(McLain
v.
Real Estate Bd. of New Orleans, Inc.
(1980)
We reject Alcove’s argument for two reasons. First, it was not made in the proceeding below. As a general rule, appellate courts will not
*65
entertain arguments raised for the first time on appeal.
(Musquiz
v.
City of Huntington Park
(1986)
The standard of review for an order staying or denying arbitration under section 1281.2, subdivision (c) is the well-known test for abuse of discretion.
(Pioneer Take Out Corp.
v.
Bhavsar
(1989)
Here, the possibility of conflicting rulings on a common issue of fact or law is obvious and the trial court’s order is clearly “in bounds.” In order to establish Alcove’s liability for fraud, Henry will have to establish (1) Hazan or other individual defendants defrauded Mr. Henry in the home improvement transaction; (2) Hazan or the other individual defendants were acting as agents of Alcove; (3) Alcove is liable for the fraud of Hazan or the other individual defendants. (See, generally, 2 Witkin, Summary of Cal. Law (9th ed. 1987) Agency and Employment, §§ 113-117.) A possibility of conflict exists as to the first issue because the arbitrator could find Hazan or other individual defendants did not defraud Mr. Henry while at trial the trier of fact could find fraud was committed by Hazan or other defendants. The existence of this possibility of conflicting rulings on a common issue of fact is sufficient grounds for a stay under section 1281.2. (Cf.
C. V. Starr & Co.
v.
Boston Reinsurance Corp.
(1987)
Alcove contends upholding the trial court’s order in this case will effectively vitiate arbitration. According to Alcove, all a party would have to do to avoid arbitration is sue another party not bound by the arbitration clause and allege that party is in some way involved in the arbitrable dispute.
*66
Alcove’s argument overlooks the fact the Legislature made stay orders in cases involving third parties discretionary in order to avoid the gamemanship suggested in Alcove’s hypothetical. In
Madden
v.
Kaiser Foundation Hospitals
(1976)
In the present case the plaintiff has done more than merely name third parties as defendants. The complaint alleges the fraudulent acts of those defendants and the connection between those defendants and defendant Alcove. Furthermore, nothing in the record before us suggests plaintiff named these third parties as defendants for the primary purpose of attempting to avoid arbitration with Alcove. Under the circumstances of this case, the purpose of a stay of arbitration was not abused by the trial court’s order.
Disposition
The order is affirmed.
Lillie, R J., and Woods (Fred), J., concurred.
Notes
Mr. Henry died on February 1, 1991. Pursuant to an order of the superior court entered on March 7, 1991, Canzata Y. Castleberry (Mr. Henry’s sister), special administrator for the estate of Roland H. Henry, was substituted into this action in place of Roland Henry.
Mr. Henry testified at his deposition he reads the Bible and the Los Angeles Times but he does not understand everything he reads. When he does not understand something he asks his sister.
All future statutory references are to the Code of Civil Procedure unless otherwise noted.
Section 1294, subdivision (a) provides for appeal from “[a]n order dismissing or denying a petition to compel arbitration.”
