Opinion by
T 1 In this post-dissolution of marriage action between Naney L. Dorsey (wife) and John Dorsey (husband), wife appeals from the district court's determination that the parties' dispute over the property distribution payment husband owed under their separation agreement was arbitrable, and from its denial of her subsequent motion to vacate the arbitration award. We affirm.
I. Background
T2 The parties' marriage ended in 2007, and they entered into a separation agreement dividing their marital property and debt, and resolving maintenance and attorney fees. As relevant here, under the property division, husband agreed to pay wife a total of $4 million, in installment payments of (no less than) $40,000 a month for fifty-nine months, and the balance by December 20, 2011. Husband was entitled to reimbursement for certain expenses he incurred in selling the parties' properties and facilitating
3 Section 10.18 of the agreement, entitled "Dispute Resolution," provided:
The Parties agree that they will attempt to settle any claim or controversy arising out of or as a result of their dissolution of marriage through consultation and in the spirit of mutual cooperation. If such attempts fail, the specific dispute will be identified in writing and shall be mediated....
If mediation shall be unsuccessful and if still unresolved, the dispute shall then be arbitrated .... [And] the Mediator/Arbiter shall resolve the dispute or controversy pursuant to C.R.S. § 13-22-201 et seq.
T4 When the end of the installment payment period approached, the parties were unable to agree on the expenses for which husband was entitled to a eredit, and therefore what amount he owed to wife as a final payment under the agreement. After wife refused to mediate/arbitrate the unresolved issue, husband asked the district court to direct the parties to mediate/arbitrate pursuant to section 10.13 of their agreement.
15 Wife objected and asked the court to compel the final property payment that she contended was due. She argued, as she does on appeal, that mediation/arbitration of the parties' dispute was not required because of section 10.8 of the agreement. This section, entitled "Governing Law and Jurisdiction," provided:
This Agreement shall be interpreted, governed and enforced in accordance with the laws of the State of Colorado, and the District Court of the City and County of Denver, State of Colorado shall have exclusive and continuing jurisdiction over matters relating to the interpretation and enforcement of this Agreement.
T 6 The district court rejected wife's argument and ordered the parties to mediate/arbitrate. See § 18-22-206(2), C.R.S.2018 {court decides whether a controversy is subject to an arbitration agreement). The parties did so, and the arbitrator entered an award resolving their dispute concerning the final amount owed. Wife then moved to vacate the award, under section 13-22-223(1)(d), C.R.S.2013, contending that the arbitrator exceeded her authority by interpreting the separation agreement. The court denied the motion and confirmed the arbitrator's award under section 18-22-222(1), C.R.S.2013, finding that the arbitrator was empowered to determine the parties' dispute, and that the court had properly interpreted the separation agreement by ordering the parties to mediate/arbitrate under section 10.13.
II. Motion to Dismiss
17 Because the district court's order confirming the arbitrator's award is final and appealable under section 13-22-228(1)(c), C.R.S.2013, we deny husband's motion to dismiss the appeal. We reject his argument that wife's failure to allege the existence of a final judgment in her notice of appeal requires dismissal. CCf. SMLL, L.L.C. v. Daly,
III Arbitrability
T8 Wife contends that the district court erred by ordering the parties to mediate/arbitrate under section 10.18 of their separation agreement, and that the arbitrator exceeded her authority by rendering a decision interpreting the property provisions of the agreement. We disagree with both contentions.
A. Legal Standards
19 Whether an agreement to arbitrate exists is a legal question subject to de novo review on appeal. Lane v. Urgitus,
111 An arbitrator lacks jurisdiction to decide an issue outside the scope of an arbitration agreement, however. When an arbitration clause is "expressly of limited scope," a court may be able to say with positive assurance that particular matters are not encompassed by the clause. Radil v. Nat'l Union FFire Ins. Co.,
T12 A court must vacate an arbitration award when the arbitrator has exceeded his or her authority. § 183-22-223(I)(d); BFN-Greeley,
B. Analysis
113 The section 10.18 arbitration clause is exceedingly broad in seope in that it encompasses "any claim or controversy arising out of or as a result of [the parties'] dissolution of marriage." See Smith v. Multi-Fin. Sec. Corp.,
114 Wife's argument that section 10.8 limits the broad language of the arbitration clause is unpersuasive. Section 10.8 expressly addresses "governing law and jurisdiction," not "dispute resolution," as section 10.18 does. A choice of law or choice of forum provision, like section 10.8, does not supersede an arbitration clause. See Ahluwalia v. QFA Royalties, LLC, 226 P.8d 1093, 1099 (Colo.App.2009). In Ahluwalia, the parties entered into a restaurant franchise agreement mandating arbitration. Id. at 1096. Subsequent versions of the agreement entered three years later, however, designated Colorado courts as the forum to resolve any disputes arising between the parties, and did not reference the earlier arbitration provision. Id.
¶ 15 A division of this court affirmed the district court's ruling that the parties' dis
11 16 Courts have interpreted forum selection clauses as not inherently inconsistent with arbitration clauses contained in the same agreement or in a separate agreement between the same parties, recognizing that arbitrating parties may choose to designate a judicial forum in which to compel arbitration and, if necessary, enforce the resulting award. See Bank Julius Baer & Co.,
{17 We acknowledge that the United States District Court for the District of Colorado recently held that contract language designating the state and federal courts of Colorado as having exclusive jurisdiction to determine all claims and disputes was inconsistent with language in a separate agreement requiring that all disputes be resolved by arbitration. See PDX Pro Co., Inc. v. Dish Network, LLC, No. 12-CV-01699-RBJ,
¶18 Both PDX Pro Co. and Bank Julius Baer & Co. involved two separate agreements entered into at different times-one requiring arbitration and the other designating a particular judicial forum to resolve disputes. See Bank Julius Baer & Co.,
¶ 19 Accordingly, the Applied Emergetics court concluded that the second agreement revoked the first, and thus there was no agreement to arbitrate. Id. at 524-26; see also Goldman, Sachs & Co. v. Golden Empire Sch. Fin. Auth.,
20 In this case, however, the two clauses-arbitration and forum selection-al
121 Even though the arbitration and forum selection clauses here are mandatory, they are reconcilable, and the agreement as a whole can reasonably be interpreted, as the district court did, in a manner effectuating the broad arbitration provision agreed to by the parties.
«[ 22 For example, in Sec. Life Ins. Co., the federal district court rejected a party's contention that because the choice of jurisdiction clause in the contract expressly applied if the other party failed to pay any amount claimed, that specific type of claim was not subject to the broad arbitration clause covering all disputes between the parties.
123 Further, if, as wife argues, section 10.8 exempts any issue involving interpretation of the separation agreement from arbitration, the section 10.18 arbitration clause would essentially be rendered meaningless because all issues involved in the parties' dissolution action-property, maintenance, and attorney fees-were resolved by the separation agreement. See Gaffer Ins. Co.,
1 24 Because we affirm the district court's arbitrability determination, we do not address wife's contentions concerning the merits of the arbitrator's award, including that the arbitrator should have awarded her default interest on husband's final payment. See Treadwell v. Vill. Homes of Colo., Inc.,
IV. Appellate Attorney Fees
125 Husband requests an award of his appellate attorney fees under section 13-17-102(2), C.R.S.2018, contending that the appeal lacks substantial justification. Although wife has not prevailed on her contentions, we do not view the appeal as frivolous or otherwise lacking in substantial justification, and thus deny the request. See Mission Denver Co. v. Pierson,
T 26 The judgment is affirmed.
Notes
. We conclude that we can reconcile sections 10.8 and 10.13 by reference to the language in each section. To the extent either party claims that these two sections conflict, perhaps more careful drafting could have avoided the alleged conflict although not the result here. In any event, because section 10.13 gives every indication that it was specifically drafted to apply to disputes in this dissolution action, while section 10.8 appears to have been boilerplate language imported from other general contract provisions, we give section 10.13 more weight. See Greenberg v. Life Ins. Co. of Virginia,
