INTRODUCTION
This case arises from a contract dispute between Sammie Jones (Jones) and The Summit Group, Inc., a general contractor *794 affiliated with Summit Limited Partnership Five (collectively The Summit Group). After the dispute was submitted to arbitration, The Summit Group requested that the district court modify or correct the arbitrator’s award pursuant to Neb. Rev. Stat. § 25-2614(a)(l) (Reissue 1995). The district court denied the request and confirmed the award. The Summit Group appealed.
FACTUAL BACKGROUND
Jones, an individual doing business as Jones Drywall, contracted to do painting and drywalling on a hotel owned by The Summit Group in Lincoln, Nebraska. The Summit Group was displeased with Jones’ work and his staffing of the job, and eventually terminated its contractual relationship with Jones.
On July 30, 1998, Jones filed a construction lien against the hotel and a construction lien foreclosure petition and praecipe in Lancaster County District Court. The parties thereafter filed a joint stipulation to arbitrate the dispute and agreed to stay the district court proceedings pending the outcome of the arbitration. The district court ordered the stay.
The parties arbitrated their dispute. The record before this court regarding the proceedings before the arbitrator includes only the two-page arbitration award and the one-page order of the arbitrator denying modification. The arbitrator entered his award on February 25, 1999. In the award, the arbitrator awarded Jones $40,195.47, itemized as follows:
Drywall Contract Damages Total $31,031.59
Painting Contract Damages Total 9.163.88
Total $40,195.47
The arbitrator also awarded The Summit Group $10,019.40, itemized as follows:
Custom Drywall Systems $ 11,453.00
E&K Drywall 21,112.00
Performance Coatings 18,800.00
Payment to Tim Rogers 600.00
Extra staff to clean paint and texture from Fixtures, tubs, etc. 1,092.00
Sub-total $53,057.00
Less Contract Amounts
Not Paid to Jones <43.037.60>
Total $10,019.40
*795 In sum, the arbitrator found $40,195.47 in damages to Jones and $10,019.40 in damages to The Summit Group, resulting in an award of $30,176.07 to Jones.
On March 17, 1999, Jones applied to the district court for confirmation of the arbitration award. That same day, The Summit Group filed an application for modification of the award with the arbitrator in accordance with Neb. Rev. Stat. § 25-2610 (Reissue 1995). The arbitrator refused to modify the prior award and denied the application.
The Summit Group then filed a motion in the district court, requesting modification or correction of the arbitrator’s award pursuant to § 25-2614(a)(l). The Summit Group asserted that the arbitrator granted Jones a double recovery by awarding Jones $40,195.47 for “Drywall Contract Damages” and “Painting Contract Damages,” while deducting $43,037.60 for “Contract Amounts Not Paid to Jones” from The Summit Group’s award. The district court denied The Summit Group’s motion and confirmed the arbitrator’s $30,176.07 award to Jones. The court found there was not an “evident miscalculation of figures” under § 25-2614(a)(l).
The Summit Group appealed to the Nebraska Court of Appeals, which, in
Jones
v.
Summit Group, Inc.,
ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR
The Summit Group assigns that the district court erred as a matter of fact and law in refusing to alter or amend the arbitrator’s award.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
In reviewing a district court’s decision to vacate, modify, or confirm an arbitration award under Nebraska’s Uniform Arbitration Act, this court is obligated to reach a conclusion independent of the trial court’s ruling as to questions of law. However, the trial court’s factual findings will not be set aside
*796
on appeal unless clearly erroneous. See
Dowd
v.
First Omaha Sec. Corp.,
ANALYSIS
Question of Law
The Summit Group asserts that the arbitrator’s award contains an “evident miscalculation of figures” under § 25-2614(a)(l), justifying a modification or correction of the arbitrator’s award. Under Nebraska’s Uniform Arbitration Act, a district court may modify or correct an arbitration award when one of the limited grounds listed in § 25-2614 exists. The Summit Group relies on § 25-2614(a)(l), which states, “[T]he court shall modify or correct the award when: (1) There was an evident miscalculation of figures.”
This court has not previously addressed what constitutes an “evident miscalculation of figures” under § 25-2614(a)(1). However, § 25-2614(a)(l) is similar to 9 U.S.C. § 11(a) (1994) of the federal Arbitration Act (“evident material miscalculation of figures”) and identical to the Unif. Arbitration Act § 13(a)(1), 7 U.L.A. 409 (1997) (“evident miscalculation of figures”), which has been adopted in other states. Accordingly, we look to federal and state decisions interpreting similar portions of the Uniform Arbitration Act and the federal Arbitration Act for guidance in construing § 25-2614(a)(l). See, e.g.,
Father Flanagan’s Boys’ Home
v.
Agnew,
Various courts have defined what constitutes an evident miscalculation in the context of reviewing an arbitrator’s decision. In the federal courts, the Eighth Circuit has defined an “evident material miscalculation of figures” under 9 U.S.C. § 11(a) of the federal Arbitration Act as a “mathematical mistake.”
Stroh Container Co.
v.
Delphi Industries, Inc.,
State courts similarly define an “evident miscalculation of figures” under the Uniform Arbitration Act in very narrow terms. See, e.g.,
Foust v. Aetna Cas. & Ins. Co.,
The Summit Group relies principally upon
Laurin Tankers America v. Stolt Tankers,
*798
The decision in
Laurin Tankers America,
however, differs from this case. In
Laurin Tankers America,
the arbitrators acknowledged their erroneous calculation. Furthermore, the court in
Laurin Tankers America
found that the parties had agreed “on the vessel’s rates of fuel consumption to be used in calculating [the petitioner’s] damages.”
As noted by the Fourth Circuit in
Apex Plumbing Supply
v.
U.S. Supply Co.,
Question of Fact
The Summit Group contends that the arbitrator’s award contains an error on the face of the award that is “obvious, indisputable and clear.” Brief for appellants at 24. While a plausible argument can be made that there is some inconsistency in the arbitrator’s award, we cannot say that the district court was clearly erroneous in finding that there was no evident miscalculation of figures. In the arbitrator’s itemization of damages, it is not clear whether the distinctly labeled “Drywall Contract Damages” and “Painting Contract Damages” are equivalent to “Less Contract Amounts Not Paid to Jones,” particularly when *799 the dollar amount is not identical. As the trial court observed in its order:
The various elements of damage in [the] arbitrator’s award are not at all clear.... It is noted that the amount of the deduction ($43,037.60) is not identical to the amount of the damages awarded to [Jones]. While this may be confusing and even suspicious that there may be duplication, that is not sufficient under the law. The duplication must be clear, conclusive, or undisputable, in other words, evident. It is not.
We further note that Jones has disputed any modification of the award from the start. Compare
Cole
v.
Hiller,
“[T]he burden of alleging and proving [an arbitration award’s] invalidity rests upon the party seeking to set aside the decision.”
Babb
v.
United Food & Commercial Workers Local 271,
CONCLUSION
The district court’s confirmation of the award is affirmed.
Affirmed.
