FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Appellant Maplebear, Inc. (Instacart) is a same-day grocery delivery service.
Before the dispute arose, Instacart and Busick had signed an Independent Contractor Agreement (Agreement) stating that disputes between them would be submitted to binding arbitration. Under the terms of the Agreement, the arbitration would be conducted by JAMS under its rules and procedures; the arbitrator would apply California substantive law; the arbitrator had no "power or authority to commit errors of law or legal reasoning"; and "[a]ny action to review the arbitration award for legal error or to have it confirmed, corrected or vacated" would be decided under California law by "a California state court of competent jurisdiction."
Instacart filed a petition in superior court to vacate the partial final award, invoking sections 1285 and 1286.2.
The superior court agreed with Busick, concluded it lacked jurisdiction to rule on Instacart's petition, and issued an order entitled, "Order Denying Petitioner [Instacart's] Petition to Vacate Partial Final Arbitration Award." Instacart appeals, arguing that the trial court should have ruled on the merits of its petition, and asking us to remand to the trial court with instructions to do so.
DISCUSSION
We must first determine whether we have jurisdiction to hear this appeal. Busick urges us to dismiss the appeal, arguing that the challenged order is, just as it is labeled, an order "denying" a petition to vacate, which is not an appealable order under section 1294.
We then consider whether the superior court erred in dismissing Instacart's petition. Busick argues that, even if the superior court's order is appealable, the court correctly determined that it had no jurisdiction to reach the merits of Instacart's petition because the arbitrator's partial final award is not an "award" under section 1283.4, and therefore cannot be the subject of a petition to vacate under section 1285.
Because this case presents questions of law applied to undisputed facts, our review is de novo. ( Ghirardo v. Antonioli (1994)
A. Applicable Law
We begin by summarizing the provisions of the CAA that authorize parties to enlist the superior court in enforcing an arbitration award. An award "shall be in writing and signed by the arbitrators concurring therein" and "shall include a determination of all the questions submitted to the arbitrators the decision of which is necessary in order to determine the controversy." (§ 1283.4.) Any party to an arbitration where an award has been made may petition the superior court to "confirm, correct or vacate the award." (§ 1285.) The responding party may then "request the court to dismiss the petition or to confirm, correct or vacate the award." (§ 1285.2.) The trial court confirms the award as made, "unless in accordance with this chapter it corrects the award and confirms it as corrected, vacates the award or dismisses the proceeding."
The CAA specifies only one circumstance in which the superior court can "dismiss" a petition: when the superior court determines that a person named in the petition "was not bound by the arbitration award and was not a
Two more recent cases have considered what action a superior court may take if a petition purportedly filed under section 1285 concerns an arbitrator's ruling that does not meet the criteria for an "award" under section 1283.4. In Cinel v. Christopher (2012)
B. Analysis
1. The Trial Court Order Here Is Appealable
In determining whether the trial court's order is appealable, we look to the substance and effect of the order, rather than its label. ( Pazderka v. Caballeros Dimas Alang, Inc. (1998)
The CAA does not contemplate the denial of a petition to vacate an award, except where the denial is a precursor to a judgment confirming the award. (§§ 1286, 1287.4; Segreto , supra ,
Busick's argument on appeal relies primarily on Mid-Wilshire Associates v. O'Leary (1992)
Busick also argues that even if we treat the trial court's order as a dismissal, the order is not appealable under section 1294 because the arbitrator's award is not an "award" under section 1283.4. Busick relies on Judge v. Nijjar Realty, Inc. (2014)
Our case is different. Here, we confront an appeal from a trial court order that dismissed a petition to vacate on the ground of no trial court jurisdiction. We conclude that the trial court order is appealable under section 1294, subdivision (b), as an order dismissing a petition to vacate an arbitration award.
2. The Trial Court Did Not Err in Concluding It Lacked Jurisdiction to Consider Instacart's Petition
We now consider whether the trial court correctly ruled that it had no jurisdiction to review the arbitrator's partial final award. Instacart's position is that, at least in certain circumstances, trial courts have jurisdiction under the CAA to consider petitions to vacate "partial final awards concerning classwide arbitration," particularly "interim awards that determine whether the parties agreed to classwide arbitration" because of the "importance of that issue to the conduct, complexity, efficiency, and effectiveness of the arbitration." Instacart proposes that such circumstances exist where the arbitration agreement allows judicial review of legal error and where the private rules governing the arbitration contemplate superior court review of interim rulings.
Instacart argues that an arbitrator's ruling qualifies as an "award" under section 1283.4, and is subject to judicial review, "if an incremental award process is reasonably necessary in order to provide an effective remedy on an issue that the parties have submitted to arbitration." Instacart reasons that the "issue" submitted to arbitration here was whether Instacart had agreed to conduct classwide arbitration, that "[n]o effective remedy could be provided on that issue" unless the ruling was an immediately reviewable award, and that therefore the arbitrator's ruling is subject to immediate review by the trial court under the CAA.
This argument finds no support in the statutory language, which states that an award "shall include a determination of all the questions submitted to the
The Second District's thorough analysis of section 1283.4 in Kaiser , supra ,
Instacart argues that to give effect to the phrase "submitted to the arbitrators" in section 1283.4 we should understand the section as requiring only that an award determine the questions that have been briefed or argued and taken under submission by the arbitrators up to that point, and whose resolution is necessary to resolve the overall controversy. But treating an interim award like the one here as a section 1283.4 "award" would contravene " ' "a strong public policy in favor of arbitration as a speedy and relatively inexpensive means of dispute resolution." ' " ( Saint Agnes Medical Center v. PacifiCare of California (2003)
In arguing that the arbitrator's ruling here constitutes an "award" under section 1283.4, Instacart relies primarily on two cases, Hightower v. Superior Court (2001)
The dispute in Hightower concerned the alleged breach of a shareholder agreement that included a buy-sell provision. ( 86 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1421, 1423,
Roehl was a trust dispute, where the arbitrator issued an award that "effectively decided the most important dispute between the parties, involving whether a corporate note was separate or community property" and that expressly left open the arbitrator's option to make distributions different from those set forth in a specific exhibit. ( 147 Cal.App.4th at pp. 340-341,
Nor are we persuaded by Instacart's argument that Cable Connection, Inc. v. DIRECTV (2008)
In the second, more abbreviated part of the opinion ( Cable Connection, supra, 44 Cal.4th at pp. 1364-1366,
Instacart contends that Cable Connection governs the outcome here, because it implicitly holds that trial courts have jurisdiction to rule on arbitrators' "partial final awards." To the contrary, as Justice Baxter pointed out in his concurring opinion in Cable Connection , "it is questionable whether parties to an arbitration agreement may contract to obtain premature judicial merit review of arbitral decisions that are labeled 'awards,' but which in substance merely resolve one or more legal or factual issues pertaining to only a portion of the controversy submitted to the arbitrators for their determination. Our court has not addressed this issue, and it has not been raised or litigated in the instant case. " ( Cable Connection , supra ,
Although "[i]t is axiomatic that cases are not authority for propositions not considered" ( People v. Avila (2006)
Instacart urges us to go beyond statutory language and case law and adopt a "rule" that parties who have agreed that courts can review an arbitrator's award for legal error, as Instacart and Busick allegedly have here, have also agreed that interim awards are reviewable "where reasonably necessary to ensure an effective remedy on an issue that they have agreed to submit to arbitration."
In the face of section 1283.4, which defines "award" as "a determination of all the questions submitted to the arbitrators the decision of which is necessary in order to determine the controversy," parties to an arbitration agreement cannot confer jurisdiction on courts to review arbitrator's rulings by agreeing to proceed under a private organization's rules that purport to allow immediate review of some interim awards. ( Kaiser , supra ,
We conclude that the arbitrator's ruling in this case is not an award under section 1283.4 and that the trial court correctly dismissed Instacart's petition to vacate.
DISPOSITION
The order appealed from is affirmed. Busick shall recover her costs on appeal.
We concur:
Kline, P.J.
Richman, J.
Notes
Further statutory references are to the Code of Civil Procedure unless otherwise stated.
Maplebear, Inc. does business as Instacart, and we follow the parties' convention in referring to appellant as "Instacart."
The JAMS Class Actions Procedures are available at < https://www.jamsadr.com/rules-class-action-procedures/> (as of August 21, 2018).
JAMS Rule 2 provides that the determination whether an arbitration can proceed on behalf of a class is to be "set forth ... in a partial final award subject to immediate court review."
As relevant here, section 1285 provides, "Any party to an arbitration in which an award has been made may petition the court to confirm, correct or vacate the award." Section 1286.2, subdivision (a)(4), provides that "the court shall vacate the award if the court determines ... [t]he arbitrators exceeded their powers and the award cannot be corrected without affecting the merits of the decision upon the controversy submitted."
Section 1294 states, "An aggrieved party may appeal from: [¶] (a) An order dismissing or denying a petition to compel arbitration. [¶] (b) An order dismissing a petition to confirm, correct or vacate an award. [¶] (c) An order vacating an award unless a rehearing in arbitration is ordered. [¶] (d) A judgment entered pursuant to this title [i.e., Title 9, "Arbitration," of Part 3 of the Code of Civil Procedure]. [¶] (e) A special order after final judgment."
The "proceeding" is initiated by the filing of the "petition" to confirm, correct or vacate an arbitration award (§§ 1285, 1290). Although section 1285.2 refers to the dismissal of a petition , section 1286 refers only to the dismissal of a proceeding. We view the dismissal of the petition as equivalent to the dismissal of the proceeding.
When a petition to vacate or correct an award is denied on the merits, the expected outcome under the CAA is an appealable judgment confirming the award. (§§ 1286, 1286.2, 1286.6, 1287.4.)
Judge anticipated the issue of whether a trial court has jurisdiction to confirm or vacate non-final awards, which was later decided in Kaiser , supra ,
A recent decision, EHM Productions, Inc. v. Starline Tours of Hollywood, Inc. (2018)
We are not persuaded by Instacart's claim that Justice Baxter himself "raised" the issue of jurisdiction by stating in his concurrence that the issue had not been "raised" in the case (Cable Connection , supra ,
Instacart's proposed rule draws on language from Hightower , but with significant revisions. The court in Hightower viewed the incremental process adopted by the arbitrator "as reasonably necessary, if not essential, to the effective establishment and enforcement of the remedy that the arbitrator has fashioned ." (
