MARCUS & MILLICHAP REAL ESTATE INVESTMENT BROKERAGE CO. et al., Plaintiffs and Appellants, v. WOODMAN INVESTMENT GROUP et al., Defendants and Respondents.
No. B174696
Second Dist., Div. Seven.
May 17, 2005.
508
Overland Borenstein Scheper & Kim, Diann H. Kim, Wendy O. Clendening and Kathryn E. White for Plaintiffs and Appellants.
Alschuler Grossman Stein & Kahan, Daniel Alberstone and David B. Dreyfus for Defendants and Respondents.
OPINION
PERLUSS, P. J.-The trial court denied a petition to confirm an arbitration award filed by Marcus & Millichap Real Estate Investment Brokerage Company, Tony Azzi and John P. Walsh (collectively Marcus & Millichap) and granted the cross-petition to vacate the award filed by Woodman Investment Group, LLC (Woodman) and Eli Sasson, Woodman‘s managing partner, on the ground the arbitrator exceeded her authorized powers and the award could not be corrected without affecting the merits of the decision. (
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
1. The Arbitration
Marcus & Millichap filed a demand for arbitration in May 2002 for payment of a commission pursuant to a listing agreement with Woodman dated April 19, 2001, covering a shopping center located on Woodman Avenue in Van Nuys, California. Woodman filed a cross-complaint in the arbitration proceeding for breach of fiduciary duty and constructive fraud.
2. Postarbitration Judicial Proceedings
Marcus & Millichap initiated a superior court action pursuant to
On December 10, 2003, the trial court denied Marcus & Millichap‘s petition to confirm and granted Woodman and Sasson‘s cross-petition to vacate. Marcus & Millichap did not request, and the court‘s order vacating the arbitration award did not include, an order for rehearing the arbitration pursuant to
On March 29, 2004, the trial court denied Marcus & Millichap‘s motion for clarification and granted Woodman and Sasson‘s request for attorney fees and costs, awarding them $33,492.50 as the prevailing parties in the judicial proceedings. Marcus & Millichap filed a notice of appeal of the fees-and-costs award only; no appeal has been taken from the trial court‘s orders vacating the arbitration award or denying the motion for clarification.
3. Subsequent Proceedings
On April 15, 2004, the same day it filed its notice of appeal in this proceeding, Marcus & Millichap moved in the trial court for an order to
Woodman and Sasson‘s challenges to Marcus & Millichap‘s renewal of the arbitration proceedings and to the trial court‘s order compelling the second arbitration have to date been unsuccessful.4 On March 24, 2005, in response to Marcus & Millichap‘s second motion for clarification, the trial court issued a minute order stating: “[T]he Court clarifies its December 10, 2003 order to reflect its intent that rehearing of the arbitration shall take place between all parties. In its December 10, 2003 order, the Court vacated the entire arbitration award. On May 27, 2004, the Court granted [Marcus & Millichap‘s] motion to compel arbitration. The Court intended a rehearing of the arbitration between all parties, as reflected in the reporter‘s transcript of the hearing on the motion to compel arbitration. On three separate occasions, the Court has rejected [Woodman and Sasson‘s] argument that the lack of an order of rehearing bars any rehearing.”5
CONTENTION
Marcus & Millichap contends the trial court erred as a matter of law in awarding attorney fees and costs to Woodman and Sasson pursuant to
DISCUSSION
1. Governing Law
The award of costs pursuant to
In Carole Ring, supra, 87 Cal.App.4th 253, Division Three of this court considered whether
“The arbitrator‘s earlier refusal to award attorney fees in the arbitration proceeding was not dispositive on the issue of postarbitration attorney fees. The arbitrator obviously did not, and could not, make a determination with respect to which, if either party, would be the prevailing party in subsequent postarbitration proceedings. For these reasons, the arbitrator‘s refusal to award attorney fees did not dictate a similar result with respect to Nicastro‘s request for attorney fees in postarbitration judicial proceedings. [[] Because Nicastro was the prevailing party as a matter of law, the mandatory language
of the contractual attorney fees clause and section 1293.2 entitle Nicastro to reasonable attorney fees and costs incurred in postarbitration judicial proceedings.” (Carole Ring, supra, 87 Cal.App.4th at p. 261.)6
2. Woodman and Sasson Were Properly Awarded Fees and Costs
a. Woodman and Sasson Were the Prevailing Parties in the Postarbitration Judicial Proceedings
In the postarbitration judicial proceedings in this case, commenced on August 27, 2003, by Marcus & Millichap after the arbitrator made her award in its favor, the trial court denied Marcus & Millichap‘s petition to confirm and granted Woodman and Sasson‘s cross-petition to vacate the award (without ordering a rehearing pursuant to
b. The Judicial Proceeding Initiated by Marcus & Millichap to Confirm Its Arbitration Award Is “Final” for Purposes of an Award of Fees
Whether or not Marcus & Millichap is correct in asserting it may initiate another arbitration proceeding to determine its right to a commission without an express order for rehearing pursuant to
The trial court‘s belated, March 24, 2005 order of clarification does not alter our conclusion as to the finality for purposes of a cost and fee award of its earlier order vacating the arbitration award without an order for rehearing. The court‘s explanation of “its intent that rehearing of the arbitration shall take place between all parties,” as emphatic as it may be, is simply a ruling that the absence of an express order for rehearing does not necessarily bar a rehearing-a ruling, as the court itself notes, it had also made on three occasions prior to its March 24, 2005 ruling. Indeed, notwithstanding Marcus & Millichap‘s argument to the contrary, the trial court appears to have carefully worded its clarification to avoid suggesting it was attempting to correct nunc pro tunc its December 10, 2003 order to include an order for a rehearing. Because no rehearing of the arbitration was ordered by the trial court and Marcus & Millichap did not appeal from the order vacating the arbitration award (or, for that matter, from the trial court‘s subsequent denial of its motion for clarification of the order vacating the arbitration award), the trial court‘s decision to vacate the original arbitration award is now final.
Green v. Mt. Diablo Hospital Dist. (1989) 207 Cal.App.3d 63 [254 Cal.Rptr. 689], upon which Marcus & Millichap relies, does not support a contrary result. In Green the Court of Appeal affirmed an order denying a petition to compel arbitration of disputes arising from an employment contract and a buyout agreement between Green and the Hospital District. The petition had been filed at least partially in response to a complaint for declaratory relief by a taxpayers group alleging that the termination agree-
In rejecting the Hospital District‘s cross-appeal arguing that the trial court should have awarded it attorney fees following denial of Green‘s petition to compel arbitration, the Court of Appeal held an award of fees would be premature because the claims of the parties remained before the court and subject to judicial determination. “[T]he trial court has not reached the merits of the case. . . . The trial court, therefore, correctly concluded that there has been no final determination of the rights of the parties . . . .” (Green v. Mt. Diablo Hospital Dist., supra, 207 Cal.App.3d at p. 76.) Because no rehearing of the arbitration was ordered and Marcus & Millichap did not appeal the order vacating the arbitration award in this case, unlike the situation presented by Green, no claim of either party remains before the court or otherwise subject to judicial determination: The trial court‘s rulings are final. (See Long Beach Iron Works, Inc. v. International Molders Etc. of North American, Local 374, supra, 26 Cal.App.3d at p. 659.)
Finally, although not raised in its briefs on appeal, Marcus & Millichap suggested at oral argument that, even if Woodman and Sasson are prevailing parties and entitled to an award of costs under
3. Marcus & Millichap‘s Motion for Sanctions Is Denied
All parties agreed to participate in the mediation program administered by the Second District Court of Appeal.8 Notice of the conference date and location sent by the clerk of the court specifically advised the parties, in boldface type, ”It is mandatory that ALL PARTIES and their counsel as well as any other individual whose presence is necessary to effect a settlement of the case be present at the settlement conference. . . . [F]ailure to either
Marcus & Millichap was represented at the scheduled mediation conference by both outside litigation counsel and the general counsel of Marcus & Millichap Real Estate Investment Co., who traveled from Northern California to attend the session. Woodman and Sasson were represented only by their outside litigation counsel, who stated he had full authority to settle the issue of attorney fees and costs raised in the instant appeal. Neither appellants Tony Azzi and John P. Walsh nor respondent Eli Sasson attended the conference.
At the outset of the conference counsel disputed whether they had agreed to attempt to mediate only the attorney fee dispute, the issue presented by Marcus & Millichap‘s appeal (Woodman and Sasson‘s position), or to discuss settlement of both the appeal and the underlying dispute regarding Marcus & Millichap‘s claim to a commission under the listing agreement (Marcus & Millichap‘s position). As a result no productive discussions of any sort occurred.
Following the fruitless mediation conference, Marcus & Millichap moved for sanctions against Woodman and Sasson for Sasson‘s failure to personally appear at the court-ordered mediation conference. The motion is supported by a declaration from Marcus & Millichap‘s litigation counsel and related exhibits. Woodman and Sasson filed an opposition at our request, which likewise includes a declaration from counsel who attended the mediation conference, as well as related exhibits.
Because it is impossible for us to determine from the conflicting declarations what, if any, agreement had been reached by counsel to discuss a possible global resolution of the parties’ disputes, rather than to address the single issue actually raised in this appeal, we deny the motion for sanctions. What is apparent is that both sides to the dispute failed to have all parties to the appeal present at the mediation and, more importantly, that the failure of counsel to communicate with each other clearly and forthrightly about their positions and intentions prior to the mediation conference resulted in a waste of the volunteer mediator‘s valuable time. We expect more.
DISPOSITION
The order awarding attorney fees and costs is affirmed. The stay of proceedings in Los Angeles Superior Court case No. BS085380 is terminated. Woodman and Sasson are to recover their costs on appeal.
Johnson, J., concurred.
WOODS, J.-I respectfully dissent from that portion of the opinion holding that the arbitration proceedings in the trial court were final thereby entitling Woodman to claim attorney fees. The majority opinion, in my view, is overly technical in its approach to the problem, and sidesteps equitable principles which should lead to a reversal. Of great importance is the fact that the Legislature has not revealed its intent when it enacted
“If the award is vacated, the court may order a rehearing before new arbitrators. If the award is vacated on the grounds set forth in subdivision (d) or (e) of
Section 1286.2 , the court with the consent of the parties to the court proceeding may order a rehearing before the original arbitrators.” (Italics added.)
When the Legislature uses language in a statute which is indicative of discretion, such as the use of “may” in
The quandary of the parties and the courts in such instances is generally exemplified in 58 Cal.Jur.3d (2004) Statutes, section 152, pages 578-579 as follows: “The distinction between directory and mandatory statutes is not susceptible of exact definition, for it depends on legislative intent, and consequently there is no simple, mechanical test for determining whether a provision should be given directory or mandatory effect. . . . The
What we are left with are two principles. The first and foremost is the general proposition that arbitration statutes are remedial in nature and are to be liberally construed with every reasonable intendment favoring the validity of arbitration awards. (Goossen v. Adair (1960) 185 Cal.App.2d 810 [8 Cal.Rptr. 855].) The policy in this state is to favor arbitration. (Firestone Tire and Rubber Co. v. United Rubber Workers of America (1959) 168 Cal.App.2d 444 [335 P.2d 990].) The second principle rests on the fact that
I opine that the Legislature certainly knew how to utilize the mandatory word “shall” or even “must” had it chosen to do so. One need only examine
I recall that the intention of General Douglas MacArthur pertaining to the invasion of the Philippine Islands was expressed in determined language when he declared “I shall return.” He didn‘t say “I may return.” I find the use of may by the Legislature to be just as permissive, contingent and confusing as had the great general made the mistake of using the word may in his declaration of intentions.
