MORGAN STANLEY DW INC., and Jeffrey Jon, Appellants, v. Janet C. HALLIDAY, Elizabeth Ann Halliday, Susan Jane Halliday, Sarah Halliday Verrier, Appellees.
No. 4D03-2875.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fourth District.
April 14, 2004.
Rehearing Denied June 8, 2004.
873 So. 2d 400
Randall W. Henley, West Palm Beach, for appellee Janet C. Halliday.
FARMER, C.J.
The central issue in this appeal from an order denying arbitration is whether a
Plaintiff in this lawsuit is the lifetime income beneficiary of a QTIP Trust. The Trust is managed solely by its Trustees—plaintiff has no power over the Trust assets and may not invade the principal. Some or all of the Trust assets were placed by the Trustees in an account with Morgan Stanley. The customer account agreement was executed by the Trustees and Morgan Stanley but not by plaintiff, who is not named as a party to the agreement.1 The customer account agreement includes an arbitration clause saying that the agreement is governed by the law of New York.
Litigation began when plaintiff sued the Trustees and Morgan Stanley for mismanagement of the Trust assets. Morgan Stanley responded with a motion to compel arbitration. The motion contends that the arbitration clause in the customer account agreement requires that all controversies between the account holder and Morgan Stanley be arbitrated. Citing both the Florida and United States Arbitration Codes (but not any New York law), Morgan Stanley prayed for an order compelling arbitration.
The trial Judge denied the motion. Her order explains:
“The defendant [Morgan Stanley] contends that the plaintiff is a third party beneficiary under the customer account agreement between [Morgan Stanley] and the trustees, and the plaintiff is therefore subject to the arbitration clause. In her complaint, plaintiff does not claim rights under the customer account agreement. At most the plaintiff is an incidental beneficiary of the agreement, not a third party beneficiary which would require that the parties to the agreement (Morgan Stanley and the trustees) intended to primarily and directly benefit the plaintiff. Tartell v. Chera, 668 So. 2d 1105 (Fla. 4th DCA 1996). Also See Aetna Cas. & Sur. Co. v. Jelac Corp. 505 So. 2d 37 (Fla. 4th DCA 1987). A party is an intended beneficiary only if the parties to the contract clearly express, or the contract itself expresses, an intent to primarily and directly benefit the third party. Caretta Trucking Inc. v. Cheoy Lee Shipyards Ltd., 647 So. 2d 1028 (Fla. 4th DCA 1994).... Arbitration in this matter could result in extended litigation of the parties whereby the plaintiff would be litigating her claims in both arbitration and before this court, with the possibility of differing outcomes.”
Morgan Stanley appeals this decision.
We find no error in the trial judge‘s analysis. There is nothing in the
The rules as to third party beneficiaries are these. Unless a person is a party to a contract, that person may not sue—or, for that matter, be sued—for breach of that contract where the non-party has received only an incidental or consequential benefit of the contract.2 Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. v. McCarson, 467 So. 2d 277 (Fla. 1985); Caretta Trucking Inc. v. Cheoy Lee Shipyards, Ltd., 647 So. 2d 1028 (Fla. 4th DCA 1994). There is an exception when the non-party is specifically the intended third party beneficiary of the contract. Jacobson v. Heritage Quality Constr. Co., 604 So. 2d 17 (Fla. 4th DCA 1992), rev. dismissed, 613 So. 2d 5 (Fla. 1993). A non-party is the specifically intended beneficiary only if the contract clearly express an intent to primarily and directly benefit the third party or a class of persons to which that party belongs. Aetna Cas. & Sur. Co. v. Jelac Corp., 505 So. 2d 37 (Fla. 4th DCA 1987); Security Mut. Cas. Ins. Co. v. Pacura, 402 So. 2d 1266 (Fla. 3d DCA 1981). To find the requisite intent, it must be established that the parties to the contract actually and expressly intended to benefit the third party; it is not sufficient to show only that one of the contracting parties unilaterally intended some benefit to the third party. Clark and Co. v. Dep‘t of Ins., 436 So. 2d 1013, 1016 (Fla. 1st DCA 1983). None of these principles are satisfied in this case.
Perhaps the whole idea of trying to bind a nonparty trust beneficiary to an arbitration agreement entered into by the Trustees with a securities portfolio manager is really what is wrong here. Maybe the attempt to metamorphose plaintiff into a “third party beneficiary” of this arbitration agreement really masks an attempt to make the Trustees the agent for plaintiff when they entered into the customer account agreement. But only a moment‘s reflection should dispel that notion as well.
The Trustees are fiduciaries for plaintiff, not established agents. Their role is to manage the Trust assets for the benefit of those entitled to share in the Trust assets, both the income and the principal. That the Trustees may engage the services of an expert in managing Trust assets to assist them in the performance of their fiduciary responsibilities hardly makes them agents of the Trust beneficiary in order to bind her personally to their hiring of that assistance or to their purported waiver of her right of access to a court to seek redress for loss occasioned thereby.
Fiduciaries are generally not able to avoid the negligent performance of their own special responsibilities by handing
Consequently, in hiring Morgan Stanley to make the daily investment decisions for the Trust assets, the law of agency did not make their Trust beneficiary bound by a hiring decision the Trustees made principally for their own convenience. Even less so, for that matter, should the Trust beneficiary be bound by an incidental stipulation (such as an arbitration clause) to which the Trustees agreed in so contracting. Clearly therefore agency also supplies no legal basis to make this arbitration agreement binding on the Trust beneficiary.
As for arbitration agreements, which involve a waiver of a person‘s right of access to the courts, binding a non-signatory to arbitrate under the theory of third party beneficiary is fraught with miscalculation and unfairness. For one thing, unless a manifestation of intent by the third party beneficiary to the arbitration clause is clear and indisputable, the non-party‘s right of access may be lost by the unilateral decision of another without knowledge or consent. For another, it is difficult to understand how, as a general matter, the usual arbitration agreement is designed specifically to benefit a non-party. In this instance, any general doubt as to benefit is displaced by its specific absence, as the trial Judge found. Arbitration in this case—involving the alleged mismanagement by both Morgan Stanley and the Trustees of the Trust assets—will not shorten the dispute at all because the litigation will proceed against the Trustees anyway.
In any event, agreements to arbitrate must generally manifest the intent of the person bound thereby to arbitrate. Seifert v. U.S. Home Corp., 750 So. 2d 633, 636 (Fla. 1999). Thus, the rule is that “no party may be forced to submit a dispute to arbitration that the party did not intend and agree to arbitrate.” 750 So. 2d at 636. In light of this rule of clarity of intent, “in the absence of express language in the parties’ contract mandating arbitration of such disputes,” arbitration should not be compelled. 750 So. 2d at 642; and cf. First Options of Chicago Inc. v. Kaplan, 514 U.S. 938, 944, 115 S. Ct. 1920, 131 L. Ed. 2d 985 (1995) (“Courts should not assume that the parties agreed to arbitrate arbitrability unless there is ‘clea[r] and unmistakabl[e]’ evidence that they did so.“). Using the First Options analysis, we conclude that whether a non-party to an arbitration agreement should nevertheless
For all we know from this bare bones motion and the above documents, the customer account agreement was more than likely primarily for the benefit of the Trustees.3 They may have thought that in relieving themselves of making the daily investment decisions for the management of those assets they could thereby lessen their personal culpability for mismanagement. We note that the Trustees are individuals related to the decedent from whose estate the QTIP trust was established to perform the promise of a prenuptial agreement. Perhaps these family Trustees are untrained or inexperienced in managing such assets. Maybe they are simply risk averse and would prefer to throw off the liability to someone else. Certainly, nothing in the record we have been given supports the contention made by the motion to compel arbitration that as a matter of law plaintiff should be required to arbitrate.
AFFIRMED.
GUNTHER and TAYLOR, JJ., concur.
