CITY OF MOUNT DORA, Appellant,
v.
CENTRAL FLORIDA POLICE BENEVOLENT ASSOCIATION, INC., Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fifth District.
Leo P. Rock, Jr., Gray, Harris & Robinson, P.A., Orlando, for appellant.
Joan Stewart, Tallahassee, for appellee.
DAUKSCH, Judge.
Appellant, City of Mount Dora, timely appeals a final order denying its application to vacate an arbitration award and an оrder denying its motion for rehearing.
The facts show that appellant entered into a collective bargaining agreement with appellee, Central Flоrida Police Benevolent Association, Inc., which pertained to its police personnel. The agreement provides for arbitration of unresolved grievances. Appellant terminated the employment of police officer Gregory Treon following an internal investigation. On March 19, 1990 appellee sent appellant written notice of its intent to arbitrate stating: "We shall submit *521 a request to the F.M.C.S. for a list of arbitrators within the time limits set out in the Agreement." The noticе indicated that a copy had been sent to Officer Treon and to the City Manager.
Article 29.1 of the arbitration agreement requires that the parties shall mеet to select an arbitrator within seven working days of appellant's receipt of appellee's notice of arbitration. The agreement аlso provides that if they fail to agree upon an arbitrator, they shall, within seven working days, jointly request a list of seven qualified arbitrators from the Mediation and Conсiliation Service. The person remaining after each party has struck three names from the list is the designated arbitrator. The parties in the present case didn't agree upon an arbitrator. Although article 28.5 of the grievance procedure requires strict compliance with the time limits set forth in the agreemеnt, appellant argued below that appellee had failed to comply with the arbitration agreement by failing to submit its request for arbitrators until May 16, 1990, or forty-nine days following its notice of intent to arbitrate.
Appellant raised the procedural issue at the hearing but the arbitrator ruled against it reasoning, "While the letter of the Agreement may not have been followed due to the confusion at the time, certainly the spirit of the Agreement was followed." Because article 29.3 of the arbitration agreement specifically limits the arbitrator's authority to a determination and interpretation of the express terms of the agrеement, appellant requested vacation of the arbitrator's award arguing to the trial court that the arbitrator in the present case exceеded his powers in violation of section 682.13(1)(c), Florida Statutes (1989).
Appellee argued in response that the parties agreed to waive steps one and two of the grievance procedure by not filing the grievance at step one and by failing to jointly request a list of seven qualified arbitrators within seven working days as they had done in prior arbitration cases. Appellee emphasized that appellant had not responded to its notice of intent to arbitratе nor had appellant contacted it regarding the joint request for arbitrators. Although appellee's president and counsel had both tried to contаct appellant regarding the arbitration, appellant's officials, including its attorney and acting police chief, were not making arbitration decisions at the time. On May 16, 1990, however, the parties jointly submitted a request for a list of arbitrators.
The trial court denied appellant's motion to vacate the arbitrаtor's award finding that the parties' responsibility to submit a list of arbitrators was joint and that the arbitrator had not exceeded his powers by deciding the procedural issue. We agree with the trial court that the arbitrator in the present case did not exceed his powers by ruling upon the issue of procedural arbitrability. We rely upon John Wiley & Sons, Inc. v. Livingston,
In keeping with the primary purpose of an arbitration clause, the court said that procedural disagreements should be treated as aspects of the dispute which ignited the grievance procedure rather than as separate disputes. It reasoned that reservation of рrocedural questions for the courts would not only create the difficult task of separating related issues but would also result in frequent duplicated efforts. The сourt also found that separation of the substantive and procedural elements of a dispute could provide an opportunity for deliberate delay or the possibility of well-intentioned but no less serious delay and, that in some instances, the delay could entirely eliminate all prospects of a speedy arbitrated settlement of the dispute to the parties' disadvantage, both financial and otherwise.
Federal decisions rendered since the Supremе Court's decision in Wiley are in agreement. See Shopmen's Local 539 v. *522 Mosher Steel Co.,
There are two recent Florida decisions which further indirectly apply the principle set forth in Wiley. See Executive Life Ins. Co. v. John Hammer & Ass's, Inc.,
Further, in Schnurmacher Holding, Inc. v. Noriega,
The reason for the high degree of conclusiveness which attaches to an award made by arbitrators is that the parties have by agreement substituted a tribunal of their own choosing for the one provided and established by law, to the еnd that the expense usually incurred by litigation may be avoided and the cause speedily and finally determined. To permit the dissatisfied party to set aside the аward and invoke the judgment of the court upon the merits of the cause would be to render it merely a step in the settlement of the controversy, instead of a final determination of it.
These reasons, articulated by this Court over seventy years ago, remain relevant under today's arbitration legislation. As petitioner nоtes, the finality and enforceable nature of an arbitration award is a characteristic of arbitration that distinguishes it from other forms of alternative disputе resolution. To allow judicial review of the merits of an arbitration award for any reasons other than those stated in section 682.13(1) would undermine the purposе of settling disputes through arbitration. We find it incumbent to adhere to the long-standing principle of finality of arbitration awards in order to preserve the integrity of the arbitration process as a means of alternative dispute resolution.
Schnurmacher,
AFFIRMED.
GOSHORN, C.J., and COWART, J., concur.
