Opinion
Dеfendants Michael Townsend and Margaret Torma appeal an order denying their petition to stay proceedings and compel arbitration 1 in an action brought by plaintiffs Pacific Investment Company, a limited partnership doing business as Pacific Gardens, Todd Schiffman, Larry Larson, Donald and Leonard Olds, Smile Perеs, Hugh Rouse, and Robert Dahl.
The primary issue is whether an arbitration clause in a limited partnership agreement covers matters raised in plaintiffs’ complaint.
Background
Defendants Michael Townsend and Margaret Torma and plaintiffs Schiffman, Larson, Ronald and Leonard Olds, Peres, Rouse, and Dahl are limited partners in Pacific Investment Company. Michael Townsend initially was also the general partner. Michael Townsend, his brother defendant Thomas Townsend, and their mother Margaret Torma, own defendant General Management Company. Margaret Torma’s husband, defendant Tibor Torma, does business as Quality Maintenance Company. The partnership and General Management Company maintain bank accounts or certificates of deposit with defendants Bank of California, Crocker Bank, and Brentwood Savings & Loan. Pacific Investment Company was formed in December 1970 to acquire and manage Pacific Gardens, a 47-unit apartment building at 111 Marquez Place, Pacific Palisades. Nine limited partners contributed a total of $120,000 to capital.
In a related transaction, in December 1970 Schiffman and Larson executed promissory notеs for $12,000 and $8,000, respectively, payable to Michael Townsend with 8 percent interest from 30 April 1971. $4,500 and $3,000, respectively, was due on 31 December 1971 with the remainder payable solely from distributions to Schiffman and Larson on their limited partnership interests. The notes were secured by the limited partnership interests.
The Complaint
Plaintiffs’ second amended complaint asserts three causes of action.
The first cause of action additionally alleges that Michael Townsend improperly enabled Margaret Torma to aсquire the limited partnership interest of a former partner without notice to the other limited partners and by a loan of partnership funds.
Plaintiffs allege that as a result of an independent audit of the partnership, they discovered the improper activities on 14 October 1974. Qn 5 December 1974 they removed Michаel Townsend as general partner, elected Schiffman and Larson as co-general partners, and canceled the management contract of General Management Company. Michael Townsend nevertheless continues to act as general partner and to occupy an apartment rent-free, and he refuses to turn over the partnership records to his successors..
On the first cause of action plaintiffs seek damages, punitive damages, an accounting, appointment of a receiver, injunctive relief, and declaration of constructive trusts.
The second cause of action seeks declaratory relief for plaintiffs and Michael Townsend. It alleges that a dispute has arisen over the limited partnership agreement provisions concerning the interest to be received by a former general partner on removal and on conversion of his interest to “an equivalent limited partnership interest.” If the general partner is removed with or without cause, is his converted interest subordinate to that of the other limited partners?
Discussion
1
.Parties.
Arbitration is a matter of contract and a party cannot be required to arbitrate a dispute he has not agreed to submit.
(Steelworkers
v.
Warrior & Gulf Co.,
Of the plaintiffs, only Donald Olds claims not to be bound by the agreement. He avers he did not sign the original limited partnership agreement. In the complaint, however, Donald Olds alleges he is now a limited partner. By the terms of the limited partnership agreement, to become a limited partner Olds must have accepted and adopted in writing all the terms of the agreement including those for arbitration. All individual plaintiffs, therefore, are parties to the arbitration provision and subject to its compulsion.
2.
Issues.
Arbitration is highly favоred as a method for settling disputes.
(Berman
v.
Dean Witter & Co., Inc.,
In our view this clause encompasses the allegations of the first cause of action against Michael Townsend. The cоmplaint accuses him of mismanagement and misuse of partnership property in his role as general partner and thus asserts a “disagreement... with reference to ... the activities of the General Partner.” Margaret Torma, on the • other hand, is accused only of receipt of misused partnership property. Her role as a limited partner is not questioned, and we find the allegations against her outside the scope of.the arbitration clause.
The arbitration clause is broad enough to encompass the allegations of the second cause of action for declaratory relief on the naturе of the partnership interest retained by a removed general partner. This clearly stems from a “disagreement between one or more of the partners and the limited partnership.”
The third cause of action, is beyond the compass of the arbitration clause. The dispute there centers upon lоans from Michael Townsend to Schiffman and Larson. The three were partners, but only coincidentally so, and the loans neither flowed from nor depended upon their partnership relation.
3. Remedies. Plaintiffs contend the substance of their action is to obtain an accounting from Michael Townsend and that an arbitratiоn agreement cannot defeat, the court’s inherent power to direct an accounting.
This contention is without merit. Equitable relief may be awarded in an arbitration
(California State Council of Carpenters
v.
Superior Court,
Plaintiffs rely on two cases. In
Fischer
v.
Superior Court,
Smith
v.
Superior Court, 202
Cal.App.2d 128 [
The foregoing cases are reаdily distinguishable. Both involve a request for an accounting on the termination of a relationship under an arbitration clause that applied only to matters arising during the relationship. At bench plaintiffs do not seek to terminate the limited partnership; rather, they seek an accounting of the general partner’s activities within a continuing and ongoing partnership. This was specifically provided in the language of the limited partnership agreement which calls for arbitration “with reference to any of the activities of the General Partner.”
4.
Waiver.
Plaintiffs filed their original complaint on 14 November 1974 and their second amended complaint on 13 December 1975.
Waiver is ordinarily a question of fact for the trial court
(Daugherty Co.
v.
Kimberly-Clark Corp.,
Conclusion
The trial court erred in denying the petition to compel arbitration of the claims against Michael Townsend in the first two causes of action. The order is reversed to the extent it denies arbitration to Michael Townsend on the first two causes of action, and in other respects the order is affirmed. All рarties will bear their own costs on appeal.
Roth, P. J., and Compton, J., concurred.
Notes
The notice of appeal specifies the order of 24 February 1975 which denied a motion for reconsideration. Appellants apparently intended, and we treat this as, an appeal from the earlier order denying the substantive motions. The order denying a stay is not appealable but may be reviewed on appeal from the order refusing to compel arbitration. (Code Civ. Proc., §§ 1294, 1294.2;
Berman
v.
Renart Sportswear Corp.,
