2003 Ohio 6045 | Ohio Ct. App. | 2003
{¶ 3} Select terminated Palumbo's employment effective January 12, 2000. Select sent Palumbo a notice indicating that Select was exercising its right under the close corporation agreement to purchase Palumbo's shares at a price per share of $315. Palumbo disputed the price Select proposed to pay.
{¶ 4} Select contacted Ernst Young, the parties' designated "dispute resolver," to inquire whether it would be willing to arbitrate the dispute. Ernst Young agreed to do so. An initial conference was conducted on August 7, 2000. The parties agreed to make written submissions to the arbitrator by September 18.
{¶ 5} On August 22, 2000, Select demanded that Palumbo surrender his stock to Select by August 31 at the price Select had previously demanded. When Palumbo refused to do so, the petition alleges that Select "unilaterally refused to participate in the arbitration process that is mandated by the Agreement and that Respondent itself had invoked." Palumbo therefore requested an order directing Select to arbitrate the price per share.
{¶ 6} A copy of the close corporation agreement was attached to the petition. With respect to the corporation's right to repurchase stock, section 3.4 of the agreement provides:
{¶ 7} "Upon termination of employment for any reason, with or without cause, the Company shall have the right to repurchase and the employee will sell all Stock and Debentures held by the employee. The price per share shall be determined in accordance with Section
{¶ 8} Section
{¶ 9} Section 4.10 of the close corporation agreement contains the agreed dispute resolution procedure. It provides:
{¶ 10} "If any dispute shall arise between the parties concerning the construction of this Agreement or their respective rights and obligations hereunder, the dispute shall be settled by final and binding dispute resolution in accordance with the terms of this Section 4.10. This dispute shall be submitted to Ernst Young, CPAs or their successor, unless Ernst Young declines or a dispute party specifies a conflict of interest on the part of Ernst Young in which event the dispute shall be submitted to Arthur Anderson or then to the next largest national accounting firm which accepts the assignment and does not have a conflict. (Hereinafter the "Dispute Resolver".)[sic] *** Each party may, within ten (10) days after the Dispute Resolver has been accepted by all parties, make one written submission supporting its position. No oral submissions or ex parte conferences or submissions are permitted. The Company shall provide to the Dispute Resolver all information it requests in connection with the dispute. The Dispute Resolver shall agree to issue its decision in writing as soon as possible but in no event later than forty-five (45) days after its acceptance by all parties. All parties shall supply all information requested by the Dispute Resolver. The decision rendered by the Dispute Resolver shall be final and binding and conclusive on all parties concerned and free of challenge or review in any court. The decision so rendered by the Dispute Resolver shall be enforceable by any court of competent jurisdiction. ****"
{¶ 11} In response to the petition, Select argued that the parties' dispute was beyond the scope of the close corporation agreement because Select had the discretion under the agreement not to repurchase Palumbo's shares, and its decision to withdraw its offer to repurchase was within its discretion. As there is no offer to repurchase, Select argued, there is nothing to arbitrate.
{¶ 12} Based upon the petition and Select's response, the court found "no issues of material fact remain to be tried and that there exist genuine disputes as to (1) whether, pursuant to the close corporation agreement, respondent is obligated to purchase petitioner's shares and (2) if so, what value those shares represent. Therefore, the petition is well-taken and granted. The arbitration shall occur as directed in section 4.10 of the Agreement. R.C.
{¶ 14} Nevertheless, the court's decision determined the action to compel arbitration pursuant to R.C.
{¶ 15} Select contends that the alternative dispute resolution ("ADR") procedure to which the parties agreed was not equivalent to arbitration and therefore the court had no jurisdiction to enforce it through R.C.
Select's argument misses the mark. Ohio courts have held that there is no jurisdiction under R.C. Chapter 2711 to confirm a decision made pursuant to a contractual ADR procedure other than arbitration. See, e.g., Ohio Council 8 v. Ohio Dept. Of Mental Health (1984),
{¶ 16} More important, a court has jurisdiction to determine its own jurisdiction. In re Estate of Boll (1998),
{¶ 17} The question whether the parties agreed to arbitrate their disputes is, of course, a matter of contract. The terms of a contract are a question of fact. In the proceedings before the common pleas court, Select admitted that it agreed to arbitrate its contractual disputes with Palumbo. Select specifically conceded that "if it desired to purchase the shares and there was a dispute over the price, that dispute would be arbitrable under § 4.10." This admission eliminated any factual issue as to whether the parties had agreed to arbitrate. The facts before the common pleas court demonstrated that the parties had agreed to arbitrate disputes, so the court had jurisdiction to compel arbitration. Therefore, we overrule the first assignment of error.
{¶ 18} Second, Select argues that it was not contractually obligated to purchase Palumbo's stock. Therefore, Select contends, it could withdraw its offer to purchase anytime before it was accepted by Palumbo, and the withdrawal of its offer eliminated any arbitrable issue.
{¶ 19} This analysis depends on Select's characterization of the repurchase transaction as an "offer" which could be withdrawn at any time before it was "accepted." However, this characterization is suspect: If Select chooses to repurchase the shares, Palumbo is required to sell them. The only issue is the purchase price. Accordingly, we find no error in the common pleas court's order to arbitrate the issue whether Select has the power to withdraw a demand for repurchase, once made.2 The dispute plainly concerns the construction of the agreement and the parties' respective rights and obligations thereunder, and accordingly is arbitrable under section 4.10 of the parties' agreement.
Judgment affirmed.
Anne L. Kilbane, P.J. and Sean C. Gallagher, J. concur.