In 1982, Grace Finch Cates opened an account with Wheat First Securities, Inc., requiring her to sign a securities account agreement that contained the following arbitration clause:
AGREEMENT TO ARBITRATE CONTROVERSIES — Except with respect to any future dispute or claim arising under the federal securities laws or where this arbitration requirement would violate applicable state law or rule of the United Securities and Exchange Commission, it is agreed that any controversy between us arising out of our relating to this Agreement or transactions *454 between us shall be submitted to arbitration under the rules of The New York Stock Exchange, Inc., National Association of Securities Dealers or, where appropriate Chicago Board Options Exchange or Commodities Future Trading Commission, as I may elect by sending notice of such election to you by registered mail. . . .”
Following Cates’ death — about two years after she signed the agreement — the Clerk of Superior Court, Davidson County, appointed Margaret Ragan as the executrix of her estate. Ragan closed Cates’ account and directed Wheat First to transfer the securities into a capital resources account. To open the capital resources account for Cates’s estate, Ragan signed a capital resources account agreement that also contained an arbitration clause.
In October 1998, Ragan, in her capacity as executrix of the Estate of Grace Cates, brought this action against Wheat First. The complaint alleged claims for negligence and conversion arising out of Wheat First’s sale of securities contained in the account opened by Cates. Specifically, the complaint stated:
3. After Cates died on March 15, 1995, Wheat, through its agent, Alex Galloway, had knowledge of her death shortly after it occurred and knew or should have known that Wheat’s authority to sell any securities held in Cates’ account had been terminated.
4. Plaintiff is informed and believes that shortly after Cates’ death and, after acquiring knowledge of Cates’ death and without obtaining authorization from the plaintiff as Cates’ executor or any other person having authority to conduct Cates’ business affairs, Wheat through its agent, Alex Galloway, sold certain securities (“the Securities”) which where held by Wheat in Cates’ account .... The proceeds from these sales were retained by Wheat and the plaintiff was not notified of the sale.
5. Following the sale of the Securities, they appreciated substantially in value.
6. Wheat reinvested the proceeds of the sale in other securities which did not appreciate in value to the same extent as the Securities originally held by Wheat for plaintiff’s testator.
9. The estate of Cates has been damaged as a result of the unauthorized sale of the Securities.
*455 In response, Wheat First moved to compel arbitration under the arbitration clause in the Cates’ securities agreement, or in the alternative, under the arbitration clause in the Cates Estate’s capital resources account agreement. The trial court denied that motion finding that the arbitration clause under the Cates’ securities agreement terminated upon the death of Grace Cates, and that arbitration clause under the Cates Estate’s capital resources account agreement did not cover the subject matter for arbitration.
From this order, Wheat First appeals.
In considering a motion to compel arbitration, the trial court should determine (1) the validity of the contract to arbitrate and (2) whether the subject matter of the arbitration agreement covers the matter in dispute.
See AT&T Technologies, Inc. v. Communication Workers of America,
I.
On appeal, Wheat First contends that the trial court erroneously denied its motion to compel arbitration because the arbitration agreement under the Cates’ securities agreement did not terminate upon Grace Cates’ death. We disagree.
Securities brokerage agreements, such as the Cates’ securities agreement, constitute contracts “evidencing a transaction involving commerce.” 9 U.S.C. § 2;
see PaineWebber Inc. v. Elhai,
In determining the validity of the arbitration clause in the Cates’ securities agreement, issues concerning the arbitrability of the clause are governed by federal law.
See PaineWebber,
In the subject case, the Cates’ securities agreement provides that the substantive law of Virginia applies:
JURISDICTION — This agreement and all transactions made in my account shall be governed by the laws of the Commonwealth of Virginia (regardless of the choice of law rules thereof).
In
King v. Beale,
[i]n case of the death of a party to an arbitration agreement, the agreement is revoked and the power of the arbitrator is terminated by operation of law upon the universally accepted principle that the death of a principal operates as an instantaneous and *457 absolute revocation of the agent’s power or authority, unless the agency is coupled with an interest.
Id. at 770.
The arbitration agreement present in King, however, unlike the arbitration clause present in the instant case, was not covered by the Federal Arbitration Act. Thus, King is not binding on our determination; rather, the case provides guidance only to the extent that it emphasized the general principles of agency law.
Under those principles, upon the death of the principal, the agent’s powers cease unless the agent’s authority is coupled with an interest.
See Triplett v. Woodward’s Adm’r.,
To constitute a power coupled with an interest, a property in the thing which is the subject of the agency or power must be vested in the person to whom the agency, or power is given, so that he may deal with it in his own name; such that, in the event of the principal’s death, the authority could be exercised in the name of the agent.
Casey v. Walker & Mosby,
In this case, the securities agreement between Wheat First and Cates contained a clause concerning the death of a party which stated that:
We will give you immediate notice in writing of the death of any one of us. The estate of anyone of us who shall have died shall be liable, and the survivor or survivors shall continue liable, jointly and severally, for any debt balance or loss in the account, or which you may sustain, by reason of the completion of transactions initiated prior to receipt by you of written notice of death of any one of us, or incurred in the liquidation of the account.
*458 This Agreement shall inure to the benefit of your successors and assigns and shall remain in effect until an authorized member of your firm shall acknowledge in writing the receipt of a written statement from one of us that he or she wishes to terminate the account, at which time the party giving such notice will not be bound for any further transactions made for the account thereafter. However, he or she shall remain bound for any further transactions and for all further deliveries to any of us of any assets in the account, and all communications regarding the account.
In effect, this clause specified the required notice in the event of the death of a party. It does not, however, connote an agency coupled with an interest.
Hence, as an agent, Wheat First’s power to act on behalf of Cates terminated at the time of her death, thereby terminating the securities agreement between Wheat First and Cates. It, therefore, follows that the arbitration clause contained in the securities agreement also terminated. Consequently, the trial court properly denied Wheat First’s motion to compel arbitration under the Cates’ securities agreement.
II.
Wheat First also contends that a valid arbitration agreement existed since the dispute at issue — Wheat First’s alleged negligence and conversion arising out of its sale of securities contained in the account opened by Cates — is within the subject matter of the Cates Estate’s capital resources account agreement. Again, we disagree.
If the terms of an agreement are unambiguous, the court should not apply rules of construction or interpretation. See Seoane v. Drug Emporium, Inc., 457 S.E.2d 93 (Va. 1995). Rather, it is the duty of the court to merely interpret the language in the agreement according to its plain meaning. See id.
In this case, the arbitration clause in the Cates Estate’s capital resources account agreement stated that:
You agree, and by carrying on an account for you, Wheat agrees that all controversies which may arise between us concerning any transaction or the construction, performance, or breach of this or any other agreement between us, whether entered into prior, on or subsequent to the date hereof, shall be determined by arbitration.
(Emphasis added).
*459 Finding the language in the arbitration clause to be clear and unambiguous, we apply the plain meaning in interpreting this language. Under the agreement, the plain meaning of the language “between us” means between Wheat First and Ragan, as the executrix of Cates’ Estate. Therefore, the scope of the arbitration clause applies to any controversy between Wheat First and Ragan arising out of any transactions between Wheat First and Ragan.
However, the dispute at issue in this case is Wheat First’s alleged negligence and conversion in unilaterally selling securities in the account which Cates opened before her death. Thus, the dispute in the present action does fit within the scope of the arbitration clause. Consequently, the trial court properly concluded that the Cates Estate’s capital resources account agreement was not a basis to support a motion to compel arbitration.
Accordingly, the trial court’s judgment denying Wheat First’s motion to compel arbitration is,
Affirmed.
