Rosecroft Trotting & Pacing Association, Inc., (Rosecroft) appeals from an Order of the Circuit Court for Prince George’s County (Perry, J.) that granted appellee’s Motion for Summary Judgment and dismissed appellant’s complaint to stay arbitration.
Rosecroft asks whether the trial court erred:
I. When it determined that the amended arbitration claim fell within the scope of the arbitration clause; and
II. In finding that the timeliness issue was for the arbitrators, and not the court, to decide.
FACTS
On December 31, 1974, appellee, Electronic Race Patrol, Inc. (ERP) entered into a contract with Rosecroft to provide audio visual services at Rosecroft Raceway. The contract contained no arbitration clause. To remedy disputes which arose during the performance of the contract, Rosecroft and ERP entered into a written agreement on October 19, 1979, by which the parties agreed to modify particular terms of the 1974 contract and to resolve by arbitration all past and future disputes pertaining to the contract.
Paragraph 4 of the 1979 agreement prohibited the officers and directors of Rosecroft from making any communications to anyone, either oral or written, that would tend to degrade or disparage the business reputation of ERP. After the expiration of the contract, ERP filed a demand for arbitration of five contractual claims against Rosecroft, none of which related to paragraph 4 of the 1979 agreement. In July of 1985, however, ERP amended its claim, alleging that Rosecroft also had breached paragraph 4, and sought damages totalling almost four and one-half million dollars.
Contending that disputes arising under paragraph 4 were not arbitrable, Rosecroft declined to submit that matter to arbitration. After both parties had the opportunity to comment fully on the arbitrability of the issue, the arbitrators *408 determined that, pursuant to the 1979 agreement, the amended claim was arbitrable. Rosecroft then filed its Petition to Stay Arbitration, raising the issues of applicability of the arbitration clause and timeliness. The trial court granted ERP’s Motion for Summary Judgment on both issues.
I.
Scope of the Arbitration Clause
In arbitration, parties voluntarily agree to substitute an impartial private arbitrator in place of the public tribunal.
Gold Coast Mall v. Larmar Corp.,
Since its enactment in 1965, the Maryland Uniform Arbitration Act
1
has established a legislative policy that favors the enforcement of executory agreements to arbitrate.
Gold Coast Mall,
We are asked in the case sub judice to address this precise issue: the scope of an executory agreement to arbitrate. The parties disagree as to whether the arbitration provision contained in paragraph 11 of the 1979 agreement applies to the covenant not to disparage or degrade set out in paragraph 4. The arbitration clause provides in pertinent part:
Rosecroft and the Patrol agree that any dispute or disagreement concerning, pertaining, or relating to the performance of the Contract from January 1, 1980, and thereafter shall be submitted to arbitration by an impartial arbitrator selected by the parties.
(emphasis added). The arbitrator and the trial court classified this as a “catch-all” clause that authorizes the arbitration of any and all disputes relating to the performance of the contract. We agree with this characterization.
As a general rule, “[w]here there is a broad arbitration clause, calling for the arbitration of any and all disputes arising out of the contract, all issues are arbitrable unless expressly and specifically excluded.”
Gold Coast Mall,
Although no explicit exclusion exists, Rosecroft contends that we should nevertheless read one into the arbitration clause. Specifically, Rosecroft points to paragraph 10 of the 1979 agreement as evidence of the parties’ intent to limit the applicability of the catch-all clause. Paragraph 10 pertains to the disposition of ERP’s cable in place at the Rosecroft facility, after the termination of the service contract. This provision incorporated a separate arbitration provision, establishing that an arbitrator shall determine compensation if the parties fail to agree on a purchase price. Rosecroft argues that a broad construction of the arbitration clause would render the specific arbitration provision of paragraph 10 as surplusage. Citing
Jeffrey Sneider-Maryland, Inc. v. Lavay,
We do not agree. First, Rosecroft provides no authority for limiting, without express exclusion, the scope of arbitration clauses. In light of the well-recognized preference to enforce fully executory agreements to arbitrate,
Gold Coast Mall,
II.
Timeliness ofERP’s Amended Claim
ERP filed its demand for arbitration of five contractual claims on April 29, 1985. Pursuant to the arbitration clause in paragraph 11, Rosecroft agreed to submit these contractual disputes to arbitration. While arbitration was in full swing, ERP amended its demand by seeking damages for breach of the convenant not to disparage or degrade. In its Complaint to Stay Arbitration, Rosecroft opposed ERP’s amended claim on the ground that “demand for arbitration was not timely made.” On appeal, Rosecroft contends that the timeliness issue was for the court, and not the arbitrator, to decide.
As a general rule, “timeliness of demand is a threshold question, which is, in the first instance, for the courts ... [to decide].”
Frederick Contractors, Inc. v. Bel Pre Medical Center, Inc.,
[T]he issue in both cases was whether, by its acts or omissions, the party seeking arbitration had waived its contractual right to that particular forum____ Because an inappropriate delay in demanding arbitration acts as a *412 relinquishment of the contractual right to compel such a proceeding, where that matter is in dispute, its resolution constitutes, in effect, a determination of whether the agreement to arbitrate still exists; and, under the statute, that is a proper issue for the court.
Stauffer Construction Company, Inc. v. Board of Education of Montgomery County,
In its complaint to stay arbitration, Rosecroft sought to enjoin arbitration of the amended claim on the ground that “the demand for arbitration ... [was] not timely made.” The complaint, however, failed to indicate the precise nature of this objection. If appellant had based its objection on the ground that an inappropriate delay in demanding arbitration amounted to ERP’s relinquishment of its contractual right to arbitrate, then the courts would be obliged to resolve that issue. “[I]n an action to compel or stay arbitration, the court should consider but one thing—is there in existence an agreement to arbitrate the dispute sought to be arbitrated?”
Stauffer,
From the facts of this case as well as from Rosecroft’s own brief, the waiver issue which Rosecroft raised and attempted to litigate was not the waiver issue normally decided by the courts. First, the procedural posture of the parties logically precluded Rosecroft from raising that issue. At the time that the complaint was filed, the arbitration agreement was being carried out in full force and effect, without objection from Rosecroft. Rosecroft could have hardly objected to an arbitration to which it was already an active participant. Second, in its own brief, Rosecroft characterized the timeliness issue as unrelated to whether ÉRP had relinquished its contractual right to arbitrate: “Plainly the issue of timeliness is a question of fact as to when the incidents occurred and whether a *413 specific incident constitutes a degrading or disparaging of ERP.” This issue pertains only to the timeliness of the claim which is the subject of arbitration and not to the right to arbitrate.
Although Rosecroft ignores the distinction, timeliness of a claim to arbitrate is not equivalent to timeliness of the substantive claim to be arbitrated. The former requires a determination of whether an agreement to arbitrate still exists based on possible waiver and is a proper issue for the court. The latter requires factual determinations as to whether ERP was degraded or disparaged, when these specific incidents occurred, and whether, based on the time of the occurrences, they may be the subject of arbitration. The resolution of such matters falls within the province of the arbitrator, and not the court. Since Rosecroft raises a timeliness issue of the latter kind, we hold that the arbitrator must resolve that issue in the first instance.
JUDGMENT AFFIRMED;
COSTS TO BE PAID BY APPELLANT.
Notes
. 1965 Laws of Maryland, Ch. 231, § 2. Article 7 was repealed and reenacted as §§ 3-201-234 and § 12-303(c)(9) of the Courts Article. 1973 Laws of Maryland (Ex.Sess.), Ch. 2, § 1, Title 3, Subtitle 2 and Title 12, Subtitle 3. On the whole, the new Arbitration Subtitle either derives its language from Article 7 or uses language from Article 7 with minor changes in style. Revisor’s Notes, Subtitle 2, Arbitration and Award, of the Court’s Article.
