Opinion
This case arising out of a real estate dispute raises the novel claim of whether an award made in a commercial contractual arbitration can form the basis for a subsequent action for malicious prosecution. We hold in the circumstances presented by this case that it cannot.
In January 1991 plaintiff Christina M. Sagonowsky bought a four-unit apartment in San Francisco. The contract of sale contained a clause providing for commercial arbitration. 1 In April Sagonowsky entered into a tenancy in common agreement with plaintiff Curtis Kekoa, Jr. (her then fiancé), plaintiff Stefan M. Mrozowski (her uncle) and Lynn Searle, who had been a *126 tenant in the building since 1986. 2 Under that agreement Sagonowsky assigned to the other three individuals her rights “as buyer for the purchase of the real estate” “all rights, title, and interest in and to said contract [of sale], and to the real estate.” The tenancy in common agreement also contained an arbitration clause which provided for binding arbitration to be ' had through the American Arbitration Association (AAA) or a like entity of “any dispute regarding this Agreement or the duties, obligations and benefits of ownership in the Property.”
In January 1995 Searle made a demand for arbitration under the contract of sale and the tenancy in common agreement upon Sagonowsky, Kekoa and Mrozowski. The various causes of action alleged in Searle’s claim all arose from her contention that she had been unlawfully induced to advance to Sagonowsky certain sums which were purportedly required for repairs to and seismic upgrade of the building. In Searle’s view Sagonowsky had improperly retained $20,000 of $38,000. Searle sought an accounting by Sagonowsky.
Sagonowsky, Kekoa and Mrozowski responded to the demand for arbitration with a complaint naming Searle as defendant that was filed on March 1, 1995, in San Francisco Superior Court. Searle successfully moved to compel arbitration. Most of the claims advanced against Searle derived from the contention that she had underreported the square footage of her unit in the building and accordingly had undercontributed to certain expenses prorated between the tenants in common based upon that percentage of the total square footage of the building represented by each tenant’s apartment. The three sought reformation of the tenancy in common agreement to more accurately reflect the percentage of ownership attributable to Searle.
After AAA arbitration, by an award dated October 4, 1995, the arbitrator denied both the claims of Searle and the counterclaims of Sagonowsky, Kekoa and Mrozowski.
On September 20, 1996, Mrozowski filed a complaint for malicious prosecution and professional negligence in Alameda Superior Court naming as defendant Antonia L. More, the attorney who had represented Searle in the arbitration and related proceedings. Six days later Sagonowsky, *127 proceeding in propria persona, filed a similar complaint against Attorney More in San Francisco Superior Court. 3
On November 8, 1996, More demurred to both complaints in the respective courts. The three malicious prosecution complaints brought against More were consolidated in Alameda. The court sustained the demurrers without leave to amend and dismissed the complaints. It is from the judgment of dismissal that Mrozowski, Kekoa and Sagonowsky appeal.
Discussion
In reviewing a judgment of dismissal entered after a demurrer has been sustained without leave to amend we determine whether the complaint alleges facts sufficient to state a cause of action, or -can be so amended.
(Crowley
v.
Katleman
(1994)
At the conclusion of the hearing the court outlined two reasons for sustaining the demurrer as to the cause of action for malicious prosecution: 4 “Primarily . . . where the parties have come together by contract ... to submit disputes to arbitration as opposed to litigation . . . malicious prosecution should not be available to a successful defendant in such an arbitration proceeding. [^Q Also, I am persuaded that in this case the arbitrator made a decision, in essence, that nobody prevailed.”
*128
In order to state a cause of action for malicious prosecution the plaintiff must allege that the prior action (1) was commenced by or at the direction of the defendant and pursued to a legal termination in plaintiff’s favor; (2) was brought without probable cause; and (3) was initiated with malice.
(Crowley
v.
Katleman, supra,
In sum, the court concluded that these plaintiffs were unable to state a cause of action for malicious prosecution for two reasons: First, a prior action which is private, rather than judicial, arbitration to which the parties have bound themselves by contractual agreement will not support a subsequent claim of malicious prosecution; second, that in any event this arbitration did not terminate in favor of plaintiffs Sagonowsky, Kekoa and Mrozowski.
If the arbitration was not terminated in favor of Sagonowsky, Kekoa and Mrozowski then we need not reach the question of whether a private contractual, as distinct from a judicial, arbitration, may be the basis for a cause of action for malicious prosecution. Accordingly, we look first to the favorable termination element of the cause of action.
Favorable Termination
“It is hornbook law that the plaintiff in a malicious prosecution action must plead and prove that the prior judicial proceeding of which he complains terminated in his favor.”
(Babb
v.
Superior Court
(1971)
The arbitration in this case involved both the claims of Searle (breach of contract and of the duty of good faith and fair dealing, conversion, fraud, breach of fiduciary duty and conspiracy), who sought both damages of $27,000 and an accounting and the counterclaim of Sagonowsky, Kekoa and Mrozowski (“based on several theories including fraud, mistake and breach of contract”), who sought reformation of the tenancy in common agreement and declaratory relief. 5
By his award the arbitrator denied the claims of both sides. In his discussion of ruling he concluded that of Searle’s various claims only fraud and conversion merited discussion. As to them he found that while “Sagonowsky’s acts as to the disclosures of the ‘developer’s fee’ were perhaps fraudulent as to one or more non-parties to this arbitration, there was no fraud on Searle.” The arbitrator relied for this finding on the documents in evidence, having concluded the testimony of both sides was self-serving and in conflict. He found that Searle’s allegations of fraud and conversion were not proven. Although the arbitrator found that Sagonowsky had been “remiss in providing full and complete accountings,” he concluded there was insufficient detriment to Searle to justify “any relief.”
Had Searle’s claim been brought in a judicial proceeding and resulted after trial in a judgment in favor of Sagonowsky, Kekoa and Mrozowski, we would have no difficulty in concluding that there had been a termination of the prior action favorable to them. After all, the arbitrator found Searle had failed to prove any of her causes of action and denied her any relief. We are to look at the judgment as a whole in the prior action to test whether there was a favorable termination. (Crowley v. Katleman, supra, 8 Cal.4th at pp. 684-685; Dalany v. American Pacific Holding Corp., supra, 42 Cal.App.4th *130 at pp. 829-830.) Here the outcome as to Searle’s claims brought to arbitration tested against the standard used in a judicial proceeding is a termination favorable to Sagonowsky, Kekoa and Mrozowski. 6
Prior Action
The question of whether a private, contractual arbitration will support a claim for malicious prosecution is a question of first impression in California.
Appellants argue that while this precise issue has not been resolved, the recent decision of our Supreme Court in
Moore
v.
Conliffe
(1994)
The effect of the so-called litigation privilege is, as the court noted, to limit liability or provide immunity from suit by “precluding use of the protected communications and statements as the basis for a tort action
other than for malicious
prosecution.”
(Moore
v.
Conliffe, supra, 1
Cal.4th at p. 638, fn. 1, italics added;
Rubin
v.
Green
(1993)
In concluding the litigation privilege applied to private, contractual arbitration, the court looked to the purpose of the privilege. Protecting witnesses from liability for their testimony is a way of ensuring free access to the courts because witnesses need not fear retaliatory derivative tort claims and therefore will be candid. Such candor in turn is essential to maintaining the integrity of the judicial truth-seeking process.
(Moore
v.
Conliffe, supra,
Appellants argue that Moore stands for the proposition that private, contractual arbitration is a “judicial proceeding” and therefore such an arbitration is a prior action for the purposes of malicious prosecution. This reading of Moore overstates its holding, and therefore does not resolve the issue before us.
Pacific Gas & Electric Co.
v.
Bear Steams & Co.
(1990)
Nor are we persuaded that the rule which permits judicial arbitrations to be the basis for a malicious prosecution claim requires the same result in a contractual arbitration.
(Stanley
v.
Superior Court, supra,
Thus, like a voluntary dismissal, a judicial arbitration award in favor of defendant reflects a decision on the lack of merit of a claim which was brought originally to court. Permitting such terminations to support a claim of malicious prosecution furthers the public purpose underlying the cause of action—namely to discourage abuse of the judicial system by the bringing of maliciously motivated but baseless claims. (See
Crowley
v.
Katleman, supra,
Appellants urge us to follow the lead of decisions which have permitted malicious prosecution to be based upon actions before an administrative board or agency.
(Hardy
v.
Vial
(1957)
The remedy of a malicious prosecution action lies to recompense the defendant who has suffered out of pocket loss in the form of attorney fees and costs, as well as emotional distress and injury to reputation because of groundless allegations made in pleadings which are public records.
(Bertero
v.
National General Corp., supra,
13 Cal.3d at pp. 50-51;
Stanley
v.
Superior Court, supra,
Nonetheless, the potential costs of arbitration were implicitly recognized by the parties when they entered into the two agreements to arbitrate. By permitting private, contractual arbitration the Legislature has supported such arbitration as a means of dispute resolution which is both “speedy and
relatively
inexpensive.”
(Ericksen, Arbuthnot, McCarthy, Kearney & Walsh, Inc.
v.
100 Oak Street
(1983)
In this respect then the private arbitration here is quite unlike either a public administrative proceeding reviewing the firing of a state college professor or even a review proceeding of a decision to limit staff privileges at a hospital. In both those cases the subject of the proceeding has well and truly been hailed into the proceeding, and is likely to have been required to exhaust administrative remedies before being allowed to seek judicial relief. Moreover both the college professor and the dentist were likely to have suffered damage to reputation by having had to defend themselves in proceedings before a public agency or in hearings before their professional peers. (See
Stanley
v.
Superior Court, supra,
In contrast appellants expressly contracted for private arbitration and defined the scope of disputes subject to that arbitration broadly, but expressly acknowledged that certain limited avenues of action in court would still be open to them. Thus, the tenancy in common agreement contains a provision for attorney fees and costs to be awarded to the prevailing party in the event one party institutes legal action to enforce its rights under the agreement or seeks a declaration of the meaning of its terms and provisions by a court of law. 7
The significance of such provisions is that the parties sought to limit quite narrowly the circumstances in which they would seek a judicial remedy. It *134 was certainly possible for them to have agreed to subject themselves to liability in the courts for malicious prosecution of an arbitration (or to have provided for a costs or sanction award by the arbitrator for a baseless claim); however, they made no such agreement here. Nor can we say that these arbitration agreements were the product of unequal bargaining power. In short, the intent of the parties as expressed in both agreements was to strictly limit recourse to judicial remedies and submit “any dispute” regarding each agreement to private arbitration.
Appellants urge us to insert into the agreement to arbitrate any dispute the added requirement that the dispute be a “colorable claim” or a “bona fide” claim. We decline to rewrite the agreement entered into by the parties. These parties were not impeded from agreeing to submit only colorable or bona fide claims to arbitration, nor from including in their agreement a provision for a fee award or sanction to be imposed by the arbitrator for claims found not to be colorable or bona fide. They did not do so. Having chosen in their agreement to arbitrate not to foreclose the risk that they might bear the cost of an arbitration which terminated in their favor on a claim without merit, appellants cannot expect this court to rewrite that agreement.
Accordingly, on these facts we find the trial court did not err in sustaining the demurrer to the cause of action for malicious prosecution on the basis that the private, contractual arbitration which terminated in their favor was not a “prior action” of the sort which will support such a claim. 8
The judgment is affirmed.
Hanlon, P. J., and Reardon, J., concurred.
Petitions for a rehearing were denied June 22, 1998, and the petitions of all appellants for review by the Supreme Court were denied August 19, 1998. Kennard, J., was of the opinion that the petitions should be granted.
Notes
That clause provided in pertinent part: “Any dispute or claim in law or equity arising out of this contract or any resulting transaction shall be decided by neutral binding arbitration in accordance with the rules of the American Arbitration Association, and not by court action except as provided by California law for judicial review of arbitration proceedings. . . . The following matters are excluded from arbitration hereunder: (a) a judicial or non-judicial foreclosure or other action or proceeding to enforce a deed of trust, mortgage, or real property sales contract ...(b) an unlawful detainer action, (c) the filing or enforcement of a mechanic’s lien, (d) any matter which is within the jurisdiction of a probate court, or (e) an action for bodily injury or wrongful death, or for latent or patent defects ....’’
Under that agreement title was to be “divided among the Owners ... as follows: Curtis Kekoa, Jr.-35%; Stefan M. Mrozowski-50% and Lynn Searle-15%.”
In their opening brief appellants Sagonowsky and Kekoa assert that Kekoa also filed, in propria persona, a malicious prosecution action against More on September 26, 1996. Despite that assertion the brief does not include a citation to Kekoa’s complaint in the record before us and we find no such document in the record.
Plaintiffs’ complaints contained a second cause of action for professional negligence. In sustaining the demurrer to the cause of action for professional negligence the court commented that “based on all the information I have, Antonia More was not in any way the attorney for any of these three plaintiffs.”
An attorney’s duty runs only to the intended beneficiaries of his actions.
(Held
v.
Arant
(1977)
The record before us includes a copy of Searle’s claim in the arbitration, but does not include a copy of the counterclaim in arbitration of Sagonowsky, Kekoa and Mrozowski. Accordingly we rely upon the characterization of the counterclaim by the arbitrator as included in his discussion of ruling.
The complaint filed on March 1, 1995, against Searle by appellants in San Francisco Superior Court alleged intentional and negligent misrepresentation, breach of contract and of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing, and defamation and sought declaratory relief and reformation of the tenancy in common agreement. Presumably these are the same claims contained in the counterclaim appellants submitted to arbitration.
Of course, the very same thing can be said as to the counterclaim brought by Sagonowsky, Kekoa and Mrozowski against Searle in that the arbitrator concluded there was no credible evidence Searle had “knowingly misled the other parties about the size of her unit in the building or that her actions in procuring changes to the agreement were intended to deceive the Counter Claimants.” The arbitrator declined to reform the tenancy in common agreement and upheld the agreement as written, finding it to be binding on all parties.
The matters excluded from arbitration under the form purchase agreement are “(a) a judicial or non-judicial foreclosure or other action or proceeding to enforce a deed of trust, mortgage, or real property sales contract as defined in Civil Code § 2985, (b) an unlawful detainer action, (c) the filing or enforcement of a mechanic’s lien, (d) any matter which is within the jurisdiction of a probate court, or (e) an action for bodily injury or wrongful death, *134 or for latent or patent defects to which the Code of Civil Procedure § 337.1 or § 337.15 applies.”
In light of this holding we need not reach appellants’ additional claims that: (a) the arbitration award is not res judicata as to their cause of action for malicious prosecution, and (b) the award does not collaterally estop them from seeking to recover attorney fees via the malicious prosecution claim.
