TD Waterhouse Investor Services, Inc., Waterhouse Securities, Inc., Neil Kirk Porter and Anthony Tyson Pope (collectively, “defend
ants”) appeal from an order denying their motion to compel arbitration. For the
On 29 June 2000, Joseph C. Sciolino and his wife, Constance F. Sciolino (collectively, “plaintiffs”), filed a complaint against defendants in Wake County Superior Court, alleging breaches of contract and fiduciary duty, negligence, constructive and securities fraud, and conversion. Defendants thereafter filed a motion to compel arbitration of plaintiffs’ claims, which motion the trial court heard on 26 October 2000. Upon consideration of all of the evidence and arguments by the parties, the trial court made the following findings of fact:
1. Plaintiffs are citizens of Wake County, North Carolina. They opened a joint brokerage account with the corporate defendants. In connection therewith, plaintiffs executed a document entitled “Waterhouse webBroker New Account Application.” A copy of that agreement was attached to the affidavit of Ms. Campanella, an employee of Waterhouse. Both plaintiffs signed the document on its reverse side on or about August 12,1998. The document, at paragraph 11(5), references an attached “customer agreement.”
2. Defendants attached a customer agreement to their original motion to compel arbitration, and to the affidavit of Ms. Campanella. That customer agreement is on a separate sheet from the new account application. It contains an arbitration clause. However, the customer agreement is not signed by either plaintiff or any of defendants. Defendants contend that the customer agreement was provided to plaintiffs at the time they executed the new account application.
3. Plaintiffs deny having been provided with a copy of the customer agreement. Mr. Sciolino testified, by affidavit, that he had searched his files, and did not have a copy of a customer agreement. Mr. Sciolino testified, in his affidavit, that he inquired of defendant Porter, in November, 1999, as to the existence of any documents in plaintiffs’ file, and that Mr. Porter provided Mr. Sciolino with certain documents that are attached as exhibits to Mr. Sciolino’s affidavit, representing that those documents constituted the account documents. The documents provided by Mr. Porter include a customer agreement, but it is not the same customer agreement that was attached to defendants’ motion. In fact, the customer agreement provided to Mr. Sciolino by Mr. Porter contains a revision date of September, 1998, which is after the date on which plaintiffs signed the new account application.
4. Plaintiffs have disputed the existence of an agreement to arbitrate. After having conducted a plenary hearing, the court finds that the existence of an agreement to arbitrate has not been demonstrated.
Based on the above-stated facts, the trial court concluded that an arbitration agreement did not exist and accordingly denied defendants’ motion to compel arbitration, from which order defendants appeal.
The sole issue on appeal is whether the trial court erred in denying defendants’ motion to compel arbitration. We conclude that the trial court properly denied defendants’ motion.
We note initially that the order denying defendants’ motion to compel arbitration is interlocutory, as it is not a final judgment.
See Veazey v. Durham,
Defendants argue that the trial court erred in denying their motion to compel arbitration. Noting the public policy which favors arbitration, defendants contend that, by signing the webBroker Account Application (“the application”), plaintiffs agreed to submit any dispute arising from their account to arbitration. The application at issue contains the following statements:
1) I have read, understand, and agree to be bound by the terms of the attached Customer Agreement....
5) The enclosed Customer Agreement contains a pre-dispute Arbitration clause. Please see paragraph #9 of the Customer Agreement for full details.
Defendants argue that the above-stated language incorporates by reference the customer agreement containing the arbitration clause, such that plaintiffs are bound by its terms.
When a party disputes the existence of a valid arbitration agreement, the trial judge must determine whether an agreement to arbitrate exists.
See
N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1-567.3(a) (1999);
Burke v. Wilkins,
Before a dispute can be settled by arbitration, there must first exist a valid agreement to arbitrate.
See
N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1-567.2 (1999);
Routh,
In support of their motion to compel arbitration, defendants submitted two different customer agreements, one of which was revised a month after plaintiffs opened their account. Neither customer agreement bears the signatures of plaintiffs or defendants. Defendants nevertheless assert that plaintiffs are bound to the terms of the customer agreement because the arbitration clause contained in the revised customer agreement is identical to the one referenced by the application signed by plaintiffs. We disagree.
It is well established that a valid contract arises only where the parties “assent to the same thing in the same sense, and their
minds .. . meet as to all the terms.”
Goeckel v. Stokeley,
In the application signed by plaintiffs in the instant case, plaintiffs agreed to “be bound by the terms of the attached Customer Agreement.” Plaintiffs deny, however, that defendants attached any type of document to the application. Defendants have produced two separate customer agreements, neither of which is attached to the application signed by plaintiffs and neither of which bears plaintiffs’ signatures. .Further, as plaintiffs note, “there is nothing on the Customer Agreement itself — no signature, no initials, no account number — to suggest that it was ever provided to plaintiffs; when it was provided; in connection with which account it
Affirmed.
