Opinion
Defendants Dean Witter Reynolds, Inc. (Dean Witter) and Craig Nelson (Nelson) appeal from an order denying their petition to compel arbitration. The trial court denied arbitration because of plaintiff’s allegations in her complaint that defendants had fraudulently induced her to sign the contract which contained the agreement to arbitrate and that the fraud permeated the entire contract, including the agreement to arbitrate.
I
FACTS 1
In October of 1985, plaintiff went to the Dean Witter office in Upland and met with Nelson for the purpose of transferring her investment account *211 from the Dean Witter office in Costa Mesa which had managed her investments since 1979. At the time of the transfer, Nelson had plaintiff sign a “Customer’s Agreement” and an “Option Client Information” agreement. Both contracts include agreements to arbitrate any controversy arising out of or related to the contract. Additionally both contracts state that all terms of the agreement shall be included in any subsequent agreement. Plaintiff signed a second “Option Client Information” agreement in 1987 which contained the same terms. In 1988, plaintiff filed suit when she learned defendants had lost her $180,000 investment, contending that defendants had misrepresented the nature of the OEX index options in which she had invested by stating they were a low risk investment when in fact they were high risk, had concealed the full extent of her losses and had sold her stock to cover her losses.
When defendants demanded arbitration under the two contracts signed in 1985, plaintiff filed a first amended complaint wherein she alleged that at the time she signed the contracts in 1985, defendants told her that the contracts simply were documents necessary to open her account, that they did not affect her legal rights and that it was not necessary to read them. She contends she was not given the opportunity to read the documents and was not advised of the agreement to arbitrate. Additionally, she alleges she was not told that the document entitled “Option Client Information” was actually a contract, the terms of which were set forth on the back of the form. Finally, plaintiff contends she did not know the true nature and effect of the documents and that had she known she would not have signed them. 2
Defendants filed their petition to compel arbitration wherein they alleged that both the contracts signed in 1985 and the “Option Client Information” contract signed in 1987 required plaintiff to submit her claims to arbitration. In opposition to the petition to compel arbitration, plaintiff filed a declaration which in essence repeated the allegations in the complaint. She also filed a supplemental declaration in which she stated that from time to time after she opened her account with defendants, she received documents or form letters from defendants. When she received such documents, she would call defendants and ask what the documents were. Each time, defendants would tell her that it was okay to sign the documents, that it wasn’t necessary to keep copies and not to worry. She further stated that she signed such documents on defendants’ assurances that they were simply standard documents defendants required. The 1987 “Option Client Infor *212 mation” agreement was among the documents defendants told her were standard forms defendants required.
II
Permeation Doctrine
In this case we are called upon to determine whether the federal Arbitration Act (9 U.S.C. § 1 et seq.) allows a party to avoid an agreement to arbitrate by use of what has been referred to by the parties as the “permeation doctrine.” While the parties argue its applicability, they have not attempted to explain or define the doctrine. But then we find that the courts which have applied the permeation doctrine provide little guidance in its proper application as well. Therein lies the problem. Because the parameters of the doctrine have not been clearly defined in relation to the United States Supreme Court rule of severability under the federal Arbitration Act, we decline to rely on it. Nonetheless, as we explain, we find the trial court properly denied the petition to compel arbitration.
The federal Arbitration Act provides that, in contracts involving interstate commerce, a written arbitration agreement is valid and enforceable. 3 Accordingly, a trial court is required to order a matter to arbitration unless there are grounds for revocation of the arbitration agreement. Prior to 1967, the circuit courts of appeals had been divided on the issue of whether claims of fraud in the inducement of a contract which contained an agreement to arbitrate were subject to arbitration or were to be decided by the trial court. Some courts held as a matter of federal substantive law that the arbitration agreement was severable from the principal contract and therefore claims of fraud in the inducement of the principal contract did not invalidate the arbitration agreement. Others held that the issue of severability was to be determined under the applicable state law.
In
Prima Paint
v.
Flood & Conklin
(1967)
In Prima Paint, the plaintiff alleged that it had been induced to enter a contract containing an arbitration agreement by the defendants’ false representations and fraud regarding its ability to perform the contract. The court held that this fraud did not relate to the making or the performance of the agreement to arbitrate. As there was no evidence the parties intended to withhold legal issues regarding the validity of the contract from arbitration and no evidence the plaintiff was fraudulently induced to agree to arbitration, the fraud issue was to be decided by the arbitrator. 5
Although
Prima Paint
is clear in its directive that the trial court may decide only issues of fraud directed at the making and the performance of the arbitration agreement, the courts which have applied the permeation doctrine actually have relied more on an earlier Supreme Court decision in
Moseley
v.
Electronic Facilities
(1963)
Thus, when Moseley and Prima Paint are read together, they hold that, under a broadly worded arbitration provision, fraud in the making or performance of a principal contract is to be decided by the arbitrator. The issue of fraud is to be decided by the court only where it is alleged the arbitration agreement itself was obtained by fraud or is part of a fraudulent scheme. It is not sufficient to allege simply that the arbitration agreement is located in a contract which was otherwise procured by fraud.
The “permeation doctrine” apparently was originated in an appellate division of a New York trial court, applying New York law, in
Housekeeper
v.
Lourie
(1972)
The court in
Housekeeper
was addressing a contract governed by New York law which did not involve the federal Arbitration Act. California
*215
courts, however, subsequently applied the permeation doctrine to cases arising under the federal Arbitration Act. In
Main
v.
Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Inc., supra,
We also do not believe the Housekeeper decision can be construed to be consistent with Prima Paint’s rule of severability as there were no allegations of fraud directed at the arbitration clause. There was no allegation, for example, that the plaintiffs were led to believe they had to agree to arbitration or that the arbitration agreement was part of a fraudulent scheme or that the parties never intended to agree to arbitration. In fact, there is no explanation of how or why the fraud “permeated” the contract. In our reading of the Housekeeper decision, it appears the court found the arbitration agreement invalid merely because it was contained within a contract which was otherwise obtained by fraud. If this is a correct interpretation, then it is inconsistent with Prima Paint’s rule of severability and cannot be applied under the federal Arbitration Act.
In
Main,
the court elaborated on the permeation doctrine and affirmed the order denying the petition to compel arbitration not merely because the agreement to arbitrate was contained in a contract which was otherwise procured by fraud but because that inclusion of the arbitration agreement itself constituted constructive fraud. The court found that defendants “gained an advantage over plaintiff by inclusion, in the lending agreement, of the provision to arbitrate.”
(Main
v.
Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner &
*216
Smith, Inc., supra,
First, whatever the law may be regarding unilateral waiver of the right to select a judicial forum, it is not instructive in the context of a bilateral agreement to arbitrate. W'here an agreement to arbitrate exists, the parties’ mutual promises to forego a judicial determination and to arbitrate their disputes provide consideration for each other. Both parties give up the same rights and thus neither gains an advantage over the other. 7
Second, that one court has criticized the practice of including arbitration clauses in standardized contracts is not a basis for ignoring an agreement to arbitrate. Arbitration has received increasing support in the courts as a recognized means of resolving disputes more efficiently and more economically.
(Pacific Inv. Co.
v.
Townsend
(1976)
Finally, the fact that one party later seeks to avoid the agreement to arbitrate cannot alone preclude enforcement of the agreement. If that were sufficient, few arbitration agreements would be enforceable.
In
Ford
v.
Shearson Lehman American Express, Inc., supra,
The Supreme Court in
Prima Paint
did not hold that fraud which goes to the making of the contract is for the court and fraud related to the performance of the contract is for the arbitrator. Rather, the court specifically and expressly made a distinction between fraud which is directed at the arbitration agreement and fraud directed at the principal contract. The court quite clearly held that only fraud directed at the making or performance of the arbitration agreement is to be determined by the court.
(Prima Paint
v.
Flood & Conklin, supra,
Although we disagree with the analysis in both
Main
and
Ford
and find no support under federal law for the permeation doctrine, we nonetheless find that the result in the
Main
and
Ford
cases as well as in the present case is correct on the alternative theory applied in the
Ford
opinion. In
Ford,
the plaintiff alleged that at the time he signed the agreements, he was under the complete dominion and control of one of the defendants and that if he in fact signed the agreements he did not know what they were and did not know what their effect was.
(Ford
v.
Shearson Lehman American Express, Inc., supra,
We agree that if a party is unaware he is signing any contract, obviously he also is unaware he is agreeing to arbitration. Accordingly, an allegation of fraud in the inception or execution of the contract is necessarily directed at both the principal contract and the arbitration agreement contained *218 therein. 8 In such a situation it cannot be seriously contended that the party knew he was signing one contract but did not know he was agreeing to another agreement when the two agreements are contained in the same document.
The claim of fraud in the inception or execution is analogous to the claim that an agent lacked authority to sign an agreement discussed in
Kulukundis Shipping Co.
v.
Amtorg Trading Corp.
(2d Cir. 1942)
The alternate theory in Ford as well as the Kulukundis case is also consistent with Moseley. Had the court, in Moseley, referred the issue of fraud to arbitration in New York pursuant to the arbitration agreement, the court would have been assisting the defendant in its fraudulent scheme. A determination by the arbitrator that the arbitration agreement was, as the plaintiffs contended, a means to effect the fraud would have been of little value to the subcontractors who already would have incurred the time and expense of arbitrating their dispute in New York.
Accordingly, we hold that allegations of fraud in the inception or execution of a contract which contains an agreement to arbitrate are sufficient to place the issue of fraud before the court and to deny a petition to compel arbitration.
Here the plaintiff has alleged that defendants deceived her as to the nature and effect of the documents she was signing and that had she known the documents contained an agreement to arbitrate, she would not have signed the documents. Plaintiff’s failure to read the docu
*219
ments may be excusable in light of allegations of a fiduciary relationship and defendants’ misrepresentations. (See 1 Witkin, Summary of Cal. Law (9th ed. 1987) Contracts, § 407, pp. 366-367.) If the court decides the issue of fraud in the execution of the documents in favor of plaintiff, litigation should proceed in court on the remaining issues, including the fraudulent representations about the index options. If, however, the court finds no fraud in the execution of the documents, plaintiff will be bound by the agreement to arbitrate and the court should enter an order compelling arbitration.
(Ford
v.
Shearson Lehman American Express, Inc., supra,
Ill
The 1987 Contract
Defendants also contend that since plaintiff has not set forth in her amended complaint any allegations of fraud directed at the “Option Client Information” contract signed in 1987, then, even if there was fraud in connection with the first two contracts, the court erred in denying arbitration under the third contract. 9 While it is true that the fraud alleged in the amended complaint refers only to the two contracts signed in 1985, plaintiff, in her supplemental declaration in opposition to the petition to compel arbitration, did allege that during the course of her relationship with defendants, defendants sent a number of documents requesting her signature. Each time, according to plaintiff, defendants advised her that these were simply standard forms required for her account and there was nothing to worry about. She also stated in her declaration that she signed these documents in reliance on defendants’ assurances that these were merely standard forms. 10 In light of the allegations of a confidential relationship existing between plaintiff and defendants at the time this contract was signed, whether it was reasonable for plaintiff to rely on defendants’ assurances is a question of fact. At this time, we simply find that as is true with the other *220 contracts, plaintiff has alleged sufficient facts of fraud in the execution of the third contract to warrant denial of defendants’ petition to compel arbitration at this time.
IV
Disposition
The order denying defendants’ petition to compel arbitration is affirmed. All parties to bear their own respective costs on appeal.
Timlin, J., and McDaniel, J., * concurred.
Appellants’ petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied November 14, 1990. Panelli, J., was of the opinion that the petition should be granted.
Notes
Under the federal Arbitration Act, the parties are entitled to a jury trial of the issue whether a valid agreement to arbitrate exists. (9 U.S.C. § 4.) “The issue, ' “should not be determined on affidavits, but rather a full trial should be had.” ’ ”
(Main
v.
Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Inc.
(1977)
The facts are taken from the plaintiff’s original and first amended complaints as supplemented by the facts set forth in the declarations submitted by the parties in connection with the petition to compel arbitration.
Plaintiff also alleges she was not informed the option agreement gave defendants the right to sell her stock to cover the losses and continues her allegations of fraud and misrepresentation about the nature of the investment in OEX index options.
The parties concede that this matter is governed by the federal Arbitration Act as it involves securities transactions in interstate commerce.
(Main
v.
Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Inc., supra,
If the court determines the arbitration agreement is valid, it must then decide what issues are to be decided by the arbitrator. This issue is determined by reference to the language of the agreement itself. Here, as in Prima Paint, the parties’ agreement includes “any controversy arising out of or related to the contract.” Under the Prima Paint holding, this language is broad enough to include a claim of fraud in the inducement of the contract.
In a dissenting opinion joined in by Justices Douglas and Stewart, Justice Black strongly criticized the severability rule as being inconsistent with the legislative history of the Arbitration Act. Black also argued the rule was inconsistent with the parties’ intentions. “Prima would not have agreed to . . . the arbitration clause but for F & C’s fraudulent promise . . . .” (
The other cases relied upon by the court in Main do not aid in the analysis of the permeation doctrine as they either did not apply or discuss the permeation doctrine and were decided long before Prima Paint or merely quoted language from the Housekeeper decision in dicta. We do not discuss these cases.
We acknowledge that there may be arbitration provisions which do give an advantage to one party. The provision in the Moseley case requiring arbitration in New York for a dispute in Georgia is illustrative of an unfair arbitration agreement. Similarly, courts are less inclined to uphold a provision for arbitration before a presumptively biased arbitrator. In those cases, however, it is not the requirement of arbitration alone which makes the provision unfair but rather the place or manner in which the arbitration is to occur. Here the arbitration agreement does not favor either party as it allows the customer to elect whether the arbitration is to be governed by rules of the Arbitration Committee of the Chamber of Commerce of the State of New York, the American Arbitration Association or the Board of Arbitration of the New York Stock Exchange.
Similarly, the result in Main can be explained and upheld under this theory. In that case as well, the plaintiff had alleged a fiduciary relationship with the defendant and that because of the trust and confidence she had in defendant she was accustomed to signing 'documents at the defendant’s request without reading the documents. (Main v. Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Inc., supra, SI Cal.App.3d 19, 30.) She further alleged that she did not know the true nature and effect of the documents she was signing, that defendant misrepresented the nature and content of the documents in order to induce plaintiff to sign them, and that plaintiff believed she was only signing documents necessary to open an account and would not have signed them if she knew their contents. (Ibid.)
Plaintiff’s failure to allege fraud in connection with this third contract is understandable. When defendants first demanded arbitration in their counsel’s letter dated October 19, 1988, reference was made to only the two contracts signed in 1985, copies of which were attached to the letter. Defendants did not demand arbitration pursuant to the third contract until they filed their petition to compel arbitration which was after plaintiff’s first amended complaint was filed.
Defendants did not object to the trial court’s consideration of this supplemental declaration and certainly did not contend the trial court was limited to the allegations of fraud set forth in the complaint. Thus any error in the trial court’s consideration of this supplemental declaration was waived. We note, however, that neither the federal Arbitration Act nor our comparable state procedure for a petition to compel arbitration (Code Civ. Proc., §§ 1281-1281.8) specifically requires that the grounds for invalidating an arbitration agreement be contained in a complaint or alternatively, that they be set forth in declarations in opposition to the petition.
Retired Associate Justice of the Court of Appeal sitting under assignment by the Chairperson of the Judicial Council.
