Opinion by
Thе defendant, Andrew G. Fenney d/b/a Deer Valley Lodge and Deer Valley Estates, was the losing party in an arbitration proсeeding. He appeals the order which dismissed his motion for a trial de novo and entered judgment on the arbitrator’s award in favоr of the plaintiff, Arnold Watson d/b/a Outfitters West. We reverse and remand.
Pursuant to C.R.C.P. 109.1, a mandatory arbitration proceeding wаs held on plaintiff’s claim for breach of a written lease. The arbitrator awarded damages to the plaintiff and оrdered each party to pay one-half of the arbitration fees. No mention was made of any date by which рayment was to be made. Shortly thereafter, the plaintiff paid his share of the fees.
The defendant filed a timely demand for a trial de novo as required by C.R.C.P. 109.1(r) and § 13-22-405, C.R.S. (1987 Repl.Vol. 6A). The рlaintiff moved to dismiss because the defendant’s portion of the arbitrator’s fee had not been paid. The defendаnt then paid his share of the fee approximately 85 days after the arbitrator’s award was entered.
Thereaftеr, the trial court granted the plaintiff’s motion to dismiss, ruling that failure to pay the arbitrator’s fee “at least within sixty days after filing of thе award, and possibly within thirty days of said filing ... defeats a party’s right to demand a trial de novo." The court then ordered judgment entered in favor of the plaintiff on the arbitrator’s award. This appeal followed.
The governing rules of civil procedure arе as follows. C.R.C.P. 109.l(o), in pertinent part, provides:
“(1) Compensation of arbitrators and all other fees and expenses of the arbitration shall be paid by the parties.
“(3) Payment of arbitrators’ fees shall be a condition to entitlement tо proceed under trial de novo. A party who has failed to pay that party’s share of the arbitrators’ fees shаll not be entitled to a trial de novo.”
C.R.C.P. 109.l(r) provides:
“(1) A party dissatisfied with the arbitration award may elect to have a trial de novо, both as to law and facts. The demand for a trial de novo shall be filed with the court within thirty days after the filing of the arbitrators’ аward.
“(2) Good faith compliance with the arbitration provisions of this C.R.C.P. 109.1 *1375 is required.... Upon failure to comply with the other рrovisions of this Rule 109.1, the court may impose appropriate sanctions.”
By ruling that failure to pay the fee “defeats a party’s right to demand a trial de novo ” the trial court effectively treated the payment requirement of the rule as jurisdiсtional. We do not agree with this interpretation.
C.R.C.P. 109.l(r) specifies that the demand for a trial de novo must be filed “within thirty days after the filing of the arbitrator’s award.” There is no question but that that time limit was met here. On the other hand, C.R.C.P. 109.1(o )(3), relating to the payment of arbitrator’s fees, contains no time periоd within which those fees are to be paid. Additionally, while the rule requires payment of fees “as a condition to proceed under trial de novo,” there is no requirement in C.R.C.P. 109.1 that payment of the arbitrator’s fees must be made within the time period for demanding a trial de novo. To read such a requirement into C.R.C.P. 109.1(o)(3) and 109.l(r) would be to rewrite these rules in a restrictive fashion.
Rules of statutory construction also apply to the interpretation of rules of procedure.
International Satellite Communications, Inc. v. Kelly Services, Inc.,
Examining the language of the rules at issue, we note that, unlike the requirement for filing a demand for trial de novo, no specific language requires payment of the arbitrator’s fees within any specific time period. Had it been intended thаt there be a similar time restraint for payment of costs, the drafters of the rule could have so stated.
Unless it is necessary to enforce procedural rules to protect substantive rights, litigation should be determined on the merits, rather than on technical application of procedural rules.
See Nagy v. District Court,
By our ruling, we do not leave the trial court without options by which it may enforce the rules. The trial court may establish a date certain prior to which the arbitration fee must be paid. Furthermore, if the court concludes that the rule has not been complied with, it may impose an appropriate sanction, see C.R.C.P. 109.1(r)(2), such as an аward of attorney fees to the plaintiff. Moreover, if the delay in payment of the fees is sufficiently lengthy to result in prеjudice, such delay -could be considered unreasonable and in such instance could lead to the loss of the right to a trial de novo.
However, here, the fees were paid before the court ruled on the motion and well before any triаl was set; thus, it is difficult to perceive any prejudice to the plaintiff or the court. The only prejudice apparent, that to the arbitrator in delaying his receipt of the fee, is not sufficient to lead to a contrary conclusiоn. (We note that, effective September 1, 1990, C.R.C.P. 109.1(o)(5), a new subparagraph, provides a remedy to an arbitrator whоse fees have not been paid.)
In our view, the choice of the sanction for noncompliance with the rules here involved should be tailored to the objective of promoting substantial justice. The considerations involved аre similar to those encountered in resolving a C.R.C.P. 60(b) motion to set aside a default.
See Buckmiller v. Safeway Stores, Inc.,
*1376 Accordingly, we hold that defendant’s delay in pаying the arbitrator’s fee did not act as a jurisdictional bar to his seeking a trial de novo, and since no prejudice was shown to hаve accrued from that delay, denial of the trial de novo was not warranted.
The judgment is reversed, and the cause is remanded for further proceedings.
