Calais Company, Inc. v. Kyzer Ivy , 303 P.3d 410 ( 2013 )


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  •       Notice: This opinion is subject to correction before publication in the P ACIFIC R EPORTER .
    Readers are requested to bring errors to the attention of the Clerk of the Appellate Courts,
    303 K Street, Anchorage, Alaska 99501, phone (907) 264-0608, fax (907) 264-0878, email
    corrections@appellate.courts.state.ak.us.
    THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF ALASKA
    CALAIS COMPANY, INC.,                          )
    )        Supreme Court No. S-13884
    Appellant,                       )
    )        Superior Court No. 3AN-07-08813 CI
    v.                                       )
    )        OPINION
    DEBORAH KYZER IVY,                             )
    individually and as a Derivative               )        No. 6784 – May 31, 2013
    Plaintiff on behalf of the interests           )
    of CALAIS COMPANY, INC. and                    )
    its SHAREHOLDERS,                              )
    )
    Appellee.                        )
    )
    Appeal from the Superior Court of the State of Alaska, Third
    Judicial District, Anchorage, William F. Morse, Judge.
    Appearances: Jeffrey M. Feldman and Susan Orlansky,
    Feldman Orlansky & Sanders, Anchorage, for Appellant.
    Phillip Paul Weidner, Weidner & Associates, Anchorage, and
    Charles E. Cole, Law Offices of Charles E. Cole, Fairbanks,
    for Appellee.
    Before: Fabe, Winfree, and Stowers, Justices. [Carpeneti,
    Chief Justice, and Christen, Justice, not participating.]
    STOWERS, Justice.
    I.    INTRODUCTION
    In 2007, Deborah Kyzer Ivy, a shareholder of Calais Company, Inc.
    (Calais), filed a complaint against Calais seeking involuntary corporate dissolution. In
    May 2009, Ivy and Calais reached a settlement agreement (Agreement) in which Calais
    agreed to purchase Ivy’s shares at “fair value” as determined by a three-member panel
    of appraisers. The appraisers disagreed over the fair value of Calais. Two of the
    appraisers agreed the fair value of Calais was $92.5 million; one appraiser dissented,
    valuing Calais at $43 million.
    Calais sought to enforce the Agreement in superior court, arguing the two
    majority appraisers had failed to comply with the appraisal procedure mandated by the
    Agreement and the Agreement’s definition of “fair value.” The superior court ultimately
    declined to rule on the issue, concluding that interpreting the term “fair value” was
    beyond its scope of authority under the terms of the Agreement. Consequently, the court
    ordered Calais to purchase Ivy’s shares based on the majority appraisers’ valuation.
    Calais appeals. We reverse the superior court’s final order and remand for
    the court to remand to the appraisers with explicit instructions to calculate the “fair
    value” of Calais as defined by AS 10.06.630(a), as required by the Agreement.
    II.   FACTS & PROCEEDINGS
    Calais does business in real estate acquisition, development, rental, and
    leasing, and owns “significant tracts of land” in Anchorage. In 2007, Ivy — one of 30
    individual stockholders and owner of 6.25% of Calais stock — filed a complaint against
    Calais; her complaint seeking involuntary dissolution under AS 10.06.628 included both
    personal and derivative claims.1     In May 2009 the parties reached a settlement
    1
    Alaska Statute 10.06.628(b) states that the grounds for involuntary
    dissolution are:
    (continued...)
    -2-                                     6784
    agreement.
    A.        Settlement Agreement
    Under the Agreement, Ivy agreed to dismiss her claims and Calais agreed
    1
    (...continued)
    (1) the corporation has abandoned its business for more than
    one year;
    (2) the corporation has an even number of directors who are
    equally divided and cannot agree as to the management of its
    affairs, so that its business can no longer be conducted to
    advantage or so that there is danger that its property and
    business will be impaired or lost, and the holders of the
    voting shares of the corporation are so divided into factions
    that they cannot elect a board consisting of an uneven
    number;
    (3) there is internal dissension and two or more factions of
    shareholders in the corporation are so deadlocked that its
    business can no longer be conducted with advantage to its
    shareholders, or the shareholders have failed at two
    consecutive annual meetings at which all voting power was
    exercised to elect successors to directors whose terms have
    expired or would have expired upon election of their
    successors;
    (4) those in control of the corporation have been guilty of or
    have knowingly countenanced persistent and pervasive fraud,
    mismanagement or abuse of authority or persistent unfairness
    toward shareholders, or the property of the corporation is
    being misapplied or wasted by its directors or officers;
    (5) in the case of any corporation with 35 or fewer
    shareholders of record, liquidation is reasonably necessary
    for the protection of the rights or interests of the complaining
    shareholder or shareholders; or
    (6) the period for which the corporation was formed has
    terminated without extension.
    -3-                                  6784
    to purchase all of Ivy’s shares of Calais stock. Paragraph 5 of the Agreement described
    the procedure for valuing Ivy’s shares. Calais and Ivy were to each nominate one
    appraiser, and these two appraisers were to select a third. The appraisers were to
    “determine the fair value of Calais in accordance with [the] Settlement Agreement and
    AS 10.06.630(a),[2] as of the date of [the] Settlement” using “their expertise and
    judgment” and “giving due consideration to all Calais liabilities and to the fair market
    value of all Calais assets.” In arriving at the “appraised fair value of Calais,” the
    appraisers were not to apply any discount due to the number of shareholders or
    distribution of shares, nor consider the “impact or value of any speculative future
    development of Calais property or assets, or any speculative projected or assumed profits
    or revenues that might be derived from any future development of Calais property or
    assets.” The appraisers could, however, “consider future opportunities to develop the
    property, subject to all existing leases and commitments, to the extent and only to the
    2
    Alaska Statute 10.06.630(a) states:
    Subject to a contrary provision in the articles of
    incorporation, in a suit for involuntary dissolution under
    AS 10.06.628 the corporation or, if it does not elect to
    purchase, the holders of 50 percent or more of the voting
    power of the corporation, the “purchasing parties”, may avoid
    the dissolution of the corporation and the appointment of a
    receiver by purchasing for cash the shares owned by the
    plaintiffs, the “moving parties”, at their fair value. The fair
    value shall be determined on the basis of the liquidation
    value, taking into account the possibility of sale of the entire
    business as a going concern in a liquidation. The election of
    the corporation to purchase may be made by the approval of
    the outstanding shares excluding shares held by the moving
    parties.
    (Emphasis added.)
    -4-                                     6784
    extent that those future opportunities impact the fair value of the property as of the
    appraisal date.”
    The appraisers were to prepare “a final report stating the appraised value
    of the fair value of Calais under the[se] criteria.” The value of Ivy’s shares were then to
    be determined by calculating 6.25% of the appraised fair value of Calais. Paragraph 5(d)
    of the Agreement states: “An agreement on the value of Calais need only be reached by
    two of the three appraisers, and that valuation shall be binding on the parties and shall
    not be subject to any further review, dispute, or appeal.” But Paragraph 23 of the
    Agreement states:
    Superior Court Judge William Morse shall retain jurisdiction
    over this matter for the purpose of enforcing all terms and
    conditions of this Settlement Agreement . . . . Should a
    dispute arise concerning any aspect of this Agreement, and
    should any party seek judicial assistance to secure
    enforcement of the Agreement, the Court, in its discretion,
    may award full reasonable and appropriate costs and
    attorney’s fees to the prevailing party in the dispute, in
    connection with resolution of the dispute.
    B.	    Appraisal And Dissent
    Ivy named Steve MacSwain and Calais named Timothy Lowe as their
    respective appraisers; MacSwain and Lowe selected Kenneth Gain as the third appraiser.
    In November 2009 MacSwain and Gain reported that they both agreed on the appraised
    “fair market value” of Calais “when valued in accordance with the Settlement
    Agreement.” They appraised the value at $92.5 million; Lowe disagreed, appraising
    Calais’s value at $43 million.
    Lowe explained in a dissent that he believed MacSwain and Gain’s
    agreed-upon fair market value did not comply with the instructions of the Agreement or
    AS 10.06.630(a) because they omitted: (1) the capital gains tax liability for Calais’s
    -5-	                                      6784
    appreciated real property; (2) the actual costs that would be incurred in the liquidation
    of the company; and (3) the time value of money during the disposition or liquidation
    period. Lowe also explained that both MacSwain and Gain were unwilling to consider
    or acknowledge their omission of these costs after Lowe encouraged them to do so,
    explaining that both were “valuing the equity of [Calais] as a direct real property interest
    and not as equity in a corporation [and] only in the context of market value and not in the
    mandated context of liquidation value.” Lowe clarified his belief that the appraisal
    panel’s assignment under the Agreement was to determine the fair value of Calais on a
    liquidation basis, as defined by AS 10.06.630(a), not the fair market value of Calais’s
    assets. Lowe concluded that the value agreed upon by MacSwain and Gain should be
    set aside or be subject to further review because it did not provide a reliable estimate of
    the fair value of Calais.
    C.   First Motion To Enforce
    In December 2009 Calais filed a motion in the superior court to enforce the
    Agreement. Calais asked the court to find that the appraisers had not followed the
    procedures set forth in the Agreement and to remand the appraisal to the appraisers with
    directions to comply with the Agreement’s instructions to determine Calais’s fair value
    by taking into account liquidation costs, including capital gains tax liabilities. Ivy
    opposed Calais’s motion, contending the Agreement did not authorize review by the
    court.
    Superior Court Judge William F. Morse granted Calais’s motion in part,
    setting forth his findings and conclusions on February 2, 2010. The court distinguished
    between reviewing the appraisers’ valuation, which it believed it was prohibited from
    doing under the terms of the Agreement, and reviewing the appraisers’ process in making
    the valuation to determine whether the appraisers had complied with the procedures and
    standards outlined in the Agreement. The court concluded that the parties’ explicit grant
    -6-                                       6784
    of authority to enforce the Agreement authorized the court to review the appraisers’
    procedures for compliance with the Agreement. The superior court reviewed the
    Agreement and determined that the parties intended the appraisers to determine the “fair
    value of Calais” as defined by AS 10.06.630(a), not the “fair market value” of Calais’s
    assets. The court then issued a limited order directing the parties to “advise the panel
    that it should again evaluate the fair value of Calais” and to convey to the panel
    instructions that the court had drafted,3 which included paragraphs from the Agreement
    3
    The superior court’s instructions to the appraisal panel provided:
    You are instructed to determine the “fair value of Calais” in
    accordance with the Settlement Agreement and
    AS 10.06.630(a), as of the date of the Settlement,
    May 15, 2009. This means that you must prepare your
    appraisal in accordance with the provisions of both the
    Settlement Agreement and AS 10.06.630(a).
    To be “in accordance with the Settlement Agreement,” your
    determination must comply with Paragraphs 5(a) and (b) of
    the Settlement Agreement, which state, in relevant part:
    (a) . . . [T]he appraisers shall exercise their expertise and
    judgment in that determination [of fair value], giving due
    consideration to all Calais’ liabilities, and to the fair market
    value of all Calais’ assets. The appraisers shall make their
    determination of the fair value of Calais without input or
    communication from Calais or the Defendants or Ivy, either
    orally or in writing, except as provided by Paragraph 5(e).
    (b)    In arriving at the appraised fair values of Calais there
    shall be: 1) no discount as to appraising fair value of Calais
    due to the number of shareholders or dilution of ownership of
    shares; 2) no consideration by the appraisers of the impact or
    value of any speculative future development of Calais
    property or assets, but the appraisers may consider future
    opportunities to develop the property, subject to all existing
    (continued...)
    -7-                                      6784
    and AS 10.06.630(a).
    Following the court’s February 2010 order, Lowe made repeated attempts
    to communicate with MacSwain and Gain. MacSwain and Gain each sent brief e-mails
    to Lowe regarding their continued involvement as appraisers, but those e-mails did not
    respond to any of Lowe’s substantive questions or concerns regarding the appraisal
    process and the superior court’s order. Lowe also asked the parties’ counsel and the
    court to assist him in getting the appraisal panel to work together, but the appraisal panel
    never met following the February 2010 order.
    On April 6, 2010, MacSwain and Gain sent a response to the court in which
    they concluded that “fair value,” “fair market value,” and “market value” are
    synonymous. They also asserted that deductions for tax consequences and transaction
    costs were not appropriate when determining the fair value of Calais because they had
    not been explicitly asked to make such deductions. They made no reference to the
    definition of “fair value” in AS 10.06.630(a).
    Lowe prepared a separate response to the court’s February 2010 order and
    a report that described MacSwain and Gain’s erroneous procedures and analysis, their
    3
    (...continued)
    leases and commitments, to the extent and only to the extent
    that those future opportunities impact the fair values of the
    property as of [May 15, 2009].
    To be “in accordance with AS 10.06.630(a),” your
    determination must comply with AS 10.06.630(a) which
    provides, in relevant part:
    (a) . . . The fair value shall be determined on the basis of the
    liquidation value, taking into account the possibility of sale
    of the entire business as a going concern in a liquidation.
    -8-                                    6784
    refusal to work as a panel, and their general disregard of the Agreement’s prescribed
    procedures and directions.
    D.     Second Motion To Enforce
    On April 8, 2010, Calais filed a second motion to enforce, asserting that the
    majority appraisers still had not complied with the Agreement’s procedures for valuing
    Calais or with the court’s February 2010 order. Specifically, Calais claimed that the
    majority: (1) had not complied with the requirement to use the definition of “fair value”
    in AS 10.06.630(a); and (2) had violated the court’s “express directive that the matter be
    decided by ‘the panel’ — not by the majority members acting on their own.” Calais
    asked the court to reject the majority appraisers’ report and to enforce the Agreement by
    ensuring that fair value was determined in accordance with the terms and procedures of
    the Agreement. Ivy filed a cross-motion to enforce the Agreement, asking the court to
    order Calais to pay her 6.25% of the valuation determined by the majority appraisers.
    In June 2010 the superior court denied Calais’s motion and granted Ivy’s,
    concluding that it had no authority under the Agreement to do anything further. The
    court concluded that choosing between the majority appraisers’ definition of “fair value”
    and the dissent appraiser’s definition of “fair value” and declaring that one or the other
    complied with the Agreement would be outside the scope of authority delegated to the
    superior court to enforce the Agreement. The court made no findings or conclusions
    regarding the majority appraisers’ failure to include Lowe in the appraisal process
    following the February 2010 order.
    The superior court issued a final order in July 2010, reaffirming that its
    June 2010 order would be the court’s final action. Calais appeals.
    -9-                                      6784
    III.   STANDARD OF REVIEW
    We interpret settlement agreements as contracts.4 The interpretation of
    contractual terms is a question of law, which we review de novo.5
    IV.    DISCUSSION
    The preliminary issue in this appeal is whether the superior court had
    authority to review the procedures and methodology employed by the three-person
    appraisal panel under paragraph 23 of the Agreement. This paragraph explicitly grants
    “jurisdiction”6 to the superior court to enforce “all terms and conditions” of the
    Agreement, notwithstanding paragraph 5(d), which states that a valuation agreed upon
    by two of the appraisers would be “binding on the parties” and not “subject to any
    further review, dispute, or appeal.” The second issue presented for review is whether the
    majority appraisers’ definition of “fair value” and exclusion of Calais’s appraiser from
    the appraisal and reappraisal processes violated the express terms of the Agreement.
    Because paragraph 23 of the Agreement expressly provides the superior
    4
    Chilkoot Lumber Co. v. Rainbow Glacier Seafoods, Inc., 
    252 P.3d 1011
    ,
    1014 (Alaska 2011).
    5
    See Smith v. Cleary, 
    24 P.3d 1245
    , 1247 (Alaska 2001) (“The settlement
    agreement’s scope and effect raise questions of contract law that we review de novo.”).
    6
    While the Agreement explicitly grants “jurisdiction” to the superior court,
    this is an incorrect characterization because once the parties invoke the jurisdiction of the
    court by filing suit, jurisdiction is always held by the court. See Sea Hawk Seafoods, Inc.
    v. State, 
    215 P.3d 333
    , 338 (Alaska 2009) (“[A] court has subject-matter jurisdiction over
    a case when it has ‘the legal authority . . . to hear and decide [that] particular type of
    case.’ . . . AS 22.10.020(a) provides that the superior court has ‘jurisdiction in all civil
    and criminal matters.’ ”) (internal citations omitted); see also 21 C.J.S. Courts § 98
    (2012) (“In general, jurisdiction once acquired is not lost or divested by subsequent
    events.”). Instead, we use the word “authority” since a contract may limit a court’s
    authority to review it.
    -10-                                       6784
    court with continuing authority to enforce “all terms and conditions” of the Agreement
    “[s]hould a dispute arise concerning any aspect of th[e] Agreement,” the superior court
    has authority to interpret the Agreement and review whether the appraisers complied
    with the process and terms for determining fair value. Because the majority appraisers’
    definition of “fair value” violates the express terms of the Agreement, we reverse the
    superior court’s order and remand to the superior court to remand to the appraisers with
    instructions to follow the Agreement’s instructions regarding both appraisal procedures
    and fair value determination.
    A.	    The Superior Court Has The Authority To Determine Whether The
    Appraisers Complied With The Terms Of The Settlement Agreement.
    Although the parties agree that the superior court did not have authority
    under the Agreement to review the majority appraisers’ valuation of Calais, the parties
    dispute whether the superior court had authority to review the majority appraisers’
    valuation process or methodology.
    Ivy argues that under the Agreement neither the superior court nor this
    court has the authority to review the majority appraisers’ “exercise of their judgment,
    expertise, or methods employed” in reaching their determination of Calais’s value.
    Specifically, Ivy contends that the majority appraisers’ valuation of Calais is binding and
    non-reviewable because both parties “gave up certain rights in exchange for gaining
    other rights” when they agreed to waive further review of the majority appraisers’
    determination of the fair value of Calais, including the judgment and methods the
    majority appraisers used to calculate the fair value. According to Ivy, this forfeiture of
    rights was “an important element of consideration for [the] entire [Agreement].”
    Calais argues that paragraph 5(d) of the Agreement does not foreclose all
    judicial review of the appraisal process because paragraph 23 expressly grants the
    -11-	                                     6784
    superior court “jurisdiction” to “enforce,” meaning to “carry out effectively,”7 all terms
    and conditions of the Agreement.
    Whether an appraisal conducted pursuant to a contractual settlement
    agreement may be subject to review by the trial court generally presents a question that
    is governed by the language of the settlement agreement. In this case, paragraph 23 of
    the Agreement expressly granted authority to the superior court to enforce the terms of
    the Agreement, and the Agreement included specific terms setting forth the procedures
    to be used by the appraisal panel in determining the fair value of Calais.
    1.	    Paragraph 23 of the Agreement expressly grants the superior
    court authority to enforce the terms of the Agreement, including
    the terms that expressly govern the appraisal procedure.
    Ivy argues that the enforcement clause in paragraph 23 of the Agreement
    “simply allows [the] Trial Court to provide [the] Parties relief to enforce [the
    Agreement’s] provisions as to consideration.”8 But Ivy does not provide any contractual
    language, extrinsic evidence, or legal authority to support her assertion that paragraph
    23 only refers to consideration provisions. And paragraph 23’s phrase “[s]hould a
    dispute arise concerning any aspect of this Agreement” directly contravenes Ivy’s
    interpretation. (Emphasis added.) “Any aspect” means “any aspect.”
    In Salt Lake Tribune Publishing Co. v. Management Planning, Inc., a party
    argued that an appraisal of a newspaper’s assets was not subject to judicial review
    7
    Calais cites W EBSTER ’S N INTH N EW COLLEGIATE D ICTIONARY at 412
    (1987) for this definition of “enforce.”
    8
    The consideration provisions Ivy specifically points to are: “payment of
    money; transfer of stock out of Escrow to Calais; releases; termination of association by
    Ivy with Calais and Calais with Ivy; no further claims; release of Stipulation to Dismiss
    from Escrow and filing with and signing by Court; prohibiting future contact
    involvement by Ivy regarding with Calais, etc.”
    -12-	                                     6784
    because the parties’ agreement stated the appraisal was “final, binding, and conclusive.”9
    The Tenth Circuit rejected this argument because it ignored other terms in the agreement:
    The agreement expressly allowed the parties to enforce the agreement in any court and
    provided that the appraisal was binding only if it complied with the appraisal provisions
    in the agreement, such as the agreement’s definition of “fair market value.”10 The Tenth
    Circuit concluded that the trial court had authority to “review the appraisal for the
    appraiser’s compliance with the contractual terms.”11
    Like the contract in Salt Lake Tribune, the Agreement here specifically
    allows the parties to enforce its terms in the superior court and even provides for costs
    and attorney’s fees “[s]hould a dispute arise concerning any aspect of this
    Agreement . . . .” And the Agreement includes specific terms regarding the appraisal
    process, requiring the appraisers to determine the “fair value” of Calais “in accordance
    with [the] Agreement and AS 10.06.630(a).” Judicial review of the appraisers’ process
    to determine whether they complied with the express terms of the Agreement is therefore
    proper.
    2.	    Courts in other jurisdictions have held that appraisal clauses
    are generally reviewable for fraud, bad faith, material mistake,
    or a failure to understand or complete the contractually
    assigned task.
    Courts in other jurisdictions have held that there are key distinctions
    between an arbitration process, which is generally non-reviewable, and an appraisal
    9
    
    454 F.3d 1128
    , 1136-37 (10th Cir. 2006).
    10
    
    Id. at 1137
    .
    11
    
    Id.
     at 1138 (citing Melton Bros., Inc. v. Philadelphia Fire & Marine Ins.
    Co., 
    144 A. 726
     (N.J. 1929)).
    -13-	                                     6784
    process, which is generally reviewable under limited circumstances.12 The Wisconsin
    Supreme Court recently discussed the unique characteristics of appraisals and described
    what it believed the court’s role should be in reviewing appraisal awards:
    The court’s role is not to determine whether the third party
    [appraisers] accurately valued the item (as if the court itself
    could do a better job), but whether the third party experts
    understood and carried out the contractually assigned task.
    The obvious point of contracting for an appraisal process is
    to keep a jury or court out of that decision. Courts have an
    obligation to enforce this aspect of an agreement between the
    parties by asserting only limited power to review appraisal
    awards.[13]
    The Wisconsin court also noted that appraisals deserve a more deferential review
    because the appraisal process is a “fair and efficient tool for resolving disputes.”14 But
    the court ultimately concluded that, although appraisals are presumptively valid and
    should not be “lightly set aside,” an appraisal may be set aside upon a showing of “fraud,
    bad faith, a material mistake, or a lack of understanding or completion of the
    12
    See, e.g., Cas. Indem. Exch. v. Yother. 
    439 So. 2d 77
    , 79-80 (Ala. 1983)
    (noting that an appraisal is distinguishable from arbitration and is not subject to the
    various procedural requirements imposed on the arbitration process); Minot Town &
    Country v. Fireman’s Fund Ins. Co., 
    587 N.W.2d 189
    , 190 (N.D. 1998) (noting that
    while both appraisal and arbitration are proceedings designed to effect speedy and
    efficient resolutions in lieu of judicial proceedings, there are key distinctions between the
    two; for example, arbitration is a quasi-judicial proceeding that ordinarily decides the
    entire controversy while appraisal establishes only the amount of a loss and not liability
    for the loss); Miller v. USAA Cas. Ins. Co., 
    44 P.3d 663
    , 673 (Utah 2002) (noting the
    intrinsic differences between appraisal and arbitration).
    13
    Farmers Auto. Ins. Ass’n v. Union Pac. Ry. Co., 
    768 N.W.2d 596
    , 607
    (Wis. 2009).
    14
    
    Id.
    -14-                                       6784
    contractually assigned task.”15 Courts in the District of Columbia, Iowa, Massachusetts,
    and Texas have reached similar conclusions and reviewed appraisals for fraud, bad faith,
    mistake, or failure to complete the appraisal according to the contractually prescribed
    appraisal procedures.16
    As we explain below, the majority appraisers’ response to the superior
    court’s February 2010 order demonstrates “a lack of understanding or completion of the
    contractually assigned task.”17 As courts in other jurisdictions have held, this issue is
    judicially reviewable. We therefore hold that the superior court has the authority to
    determine whether the appraisers’ process complied with the contractual terms of the
    Agreement and, if it did not, enforce the terms of the Agreement.
    B.	    The Majority Appraisers Failed To Comply With The Agreement’s
    Requirement That The Appraisers Determine The Fair Value Of
    Calais In Accordance With AS 10.06.630(a).
    As previously discussed, the superior court initially determined that the
    15
    
    Id.
     (emphasis added).
    16
    See Wash. Auto. Co. v. 1828 L St. Assocs., 
    906 A.2d 869
    , 875 n.3 (D.C.
    2006) (holding that a court will not set aside an appraiser’s valuation unless appraisers
    have “mistaken their authority, departed from the submission, clearly misconceived their
    duties, acted upon some fundamental and apparent mistake, or have been moved by fraud
    or bias”); Cent. Life Ins. Co. v. Aetna Cas. & Sur. Co., 
    466 N.W.2d 257
    , 260 (Iowa 1991)
    (“The [appraisal] award will not be set aside unless the complaining party shows fraud,
    mistake or misfeasance on the part of the appraiser or umpire.”); Nelson v. Maiorana,
    
    478 N.E.2d 945
    , 947 (Mass. 1985) (holding a court is justified in overturning an
    appraisal determination only when evidence supports a finding of “fraud, corruption,
    dishonesty, or bad faith in the appraisal process or decision”); Wells v. Am. States
    Preferred Ins. Co., 
    919 S.W.2d 679
    , 683 (Tex. App. 1996) (recognizing an appraisal
    award is not binding if “the award was the result of fraud, accident, or mistake” or “was
    not made in substantial compliance with the terms of the contract”).
    17
    Farmers Auto. Ins. Ass’n, 768 N.W.2d at 607.
    -15-	                                    6784
    plain language of the Agreement showed the parties “intended that the appraisers utilize
    the statutory definition of ‘fair value’ ” in AS 10.06.630(a) and directed the panel to
    reappraise Calais’s fair value “in accordance with the provisions of both the Settlement
    Agreement and AS 10.06.630(a).”18 After MacSwain and Gain responded that they had
    understood and complied with the Agreement’s provisions, the superior court concluded
    that “to inquire further into the merits of the panel’s action or construction of
    AS 10.06.630(a) would . . . exceed the authority granted to it by the parties’ Settlement
    Agreement.”
    Calais argues that the superior court should have interpreted the meaning
    of “fair value” within the context of the Agreement in order to determine whether the
    appraisers had complied with the court’s instructions. Calais argues the court should
    have concluded that the Agreement’s use of the term “fair value,” the Agreement’s
    requirement that all liabilities be taken into account, and the Agreement’s citation to
    AS 10.06.630(a) “together require[d] deductions for capital gains tax liabilities and other
    costs of liquidation.” In response, Ivy argues that neither the superior court nor this court
    has authority to define “fair value” in the context of the Agreement, and she contends
    that the “meaning and effect” of the term “fair value” was “committed to [the] sole
    discretion and expertise” of the appraisers using their own experience, expert opinions,
    and principles of the profession.
    1.	    The court has the authority to interpret the term “fair value”
    within the context of the Agreement.
    We reiterate that under the plain language of the Agreement and persuasive
    case law from other jurisdictions, the court has the authority to resolve disputes
    concerning “any aspect” of the Agreement, enforce “all terms and conditions” of the
    18
    See supra note 3 for the text of the superior court’s order.
    -16-                                       6784
    agreement, and review the appraisers’ process to determine whether they complied with
    the Agreement’s provisions. The superior court (and this court) has the authority to
    construe the term “fair value” within the context of the Agreement. Interpreting a
    contractual term is a legal question for the court,19 not for the appraisers.
    2.	     The plain language of the Agreement shows the parties intended
    “fair value” to mean “liquidation value.”
    “The objective of contract interpretation is to determine and enforce the
    reasonable expectations of the parties.”20 When interpreting contracts, we “[consider]
    the contract’s language as well as relevant extrinsic evidence . . . .”21 “The parties’
    expectations are assessed by examining the language used in the contract, case law
    interpreting similar language, and relevant extrinsic evidence, including subsequent
    conduct of the parties.”22
    The Agreement is unambiguous — it plainly states that the parties intended
    the   appraisers     to    “determine   the    fair   value   of   Calais   in   accordance
    with . . . AS 10.06.630(a),” which provides that “fair value shall be determined on the
    basis of the liquidation value, taking into account the possibility of sale of the entire
    business as a going concern in a liquidation.” The superior court correctly recognized
    this in its first order:
    The Agreement’s reference to AS 10.06.630(a) is telling.
    That subsection describes a mechanism for majority
    shareholders to avoid the dissolution of a corporation at the
    19
    See Smith v. Cleary, 
    24 P.3d 1245
    , 1247 (Alaska 2001).
    20
    Norville v. Carr-Gottstein Foods Co., 
    84 P.3d 996
    , 1004 (Alaska 2004).
    21
    Sowinski v. Walker, 
    198 P.3d 1134
    , 1143-44 (Alaska 2008).
    22
    Norville, 84 P.3d at 1004 (quoting Municipality of Anchorage v. Gentile,
    
    922 P.2d 248
    , 256 (1996)).
    -17-	                                   6784
    request of a minority shareholder by the purchase for cash of
    the minority’s shares “at their fair value,” which is to be
    “determined on the basis of liquidation value, taking into
    account the possibility of sale of the entire business as a
    going concern in a liquidation.”[23]
    In their response to the superior court, the majority appraisers interpreted
    “fair value” as synonymous with “fair market value.” But the Agreement differentiates
    between the two, stating the appraisers shall “determine the fair value of Calais in
    accordance with . . . AS 10.06.630(a),” while “giving due consideration to all Calais
    liabilities and to the fair market value of all Calais assets.” (Emphasis added.) By the
    Agreement’s terms, the “fair market value” of Calais’s assets is just one factor to be
    considered in determining the ultimate “fair value” of Calais. To interpret “fair market
    value” as synonymous with “fair value,” as the majority appraisers suggest, would render
    the Agreement’s distinction meaningless, which would be contrary to our rules of
    contract interpretation.24
    23
    It is clear from the appraisers’ correspondence and methodology that they
    were not appraising Calais under the going concern option, but rather under the
    liquidation of assets option.
    24
    See Rockstad v. Global Fin. & Inv. Co., 
    41 P.3d 583
    , 592-93 (Alaska 2002)
    (“[T]his definition is excluded . . . by the rule disfavoring interpretations that leave
    contract terms meaningless.”). Additionally, we note that the majority appraisers’
    assertion that “fair value, market value, and fair market value” are “virtually
    synonymous” is not supported by professional appraisal treatises. For example, one
    treatise notes that while “market value” is “essentially synonymous” with “fair market
    value,” the term “fair value” in business valuations “is usually a legally created
    standard.” SHANNON P. P RATT & A LINA V. N ICULITA , V ALUING A BUSINESS : THE
    A NALYSIS AND A PPRAISAL OF CLOSELY H ELD COMPANIES 42, 45 (5th ed. 2008). “In
    most states, fair value is the statutory standard of value applicable in cases of dissenting
    stockholders’ appraisal rights” or in “the dissolution statutes of those states in which
    minority stockholders can trigger a corporate dissolution.” Id. at 45. “[P]ublished
    (continued...)
    -18-                                       6784
    3.	    Cases construing “fair value” in the context of dissolution buyout
    statutes, rather than involuntary dissolution statutes, are not
    relevant.
    There is no Alaska case law construing “fair value” under AS 10.06.630(a).
    Ivy cited several cases from other jurisdictions in her briefing to the superior court to
    support her assertion that capital gains taxes should not be deducted when determining
    the “fair value” of a corporation.25 These cases discuss “fair value” in the context of
    dissenter buyout (in contrast to cases discussing “fair value” in the context of statutes
    governing buyout in lieu of involuntary dissolution) and reject deductions for capital
    gains tax liabilities and other costs of liquidation.26 Calais persuasively argues that
    because Ivy’s cases define “fair value” under dissenter buyout statutes, they are not
    relevant for interpreting how the parties here intended “fair value” to be defined: The
    24
    (...continued)
    precedents established in various state courts have not equated [fair value] directly to
    fair market value”; therefore “[w]hen a situation arises of actual or potential stockholder
    dissent or dissolution action, it is necessary to carefully research the legal precedents
    applicable to each case” and to “solicit the view of counsel as to the interpretation of fair
    value.” Id. (emphasis added). As this treatise explains, “fair value” is generally a
    statutory term that is not synonymous with “market value” and “fair market value.” See
    also U NIFORM STANDARDS OF PROFESSIONAL A PPRAISAL PRACTICE at 112-13 (2002)
    (quoting Appraisal Standards Board, AO-8 (1999)) (distinguishing “market value” from
    “fair value” in the context of real property appraisals and stating, “Rarely will market
    value and fair value be exactly the same”).
    25
    See Swope v. Siegel-Robert, Inc., 
    243 F.3d 486
     (8th Cir. 2001); Bogosian
    v. Woloohojian, 
    158 F.3d 1
     (1st Cir. 1998); In re 75,629 Shares of Common Stock of
    Trapp Family Lodge, Inc., 
    725 A.2d 927
     (Vt. 1999); Matthew G. Norton Co. v. Smyth,
    
    51 P.3d 159
     (Wash. App. 2002); Brown v. Arp & Hammond Hardware Co., 
    141 P.3d 673
     (Wyo. 2006).
    26
    See Swope, 
    243 F.3d at 491
    ; Bogosian, 
    158 F.3d at 11
    ; Trapp Family
    Lodge, 
    725 A.2d at 931
    ; Matthew G. Norton Co., 
    51 P.3d at 163
    ; Brown, 141 P.3d at
    688.
    -19-	                                      6784
    Agreement expressly refers to AS 10.06.630(a), which provides the mechanism for a
    corporation to avoid dissolution by purchasing the plaintiff’s shares at fair value, and not
    AS 10.06.574-.580, Alaska’s dissenter buyout statutes.
    There appears to be minimal precedent discussing how to calculate “fair
    value” in the involuntary dissolution context. Calais cites an unpublished case from
    California interpreting an involuntary liquidation buyout statute similar to Alaska’s
    statute in which the California court affirmed a fair value appraisal that deducted taxes
    and other liquidation expenses.27
    We also look to the statutes governing liquidation of a corporation. Under
    AS 10.06.655(a)(1)-(2), a corporation is ready to dissolve when state taxes have been
    paid or provided for, “the other known debts and liabilities of the corporation have been
    paid or adequately provided for,” and the remaining assets have been distributed.
    AS 10.06.665 states that after “all of the known debts and liabilities of a corporation in
    the process of winding up have been paid or adequately provided for,” the remaining
    assets of the corporation shall be distributed to the shareholders according to their
    respective rights. It is hard to imagine how costs of sale and applicable income tax
    liabilities are not a part of this process.
    Ivy asserts that because her rights were obtained through a settlement, fair
    value under AS 10.06.630(a) means something different than liquidation value under the
    dissolution statutes. However, Ivy sued under AS 10.06.628 for an involuntary
    dissolution; Calais was entitled to avoid the involuntary dissolution under AS 10.06.630
    27
    Khatkar v. Dhillon, No. F053322, 
    2009 WL 189846
    , at *11-12 (Cal. App.
    Jan. 28, 2009) (citing Abrams v. Abrams-Rubaloff & Assocs., 
    170 Cal. Rptr. 656
    (Cal. App. 1980)) (affirming appraisal of fair value of plaintiffs’ shares made pursuant
    to California’s involuntary dissolution buyout statute that deducted taxes and other
    liquidation expenses).
    -20-                                    6784
    by ultimately paying Ivy an estimated “fair value” of what she would have received had
    the corporation actually been required to liquidate and dissolve. The parties settled the
    lawsuit by specifically referring to fair value under AS 10.06.630(a). The provision in
    the Agreement for valuing the corporate assets at fair market value was the obvious
    bargained for difference in the normal liquidation process — under AS 10.06.660,
    corporate directors overseeing liquidation have the authority to sell or dispose of all or
    any part of the assets of the corporation as they deem reasonable, i.e., not necessarily at
    fair market value.
    Though relevant case law is scarce, we conclude that Calais’s argument is
    more persuasive. Because the Agreement specifically references Alaska’s involuntary
    dissolution statute for purposes of determining “fair value,” and because an appraisal of
    fair value under involuntary dissolution statutes deducts capital gains tax liabilities and
    other liquidation expenses, the appraisal of fair value in this case should also deduct
    these liabilities and expenses.
    4.     Summary
    The court has the authority to interpret the Agreement and enforce its terms
    by determining whether the appraisal panel complied with the appraisal process
    mandated by the Agreement. The plain language of the Agreement demonstrates that the
    parties intended “fair value” to mean “liquidation value” under AS 10.06.630(a).28
    28
    We agree with the superior court’s analysis in its February 2, 2010 Order:
    The parties’ decision to refer to the definition of “fair value”
    in AS 10.06.630(a) must have been meaningful and, in order
    that the parties’ decision and Agreement are enforced, it has
    to be given effect. The parties’ use of the term “fair value,”
    in their instructions to the appraisers “to determine the fair
    value of Calais” and the reference to a statutory definition of
    (continued...)
    -21-                                       6784
    Because the record shows that the majority appraisers did not take into account capital
    gains taxes or liquidation costs when they calculated the “fair value” of Calais, we
    remand the appraisal to the superior court to remand to the appraisal panel with explicit
    instructions to calculate “fair value” as defined by AS 10.06.630(a), the other terms of
    the Agreement, and this opinion.
    5.    The appraisal panel is required to work together as a panel.
    Because the appraisal panel will need to determine “fair value” on remand,
    we take this opportunity to provide guidance to the superior court should the situation
    recur where one of the appraisers is excluded by the others from the appraisal process.
    Although the Agreement permits the final valuation of Calais to be determined by a
    majority of the three appraisers, the express terms of the Agreement indicate that the
    parties intended the panel of appraisers to be composed of three members at all times.
    The Agreement also refers to the appraisal procedure as a “process” in which all three
    appraisers would participate. The Agreement states that if one of the appraisers selected
    by Ivy or Calais became disabled or was “otherwise unable to complete the appraisal
    process,” Ivy or Calais “shall have the right to select a substitute appraiser to begin the
    appraisal process anew,” and that if the third appraiser became unable to serve, “a
    substitute appraiser shall be appointed by the court . . . .” The Agreement also states “the
    appraisers as a group may in their discretion communicate as needed with any other
    party, individual, or entity” for obtaining information necessary to complete “the
    appraisal process.” (Emphasis added.)
    The record reveals that MacSwain and Gain effectively excluded Lowe
    28
    (...continued)
    “fair value,” can only reasonably be construed to mean the
    parties intended that the appraisers utilize the statutory
    definition of “fair value.”
    -22-                                     6784
    from the initial appraisal process and from discussions the two may have had following
    the superior court’s February 2010 remand order. An appraisal panel works together like
    an arbitration panel or a panel of judges — the panel members may individually prepare,
    but they meet together as a panel to discuss their case and come to their decision. Just
    because one panel member dissents from the majority’s consensus does not mean the
    majority may exclude the dissenter from meetings and deliberations of the panel. By the
    Agreement’s terms, excluding Lowe violated the parties’ intent that all three appraisers
    were to work together in an effort to come to an appraised fair value of Calais. The three
    were not required to agree, but they were required to work together as a panel in good
    faith.
    On remand the superior court shall direct the appraisal panel to work
    together as a panel pursuant to the terms of the Agreement.
    V.       CONCLUSION
    We REVERSE the superior court’s final order. Because the majority
    appraisers failed to comply with the Agreement and its requirement that their appraisal
    of Calais’s fair value be determined in accordance with the Agreement and
    AS 10.06.630(a), giving due consideration to all Calais liabilities, we REMAND the
    appraisal to the superior court to remand to the panel with instructions to calculate the
    fair value of Calais as defined by AS10.06.630(a), other terms of the Agreement, and this
    opinion. The court shall also direct the appraisal panel to work together as a panel in its
    appraisal process.
    -23-                                      6784