Davies v. Fountaingrove Lodge CA1/5 ( 2021 )


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  • Filed 1/19/21 Davies v. Fountaingrove Lodge CA1/5
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
    California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
    publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or
    ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION FIVE
    JUNE DAVIES, an Incompetent
    Person, etc.,
    Plaintiff and Respondent,                                  A160522
    v.                                                                     (Sonoma County
    FOUNTAINGROVE LODGE, LLC,                                              Super. Ct. No. SCV265963)
    et al.,
    Defendants and Appellants.
    This case concerns an appeal from an order denying a motion to
    dismiss or, in the alternative, to compel arbitration. Plaintiff and respondent
    June Davies was admitted to the memory care unit of appellant’s residential
    care facility.1 The “Residence and Services Agreement” (the Residence
    Agreement) between the parties was signed for Davies by Jolynn Lima. This
    agreement requires informal dispute resolution and arbitration. Without
    fulfilling these requirements, Davies filed a complaint against Oakmont.
    Appellants are Fountaingrove Lodge, LLC, Oakmont Senior Living,
    1
    LLC, and Oakmont Management Group, LLC (collectively, Oakmont).
    Fountaingrove Lodge is the particular facility at issue, and its memory care
    unit is called The Terraces.
    1
    Oakmont appeals the trial court’s denial of its motion to dismiss that
    complaint or, in the alternative, to compel arbitration. We affirm.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    In March 2016, Davies was admitted to Fountaingrove Lodge, a
    residential care facility for the elderly in Santa Rosa, California. In
    November 2017, she was admitted to The Terraces, the memory care unit
    of Fountaingrove Lodge, where she remained until September 2019.
    In November 2017, Lima signed the Residence Agreement for The
    Terraces.2 In doing so, Lima identified herself as the holder of Davies’s
    financial power of attorney. Although evidence of the exact scope of her
    authority was never presented to the trial court (a circumstance we discuss
    below), the parties do not dispute the general characterization that Lima held
    a financial power of attorney, and not one denominated as a health care
    power of attorney.
    The Residence Agreement includes an informal dispute resolution
    clause, which provides in part that if a dispute arises, “before taking any
    legal action, [the parties] will first meet and confer informally in good faith to
    try to resolve any such dispute.” If this process failed, the parties agreed to
    submit the dispute to “formal non-binding mediation.” The Residence
    Agreement also contains an arbitration clause providing in part that “[b]oth
    parties give up their constitutional rights to have any such dispute decided in
    a court of law before a jury, and instead accept the use of arbitration.”
    In February 2020, about five months after leaving the facility, Davies,
    acting by and through her guardian ad litem, Cynthia Kennedy, filed a
    2The terms of the original agreement for placement at Fountaingrove
    Lodge in 2016 were not presented to the trial court, it is not part of the record
    on appeal, and the parties do not discuss it. We presume this other
    agreement, if there was one, is not material to the questions we address.
    2
    complaint alleging causes of action including negligence and elder neglect.
    Kennedy was also the holder of Davies’s health care power of attorney.
    Oakmont moved to dismiss or, in the alternative, to compel arbitration based
    on the informal dispute resolution and arbitration provisions in the
    Residence Agreement.
    Davies opposed the motion relying on Hutcheson v. Eskaton
    FountainWood Lodge (2017) 
    17 Cal.App.5th 937
    , 957 (Hutcheson), which
    holds that admission to the residential care facility at issue was a “health
    care decision” under the Health Care Decisions Law, Probate Code section
    4600 et seq. Below, Davies argued that her admission to The Terraces was a
    health care decision, and, as a result, the arbitration agreement is not
    enforceable because Kennedy—not Lima—is authorized to make health care
    decisions for Davies.3
    Oakmont did not have an opportunity to file a reply brief because the
    trial court was closed in the spring of 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
    After it resumed operations, the trial court held a hearing on the motion. The
    trial court acknowledged Oakmont had no opportunity to reply, but assumed
    it would “get any sort of argument or additional authority cited at oral
    argument.” Prior to the hearing, the court issued a tentative decision
    denying the motion and saying, in part: “Defendants make no effort to
    3  In Hutcheson, supra, 17 Cal.App.5th at pages 949 to 950, the court
    found that admission to the residential care facility at issue was a health care
    decision in part because the facility “agreed to provide dementia care as part
    of its custodial care.” Here, the record indicates The Terraces is the facility’s
    memory care unit and its program “is designed for residents who have a
    diagnosis . . . of dementia or . . . [for whom] it has been determined that the
    services offered . . . are in the best interest of the resident.” Services
    available included “dementia care.” Accordingly, admission to The Terraces
    was a health care decision.
    3
    demonstrate that Lima had the power to make healthcare decisions for
    plaintiff.”
    At the hearing, Oakmont argued Hutcheson was distinguishable
    because, in Hutcheson, “the arbitration agreement was . . . entered into
    automatically when the admission agreement was executed,” but, in Davies’s
    agreement, “the arbitration agreement was not something that was necessary
    or part and parcel of the admission agreement. It was something that could
    be voluntarily entered into or not entered into by the person who signed for
    the resident. In this case, the person who signed was a financial power of
    attorney and she did decide to enter into that arbitration agreement.”
    According to Oakmont, “the arbitration agreement standing alone is not the
    healthcare decision,” and was more akin to a financial decision. Oakmont
    never contended that Lima had the authority to make a health care decision.
    After hearing the parties’ arguments, the trial court denied the motion
    reiterating that Oakmont made “no effort to demonstrate that Lima had the
    power to make healthcare decisions for” Davies, and, as a result, “the
    arbitration agreement is void.” Oakmont filed a timely notice of appeal.
    DISCUSSION
    On appeal, Oakmont makes three arguments. First, based on the
    specific language of Davies’s financial power of attorney (POA), Oakmont
    contends Lima had actual authority to enter into contracts with nursing
    homes and similar establishments. Second, Oakmont argues Lima had
    ostensible authority to sign the Residence Agreement. Third, Oakmont
    claims that even if Lima’s execution of the Residence Agreement is not
    enforceable, her execution of the arbitration provision therein remains valid
    and enforceable. We disagree and affirm.
    4
    I.     Standard of Review
    Under federal and California law, there is a strong public policy in
    favor of arbitration as an expeditious and cost-effective way of resolving
    disputes. (Stolt-Nielsen S.A. v. AnimalFeeds International Corp. (2010)
    
    559 U.S. 662
    , 681–683; Moncharsh v. Heily & Blase (1992) 
    3 Cal.4th 1
    , 9.)
    “Even so, parties can only be compelled to arbitrate when they have agreed to
    do so. [Citation.] ‘Arbitration . . . is a matter of consent, not coercion.’ ”
    (Avila v. Southern California Specialty Care, Inc. (2018) 
    20 Cal.App.5th 835
    ,
    843; Suh v. Superior Court (2010) 
    181 Cal.App.4th 1504
    , 1512 [“ ‘[e]ven the
    strong public policy in favor of arbitration does not extend to those who are
    not parties to an arbitration agreement or who have not authorized anyone to
    act for them in executing such an agreement’ ”].) The party seeking to compel
    arbitration bears the burden of proving the existence of a valid arbitration
    agreement. (Garrison v. Superior Court (2005) 
    132 Cal.App.4th 253
    , 263.)
    II.    Actual Authority
    Oakmont’s first argument is that, according to the language of the
    financial POA, Lima had actual authority to contract with nursing homes or
    similar establishments and, thus, had the authority to sign the Residence
    Agreement. This argument was not made in the trial court, and it is based
    on a document—the financial POA—that Oakmont did not even present to
    the trial court. Oakmont requests we take judicial notice of it in the first
    instance. Davies opposes the request.
    We deny the request for judicial notice because the financial POA was
    not presented below. (Brosterhous v. State Bar (1995) 
    12 Cal.4th 315
    , 325–
    326 [“An appellate court may properly decline to take judicial notice under
    Evidence Code sections 452 and 459 of a matter which should have been
    presented to the trial court for its consideration in the first instance.”];
    5
    DeYoung v. Del Mar Thoroughbred Club (1984) 
    159 Cal.App.3d 858
    , 863
    [“ ‘[A]s a general rule, the court should not take [judicial] notice if, upon
    examination of the entire record, it appears that the matter has not been
    presented to and considered by the trial court in the first instance.’ ”].)
    Although reviewing courts may “take evidence relating to any facts occurring
    at any time prior to appeal,” this rule “is not available where there is no good
    cause shown for the unavailability of the evidence below.” (DeYoung, at
    p. 863, fn. 3.)
    Here, Oakmont claims good cause for failing to present the financial
    POA below because COVID-19 restrictions made it impossible to file a reply
    brief. Oakmont asserts “[t]he reply would have been the instance where
    presenting [the financial POA] to the trial court would have occurred.” But
    the record indicates Oakmont obtained a copy of the financial POA in March
    2020, over three months before the July hearing on the motion to compel
    arbitration. Oakmont does not explain why it failed to offer a copy of the
    financial POA into evidence at the hearing, or make any reference to it or its
    terms. Having failed to show good cause, we deny Oakmont’s request for
    judicial notice of the financial POA, and we decline to consider Oakmont’s
    argument that relies on its terms. (Doers v. Golden Gate Bridge etc. Dist.
    (1979) 
    23 Cal.3d 180
    , 184, fn. 1 [“ ‘points not urged in the trial court may not
    be advanced on appeal’ ”]; In re Zeth S. (2003) 
    31 Cal.4th 396
    , 405 [“It has
    long been the general rule and understanding that ‘an appeal reviews the
    correctness of a judgment as of the time of its rendition, upon a record of
    matters which were before the trial court for its consideration.’ ”].)
    Even considering the argument, Oakmont’s assertion that Lima had
    actual authority to sign the Residence Agreement fails. The proffered
    financial POA provides, in section 4.01, that Lima has the power to “[m]ake
    6
    all necessary arrangements, contractual or otherwise, for [Davies’s] care at
    any hospital, hospice, nursing home, convalescent home or similar
    establishment.” Based on this provision, Oakmont contends that Lima was
    authorized to contract with it because it operates a nursing home or similar
    establishment.
    However, in opposition to Oakmont’s motion to compel arbitration,
    Davies filed a declaration from Kennedy and a copy of Davies’s “Advance
    Health Care Directive,” which identifies Kennedy as her agent for health care
    decisions. This health care POA is dated November 2015, about four months
    prior to Davies’s admission to Oakmont’s facilities. As part of the admission
    process, Kennedy identified herself to Oakmont as Davies’s “agent for health
    care decisions,” and she gave them a copy of the health care POA. Kennedy
    avers the staff treated her as Davies’s agent for health care decisions,
    including when Davies was moved to The Terraces in November 2017.
    Oakmont does not dispute this evidence.4
    4 At oral argument, Oakmont relied on Kennedy’s declaration (filed
    below in opposition to its motion to compel arbitration) to argue Kennedy
    participated in, and consented to, Davies’s transfer to the memory care unit,
    even if Kennedy did not sign the Residence Agreement. We could decline to
    consider this argument because it was not made in Oakmont’s appellate
    briefs. Indeed, Oakmont did not even include Kennedy’s declaration in the
    appellant’s appendix. But even considering the argument, it does not
    establish that Lima, the person who did sign the Residence Agreement on
    Davies’s behalf, had authority to do so. Kennedy signed three of numerous
    documents appended to the Residence Agreement. One of these indicates
    Davies did not wish to be resuscitated in the event of a medical emergency.
    Another, which describes “Residents Rights,” was signed by both Lima and
    Kennedy. These facts hurt rather than help Oakmont’s case. If Kennedy was
    present or available when Lima signed the Residence Agreement, then why
    didn’t Oakmont require that both Lima and Kennedy sign it? Indeed, the
    signature page of the Residence Agreement contains signature lines for two
    representatives of the resident, but only Lima signed it on behalf of Davies.
    7
    Section 4685 of the Probate Code provides that “[u]nless the power of
    attorney for health care provides otherwise, the agent designated in the
    power of attorney who is known to the health care provider to be reasonably
    available and willing to make health care decisions has priority over any
    other person in making health care decisions for the principal.”
    Here, Oakmont was aware that Kennedy was Davies’s agent for health
    care decisions, and the record indicates she was available and willing to
    make such decisions. The decision to admit Davies to The Terraces was a
    health care decision, and Kennedy had priority in making heath care
    decisions. Therefore, any authority Lima might have had to sign the
    agreement was superseded or trumped by Kennedy’s authority. (Hutcheson,
    supra, 17 Cal.App.5th at p. 956 [“[A] person named as an attorney in fact in a
    health care POA may not necessarily have exclusive authority to make health
    care decisions on behalf of her principal. But such an attorney in fact ‘has
    priority over any other person in making health care decisions’ for the
    resident so long as the attorney in fact ‘is known to the health care provider
    to be reasonably available and willing to make health care decisions.’ ”].)
    III.   Ostensible Authority
    Next, Oakmont claims Lima “had at least ostensible authority to sign
    the Residence Agreement.” “An agency is ostensible when the principal
    intentionally, or by want of ordinary care, causes a third person to believe
    another to be [her] agent . . . .” (Civ. Code, § 2300.) Based on the terms of the
    financial POA, Oakmont contends it was “justified and not negligent in
    believing Lima had the authority to sign the Residence Agreement.”
    For the reasons explained ante, we certainly could decline to consider
    this argument, which was not made below, and which relies on the terms of
    the financial POA, a document not presented below. (See, e.g., In re Zeth S.,
    8
    
    supra,
     31 Cal.4th at p. 405.) But even considered on its merits, we are not
    persuaded Lima had ostensible authority.
    “ ‘[A]n agency cannot be created by the conduct of the agent alone;
    rather, conduct by the principal is essential to create the agency.’ ”
    (Hutcheson, supra, 17 Cal.App.5th at p. 958.) Ostensible agency requires
    “ ‘ “some intentional conduct or neglect on the part of the alleged principal
    creating a belief in the minds of third persons that an agency exists, and
    a reasonable reliance thereon by such third persons.” ’ ” (Ibid.; Garcia v.
    KND Development 52, LLC (2020) 
    58 Cal.App.5th 736
    , 745 [affirming denial
    of petition to compel arbitration because appellants failed to show patient,
    through his conduct, conferred authority on family members to execute
    arbitration agreements].)
    Here, Oakmont identifies no facts showing Davies intentionally or
    negligently caused it to believe Lima was her agent for health care decisions.
    Oakmont claims Davies “held out Lima as her agent empowered to enter into
    the Residence Agreement.” But its only support for this claim is the fact that
    Lima executed the Residence Agreement. This fact is insufficient to establish
    intentional conduct or neglect on the part of the principal, Davies.
    (Pagarigan v. Libby Care Center, Inc. (2002) 
    99 Cal.App.4th 298
    , 301
    [rejecting nursing home’s contention that daughters’ act of signing
    agreements created agency status and explaining that conduct by the
    principal was necessary].) Furthermore, the record suggests that Oakmont
    did not have a copy of the financial POA, which contains the language that
    is arguably the basis of Lima’s broader ostensible authority, until after this
    lawsuit was filed.
    Finally, a third person dealing with the agent “ ‘takes the risk not only
    of ascertaining whether the person with whom he [or she] is dealing is the
    9
    agent, but also of ascertaining the scope of his [or her] powers.’ ” (Young v.
    Horizon West, Inc. (2013) 
    220 Cal.App.4th 1122
    , 1134.) Here, even though
    Oakmont was aware that Kennedy was Davies’s agent for health care
    decisions, and that Lima purported to be Davies’s agent for financial
    decisions, there is nothing in the record to indicate Oakmont took steps to
    ascertain the scope of Lima’s powers. Of course, had it done so, Probate Code
    section 4685 would have required Oakmont to seek Kennedy’s superseding
    consent. At best, Lima’s ostensible authority could not trump Kennedy’s
    authority as Davies’s agent under the health care POA. Consequently,
    Oakmont’s theory of ostensible authority fails.
    IV.   Separability of the Arbitration Clause
    Oakmont contends we should “analyze enforceability of the arbitration
    agreement separately from the admission agreement.” Oakmont claims that
    “even if it is found that Lima did not have authority to sign the Residence
    Agreement because that was a healthcare decision . . . her execution of the
    arbitration agreement is valid.”
    In making this argument, Oakmont relies primarily on Flores v.
    Evergreen at San Diego, LLC (2007) 
    148 Cal.App.4th 581
    , 594, and Young v.
    Horizon West, Inc., supra, 220 Cal.App.4th at p. 1129. Both of these cases
    affirmed the denial of motions to compel arbitration, and they stand for
    the proposition that the power to make a health care decision does not
    necessarily include the power to agree to arbitrate a dispute arising from the
    provision of health care. (Flores, at pp. 592–594; Young, at p. 1129.) But
    here Oakmont seeks to reverse this principle, arguing Lima had the power
    to bind Davies to arbitration even if she did not have the power to make
    health care decisions for Davies.
    10
    “Both federal and California law now hold that, in the absence of a
    specific attack on an arbitration agreement, such agreement generally must
    be enforced even if one party asserts the invalidity of the contract that
    contains it.” (St. Agnes Medical Center v. PacifiCare of California (2003)
    
    31 Cal.4th 1187
    , 1198.) However, “[i]f a party can show that it did not know
    it was signing a contract, or that it did not enter into a contract at all, both
    the contract and its arbitration clause are void for lack of mutual assent.”
    (Id. at p. 1200.)
    The court in St. Agnes Medical Center cited its discussion in Rosenthal
    v. Great Western Fin. Securities Corp. (1996) 
    14 Cal.4th 394
    . In Rosenthal,
    the question of the enforceability of an arbitration clause turned on whether
    the underlying contract was alleged to be void because of “fraud in the
    execution,” or merely voidable because of “fraud in the inducement.” (Id. at
    pp. 415–417.) In the former circumstance, no contract would exist ab initio
    and, thus, any arbitration clause contained therein would be unenforceable.
    (Id. at p. 416.)
    These cases are consistent with the strong public policy in favor of
    arbitration, but only to the extent the agreement to arbitrate reflects the
    mutual consent of the parties. (Avila v. Southern California Specialty Care,
    Inc., supra, 20 Cal.App.5th at p. 843.) Where no agreement was reached in
    the first instance, neither a contract purporting to represent that agreement
    nor its provisions are enforceable. (See, e.g., Three Valleys Municipal Water
    District v. E.F. Hutton & Co., Inc. (9th Cir. 1991) 
    925 F.2d 1136
    , 1138 [party
    resisting arbitration claimed contract was invalid because unauthorized
    individual signed it].)
    That is the situation before us. Oakmont knew Kennedy was available
    and willing to make health care decisions for Davies, but Oakmont relied on
    11
    Lima to sign the Residence Agreement including its arbitration clause.
    Under Probate Code section 4685, Kennedy had priority regarding health
    care decisions, and, under Hutcheson, supra, 17 Cal.App.5th at pages 945 to
    957, admission to a facility like The Terraces is a health care decision.
    Because Kennedy should have executed the Residence Agreement, “both the
    contract and its arbitration clause are void for lack of mutual assent.” (St.
    Agnes Medical Center v. PacifiCare of California, supra, 31 Cal.4th at
    p. 1200.) Oakmont’s attempt to enforce the arbitration agreement fails.5
    Oakmont’s final argument is that the complaint should be dismissed
    because Davies did not follow the “contractually-mandated” alternative
    dispute resolution procedures. Having found that the contract is void
    because Kennedy should have executed it, we reject the argument.
    5 Davies claims the trial court determined “the arbitration agreement
    was void,” but it “did not issue a ruling as to the validity of the Residence
    Agreement as a whole.” Whether or not the trial court did so, we conclude
    the agreement as a whole is void. The California Law Revision Commission
    sponsored the bill that enacted Probate Code section 4685, which is part of
    the Health Care Decisions Law. (Assem. Com. on Judiciary, Analysis of
    Assem. Bill No. 891 (1999–2000 Reg. Sess.) as amended Apr. 15, 1999, p. 5.)
    According to its sponsor, the bill’s guiding principle is “ ‘to effectuate the
    stated desires of the patient, as set out in an advance directive or, in the
    absence of such a directive, as expressed by the patient to authorized
    surrogate decisionmakers.’ ” (Ibid.) The parties do not dispute that
    executing the agreement for admission to The Terraces was a health care
    decision. In determining this agreement is void, we effectuate the desires of
    Davies, who designated Kennedy as her agent for health care decisions in an
    advance directive. Moreover, the requirement to respect Kennedy’s “priority
    over any other person in making health care decisions” derives in part from
    the nature of such decisions, which generally “cannot be parceled out” among
    different decisionmakers. (Recommendation: Health Care Decisions for
    Adults Without Decisionmaking Capacity (Dec. 1998) 29 Cal. Law Revision
    Com. Rep. (1999) p. 31.)
    12
    DISPOSITION
    We affirm the order denying the motion to dismiss or, in the
    alternative, to compel arbitration. Davies is awarded costs on appeal. (Cal.
    Rules of Court, rule 8.278(a).)
    13
    _________________________
    Reardon, J.*
    WE CONCUR:
    _________________________
    Simons, Acting P. J.
    _________________________
    Burns, J.
    A160522
    * Judge of the Superior Court of Alameda County, assigned by the Chief
    Justice pursuant to article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.
    14