AmSouth Bank v. Charles Quimby ( 2006 )


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  •                    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI
    NO. 2006-CA-00826-SCT
    AMSOUTH BANK
    v.
    CHARLES QUIMBY
    DATE OF JUDGMENT:                         05/10/2006
    TRIAL JUDGE:                              HON. ROBERT G. EVANS
    COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED:                SMITH COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT
    ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT:                   E. BARNEY ROBINSON, III
    ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE:                   STANLEY A. SOREY
    EUGENE C. TULLOS
    NATURE OF THE CASE:                       CIVIL - CONTRACT
    DISPOSITION:                              AFFIRMED - 09/06/2007
    MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:
    MANDATE ISSUED:
    BEFORE WALLER, P.J., EASLEY AND GRAVES, JJ.
    WALLER, PRESIDING JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:
    ¶1.    Charles Quimby filed a complaint in the Circuit Court of Smith County against
    AmSouth Bank and American Heritage Life Insurance Company alleging that their failure
    to pay benefits under a credit disability insurance policy constituted a tortious breach of
    contract and caused him emotional distress. Both defendants filed answers, and AmSouth
    filed a motion to compel arbitration. The circuit court denied the motion to compel
    arbitration, and from its amended order, AmSouth now appeals.1 Under the rule announced
    1
    American Heritage filed a motion for summary judgment prior to the hearing on the
    motion to compel arbitration and so remains a defendant below. It has not joined in this
    in Tupelo Auto Sales, Ltd. v. Scott, 
    844 So. 2d 1167
     (Miss. 2003), this court has jurisdiction
    over this appeal.
    FACTS
    ¶2.    In 1985, Charles Quimby opened a line of credit with Deposit Guaranty National
    Bank. Deposit Guaranty is a predecessor to AmSouth Bank, having merged with AmSouth
    on December 31, 1999.2 There is no signature card for the line of credit account in the record
    nor is there an original contract in the record covering this account. In his complaint,
    Quimby alleges that at the time he opened the line of credit, he requested credit disability
    insurance.   On February 9, 2000, AmSouth mailed a Customer Agreement to each
    Mississippi resident with an open account. The agreement covered ‘the use of any type of
    depository account you have with us, both personal and nonpersonal, except for time
    deposits, certificates of deposit, and IRAs.’       It contained new terms for these accounts,
    notably including an arbitration clause.
    ¶3.    According to his complaint, Quimby became disabled on June 15, 2000. He
    demanded benefits from American Heritage, which denied he is covered under any credit
    disability policy. Having been denied what he thought was due, Quimby filed suit in 2005
    to recover the benefits plus compensatory damages for emotional distress and punitive
    damages for tortious breach of contract. AmSouth answered, raising arbitration as a defense,
    and subsequently filed a motion to compel arbitration.
    appeal.
    2
    Quimby had previously opened two separate checking accounts in 1981 and 1982
    with First National Bank of Laurel, and a savings account in 1984 with Deposit Guaranty.
    First National Bank of Laurel also merged with AmSouth prior to December 1999.
    2
    ¶4.    After a hearing on the motion, the circuit court sent a letter to counsel explaining it
    would deny the motion and the basis of its ruling:
    From the pleadings, briefs, exhibits, and authorities filed in connection
    with the above encaptioned matter, the following is clear:
    1.    The “Amendment to Customer Agreement” was effective March
    17, 2000;
    2.    The plaintiff (according to his complaint) became disabled in
    June of 2000; and
    3.    The arbitration clause became effective March 1, 2004.
    It is my opinion that since the plaintiff’s cause of action accrued almost
    four (4) years prior to the effective date of the arbitration agreement, the
    bank’s motion to compel arbitration and stay proceedings should be denied.
    It is also my opinion that this case is controlled by B. C. Rogers Poultry, et al
    v. Wedgeworth, 
    2005 WL 2234777
     (Miss ).
    I do not believe that the bank can rely on the March 17, 2000
    “Amendment of Customer Agreement” because while said document does say
    the bank can change the customer agreement at any time, it does not say that
    future changes would relate back to March 17, 2000. Again, I think this is
    squarely in line with the ruling in the Rogers v. Wedgeworth case, despite
    Judge Lee’s 2001 opinion in Beneficial National Bank, et al v. Payton, 
    214 F. 2d
     679.
    After AmSouth filed a supplemental motion to compel arbitration, the circuit court wrote
    another letter to counsel which provided in relevant part:
    I read and considered Mr. Robinson’s October 19 letter and
    supplemental motion, together with the “intervening evidence,” the “Second
    Affidavit of Kimberly Burkhalter.” I compared this affidavit with Ms.
    Burkhalter’s first one paragraph-by-paragraph and found the changes of little
    or no import. I found nothing to change the dates I felt controlling in my
    October 18 letter. Further, other than reading Rogers v. Wedgeworth different
    from me, the supplemented amended motion to compel arbitration simply
    appears to rehash matters I have already decided.
    3
    In its Amended Order Denying Motion to Compel Arbitration, the court incorporated these
    letters as the rationale for its ruling. The amended order itself includes no other grounds for
    denying the motion to compel arbitration. AmSouth appealed.
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    ¶5.    An order denying a motion to compel arbitration raises a question of law and is
    subject to de novo review. Smith v. Captain D’s, LLC, ___ So. 2d ___, 2006-CA-00024-
    SCT, ¶ 9 (June 14, 2007); East Ford, Inc. v. Taylor, 
    826 So. 2d 709
    , 713 (Miss. 2002). At
    this stage, this court’s review is limited to a two-pronged inquiry: “The first prong has two
    considerations: (1) whether there is a valid arbitration agreement and (2) whether the parties'
    dispute is within the scope of the arbitration agreement. . . . Under the second prong, the
    United States Supreme Court has stated the question is ‘whether legal constraints external
    to the parties' agreement foreclosed arbitration of those claims.’” East Ford, Inc., 
    826 So. 2d
     at 713 (quoting Mitsubishi Motors Corp. v. Soler Chrysler-Plymouth, Inc., 
    473 U.S. 614
    ,
    626, 
    105 S. Ct. 3346
    , 
    87 L. Ed. 2d 444
     (1985)). Under the second prong, applicable contract
    defenses available under state contract law such as fraud, duress, and unconscionability may
    be asserted to invalidate the arbitration agreement without offending the Federal Arbitration
    Act. Id. (citing Doctor's Assocs., Inc. v. Casarotto, 
    517 U.S. 681
    , 686, 
    116 S. Ct. 1652
    , 
    134 L. Ed. 2d 902
     (1996)). We find that Quimby’s claims do not fall within the scope of a valid
    arbitration clause in AmSouth’s Customer Agreements, and hold that the circuit court’s
    judgment is correct and is hereby affirmed.
    DISCUSSION
    4
    ¶6.    The circuit court’s judgment denying the motion to compel arbitration rests primarily
    upon this court’s opinion in B.C. Rogers Poultry, Inc. v. Wedgeworth, 
    911 So. 2d 483
     (Miss.
    2005). AmSouth devotes half of its brief to arguing that the circuit court misapplied its
    holding, reaching an incorrect result and requiring reversal. Quimby responds that the
    arbitration agreement came into effect after his claims arose, and the agreement does not
    cover the claims in his complaint which concern his credit disability insurance policy. He
    also counters by raising contract defenses available under state law which operate to
    invalidate the arbitration clauses.   The Wedgeworth opinion and the circuit court’s
    application are discussed below.
    ¶7.    In the Wedgeworth case, a poultry grower, Wedgeworth, contracted with a poultry
    processor, B.C. Rogers, to house and care for B.C. Rogers’s live inventory. Wedgeworth,
    911 So. 2d at 485. The written contract between the parties contained an arbitration clause
    whose scope included ‘all disputes arising under this agreement.’ Id. No other contract
    between the parties contained such a clause, and this clause did not state that it was
    applicable to disputes which existed before the contract’s execution. Id. at 487. When
    Wedgeworth sued B.C. Rogers for coercion and interference with contracts, events which
    occurred prior to the execution of the contract between them, B.C. Rogers moved to compel
    arbitration. The circuit court denied the motion to compel arbitration. On appeal, this court
    found that the scope of the arbitration agreement did not include the disputes in
    Wedgeworth’s complaint nor did the arbitration clause’s terms apply retroactively. Id. at
    489. The circuit court’s judgment was affirmed.
    5
    I.     Whether the trial court erred by incorrectly applying B.C. Rogers Poultry, Inc.
    v. Wedgeworth, 
    911 So. 2d 483
     (Miss. 2005), and finding the arbitration
    provisions in AmSouth’s March 1, 2004, Account Agreement not broad enough
    in temporal scope to cover a preexisting claim.
    ¶8.    AmSouth argues that three distinctions between the present case and Wedgeworth
    make the circuit court’s reliance upon that case misplaced: (1) The arbitration provisions in
    this case are broader than those in Wedgeworth; (2) the March 17, 2000, and October 4,
    2004, Customer Agreements contained an applicable arbitration clause that covered disputes
    prior to Quimby’s alleged disability and lawsuit, unlike Wedgeworth’s limited coverage; and
    (3) Wedgeworth’s contract did not contain a First Options clause referring questions of
    arbitrability explicitly to the arbitrator.
    ¶9.    First, AmSouth argues that the terms of its arbitration agreement in its Customer
    Agreements are broader than the terms in Wedgeworth. Three revised Customer Agreements
    are in the record.3 They will be referenced by their effective dates: March 17, 2000; March
    1, 2004; and October 4, 2004. Their scope and terms are examined below.
    ¶10.   The March 17, 2000, revision of AmSouth’s Customer Agreement covered “the use
    of any type of depository account you have with us, both personal and nonpersonal, except
    for time deposits, certificates of deposit, and IRAs.” It defined depository account as “any
    type of account to which funds may be deposited.” The arbitration clause read in pertinent
    part as follows:
    Any controversy, claim, or dispute between us (or between you and any of our
    employees, agents, representatives, parent or affiliated companies, or any of
    3
    Also, one amendment to the March 1, 2004, Agreement is applicable to “depository
    accounts” whose arbitration terms are identical to the March 2004 Customer Agreement.
    6
    their employees) shall be settled by arbitration as set forth below. Such
    arbitration shall include, without limitations, any dispute or controversy
    regarding or pertaining in any way to any of the following (a) this agreement;
    (b) the Account; (c) any charge or cost incurred under this Agreement or the
    Account; (d) the collection of any amounts due under this Agreement or the
    Account; (e) any contract or alleged tort related to or arising out of your
    business or relationship with us; and (f) any statements or representations
    made to you. . . . Any disagreement as to whether a particular dispute or claim
    is subject to arbitration under this paragraph shall be decided by arbitration in
    accordance with the provisions of this paragraph. . . . WITH RESPECT TO
    DISPUTES SUBMITTED TO ARBITRATION, YOU AND WE EACH
    WAIVE ALL RIGHT TO A TRIAL BY JURY.
    Also part of the March 2000 Customer Agreement was language permitting unilateral
    revision of the agreement. Acceptance of the revised terms was made “[b]y continuing to
    maintain your account.”
    ¶11.   The March 1, 2004, Customer Agreement covered “[Time Deposits or Certificates of
    Deposit, and Individual Retirement Accounts]. . . ; and any other type of depository account,
    both personal and nonpersonal. . . . As used herein, the term “account” shall mean and
    include any Time Deposit, Certificate, IRA or Deposit Account you have with us from time
    to time. The provisions in this Section 1 shall apply to all accounts you may have with us
    from time to time.” The arbitration clause was contained in Section 6. The pertinent March
    1, 2004, revision read as follows:
    Except as expressly provided below, any controversy, claim, dispute or
    disagreement (any “Claim”) arising out of, or in connection with or relating to
    (1) the interpretation, execution, administration or modification of the
    Agreement; (2) any account; (3) any charge or cost incurred pursuant to the
    Agreement; (4) the collection of any amounts due under the Agreement or any
    account; (5) any alleged tort arising out of or relating in any way to the
    Agreement or any account; (6) any breach of any provision of the Agreement;
    (7) any statements or representations made to you with respect to the
    Agreement or any account; or (8) any of the foregoing arising out of, in
    connection with, or relating to any agreement which relates to the Agreement
    7
    or any account; will be settled by binding arbitration with the Federal
    Arbitration Act.
    The agreement also stated that by continuing to maintain the account, the customer agreed
    to the revised terms.
    ¶12.   The October 4, 2004, Customer Agreement covers:
    the use of the following accounts you may have with us: any AmSouth Time
    Deposit . . . or AmSouth Certificate of Deposit . . . ; any AmSouth Individual
    Retirement Account . . . ; and any other type of depository account, both
    personal and nonpersonal. . . . As used herein, the term “account” shall mean
    and include any Time Deposit, Certificate, IRA or Deposit Account you have
    with us from time to time. The provisions in this Section 1 shall apply to all
    accounts you may have with us from time to time. The dispute resolution
    provisions in section 6 of this Agreement also apply to any account, contract,
    loan, transaction, business, contact, interaction or relationship you may have
    with us. Further, as used in, or in relation to, or in interpreting any provision
    of this Agreement, the term “account” shall also include any account or other
    business relationship of any nature whatsoever you may hold from time to time
    with any of us.
    The arbitration clause was contained in Section 6, and its terms were largely unchanged from
    the March 2004 agreement. Preceding the arbitration clause was the following language:
    “The following applies to all of the above referenced account types and agreements, as well
    as to any dispute you may have with us.” Another revision to the October 4, 2004, Customer
    Agreement made arbitration an elective, as opposed to a mandatory, event. Once again,
    continued maintenance of an account constituted acceptance of the revised terms.
    ¶13.   The arbitration clauses in all of the revisions to the AmSouth Customer Agreement
    appear to be more broad than those in Wedgeworth. The October 4, 2004, revision, in
    particular, covered “any account or other business relationship of any nature whatsoever you
    may hold from time to time with any of us,” and the arbitration clause within that agreement
    8
    applied to “any dispute you may have with us.” AmSouth also argues that Quimby’s use of
    his other accounts with AmSouth may have been sufficient to bind the disputes concerning
    his line of credit account over to arbitration under the terms of the October 2004 revisions
    to the Customer Agreement. His checking accounts were clearly depository accounts
    covered by the revised agreements. He agreed in his signature card on at least one of these
    accounts to abide by the “rules and regulations and all amendments” to his account
    agreements. By the express terms of the Customer Agreements his “continuing to maintain”
    any of those accounts constituted acceptance of the terms of the revised agreements, and the
    October 2004 Customer Agreement bound over to arbitration “any dispute you may have
    with us.”
    ¶14.   We find, however, the line of credit account was not governed by the March 2000 and
    March 2004 Customer Agreements, and this court’s holding in Wedgeworth requires
    specific, retroactive language within an arbitration agreement before we will find a
    preexisting controversy within its scope. Under this interpretation, the October 2004 revised
    Customer Agreement does not apply retroactively to cover the claims in Quimby’s
    complaint. Therefore, analyzing this matter under East Ford, we conclude the circuit court
    had the authority to determine whether Quimby’s claims were within the scope of the
    AmSouth Customer Agreements, and that it correctly decided that they were not. East Ford,
    Inc., 
    826 So. 2d
     at 713.
    ¶15.   From the sparse record before the court, it appears the term “line of credit” is
    undefined by either party or by any revised AmSouth Customer Agreement. During the
    hearing on the motion to compel arbitration, counsel for AmSouth referred to this account
    9
    as a “loan.” Neither party indicates the nature of this line of credit. Black’s Law Dictionary
    defines “line of credit” simply as:
    A margin or fixed limit of credit granted by one to another, to the full extent
    of which the latter may avail himself in his dealings with the former, but which
    he must not exceed; usually intended to cover a series of transactions, in which
    case, when the customer’s line of credit is nearly or quite exhausted, he is
    expected to reduce his indebtedness by payments before drawing upon it
    further.
    Black’s Law Dictionary 1078 (Rev. 4 th ed. 1968) (citing Pittinger v. Southwestern Paper Co.
    of Fort Worth, 
    151 S.W.2d 922
    , 925 (Tex. Civ. App. 1941)). There is no indication in the
    record whether this account is a secured line of credit, such as a home-equity line of credit,
    or an unsecured line of credit, such as a consumer credit card. No signature card appears in
    the record for this account. It is assumed throughout the record that Quimby is the debtor
    and AmSouth and its predecessors are the creditors. The parties appear to agree that
    Quimby’s claims are tied to opening the line of credit with Deposit Guaranty.
    ¶16.   The Mississippi Uniform Commercial Code (UCC)–Negotiable Instruments generally
    defines an “account” as “any deposit or credit account with a bank, including a demand, time,
    savings, passbook, share draft, or like account, other than an account evidence by a certificate
    of deposit.” Miss. Code Ann. § 75-4-104(3) (Rev. 2002). A “deposit account” is defined
    under the UCC–Secured Transactions as “a demand, time, savings, passbook, or similar
    account maintained with a bank. The term does not include investment property or accounts
    evidenced by an instrument.” Miss. Code Ann. § 75-9-102(29) (Rev. 2002). This Court has
    held “funds deposited to a general account belong to the bank, with the bank becoming the
    debtor to the owner of the account for the amount of the deposit.” First Investors Corp. v.
    10
    Rayner, 
    738 So. 2d 228
    , 235 (Miss. 1999) (quoting Deposit Guar. Nat’l Bank v. B.N.
    Simrall & Son, Inc., 
    524 So. 2d 295
    , 299 (Miss. 1987)). Under Mississippi law, Quimby’s
    line of credit may qualify as an “account,” but not as a deposit account. The AmSouth
    Customer Agreements further narrow the definition of “account” to the point that they
    exclude the line of credit account.
    ¶17.   The March 2000 Customer Agreement defined “account or depository account” as
    “any type of account to which funds may be deposited.” Section 4-104 of the UCC
    differentiates between deposit and credit accounts, but includes both in its general definition
    of account. Miss. Code Ann. § 75-4-104(3). However, the definition in AmSouth’s March
    2000 Customer Agreement was narrower and applied only to “depository accounts,” among
    other non-credit and unrelated accounts. The March 2004 Customer Agreement covered only
    “[Time Deposits or Certificates of Deposit, and Individual Retirement Accounts]. . . ; and
    any other type of depository account, both personal and nonpersonal. . . . As used herein, the
    term “account” shall mean and include any Time Deposit, Certificate, IRA or Deposit
    Account you have with us from time to time.” This Customer Agreement likewise limited
    its application to accounts into which funds were placed or kept, rather than where debts
    were to be repaid.
    ¶18.   The cover of the March 2000 Customer Agreement read “Customer Agreement for
    Depository Accounts,” “Time Deposit/Certificate of Deposit Agreement,” and “Individual
    Retirement Accounts Investment Agreements.” The cover of the March 2004 Customer
    Agreement read “Important information about your Checking, Money Market, Savings, Time
    Deposit and IRA accounts; your Electronic Banking services; and more.”
    11
    ¶19.   From the exhibits in the record before the court, we find that Quimby’s line of credit
    account, or loan, does not fall within the meaning of the various depository accounts listed
    and defined in the March 2000 and March 2004 Customer Agreements. Even if there is
    ambiguity within the Customer Agreements such that an argument could be made for its
    inclusion, this Court construes ambiguity within a contract against the drafter. Banks v.
    Banks, 
    648 So. 2d 1116
    , 1121 (Miss. 1994). We therefore conclude that the March 2000 and
    March 2004 revised Customer Agreements, by their terms, did not cover Quimby’s line of
    credit account.
    ¶20.   The March 2004 and October 2004 Customer Agreements did not cover Quimby’s
    claims for another reason: There was no explicit, retroactive application language in any of
    the arbitration clauses. AmSouth relied on the use of the word ‘any’ in its Customer
    Agreements to indicate retroactive application. For example, the October 2004 arbitration
    clause stated a party may elect that “any controversy . . . relating to . . . any account. . .”
    be resolved by arbitration. The March 2004 Customer Agreement likewise covered “any
    account” or “the collection of any amounts due under the Agreement or any account.”
    ¶21.   This court’s opinion in Wedgeworth indicated the Court’s intent that explicit language
    of retroactive application appear in arbitration clauses before they will be enforced on
    preexisting claims. It also left the Court room to insist upon this language in arbitration
    agreements. The court stated in Wedgeworth, “[h]ere, the arbitration provision contained
    neither language that was broad enough to cover events which predated the contract’s
    execution, nor language which would broaden its application by containing terms such as
    ‘applies to all transactions occurring before or after execution’ or ‘all transactions between
    12
    us’ or ‘all business with us.’ Where such clause exists, a legal basis to apply the arbitration
    clause retroactively may exist.” Id. at 489 (emphasis added). By indicating a preference for
    specific, retroactive application language in arbitration agreements, and using the permissive
    “may” to indicate that it was not bound to find retroactive application even if an arbitration
    agreement’s language was broader than that in Wedgeworth, the court left itself room to find
    AmSouth’s clauses insufficient to apply retroactively. Even without this leeway within this
    Court’s precedent, there is evidence in the record that AmSouth did not intend its Customer
    Agreements to apply retroactively.
    ¶22.   In support of its motion to compel arbitration, AmSouth offered the affidavit of
    Kimberly Burkhalter, an AmSouth employee, which states that the dates of the Customer
    Agreements were the dates their terms became ‘effective’; e.g., the March 17, 2000,
    Customer Agreement became effective on that date, and so on. Even if implied acceptance
    by continued use of the account was sufficient to bind Quimby to the arbitration terms in the
    March 2004 and October 2004 Customer Agreements, the effective dates of the Customer
    Agreements occurred after the accrual of his claims against AmSouth and American
    Heritage.
    ¶23.   Despite the federal policy favoring arbitration, our courts are required to submit to
    arbitration only what the parties agreed to submit to arbitration. Adams v. Greenpoint
    Credit, LLC, 
    943 So. 2d 703
    , 708 (Miss. 2006) (citing AT&T Technologies, Inc. v.
    Communications Workers of America, 
    475 U.S. 643
    , 648, 
    106 S. Ct. 1415
    , 1418, 
    89 L. Ed. 2d 648
     (1986)). The testimony within the Burkhalter affidavit provides sufficient indication
    that AmSouth intended the revised terms in these agreements to apply prospectively from
    13
    their effective dates. We therefore conclude, on the record before the court, that the parties
    intended the revisions to the Customer Agreements to apply prospectively to claims which
    occurred after their stated effective dates.
    ¶24.     Therefore, we find another reason in the record that the March 2004 and October 2004
    Customer Agreements did not cover the claims made in Quimby’s complaint. This court’s
    precedent does not require it to give retroactive application to the language found within the
    March 2004 and October 2004 Customer Agreements. Our precedent requires this court to
    enforce arbitration agreements only to the extent the parties agreed to submit their claims to
    arbitration. There being sufficient evidence in the record of an intent to apply prospectively
    the terms in AmSouth’s customer agreements, we find the circuit court’s judgment to have
    merit.
    ¶25.     The record indicates that Quimby’s pursuit of his claims began after his disability, but
    before the effective dates of the 2004 Customer Agreements. A letter from American
    Heritage to Quimby’s counsel, dated November 19, 2002, indicated that Quimby’s failure
    to submit a proper notice of disability claim would result in the denial of benefits for lack of
    coverage. This letter is proof within the record that Quimby’s claims pre-dated the effective
    dates of the 2004 Customer Agreements. The record also demonstrates that retroactive
    application language does not appear in the arbitration clauses in the AmSouth Customer
    Agreements.
    ¶26.     Therefore, we conclude that the March 2000 and March 2004 AmSouth Customer
    Agreements did not cover the line of credit account. Furthermore, the March 2004 and
    October 2004 effective dates for the AmSouth Customer Agreement post-date the accrual of
    14
    Quimby’s cause of action against AmSouth. The Court’s precedent in Wedgeworth indicates
    that such clauses are not to be given retroactive force unless the clause contains specific
    language stating so, and the parties so intended. The language in the 2004 Customer
    Agreements did not do so, relying on the use of the term ‘any’ to imply a retroactive
    application. Since it appears that the parties intended the provisions in the revised Customer
    Agreements to apply prospectively, not retroactively, the circuit court’s judgment applying
    Wedgeworth to the facts was not in error and is affirmed. The first reason AmSouth offers
    to require enforcement of the arbitration clause found within its Customer Agreements, that
    the scope of the agreement is broader than that in Wedgworth, is insufficient to require
    reversal of the circuit court’s judgment.
    ¶27.   Second, AmSouth argues that its revised Customer Agreement contains an arbitration
    clause that became effective March 17, 2000, and covers this dispute because its effective
    date preceded Quimby’s disability claim. The March 2000 revision indeed contained an
    arbitration clause. Its effective date preceded Quimby’s disability claim and the accrual of
    his right of action against American Heritage and AmSouth for benefits and damages for
    emotional distress and tortious breach of contract. However, as noted above, the March
    2000 Customer Agreement applied to specific types of accounts which did not include line
    of credit accounts. By its own terms, the March 2000 Customer Agreement did not apply to
    line of credit accounts. Therefore, this reason is insufficient to find the trial court in error.
    ¶28.   Third, AmSouth argues that the circuit court should not have applied Wedgeworth
    because the explicit terms of the revised Customer Agreements submitted all questions
    concerning the scope of the arbitration agreement to the arbitrator. In First Options of
    15
    Chicago v. Kaplan, the United States Supreme Court examined the narrow question of who
    should have the primary power to decide whether the parties to a contract agreed to arbitrate
    their claim. First Options of Chicago v. Kaplan, 
    514 U.S. 940
    , 942, 
    115 S. Ct. 1920
    , 
    131 L. Ed. 2d 985
    , 992 (1995). It determined that “Courts should not assume that the parties
    agreed to arbitrate arbitrability unless there is clear and unmistakable evidence that they did
    so.” Id. at 944 (citations and quotations removed).
    ¶29.   After reviewing the opinion in Wedgeworth, it appears that no agreement existed to
    submit questions concerning the scope of the arbitration clause to the arbitrator within the
    Wedgeworth agreement. Such an agreement undoubtedly existed in all of the revised
    Customer Agreements in the record.4 Since the March 2000 Customer Agreement, by its
    own terms, did not cover Quimby’s line of credit account, no revised Customer Agreement
    predating Quimby’s disability claim required the question of arbitrability to be submitted to
    an arbitrator. Since we hold above that the arbitration clauses in AmSouth’s Customer
    Agreements must have specific retroactive application language to govern prior disputes, and
    that it was the parties’ intent for the revisions to the Customer Agreements to apply
    prospectively, it is immaterial whether subsequent Customer Agreements submitted the
    question of the scope of the arbitration clause to an arbitrator. Because the March 2004 and
    October 2004 Customer Agreements post-dated Quimby’s claims, the clauses submitting the
    4
    For instance, the March 2000 Customer Agreement provides: “Any disagreement as
    to whether a particular dispute or claim is subject to arbitration under this paragraph shall
    be decided by arbitration in accordance with the provisions in this paragraph.”
    16
    question of arbitrability to the arbitrator did not cover his claims. This ground is likewise
    insufficient to find the circuit court in error.
    ¶30.   In summary, the circuit court used the Wedgeworth opinion to find that Quimby’s
    claims were not covered by a valid arbitration clause. After the analysis above, we agree
    with and affirm its judgment. AmSouth’s arguments to the contrary fail to pass analysis
    under East Ford. The following issues were argued before the trial court. While they did
    not form the basis of the court’s ruling, both parties address the issues and so they are
    addressed briefly here.
    II.    Whether the trial court erred by not following First Options of Chicago, Inc. v.
    Kaplan, 
    514 U.S. 938
    , 943 (1995), and proceeding to decide the issue of temporal
    scope of the arbitration provisions, when those provisions expressly reserve that
    issue for the arbitrator.
    ¶31.   This issue is examined more fully above. AmSouth argues that the trial court erred
    in deciding the scope of the arbitration agreement within the Customer Agreement because
    the agreement specifically referred such questions to the arbitrator. Quimby responds that
    state law principles of consideration, definite terms, mutual assent, and unconscionability
    apply to invalidate the arbitration clause in the Customer Agreement such that the Court was
    not bound to enforce its terms.
    ¶32.   While each of the three Customer Agreements did contain a readily-identifiable
    agreement to submit the question of the scope of the arbitration agreement to the arbitrator,
    the analysis above demonstrates that none of the revised AmSouth Customer Agreements
    covered Quimby’s claims such that he was bound to arbitration. Therefore, the presence of
    17
    this clause in the Customer Agreements does not require the court to enforce arbitration, and
    this issue is without merit.
    III.   Whether the trial court erred by failing to find the Parties bound to arbitrate a
    preexisting claim under the broad “any dispute” temporal scope provisions of
    AmSouth’s October 4, 2004 amended Account Agreement.
    ¶33.   This issue also is discussed above. The arbitration clauses in the March and October
    2004 Customer Agreements were insufficient under Mississippi law to receive retroactive
    application, because they did not contain specific terms stating so and the intent of the parties
    was for prospective application of the revisions to the Customer Agreements. While the
    March 17, 2000, Customer Agreement contained an arbitration clause, its terms did not cover
    line of credit accounts. Therefore, the use of the term ‘any’ within the October 2004
    Customer Agreement was insufficient to bind Quimby’s claims over to arbitration. This
    issue is without merit, and the circuit court’s judgment is affirmed.
    IV.    Whether section I of Union Planters Bank, National Association v. Rogers, 
    912 So. 2d
     116 (Miss. 2005), which failed to find an arbitration contract by performance,
    should be overruled due to its conflict with Perry v. Thomas, 
    482 U.S. 483
     (1987)
    and Doctor’s Associates, Inc. v. Cassarotto, 
    517 U.S. 681
     (1996), which prohibit
    applying stricter scrutiny to the formation of an arbitration contract than any
    other contract?
    V.     Whether Section I of Union Planters Bank should be overruled due to its conflict
    with Perry and Cassarotto, which mandate application of the Mississippi Uniform
    Commercial Code to the arbitration provisions at issue in a nondiscriminatory
    manner, thus allowing the adoption of the entirety of an account agreement
    (including its arbitration provisions) through maintenance or use of the account,
    by implication, ratification, estoppel and course of performance?
    VI.    Whether Section I of Union Planters Bank should be overruled due to its conflict
    with Prima Paint Corp. v. Flood & Conklin Mfg. Co., 
    388 U.S. 395
     (1967), which
    prohibits invalidating arbitration provisions based upon a defense equally
    applicable to the account agreement as a whole–such as the method of adoption
    of the account agreement?
    18
    ¶34.   AmSouth uses the next three issues to argue that this court should overrule Union
    Planters Bank, National Association v. Rogers, 
    912 So. 2d
     116 (Miss. 2005). This court
    will not address Rogers for two reasons. First, the issue was not argued before the trial court
    and it was given no opportunity to rule on this issue. The court did not cite Rogers in its
    opinion and it serves as no basis for the court’s ruling. This Court has stated, “[w]e accept
    without hesitation the ordinarily sound principle that this Court sits to review actions of trial
    courts and that we should undertake consideration of no matter which has not first been
    presented to and decided by the trial court.” Educ. Placement Serv. v. Wilson, 
    487 So. 2d 1316
    , 1320 (Miss. 1986). We find no reason to depart from this practice now.
    ¶35.   Second, Rogers, is distinguishable. The mail-outs in Rogers, while bearing a striking
    resemblance to the Customer Agreements examined here, contained conflicting provisions
    which the court concluded required existing bank customers to execute a signature card and
    use their accounts before becoming bound by the arbitration agreement. Union Planters
    Bank, Nat’l Ass’n v. Rogers, 
    912 So. 2d
     116, 120 (Miss. 2005). The AmSouth Customer
    Agreements do not appear to conflict in this way.
    ¶36.   Further, Rogers concerned a checking account, or depository account, and the record
    contained the original signature card on the account, which bound Rogers to its terms.
    Quimby’s account is a line of credit, and no signature card for this account nor any original
    contract stating the initial terms of the account appears in the record. Neither does the record
    contain any copy of any credit life or credit disability insurance policy applicable to Quimby.
    We find these reasons sufficient to forego an examination of Rogers in this case.
    19
    ¶37.   Ordinarily, in a claim against a credit disability policy case, we would expect to find
    within the record the credit disability policy or the loan agreement. In this case, we have
    neither before us, nor do we know whether either contains an agreement to arbitrate within
    its terms. The record does not even indicate whether Quimby owed any money at the time
    of his disability such that he may be entitled to benefits under a credit disability policy.
    Given these deficiencies in the record, we find no basis in the record for reversal.
    CONCLUSION
    ¶38.   The circuit court did not err when it relied upon the Wedgeworth case to deny
    arbitration. The terms of the arbitration clauses in the revised customer agreements were
    more broad than Wedgeworth, but contained no specific language of retroactive application
    to bind Quimby to its terms. Since Quimby’s line of credit account is not covered by an
    arbitration clause which became effective before the accrual of his action and claim for
    damages, Wedgeworth supports the court’s decision to deny arbitration and retain
    jurisdiction of this matter. Therefore, we affirm the judgment of the circuit court and remand
    this matter for further proceedings.
    ¶39.   AFFIRMED.
    SMITH, C.J., EASLEY, CARLSON, DICKINSON, RANDOLPH AND LAMAR,
    JJ., CONCUR. DIAZ, P.J., AND GRAVES, J., CONCUR IN RESULT ONLY.
    20