Central Ceilings, Inc. v. Suffolk Construction Co., Inc. , 93 Mass. App. Ct. 207 ( 2018 )


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    17-P-184                                              Appeals Court
    CENTRAL CEILINGS, INC.    vs.     SUFFOLK CONSTRUCTION COMPANY, INC.,
    & others.1
    No. 17-P-184.
    Suffolk.      January 10, 2018. - May 9, 2018.
    Present:    Blake, Neyman, & Ditkoff, JJ.
    Arbitration, Award, Discretion of arbitrator, Scope of
    arbitration, Confirmation of award, Judicial review,
    Attorney's fees. Contract, Arbitration. Practice, Civil,
    Interest, Attorney's fees.
    Civil action commenced in the Superior Court Department on
    January 31, 2008.
    A motion to confirm an arbitration award was heard by Peter
    M. Lauriat, J., and a motion to correct and confirm as corrected
    or to vacate an arbitration award was heard by Linda E. Giles,
    J.
    Paul R. Mordarski (Margaret Capp also present) for the
    plaintiff.
    Joel Lewin (John P. Connelly also present) for the
    defendants.
    1 Fidelity and Deposit Company of Maryland, Safeco Insurance
    Company of America, and XL Specialty Insurance Company.
    2
    DITKOFF, J.    The parties submitted a construction dispute,
    pending in litigation in the Superior Court, to arbitration
    under the Uniform Arbitration Act, G. L. c. 251, §§ 1 et seq.
    The arbitrator issued a substantial award in favor of the
    plaintiff, Central Ceilings, Inc., but purported to reserve the
    calculation of preaward interest to a Superior Court judge.     The
    parties did not agree to this reservation.    On the plaintiff's
    motion to confirm the arbitration award, the judge (remanding
    judge) remanded the matter to the arbitrator for the calculation
    of preaward interest.   After the arbitrator awarded preaward
    interest well below that requested by the plaintiff, the
    plaintiff moved to correct or to vacate that award.   The
    plaintiff now appeals from the order denying that motion.
    Concluding that an arbitrator may not reserve the calculation of
    preaward interest for a judge without the agreement of the
    parties, and finding no error in the failure to award attorney's
    fees, we affirm.
    1.   Background.    The plaintiff was a subcontractor to
    defendant Suffolk Construction Company, Inc. (Suffolk), the
    general contractor, in a project for the renovation and
    construction converting the old Charles Street jail in Boston
    3
    into the Liberty Hotel.2   On January 31, 2008, the plaintiff
    commenced an action in Superior Court against the defendants,
    raising various claims arising out of its subcontract with
    Suffolk.   After discovery and pretrial proceedings, the parties
    filed a joint motion to stay the case in favor of resolving the
    dispute through arbitration.   On October 8, 2013, the parties
    entered into an arbitration agreement governed by the Uniform
    Arbitration Act, G. L. c. 251, §§ 1 et seq., expressly
    incorporating the Construction Industry Arbitration Rules of the
    American Arbitration Association.   The arbitration agreement
    reached "all relevant issues appertaining" to the civil lawsuit
    and granted the arbitrator "full power and authority to award
    money damages and to grant such other relief, including without
    limitation reasonable attorney's fees and any other
    contractually authorized damages as he, in his sole discretion,
    shall deem just and proper" "[t]o the same extent as if he were
    a justice of the Massachusetts Superior Court."   A judge allowed
    the motion and stayed the case during the pendency of the
    arbitration.
    2 The remaining defendants, Fidelity and Deposit Company of
    Maryland, Safeco Insurance Company of America, and XL Specialty
    Insurance Company, are the joint sureties on the payment bond
    covering the project.
    4
    After extensive arbitration proceedings, the arbitrator
    issued an initial award on the merits in favor of the plaintiff
    in a decision dated February 20, 2015, in the amount of
    $1,324,819.24, "with interest thereon in the amount ultimately
    assessed by the Court," plus attorney's fees and costs as set
    out in the subcontract between the parties.3
    The parties filed timely cross motions with the arbitrator
    requesting modification, correction, and clarification of the
    initial award.   The arbitrator denied the defendants' motion and
    allowed the plaintiff's motion.     The modified award, dated April
    6, 2015, changed the award only to require an additional
    interest calculation.   It continued to reserve the task of
    calculating interest on the $1,324,819.24 award to a judge, but
    also required that judge to calculate interest on a payment of
    $402,852 already made by Suffolk shortly after the parties
    agreed to arbitration and prior to any award.
    On April 15, 2015, the defendants moved in Superior Court
    to vacate the arbitrator's award.    The defendants soon
    reconsidered, paid the modified award plus postaward interest on
    June 24, 2015, and then withdrew their motion to vacate.
    3 The arbitrator also stated, "Should the parties fail to
    agree upon the amount due for attorney's fees and costs, the
    matter shall be submitted for determination by the Arbitrator
    pursuant to" the subcontract between the parties.
    5
    Meanwhile, the parties were unable to agree on the attorney's
    fees and costs owed to the plaintiff.   The arbitrator awarded
    attorney's fees and costs on July 20, 2015, which Suffolk paid
    within one month.
    The parties, however, continued to dispute the issue of
    preaward (as opposed to postaward) interest, as neither the
    initial nor the modified award expressly stated that the
    interest to be calculated by a judge included preaward interest.
    The plaintiff maintained that the arbitrator either explicitly
    or implicitly awarded preaward interest from the commencement of
    the suit at the statutory rate of twelve percent, see G. L.
    c. 231, § 6C, and that the judge had the duty to calculate that
    interest.   The defendants, in turn, asserted that only the
    arbitrator could calculate preaward interest.
    On October 26, 2015, the plaintiff moved to confirm the
    modified award under G. L. c. 251, §§ 11, 14, 15, and to enter
    judgment against the defendants for the disputed preaward
    interest in the amount of $1,563,763.58 plus an additional
    $500.46 for every day after September 16 to the date of
    judgment.   The defendants, conversely, asserted that the
    preaward interest had been submitted to the arbitrator and thus
    no additional preaward recovery was permissible.
    After a hearing, the remanding judge concluded that,
    although the arbitrator implicitly awarded preaward interest,
    6
    the lack of any explicit agreement between the parties on the
    issue precluded its reservation for a judge.    Accordingly, the
    remanding judge remanded the matter to the arbitrator pursuant
    to G. L. c. 251, §§ 9, 13, for the calculation of preaward
    interest.
    On remand, the arbitrator explained that he had "mistakenly
    believed" that he lacked the authority to calculate the preaward
    interest.   The arbitrator acceded to the remanding judge's order
    and issued a postremand clarification dated August 9, 2016.      The
    arbitrator awarded the plaintiff $287,036 in preaward interest,
    declining to adopt the statutory interest rate under G. L.
    c. 231, § 6C.   Citing his broad discretion on the matter, the
    arbitrator instead considered "various factors" of the
    underlying dispute to award a "fair and equitable" amount based
    on the "totality of circumstances."    Suffolk promptly paid that
    amount.
    In response, on September 26, 2016, the plaintiff moved
    under G. L. c. 251, §§ 12, 13, to "correct" the arbitrator's
    postremand award to $1,462,600, based on the twelve percent
    interest rate in G. L. c. 231, § 6C, and additionally to award
    the plaintiff supplemental attorney's fees and costs for the
    postarbitration court proceedings.    The defendants opposed the
    motion, contending that (1) the plaintiff's motion was untimely;
    (2) the arbitrator did not exceed his authority; and (3) the
    7
    plaintiff was not entitled to further attorney's fees and costs
    because the defendants were the "prevailing party" in the
    postremand litigation.     A third Superior Court judge denied the
    plaintiff's motion, citing the reasons set forth in the
    defendants' opposition.
    2.     Remand to the arbitrator to calculate preaward
    interest.    We review de novo a judge's decision on a motion to
    confirm an arbitration award under G. L. c. 251, § 11, Bolman v.
    Plymouth Rock Assur. Corp., 
    82 Mass. App. Ct. 135
    , 142 (2012),
    recognizing "that 'the entitlement of a party to preaward
    interest is a decision that is within the purview of the
    arbitrator[].'"    
    Id. at 139
    , quoting from Connecticut Valley
    Sanitary Waste Disposal, Inc. v. Zielinski, 
    436 Mass. 263
    , 271
    (2002).     "Generally, in a proceeding to confirm an arbitration
    award, a judge may not alter an arbitrator's decision that
    allows, denies or fails to mention pre award interest."      Talty,
    Talty, & Braunstein, Methods of Practice § 38.20 (4th ed. supp.
    2017), quoting from Bolman, supra.4    If the award is simply
    silent as to preaward interest, the confirming court lacks the
    authority to add preaward interest.     Reilly v. Metropolitan
    Property & Liab. Ins. Co., 
    412 Mass. 1006
    , 1007 (1992), citing
    4 The calculation of postaward interest, of course, remains
    a judicial duty where the parties cannot agree. See Diaz v.
    Cruz, 
    76 Mass. App. Ct. 773
    , 774 (2010).
    8
    Sansone v. Metropolitan Property & Liab. Ins. Co., 
    30 Mass. App. Ct. 660
    , 662-663 (1991).
    The calculation of preaward interest, however, may properly
    be reserved for a confirming court in certain conditions.
    Talty, Talty, & Braunstein, supra, citing Bolman, 82 Mass. App.
    Ct. at 140-141.     Specifically, in Bolman, supra at 141, we
    decided that the issue of preaward interest may be properly
    reserved for the confirming court where "the reservation
    unambiguously was agreed to by the parties and the arbitrator."
    Here, there is no suggestion in the record that the parties
    agreed to this reservation.     Both the arbitration agreement and
    the parties' own conduct, in fact, demonstrate the opposite.
    The arbitration agreement was broad enough to include the
    calculation of preaward interest within the arbitrator's
    authority, and in no way expressly reserved the issue for the
    confirming court.     The plaintiff, moreover, specifically
    requested that the arbitrator calculate a sum certain award of
    preaward interest, and the defendants took the position in the
    Superior Court that they agreed for only the arbitrator to
    calculate preaward interest.
    We reject the suggestion that an arbitrator may reserve the
    calculation of preaward interest to a confirming court without
    the agreement of the parties.     It is a "fundamental principle
    that the arbitrator's authority is defined by the parties'
    9
    arbitration agreement."    Lynn v. Council 93, Am. Fedn. of State,
    County, & Mun. Employees, Local 193, 
    51 Mass. App. Ct. 905
    , 905
    (2001).   See Bolman, 82 Mass. App. Ct. at 141 ("the issue of
    preaward interest properly was reserved because the reservation
    unambiguously was agreed to by the parties and the arbitrator").
    Cf. Perlin & Blum, Procedural Forms Annotated § 116:1 (6th ed.
    supp. 2017), citing Sansone, 30 Mass. App. Ct. at 662–663 ("In
    the absence of an explicit agreement to the contrary, pre-award
    damage claims, including interest must be considered to have
    been submitted to arbitration").    Moreover, when agreed to by
    the parties, there is a "strong public policy favoring
    arbitration as an expeditious alternative to litigation for
    settling commercial disputes."     Massachusetts Hy. Dept. v.
    Perini Corp., 
    79 Mass. App. Ct. 430
    , 441 (2011), quoting from
    Plymouth–Carver Regional Sch. Dist. v. J. Farmer & Co., 
    407 Mass. 1006
    , 1007 (1990).   This strong public policy would not be
    honored if we allowed an arbitrator to reserve the calculation
    of preaward interest when the parties had agreed to arbitrate
    the issue.   Furthermore, that course of action presumes that
    there will be further litigation, where the hope is that the
    losing party to the arbitration will comply with the
    arbitrator's award without the necessity of resort to the
    courts.   See Katz, Nannis & Solomon, P.C. v. Levine, 
    473 Mass. 784
    , 794 (2016) (allowing parties to redefine "the scope of what
    10
    a court was to review with respect to every arbitration award
    . . . would spawn potentially complex and lengthy case-within-a-
    case litigation devoted to determining what the parties intended
    . . . .   This is fundamentally contrary to the intent and
    purpose of our arbitration statute").    Indeed, the instant case
    demonstrates the complications that would arise if the parties
    could be required to return to court, rather than allowed simply
    to comply with the arbitrator's award.
    Faced with an arbitrator's award that erroneously reserved
    the calculation of preaward interest to the court, the judge
    properly returned the matter to the arbitrator for correction.
    General Laws c. 251, § 9, authorizes the direct submission from
    the court to the arbitrator for the modification or correction
    of an award pending confirmation if (1) there is an evident
    mistake or miscalculation; (2) the award was imperfect in a
    matter of form, not affecting the merits of the controversy; or
    (3) for the purpose of clarifying the award.5   G. L. c. 251,
    §§ 9, 13.   Baxter Health Care, Corp. v. Harvard Apparatus, Inc.,
    
    35 Mass. App. Ct. 204
    , 209 (1993).   Here, because the award
    improperly directed the judge to calculate preaward interest
    without the requisite agreement of the parties, it was imperfect
    5 Section 9 expressly allows resubmission to the arbitrator
    by the judge independent of a party's application; as a result,
    the plaintiff's argument on the basis of waiver is meritless.
    11
    as a matter of form, in a manner outside the merits of the
    underlying dispute.6   G. L. c. 251, § 13(a)(3).   Accordingly, the
    issue of preaward interest was properly remanded to the
    arbitrator for calculation.    See Baxter Health Care, Corp.,
    supra at 210 (resubmission to arbitrator under § 9 "is within
    the discretion of the court, and may be upon such conditions as
    the court orders").
    It follows from the preceding conclusion that the
    plaintiff's motion to "correct" the arbitrator's postremand
    award was properly denied.    The plaintiff's motion essentially
    asked the judge to disregard the arbitrator's postremand
    decision and to calculate the postaward interest himself.
    Because, however, the remanding judge properly had remanded the
    matter to the arbitrator, the third judge also properly rejected
    this motion.   See Bolman, 82 Mass. App. Ct. at 141.   See also
    6 This is because the arbitrator awarded preaward interest
    but failed to calculate it. See Finn, Mone, & Kelly, Mediation
    and Arbitration § 19:172 (2017-2018 ed. 2017) ("The corrections
    and modifications may be made without affecting the merits of
    the award upon the issues submitted to the arbitrators"
    [emphasis supplied]). Cf. Bruner and O'Connor on Construction
    Law § 21:215 (2014) ("Courts are authorized to correct or modify
    awards that are 'imperfect in matter of form,' as long as doing
    so does not affect the merits of the controversy. As a general
    rule, courts have been reluctant to modify damage awards on this
    ground because changing the amount awarded affects the merits"
    [emphasis supplied]). By contrast, had the award merely been
    silent on the issue of preaward interest, the remanding judge
    could not have remanded. See Reilly, 412 Mass. at 1007.
    12
    Bruner and O'Connor on Construction Law § 21:215 (2014) (courts
    generally reluctant to correct awards imperfect in matter of
    form when doing so would change the amount awarded).
    3.   Motion in the alternative to vacate the arbitrator's
    postremand award.   We uphold an arbitration award even if the
    arbitrator's findings and conclusions "appear erroneous,
    inconsistent, or unsupported by the record at the arbitration
    hearing."   Katz, Nannis & Solomon, P.C., 473 Mass. at 790,
    quoting from Lynn v. Thompson, 
    435 Mass. 54
    , 61 (2001), cert.
    denied, 
    534 U.S. 1131
     (2002).   "With respect to awarding
    damages, so long as the arbitrator 'do[es] not overstep the
    limits of the issues submitted to [him], a court may not
    substitute its judgment on the matter.'"   Perini Corp., 79 Mass.
    App. Ct. at 435, quoting from Softkey, Inc. v. Useful Software,
    Inc., 
    52 Mass. App. Ct. 837
    , 839 (2001).   "We do, however,
    vacate an award if '[a]n arbitrator exceeds his authority by
    granting relief beyond the scope of the arbitration agreement
    . . . or by awarding relief prohibited by law.'"   Springfield v.
    United Pub. Serv. Employees Union, 
    89 Mass. App. Ct. 255
    , 257-
    258 (2016), quoting from Lynn v. Lynn Police Assn., 
    455 Mass. 590
    , 596 (2010).
    General Laws c. 251, § 12, inserted by St. 1960, c. 374,
    § 1, likewise, specifies that a judge shall vacate an
    arbitration award if:
    13
    "(1) the award was procured by corruption, fraud or other
    undue means;
    (2) there was evident partiality by an arbitrator appointed
    as a neutral, or corruption in any of the arbitrators, or
    misconduct prejudicing the rights of any party; [or]
    (3) the arbitrators exceeded their powers."
    Here, the plaintiff does not allege corruption, fraud, or
    prejudice.   Rather, the plaintiff contends only that the
    arbitrator exceeded his authority in the postremand award.
    As previously discussed, however, arbitrators are
    authorized to grant preaward interest.   See Bolman, 82 Mass.
    App. Ct. at 139.   Indeed, arbitrators have substantial
    discretion to determine the scope of their contractual authority
    to fashion remedies, "unless expressly restricted by the
    agreement or the submission to arbitration."   Perini Corp., 79
    Mass. App. Ct. at 443, quoting from Superadio Ltd. Partnership
    v. Winstar Radio Prods., LLC, 
    446 Mass. 330
    , 339 (2006).     An
    arbitrator's preaward interest award, moreover, "when made as a
    component of an award, is an integral part of the total remedy
    that he fashions and, as such, is not subject to the statutory
    provisions which apply to court-awarded interest on contract
    claims" (emphasis supplied).   Id. at 434, quoting from Blue
    Hills Regional Dist. Sch. Comm. v. Flight, 
    10 Mass. App. Ct. 459
    , 472 (1980), S.C., 
    383 Mass. 642
    , 644 (1981).   See also
    Construction Industry Arbitration Rules and Mediation Practices
    R-48(d)(i) (2015) (arbitrator's award may include "interest at
    14
    such rate and from such date as the arbitrator may deem
    appropriate").
    The agreement in this case contained no such provision
    limiting the arbitrator's authority to award interest of any
    kind, nor prescribed interest rates.   The arbitrator did not, as
    the plaintiff suggests, thereby exceed his authority in
    calculating preaward interest below the statutory rate under
    G. L. c. 231, § 6C.   See Perini Corp., 79 Mass. App. Ct. at 446
    ("once the parties resort to arbitration and legal proceedings
    to resolve payment of disputed claims, . . . the interest
    provisions of [the statute] are no longer controlling").    To the
    contrary, the determination was consistent with the Construction
    Industry Arbitration Rules incorporated into the arbitration
    agreement.   See Construction Industry Arbitration Rules and
    Mediation Procedures R-48(a) (2015) ("The arbitrator may grant
    any remedy or relief that the arbitrator deems just and
    equitable and within the scope of the agreement of the
    parties").   The third judge thus correctly denied the
    plaintiff's motion to vacate the arbitrator's postremand award.7
    7 The defendants had paid all existing obligations awarded
    by the arbitrator at the time of the plaintiff's motion. As a
    result, there was no need for the judge to confirm the
    arbitrator's postremand award pursuant to G. L. c. 251, § 12(d).
    See Murphy v. National Union Fire Ins. Co., 
    438 Mass. 529
    , 533
    (2003) ("confirmation of the award became moot because the
    obligation owed to the [prevailing party] had been satisfied").
    15
    4.   Attorney's fees and costs.    As a general rule,
    "litigants bear their own expenses unless a statute or a
    contract or other agreement provides otherwise."     E. Amanti &
    Sons, Inc. v. R.C. Griffin, Inc., 
    53 Mass. App. Ct. 245
    , 258
    (2001).    Here, the plaintiff claims supplemental attorney's fees
    and costs from the proceedings in the Superior Court to confirm
    the arbitrator's award pursuant to art. 8.16 of the subcontract
    between the plaintiff and Suffolk.8    In the absence of such an
    agreement, legal fees arising out of arbitration, including
    those to confirm, modify, or vacate an arbitration award, may
    not be awarded by a reviewing court.     Finn, Mone, & Kelly,
    Mediation and Arbitration § 9:9 (2017-2018 ed. 2017), citing
    Floors, Inc. v. B. G. Danis of New England, Inc., 
    380 Mass. 91
    ,
    99-101 (1980).   See Sun Fire Protection & Engr., Inc. v. D.F.
    Pray, Inc., 
    73 Mass. App. Ct. 906
    , 907-908 (2009) (declining to
    award attorney's fees and costs incurred solely in connection
    with obtaining award's confirmation).     Rather, so far as the
    record before us reveals, the arbitration agreement confers on
    the arbitrator the sole power to award attorney's fees and
    costs.    Accordingly, the parties have not demonstrated to us any
    error in the third judge's decision not to award attorney's fees
    8 The subcontract, while referenced by both parties, does
    not appear in the record before us.
    16
    for the litigation in Superior Court.    Similarly, we do not
    award attorney's fees for this appeal.
    5.   Conclusion.   The order dated November 10, 2016, denying
    the motion to confirm and correct or vacate the postremand
    arbitration award is affirmed.
    So ordered.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: AC 17-P-184

Citation Numbers: 101 N.E.3d 937, 93 Mass. App. Ct. 207

Filed Date: 5/9/2018

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/12/2023