Lesley Adams, William Adams and Adams Construction, VT, LLC v. Russell D. Barr and Barr & Associates, P.C. d/b/a Barr Law Group , 182 A.3d 1173 ( 2018 )


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  • NOTICE: This opinion is subject to motions for reargument under V.R.A.P. 40 as well as formal
    revision before publication in the Vermont Reports. Readers are requested to notify the Reporter
    of Decisions by email at: JUD.Reporter@vermont.gov or by mail at: Vermont Supreme Court, 109
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    2018 VT 12
    No. 2017-224
    Lesley Adams, William Adams and                                Supreme Court
    Adams Construction VT, LLC
    On Appeal from
    v.                                                          Superior Court, Lamoille Unit,
    Civil Division
    Russell D. Barr and Barr & Associates, P.C. d/b/a              November Term, 2017
    Barr Law Group
    Thomas Z. Carlson, J.
    Richard Cassidy of Rich Cassidy Law, South Burlington, and Michael Palmer, Middlebury, for
    Plaintiffs-Appellants.
    Chandler W. Matson, Stowe, for Defendants-Appellees.
    PRESENT: Reiber, C.J., Robinson, Eaton and Carroll, JJ., and Wesley, Supr. J. (Ret.),
    Specially Assigned
    ¶ 1.   ROBINSON, J.         The critical question in this case is whether a party who
    participates extensively and without objection in an arbitration proceeding for nearly seven months
    prior to the actual arbitration hearing waives an objection to the validity of the arbitration
    agreement. Lesley Adams, William Adams, and Adams Construction VT, LLC (collectively
    Adams Construction) appeal the trial court’s denial of their application to vacate an arbitration
    award in favor of Russell Barr and the Barr Law Group (collectively Barr Law Group) and against
    Adams Construction. Because we conclude that Adams Construction waived its challenge to the
    validity of the arbitration agreement, we affirm.
    ¶ 2.    The procedural history of this case is not disputed.1 On February 24, 2016, Barr
    Law Group filed a demand for arbitration against Adams Construction with the American
    Arbitration Association claiming that Adams Construction had failed to pay Barr Law Group more
    than $40,000 in fees for legal services. On March 8, 2016, Adams Construction filed an answer
    denying all claims and counterclaimed for $97,000, alleging various breaches by Barr Law Group.
    Both parties actively participated in the arbitrator selection process, submitting their objections
    and preferred arbitrators. Both parties participated in preliminary conferences. Barr Law Group
    requested a one-day hearing for its claims on the merits; Adams Construction requested three. The
    arbitrator scheduled the matter for a three-day hearing.
    ¶ 3.    Over the next five months, the parties engaged in reciprocal discovery and motions
    practice. Adams Construction served over thirty discovery requests on Barr Law Group, and
    responded to sixty discovery requests from Barr Law Group, followed by at least two sets of
    supplemental responses to a substantial number of questions. Barr Law Group served its own
    discovery requests on Adams Construction and responded to Adams Construction’s requests. In
    addition, Adams Construction conducted an in-person inspection of records held by Barr Law
    Group at the Barr Law Group offices. Both parties filed motions and responses relating to
    discovery disputes and Barr Law Group’s multiple requests to dismiss Adams Construction’s
    counterclaims for lack of evidence. And they both participated in at least one telephonic case
    management conference during which the arbitrator ruled on various pending discovery and
    procedural matters.
    ¶ 4.    On October 4, 2016, one week before the beginning of the scheduled three-day
    hearing, Adams Construction filed an objection to arbitration and a motion to dismiss the
    1
    Some of the procedural history was presented to the trial court by way of assertion, rather
    than affidavit or record evidence. However, neither party has substantially challenged the history
    set forth above. We note the factual assertions that are disputed.
    2
    arbitration proceeding. Adams Construction argued, for the first time, that the arbitration provision
    in Adams Construction’s fee agreement with Barr Law Group was unenforceable. Adams
    Construction cited legal authority from Vermont and across the country suggesting that an
    attorney’s fiduciary duty and ethical obligations require that the lawyer take certain steps to ensure
    that a client’s consent to a pre-dispute, binding arbitration agreement is fully informed. These
    steps may include fully disclosing the risks of binding, pre-dispute arbitration clauses, identifying
    the legal rights a client forgoes in signing such an agreement, and giving the client a chance to
    consult with independent counsel before signing the agreement. Adams Construction alleged that
    nobody from Barr Law Group explained the legal implications of the arbitration agreement to Mr.
    or Ms. Adams before or after they signed it, or advised them to get independent legal advice before
    signing the fee agreement.2 Nor did Barr Law Group explain to Adams Construction that the
    Vermont Bar Association provides a free arbitration service for resolution of attorney-client fee
    disputes. For these reasons, Adams Construction contended that the arbitration agreement was
    invalid and sought dismissal of the arbitration proceeding.
    ¶ 5.    With respect to the delay in raising the issue, Adams Construction, which had no
    counsel of record through the arbitration proceeding, indicated that it only learned of this legal
    basis for objecting to the arbitration shortly before it made the objection.
    ¶ 6.    The arbitrator denied Adams Construction’s motion at the beginning of the hearing.
    After several days of hearings, in a January 2017 order, the arbitrator awarded Barr Law Group
    the full measure of fees that it sought, plus interest; dismissed all of Adams Construction’s
    counterclaims, which the arbitrator found to be unsupported by the evidence; and ordered Adams
    2
    Barr Law Group disputes Adams Construction’s allegations concerning the
    circumstances surrounding execution of the fee agreement. These disputes are not germane to our
    resolution of this appeal, which does not turn on the merits of the claim that the arbitration
    agreement is unenforceable.
    3
    Construction to pay half of Barr Law Group’s legal fees on the ground that Adams Construction
    pursued its counterclaims in bad faith.
    ¶ 7.    In February 2017, Adams Construction filed a timely application in the superior
    court to vacate the arbitration award, reiterating its argument that the pre-dispute arbitration clause
    that gave rise to the arbitration proceeding was invalid and unenforceable because Barr Law Group
    violated its fiduciary and ethical duties in securing the agreement, and fraudulently induced Adams
    Construction’s agreement. In its opposition to the application, the Barr Law Group reviewed the
    course of the arbitration proceedings, attached copies of arbitration pleadings, and argued that by
    actively participating in the arbitration proceedings for many months, and pursuing its
    counterclaims, Adams Construction waived any objection to the arbitration proceedings. The trial
    court agreed, concluding that Adams Construction’s active participation in the arbitration
    proceeding for months before their last-minute objection, and then continuing through four days
    of hearings, constituted a waiver of Adams Construction’s challenges to the validity of the
    arbitration agreement.
    ¶ 8.    On appeal, Adams Construction focuses much of its argument on the merits, and
    its argument that because Barr Law Group induced Adams Construction to enter into the fee
    agreement with a pre-dispute, mandatory arbitration provision fraudulently and in violation of its
    fiduciary and ethical duties, the arbitration provision is unenforceable. With respect to the waiver
    question, Adams Construction relies on the language of the Vermont Arbitration Act, as well as
    policy considerations. Specifically, Adams Construction emphasizes that Vermont’s Arbitration
    Act allows a court to vacate an arbitration award where there was no actual arbitration agreement
    if “the party did not participate in the arbitration hearing without raising the objection.” 12 V.S.A.
    § 5677(a)(5). Pursuant to Vermont’s statute, Adams Construction argues that as long as a party
    raises an objection to the validity of the arbitration agreement before the arbitration hearing, the
    objection is preserved, and that a contrary rule would be inconsistent with the statutory language,
    4
    vague, and difficult to apply. We review the legal question of whether a court may conclude that
    a party has waived an objection to the enforceability of an arbitration agreement if the party makes
    the objection before the arbitration hearing without deference to the trial court. Garbitelli v. Town
    of Brookfield, 
    2011 VT 122
    , ¶ 5, 
    191 Vt. 76
    , 
    38 A.3d 1133
    .
    ¶ 9.    Our analysis of the waiver issue turns on the language of the Vermont Arbitration
    Act, this Court’s established caselaw involving waiver of objections to arbitration, and persuasive
    authority from other jurisdictions. Although we acknowledge that these sources send mixed
    signals, we conclude that on facts such as these—where a party files counterclaims, chooses an
    arbitrator, engages in extensive reciprocal discovery over a period of five months, participates in
    several prehearing conferences, makes a specific request as to the amount of time needed for the
    hearing, and engages in motion practice—that party may be deemed to have waived an objection
    to the validity of an arbitration agreement even if the party ultimately raises the objection before
    the commencement of the actual arbitration hearing.3
    ¶ 10.   Adams Construction finds its strongest support in specific language of the Vermont
    Arbitration Act. In particular, the provision governing the authority of courts to vacate arbitration
    3
    We note that our decision does not rely on Adams Construction’s participation in the
    arbitration hearing after filing the objection. Courts have generally held that where a timely
    objection is made as to whether a claim is subject to arbitration, the issue is preserved even if the
    objecting party participates in the arbitration proceeding. See, e.g., Opals on Ice Lingerie v. Body
    Lines Inc., 
    320 F.3d 362
    , 368 (2d Cir. 2003) (recognizing that “if a party participates in arbitration
    proceedings without making a timely objection to the submission of the dispute to arbitration, that
    party may be found to have waived its right to object to the arbitration,” but concluding that party
    in this case had not waived by participating because it objected repeatedly and timely to the
    arbitration); Ahluwalia v. QFA Royalties, LLC, 
    226 P.3d 1093
    , 1098 (Colo. App. 2009) (“If . . .
    the party clearly and explicitly reserves the right to object to arbitrability, participation in the
    arbitration does not preclude the party from subsequently challenging the arbitrator’s authority in
    court.”); Duemer v. Edward T. Joyce and Assocs., P.C., 
    2013 IL App (1st) 120687
    , ¶ 50 (“Where
    a timely objection is made, the issue may be judicially reviewed even if the objecting party
    participates in the arbitration proceeding.”); see also E.L. Grossman, Annotation, Participation in
    Arbitration Proceedings as Waiver of Objections to Arbitrability in State Law, 
    56 A.L.R. 5th 757
    § 4 (1998) (collecting cases holding that participation in arbitration proceedings following timely
    objection to arbitrability does not give rise to waiver of objection).
    5
    awards provides in relevant part: “Upon application of a party to confirm, modify or vacate an
    award, the court shall vacate an award where . . . a court has found that there was no arbitration
    agreement and the party did not participate in the arbitration hearing without raising the objection.”
    12 V.S.A. § 5677(a)(5). This language suggests that a party may object to the existence (or
    validity) of an arbitration agreement at any time throughout the arbitration proceeding until the
    arbitration hearing itself. Compare 
    id. § 5674(b)
    (referring to “arbitration proceeding”), with 
    id. § 5677(a)(5)
    (referring to party’s participation in arbitration hearing).
    ¶ 11.   Barr Law Group, on the other hand, draws inspiration from this Court’s discussion
    in Joder Building Corp. v. Lewis, 
    153 Vt. 115
    , 
    569 A.2d 471
    (1989). In Joder Building Corp., a
    contractor and homeowner submitted their construction contract dispute to arbitration. The parties
    encountered some problems identifying available arbitrators, and their claims continued to evolve
    as the arbitration hearing approached. Because the homeowner claimed he had found additional
    substandard work and would not be able to determine the costs to correct the work for several
    months, the homeowner sought a postponement of the scheduled arbitration hearing.                The
    arbitration panel refused and held the hearing without the homeowner’s participation. When the
    contractor moved in the superior court to confirm the award, the homeowner resisted and claimed
    for the first time that they never signed the statutorily required acknowledgment in the arbitration
    agreement. On appeal, this Court concluded that the arbitration agreement did, in fact, fall short
    of the statutory requirements. 
    Id. at 119,
    569 A.2d at 473.
    ¶ 12.   However, we declined to vacate the arbitration order because the homeowner had
    not timely raised the objection. Citing 12 V.S.A. § 5677(a)(5), this Court considered “whether
    defendants participated in the arbitration proceeding sufficiently to trigger the waiver rule.” 
    Id. at 120,
    569 A.2d at 474. We explained our conclusion that they did:
    We believe that the defendants participated sufficiently to cause a
    waiver of their right to object to the lack of an enforceable
    agreement unless they raised this point before the arbitrators. A
    6
    number of considerations lead to this conclusion. It is important that
    any objections to arbitration jurisdiction be raised at the earliest
    possible moment to allow that issue to be addressed and resolved
    before the parties expend significant time and resources trying the
    case. The Uniform Arbitration Act offers a party who challenges
    arbitration jurisdiction broad pre-arbitration judicial remedies.
    Therefore, the waiver rule can and should require a party to contest
    the presence of a valid arbitration agreement early in the
    proceedings.
    
    Id. at 121,
    569 A.2d at 474 (citations omitted). Joder Building Corp. is not determinative of this
    case because the homeowner in Joder Building Corp. did not challenge the enforceability of the
    arbitration agreement until after the arbitration order was issued. But the broad language of the
    opinion suggests a reluctance to allow a party to raise threshold objections to the validity of the
    arbitration proceeding itself only after substantial participation in that proceeding.
    ¶ 13.   We find some support for this broader view in decisions from other jurisdictions,
    but there appears to be no clear consensus on the question of whether a party can waive the ability
    to challenge the validity of an arbitration agreement by conduct prior to the arbitration hearing
    and, if so, when a party’s participation crosses the line.
    ¶ 14.   A number of courts have concluded that participation in an arbitration proceeding
    without promptly objecting to the arbitration proceeding itself may amount to a waiver even short
    of an arbitration hearing. For example, the Wisconsin Court of Appeals considered a case in which
    a party objected to arbitration and contended that his agreement to arbitrate was procured by fraud,
    misrepresentation, and coercion. Pilgrim Inv. Corp. v. Reed, 
    457 N.W.2d 544
    (Wis. Ct. App.
    1990). Because Reed’s attorney initially failed to cooperate in the appointment of a third arbitrator
    after Pilgrim initiated arbitration, Pilgrim filed suit to compel cooperation and arbitration. At that
    point, Reed’s counsel cooperated in the selection of a third arbitrator, and Reed paid Pilgrim $500
    for its attorney’s fees in consideration of Pilgrim’s agreement to discontinue its court proceeding
    to compel Reed to cooperate in the naming of a third arbitrator. Two months later, nearly three
    months after Pilgrim initiated the lawsuit to compel cooperation, Reed for the first time claimed
    7
    that the arbitration agreement was procured by fraud, misrepresentation, and coercion. Upon
    Pilgrim’s petition, the trial court issued an order compelling arbitration. The appeals court
    considered whether Reed’s participation in the arbitration proceeding without objection estopped
    him from challenging the arbitration agreement. Acknowledging a split in authority, the court
    concluded:
    [A]bsent a reservation of rights, “partial participation” in the
    arbitration process can serve to estop a party from challenging the
    arbitration agreement. Even though an arbitration process has not
    proceeded to a hearing on the merits, substantial time, money and
    effort in preparation may well have been invested in the
    undertaking. Absent a reservation of objection to the arbitration
    process, when one party participates in preliminary arbitration
    procedures preparatory to the hearing on the merits, that party is
    signaling to the other side that full participation in the process is
    intended.
    
    Id. at 548.
    Considering the steps Pilgrim took in reliance on Reed’s apparent acceptance of the
    arbitration agreement, and the course of the parties’ dealings, the court concluded that Reed was
    estopped from objecting to the arbitration agreement. 
    Id. ¶ 15.
      Other courts have likewise invoked waiver or estoppel principles to preclude
    challenges to arbitration agreements raised after some participation in the proceedings, but before
    the actual arbitration hearing. See Reed v. Mut. Serv. Corp., 
    131 Cal. Rptr. 2d 524
    , 533-34 (Ct.
    App. 2003) (rejecting as waived challenge to conscionability of arbitration provision imposing six-
    year limitation on claims in case where arbitration award dismissing claims with prejudice was
    issued without hearing, and where challenger failed to address unconscionability claim when
    initiating arbitration or in response to a motion to dismiss arbitration); First Health Grp. Corp. v.
    Ruddick, 
    911 N.E.2d 1201
    , 1210 (Ill. App. Ct. 2009) (“To preserve for judicial review the issue
    of whether a claim was subject to arbitration, a party must object to the arbitration proceedings in
    a timely manner. An objection should occur at the earliest possible moment to save the time and
    expense of a possibly unwarranted arbitration. A party must object to the arbitrability of a claim
    8
    no later than the filing of the answer.” (quotations and citations omitted)); Allstate Ins. Co. v.
    Khait, 
    643 N.Y.S.2d 163
    (App. Div. 1996) (holding that “[b]y actively participating in the
    selection of the arbitrators and in adjourning the arbitration hearing without any reservation of
    rights” party “participated in arbitration proceeding” and thereby waived statutory right to stay of
    arbitration). But see Borg, Inc. v. Morris Middle Sch. Dist. No. 54, 
    278 N.E.2d 818
    , 820-21 (Ill.
    App. Ct. 1972) (holding that school district not estopped from raising question of agreement to
    arbitrate where school district filed answer to arbitration demand and counterclaim and
    participated in selection of arbitrators before raising objection); Dachtera v. Whitehouse, 
    609 N.W.2d 248
    , 250 (Minn. 2000) (rejecting argument that parties waived right to object to arbitration
    by not filing declaratory judgment until arbitration had progressed through payment of filing fees
    and selection of arbitrator, where parties filed action before arbitration hearing).
    ¶ 16.   We are persuaded by our own reasoning in Joder Building Corporation, as well as
    by those courts that have concluded that at some point prior to the actual arbitration hearing a party
    who participates in an arbitration proceeding without objecting to the validity of the arbitration
    agreement may waive the ability to make that objection. As the Minnesota Court of Appeals
    explained, “A person objecting to arbitration must timely raise the objection so a party seeking
    arbitration can make an informed choice whether to pursue arbitration with the risk that the dispute
    would be found nonarbitrable or to abandon arbitration and pursue other remedies.” Helmerichs
    v. Bank of Minneapolis & Trust Co., 
    349 N.W.2d 326
    , 328 (Minn. Ct. App. 1984). We need not
    locate the line in this case, or define with precision the range of the trial court’s discretion; in this
    case, Adams Construction’s participation in the selection of arbitrators, filing of an answer and
    counterclaims, and active participation in extensive discovery and motion practice over a period
    of nearly six months was more than sufficient to give rise to a waiver. Our requirement of timely
    objections to arbitration jurisdiction was designed to avoid unnecessary investments in time and
    resources of exactly these types. Joder Bldg Corp., 151 Vt. at 
    121, 569 A.2d at 474
    . For that
    9
    reason, we decline to reach the merits of Adams Construction’s challenge to the validity of the
    arbitration agreement, and affirm the trial court’s denial of Adams Construction’s application to
    vacate the arbitration order.
    Affirmed.
    FOR THE COURT:
    Associate Justice
    10