Goodwin v. Comerica Bank, N.A. ( 2021 )


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  • Filed 12/15/21
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION FOUR
    MARK GOODWIN,
    Plaintiff and Appellant,
    A160909
    v.
    COMERICA BANK, N.A.,                            (Alameda County
    Super. Ct. No. RG17855144)
    Defendant and Respondent
    Mark Goodwin appeals two concurrent orders denying his petition to
    confirm an arbitration award and granting Comerica Bank’s (the bank)
    petition to vacate the award on the ground that the arbitrator made a
    material omission or misrepresentation in his disclosure of prior cases
    involving the parties’ lawyers. (See Code Civ. Proc.,1 § 1281.9.) The disclosure
    described a prior case involving Goodwin’s lawyers as “settled prior to final
    award” without disclosing that the case had settled after the arbitrator
    issued an interim award in favor of the client of Goodwin’s lawyer. On appeal,
    the parties debate whether section 1281.9 required the arbitrator to disclose
    the interim award and whether the omission was sufficiently material to
    require vacation of the award. We need not decide those questions because
    the bank forfeited any right to disqualify the arbitrator on that basis by
    failing to file a notice of disqualification within 15 days of discovering that
    All statutory citations are to the Code of Civil Procedure unless
    1
    otherwise specified.
    1
    omission. We will thus reverse the orders at issue and remand with
    instructions to enter an order confirming the award.
    Factual and Procedural History
    Goodwin subsists on disability benefits that are direct-deposited to a
    Comerica bank account. In April 2016, he alleges, the bank failed to prevent
    identity thieves from taking most of his benefits for the month, and then
    failed to respond fairly to his requests to rectify the situation. He filed this
    action in 2017.
    The bank invoked an arbitration clause in the parties’ “Terms of
    Service” agreement, and the parties agreed to submit the matter to the
    Honorable Read Ambler (Ret.), who practices in association with JAMS, a for-
    profit provider of alternative dispute resolution services, and who had
    previously arbitrated cases in which parties were represented by the lawyers
    representing both parties in this dispute.
    In January 2018, the arbitrator timely served a disclosure statement
    pursuant to section 1281.9. That statute requires an arbitrator, within
    10 days of service of a proposed appointment, to disclose “all matters that
    could cause a person aware of the facts to reasonably entertain a doubt that
    the proposed neutral arbitrator would be able to be impartial,” including all
    matters within six listed categories. (§ 1281.9, subd. (a).) The categories
    relevant here are: “(1) The existence of any ground specified in Section 170.1
    for disqualification of a judge. . . . [¶] (2) Any matters required to be disclosed
    by the ethics standards . . . . [¶] (3) . . . [and] [¶] (4) The names of the parties to
    all prior or pending noncollective bargaining cases in which the proposed
    neutral arbitrator served or is serving as a neutral arbitrator, and the results
    of each case arbitrated to conclusion, including [specified details].” (Ibid.)
    2
    The arbitrator included in his disclosure statement a report generated
    by JAMS that listed cases involving the parties and their lawyers. It listed
    two arbitrations involving Goodwin’s lawyers:2 “Hernandez, Edgar, et al. v.
    Robinson Tait, P.S. . . . [¶] . . . [¶] Case Result(s): Settled Prior to Final
    Award—05/07/2013” (Hernandez) and “Private Party v. Dent-A-Med, dba HC
    Processing Center . . . [¶] . . . [¶] Case Result(s): case on-going” (Dent-A-Med).
    The statement also noted that “Each JAMS neutral, including me, has an
    economic interest in the overall financial success of JAMS,” and that,
    “because of the size and nature of JAMS, each side should assume that one or
    more of the other neutrals who practice with JAMS has participated in . . .
    [a] dispute resolution proceeding with the parties, counsel[,] or insurers in this
    case and may do so [again].”
    Neither party exercised their statutory right to object to the proposed
    arbitrator within 15 days based on matters listed in the disclosure statement.
    (§ 1281.91, subd. (b)(1); see discussion, post, at pp. 9–10.)
    Between February 2018 and September 2019, the parties litigated the
    merits of the case before the arbitrator. The litigation included contested
    discovery motions and the filing of briefs accompanied by exhibits, in lieu of a
    live evidentiary hearing. The arbitrator heard oral argument in August 2019
    and accepted supplemental briefs in September 2019.
    On November 1, 2019, while the matter was under submission, the
    arbitrator served an amended disclosure statement accompanied by a “notice”
    from a JAMS employee stating, “The initial disclosures previously served in
    this matter were incomplete and as a result, we are providing a new disclosure
    2The disclosure report indicated that Hernandez involved Ronald
    Wilcox and Ben Dupre (as well as Dupre Law Firm, P.C.), while Dent-A-Med
    involved Mr. Wilcox and Wilcox Law Firm, P.C. We refer to Wilcox and Dupre
    and their firms, jointly and severally, as “Goodwin’s lawyers.”
    3
    checklist and report.” Among other things, the report listed additional matters
    involving the bank’s lawyers and disclosed that, in May 2018, the arbitrator
    had issued an award in Dent-A-Med in favor of the client of Goodwin’s lawyer
    in an unspecified amount.3 Neither party requested further information or
    served a notice of disqualification.
    Nineteen days later, on November 20, 2019, the arbitrator issued an
    interim award in Goodwin’s favor. He ruled that Goodwin was entitled to
    $133,000 in damages, as well as attorney fees and costs in an amount to be
    determined by subsequent motion. The interim award set a briefing schedule
    for the fees motion and added that the “further determinations” to be made
    based on that motion “shall be embodied in the Final Award, which shall also
    incorporate the contents of the Interim Award. It is not intended that this
    Interim Award be subject to review . . . pursuant to [the federal or California
    Arbitration Act].”
    Goodwin filed his fees motion on December 4, 2019, requesting a total of
    approximately $925,000 in fees and costs, or $1.8 million after a proposed
    multiplier. The bank filed an opposition on January 10, 2020, contending that
    the fees sought were excessive and should be reduced to roughly $375,000.
    While preparing that opposition—that is, between December 4, 2019 and
    January 10, 2020—the bank’s lawyers learned that before the settlement in
    Hernandez the arbitrator had entered an interim award of attorney fees and
    3 The report also stated that the arbitrator is among JAMS’s “owner
    panelists,” explaining: “[A] little over one quarter of JAMS neutrals have an
    equal ownership share in the company. Owners are not privy to information
    regarding the number of cases or revenue related to cases assigned to other
    panelists. No shareholder’s distribution has ever exceeded 0.1% of JAMS[’s]
    total revenue in a given year. Shareholders are not informed about how their
    profit distributions are impacted by a particular client, lawyer[,] or law firm[,]
    and shareholders do not receive credit for the creation or retention of client
    relationships.”
    4
    costs in favor of the claimant represented by Goodwin’s lawyers, and against
    the defendant debt collector, in the amount of $322,800.4 They also learned
    that a party to the Dent-A-Med arbitration had petitioned a federal court to
    vacate that award on the basis that the arbitrator had failed, in the
    Dent-A-Med arbitration, to disclose the interim award in Hernandez.5 The
    bank did not thereafter file a notice of disqualification or raise the
    nondisclosure of those matters in its opposition to the fees motion.
    4 In Hernandez, the parties had reached a settlement of the merits of
    their dispute pursuant to which the respondents agreed to pay the claimant
    $50,000 plus reasonable attorney fees and costs in an amount to be
    determined by the arbitrator. The arbitrator issued an interim award of fees
    and costs in the amount of $322,800 but retained jurisdiction to address a
    claim for additional fees, after which the parties settled.
    The trial court found that “[s]ometime between November 2019 and
    January 2020, defendant learn[ed] about the Hernandez arbitration award
    and the amount of the Dent-A-Med arbitration award and discover[ed that]
    the defendant in Dent-A-Med challenged the award in federal court on the
    grounds of nondisclosure of the Hernandez award.” Comerica does not dispute
    the accuracy of that finding and itself asserts that its lawyers discovered the
    Hernandez interim award at some point in “December 2019 and January
    2020 . . . [w]hile the post-award fee issues [were] being briefed and argued to
    the arbitrator.”
    5  The bank requested judicial notice below of papers filed with the
    motion to vacate the arbitration award in Dent-A-Med, as well as a transcript
    of the hearing on that motion. The court took judicial notice of the papers but
    not the transcript. On appeal, Goodwin challenges the partial denial of the
    bank’s request and himself requests that this court judicially notice the
    hearing transcript. We deny that request, as the federal court’s comments on
    and resolution of the motion in Dent-A-Med are immaterial to the resolution of
    this appeal. We also deny Goodwin’s request for judicial notice of his reply
    brief to the arbitrator in support of his fees request, which is immaterial to the
    resolution of this appeal. We grant Goodwin’s request for judicial notice of the
    JAMS Comprehensive Arbitration Rules and Ethics Guidelines, which the
    bank concedes is proper.
    5
    On February 27, 2020, the arbitrator issued a final award reiterating
    the interim award on the merits and awarding Goodwin just over $900,000 in
    fees and costs, plus interest.
    Goodwin filed a petition to confirm the final award. The bank opposed
    that petition and filed a petition to vacate the award based on the arbitrator’s
    (1) failure to disclose the interim award in Hernandez; (2) 18-month delay in
    reporting his issuance of an award to the client of Goodwin’s lawyers in
    Dent-A-Med, and ongoing failure to disclose its amount; and (3) delay in
    disclosing his ownership interest in JAMS.
    The court granted the bank’s petition and denied Goodwin’s. It held that
    the arbitrator’s failure to disclose that he had made an interim award of fees in
    Hernandez constituted a “fail[ure] to disclose within the time required for
    disclosure a ground for disqualification of which the arbitrator was then
    aware.” (§ 1286.2, subd. (a)(6).) The court noted that section 1281.9 requires a
    proposed arbitrator to disclose, with regard to all prior cases involving the
    parties’ counsel, “the results of each case arbitrated to conclusion.” (§ 1281.9,
    subd. (a)(4)) If that duty is breached, the court observed, section 1286.2,
    subdivision (a)(6), requires it to vacate the arbitrator’s award without regard
    to whether the violation caused prejudice. (Haworth v. Superior Court (2010)
    
    50 Cal.4th 372
    , 383.) The court also noted that, while section 1281.91
    requires a party to serve a notice of disqualification within 15 days after a
    proposed arbitrator serves an initial disclosure statement pursuant to section
    1281.9, an exception applies if the arbitrator made “a material omission or
    material misrepresentation in his or her disclosure.” The court held that
    Hernandez qualified as a “case arbitrated to conclusion” for purposes of section
    1281.9, even though it settled before the arbitrator issued a final award, and
    that the failure to disclose the interim award amounted to a material omission
    6
    or misrepresentation. The court rejected Goodwin’s argument that the
    disclosure of the existence of the Hernandez matter put the bank on inquiry
    notice, and that its failure to request further information was an implicit
    “waiver” of any objection.6
    Goodwin filed a timely notice of appeal.
    Discussion
    Because there are no pertinent disputed facts, this court reviews
    de novo whether the bank forfeited any right to disqualification by failing to
    timely raise the arbitrator’s failure to make complete and accurate disclosures.
    (See Honeycutt v. JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A. (2018) 
    25 Cal.App.5th 909
    , 921
    [order vacating arbitral award is reviewed de novo except insofar as it
    depends on trial court’s resolution of factual disputes].) In doing so, we
    assume without deciding that the trial court correctly ruled that the
    arbitrator was obligated to disclose in his initial disclosure statement that he
    had issued an interim award in Hernandez (§ 1281.9, subds. (a)(1), (2), and
    (4); Cal. Rules of Court, Ethics Standards for Neutral Arbitrators in
    Contractual Arbitration (ethics standards), std. 7(d)(4)), and that his
    description of the arbitration as “settled prior to final award,” without
    6 The court also rejected the bank’s other grounds for vacating the
    award—that is, the delays in disclosing the arbitrator’s ownership interest in
    JAMS and issuance of an award in the Dent-A-Med arbitration. The court held
    that the bank forfeited any right to disqualification based on the delay in
    disclosing the Dent-A-Med award by failing to raise the issue within 15 days of
    the belated disclosure, and that the bank’s failure to offer evidence of when the
    arbitrator became a JAMS owner panelist made it impossible to find his
    disclosure of that status untimely.
    7
    mention of the interim award, was a material omission and did not put the
    bank on inquiry notice.7
    1. Caselaw and Statutory Provisions Governing Forfeiture of the Right
    to Seek Disqualification.
    The Fourth Appellate District recently summarized the relevant
    principles governing an arbitrator’s failure to make adequate disclosure: “If a
    party learns the arbitrator failed to disclose information relevant to
    disqualification, the party must object ‘at the earliest practicable opportunity
    after discovery of the facts constituting the ground for disqualification.’
    [Citation.] ‘While failure to disclose properly a ground for disqualification
    generally mandates vacation of the award, this rule only applies if the party
    moving to vacate “had no reason to know of the existence of a nondisclosed
    matter.” [Citation.] If a party is “aware that a disclosure is incomplete or
    otherwise fails to meet the statutory disclosure requirements,” the party
    “cannot passively reserve the issue for consideration after the arbitration has
    concluded.” ’ ” (Alper v. Rotella (2021) 
    63 Cal.App.5th 1142
    , 1152–1153.) In an
    older opinion, that court put the matter more vividly: “[A] party who
    knowingly participates in the arbitration process without disclosing a ground
    for declaring it invalid is properly cast into the outer darkness of forfeiture.”
    (Cummings v. Future Nissan (2005) 
    128 Cal.App.4th 321
    , 329.) A party who
    7 In view of our conclusion that the bank forfeited its right to seek
    disqualification on this ground, we need not consider whether the trial court
    was correct that the omission was sufficiently significant to justify vacating
    the award if timely raised (cf. Dornbirer v. Kaiser Foundation Health Plan,
    Inc. (2008) 
    166 Cal.App.4th 831
    , 842 [“not every item of information . . .
    required to be disclosed under section 1281.9 constitutes a ‘ground for
    disqualification’ as the term is used in section 1286.2”]), or whether the court
    was right to deny relief based on the bank’s other grounds for disqualification
    —the arbitrator’s untimely disclosures of his status as an “owner panelist” of
    JAMS and of his issuance of an award in the Dent-A-Med arbitration. Our
    forfeiture analysis applies equally to those alternative grounds.
    8
    learns of a basis to disqualify an arbitrator cannot “wait and see how the
    arbitration turn[s] out before raising the[] issue[],” which would allow the
    party to “play games” with the arbitration and “not raise the issue” “until
    [they] los[e].” (Honeycutt v. JPMorgan Chase, supra, 25 Cal.App.5th at
    pp. 926, 927.)
    In accordance with these principles, sections 1281.9 and 1281.91, as
    supplemented by the ethics standards promulgated by the Judicial Council
    pursuant to section 1281.85, establish a timeline for arbitrators to disclose
    potential grounds for disqualification and for parties either to promptly seek
    disqualification or forfeit the right to do so.
    Section 1281.9 requires an arbitrator, within 10 days of notice of a
    proposed appointment, to “disclose all matters that could cause a person
    aware of the facts to reasonably entertain a doubt that the proposed neutral
    arbitrator would be able to be impartial, including [certain specific matters].”
    (§ 1281.9, subd. (a).) Section 1281.91 provides: If the arbitrator “fails to
    comply with Section 1281.9 and any party entitled to receive the disclosure
    serves a notice of disqualification within 15 calendar days,” the arbitrator
    “shall be disqualified.” (§ 1281.91 subd. (a).) If the arbitrator timely serves a
    disclosure statement, he or she “shall be disqualified on the basis of the
    disclosure statement after any party . . . serves a notice of disqualification
    within 15 calendar days after service of the disclosure statement.” (Id.,
    subd. (b)(1).) Subdivision (c) of section 1281.91 provides, “The right of a party
    to disqualify a proposed neutral arbitrator pursuant to this section shall be
    [forfeited8] if the party fails to serve the notice pursuant to the times set forth
    8The statute uses the term “waived,” but it is clear in context that the
    Legislature meant “forfeited.” Waiver and forfeiture are distinct doctrines
    with different substantive requirements, despite the informal shorthand by
    9
    in this section, unless the [arbitrator] makes a material omission or material
    misrepresentation in his or her disclosure.” As discussed in more detail below,
    subdivision (c) adds, “Except as provided in subdivision (d), in no event may a
    notice of disqualification be given after a hearing of any contested issue of
    fact relating to the merits of the claim or after any ruling by the arbitrator
    regarding any contested matter.” Subdivision (d) provides that “If any ground
    specified in section 170.1 exists, a neutral arbitrator shall disqualify himself
    or herself upon the demand of any party made before the conclusion of the
    arbitration proceeding. . . .”
    To the extent of any uncertainty in the statutory provisions, ethics
    standard 10 specifies the procedure and time requirement for disqualifying an
    arbitrator who “makes a material omission or material misrepresentation in
    his or her [initial] disclosure.” That provision, which the parties do not
    discuss, states that an arbitrator is disqualified if “[a] party becomes aware
    that an arbitrator has made a material omission or material misrepresentation
    in his or her disclosure and, within 15 days after becoming aware of the
    omission or misrepresentation and within the time specified in . . . section
    1281.91(c), the party serves a notice of disqualification that clearly describes
    the material omission or material misrepresentation and how and when the
    party became aware of [it].” (Ethics Standards, std. 10(a)(4), italics added.)
    Like section 1281.91, that provision reinforces the basic principle that a party
    which lawyers and courts often indiscriminately—and at times confusingly—
    use “waiver” to refer to both. (United States v. Olano (1993) 
    507 U.S. 725
    ,
    733–734 [“Waiver is different from forfeiture. Whereas forfeiture is the
    failure to make the timely assertion of a right, waiver is the ‘intentional
    relinquishment or abandonment of a known right.’ ”]; People v. Simon (2001)
    
    25 Cal.4th 1082
    , 1097, fn. 9 [“[T]he terms ‘waiver’ and ‘forfeiture’ long have
    been used interchangeably.”].)
    10
    who learns of a ground for disqualification must either raise it promptly or
    forfeit it. (See Alper v. Rotella, supra, 63 Cal.App.5th at pp. 1152–1153.)
    2. Analysis.
    Here, as we assume the trial court correctly ruled, the arbitrator
    “ma[de] a material omission or material misrepresentation in his or her
    [initial] disclosure [statement].” (§ 1281.91, subd. (c).) However, the bank did
    not learn of the omission until after the 15-day window to demand
    disqualification, based on the initial statement, had passed (see § 1281.91,
    subd. (b)) and after the arbitrator had heard and decided the merits of the
    controversy. (See § 1281.91, subd. (c).) The bank learned of the arbitrator’s
    failure to disclose the interim award in Hernandez while it was briefing
    Goodwin’s fee motion, which subsequently resulted in an award of attorney
    fees, costs, and interest comprising approximately 90 percent of the total
    award.9
    The parties’ appellate briefs, like the court’s order, focus on whether
    the arbitrator’s initial disclosure of the existence of the Hernandez
    arbitration put the bank on inquiry notice that he might have made interim
    rulings before the arbitration settled. The trial court did not address
    Goodwin’s distinct argument that the bank forfeited its right to seek
    disqualification by failing to do so once it had actual notice of the Hernandez
    award, and in its initial briefing the bank made only a cursory response to that
    argument. Relying on the second sentence of subdivision (c) of section 1281.91,
    the bank argued that, by the time it learned of the Hernandez interim award,
    9 The bank learned of its other grounds for disqualification—the
    arbitrator’s delays in disclosing his ownership interest in JAMS and his
    issuance of the Dent-A-Med award—in November 2019, while the merits of
    this case were under submission. Thus, as noted above, the same forfeiture
    analysis applies to these asserted grounds for disqualification.
    11
    it was too late to file a notice of disqualification, because the hearing was
    underway and the merits of the dispute had already been decided. We thus
    asked the parties pursuant to Government Code section 68081 to brief
    whether the bank forfeited its right to challenge the arbitrator
    notwithstanding the second sentence of section 1281.91, subdivision (c).
    As noted above, subdivision (c) of section 1281.91 states, “Except as
    provided in subdivision (d), in no event may a notice of disqualification be
    given after a hearing of any contested issue of fact relating to the merits of
    the claim or after any ruling by the arbitrator regarding any contested
    matter.” (Ibid.) Read in isolation, that sentence may support the bank’s
    position. But on that reading, if a basis for disqualification is not discovered
    until after the arbitration hearing has begun, either the party learning of the
    basis for disqualification would have no recourse or that party would be
    required to await the outcome of the arbitration and, if unfavorable, raise the
    ground for disqualification for the first time in a petition to vacate. Neither
    outcome would be sensible or fair, and the second would contravene long-
    settled policy. (See, e.g., Caminetti v. Pacific Mut. Life Ins. Co. of Cal. (1943)
    
    22 Cal.2d 386
    , 392 [“ ‘It would seem . . . intolerable to permit a party to play
    fast and loose with the administration of justice by deliberately standing by
    without making an objection of which he is aware and thereby permitting the
    proceedings to go to a conclusion which he may acquiesce in, if favorable, and
    . . . avoid, if not.’ ”].)
    For this reason the statute contains an exception to subdivision (c),
    provided in subdivision (d) of section 1281.91. Subdivision (d) provides, “If
    any ground specified in Section 170.1 exists, a neutral arbitrator shall
    disqualify himself or herself upon the demand of any party made before the
    conclusion of the arbitration proceeding.” (Italics added.) The arbitrator’s
    12
    failure here to disclose the sizable interim fee award he made to Goodwin’s
    attorney in another arbitration proceeding, we continue to assume, comes
    within the grounds for disqualification “specified in section 170.1.”
    Section 170.1 was enacted to identify grounds for disqualifying a judge,
    but it applies by reference to arbitrators. (§ 1281.91, subd. (d); § 1281.9,
    subd. (a)(1); Ethics Standards, std. 10(a)(5).) It states that a judge is
    disqualified if, among other things, “For any reason, . . . [a] person aware of
    the facts might reasonably entertain a doubt that the judge would be able to
    be impartial.” (§ 170.1, subd. (a)(6)(A)(iii).) That standard is identical to the
    standard in section 1281.9 requiring the arbitrator to disclose matters that
    “could cause a person aware of the facts to reasonably entertain a doubt that
    the proposed neutral arbitrator would be able to be impartial” (§ 1281.9,
    subd. (a).) As noted, the trial court held here that this standard compelled
    disclosure of the omitted information.
    Accordingly, to obtain the arbitrator’s disqualification, the bank was
    required to “object ‘at the earliest practicable opportunity after discovery of
    the facts constituting the ground for disqualification’ ” (Alper v. Rotella, supra,
    63 Cal.App.5th at p. 1152), and in compliance with the more specific
    obligation under ethics standard 10(a)(4) to serve a notice of disqualification
    “within 15 days after becoming aware of the omission or misrepresentation” in
    the arbitrator’s disclosure statement. Having failed to do so, it forfeited the
    right to demand disqualification when it subsequently learned of the
    arbitrator’s adverse fee award.
    The bank is in no position to dispute this conclusion. In petitioning the
    trial court to vacate the award it relied on section 1281.9, subdivision (a). At
    its urging, the court held that “the mischaracterization of the Hernandez
    matter satisfies the ‘might cause a reasonable person to question’ standard of
    13
    . . . section 1286.2 and the ‘cause a person aware of the facts to reasonably
    entertain a doubt that the arbitrator would be able to be impartial’ standard of
    [ethics standard] 7(d), and was a material omission and material
    misrepresentation.” The bank’s supplemental brief defends those findings.
    Hence, the bank has effectively acknowledged that the identical “might
    reasonably entertain a doubt” standard of section 170.1, subdivision (a)(6)(A)
    was satisfied, and therefore the objection could be raised at any time “before
    the conclusion of the arbitration” (§ 1281.9, subd. (d)).
    None of the three cases the bank emphasized at oral argument and in its
    letter brief responding to the court’s request for supplemental briefing affects
    our conclusion. In Gray v. Chiu (2013) 
    212 Cal.App.4th 1355
    , the defendants
    argued that the plaintiff had forfeited the right to seek vacatur of an award
    based on nondisclosure of a ground for disqualification of which she “knew or
    should have known.” (Id. at p. 1366.) There was no explicit finding or
    concession, as here, that the plaintiff did learn of the ground during the
    arbitration. Even if she did, the Second District’s analysis of the forfeiture
    claim was unsound. It held that the plaintiff could not have forfeited the
    issue because section 1281.85, subdivision (c) “prohibits waiver of the ethics
    standards. ‘The ethics requirements and standards of this chapter are
    nonnegotiable and shall not be waived.’ ” (Ibid.) But as the Fifth District has
    since explained, Gray v. Chiu misread section 1281.85. (United Health
    Centers of San Joaquin Valley, Inc. v. Superior Court (2014) 
    229 Cal.App.4th 63
    , 85.) That statute bars the advance contractual waiver of rights conferred
    by the ethics standards—not the forfeiture of such rights by failing to timely
    assert them after learning of a breach. (Id. at pp. 79–85.)
    In Mt. Holyoke Homes, L.P. v. Jeffer Mangels Butler & Mitchell, LLP
    (2013) 
    219 Cal.App.4th 1299
    , it was “undisputed that [the party seeking to
    14
    have an award vacated] did not discover until after the arbitration” the fact
    warranting disqualification. (Id. at p. 1314.) While the court rejected an
    argument that the party forfeited her objection because she had “constructive
    knowledge” of that fact during the arbitration, it noted that “[a]n arbitrator's
    failure to make a required disclosure presumably would not justify vacating
    the arbitrator’s award if the party challenging the award had actual
    knowledge of the information yet failed to timely seek disqualification.” (Id. at
    pp. 1313–1314.) That is the case here.
    The recent decision in Jolie v. Superior Court (2021) 
    66 Cal.App.5th 1025
     also strongly supports our analysis. Addressing a challenge to a
    temporary judge based on his belated disclosure of new cases in which he was
    involved with the lawyers for one party (Pitt), the Second District applied the
    “person aware of the facts might reasonably entertain a doubt” standard of
    section 170.1, subdivision (a)(6)(A). (Jolie, supra, at p. 1046.) Pitt contended
    that the other party (Jolie) forfeited her objection to the temporary judge
    because the judge’s initial disclosures had put Jolie “on notice that [he] had a
    significant history of serving in cases in which [Pitt’s lawyers] represented one
    of the parties.” (Ibid.) Citing numerous cases, the court reaffirmed that “[a]
    delay in seeking to disqualify a judge ‘constitutes forfeiture or an implied
    waiver of the disqualification.’ ” (Ibid.) In rejecting the argument that Jolie
    forfeited her objections because she was on inquiry notice, and directing the
    trial court to order the temporary judge disqualified, the court emphasized
    that, “[u]pon receiving th[e] new information, Jolie promptly sought
    disqualification.” (Id. at p. 1043; see also id. at pp. 1035–1037 [Jolie sought
    recusal two days after learning details of new matters, then promptly filed a
    disqualification statement, and then filed a writ petition.].) The facts there
    contrast sharply with the bank’s silence upon learning the facts here.
    15
    Because the bank failed to seek the arbitrator’s disqualification within
    15 days of discovering the facts requiring disqualification and before the
    arbitrator decided the pending fee motion, it forfeited the right to demand
    disqualification. The order vacating the award based on the arbitrator’s
    disqualification thus must be reversed. Because the bank has identified no
    other grounds for denying Goodwin’s petition to confirm the award, that
    petition must be granted.
    Disposition
    The order granting the bank’s petition to vacate the arbitration award
    and the order denying Goodwin’s petition to confirm the award are both
    reversed, and the matter is remanded with directions to issue orders denying
    the bank’s petition to vacate and granting Goodwin’s petition to confirm.
    POLLAK, P. J.
    WE CONCUR:
    BROWN, J.
    ROSS, J.*
    *Judge of the Superior Court of California, County of San Francisco,
    assigned by the Chief Justice pursuant to article VI, section 6 of the
    California Constitution.
    16
    Trial Court:                Alameda County Superior Court
    Trial Judge:                Honorable Julia Spain
    Counsel for Plaintiff and   EAST BAY COMMUNITY LAW CENTER,
    Appellant:                  A CLINIC OF BERKELY LAW SCHOOL
    Kara Acevedo
    Miguel Soto, Jr.
    WILCOX LAW FIRM, P.C.
    Ronald Wilcox
    Allison Krumhorn
    DUPRE LAW FIRM, P.C.
    Ben E. Dupre
    Counsel for Defendant and   BUCHALTER, A Professional Corporation
    Respondent:                 Peter G. Bertrand
    Harry W.R. Chamberlain II
    Cheryl M. Lott
    NUKK-FREEMAN & CERA, L.P.
    Stacy L. Fode
    Sabrina E. Lim
    17
    

Document Info

Docket Number: A160909

Filed Date: 12/15/2021

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 12/15/2021