Fuentes v. TMCSF, Inc. ( 2018 )


Menu:
  • Filed 8/23/18
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION TWO
    ALFREDO FUENTES,
    Plaintiff and Respondent,                  E066242
    v.                                                  (Super.Ct.No. RIC1515384)
    TMCSF, INC.,                                        OPINION
    Defendant and Appellant.
    APPEAL from the Superior Court of Riverside County. Craig Riemer, Judge.
    Affirmed.
    Arent Fox, Halbert B. Rasmussen, and George N. Koumbis for Defendant and
    Appellant.
    Pestotnik and Ross H. Hyslop for Plaintiff and Respondent.
    Plaintiff Alfredo Fuentes entered into a written agreement with defendant TMCSF,
    Inc., doing business as Riverside Harley-Davidson (Riverside), to buy a motorcycle. At
    the same time, he entered into a written agreement with Eaglemark Savings Bank
    (Eaglemark) to finance the purchase. The latter agreement included an arbitration clause;
    the former agreement did not.
    Fuentes then filed this action against Riverside, alleging that Riverside made
    various misrepresentations and violated various statutes in connection with the sale of the
    motorcycle. Riverside petitioned to compel arbitration. The trial court denied the
    petition.
    We will hold that Riverside was not entitled to compel arbitration because it was
    not a party to the arbitration clause, it was not acting in the capacity of an agent of a party
    to the arbitration clause, and it was not a third party beneficiary of the arbitration clause.
    Moreover, Fuentes was not equitably estopped to deny Riverside’s claimed right to
    compel arbitration. Hence, we will affirm.
    I
    FACTUAL BACKGROUND
    The following facts are taken from the evidence submitted in connection with
    Riverside’s petition to compel arbitration.
    On April 19, 2015, Fuentes entered into a written agreement to buy a new
    motorcycle from Riverside (Purchase Agreement). The stated parties to the Purchase
    Agreement were Fuentes and Riverside. The Purchase Agreement provided, “Federal
    law and California law apply to this . . . Purchase Agreement.” The Purchase Agreement
    did not include an arbitration clause.
    At the same time, Fuentes also entered into a written agreement to finance the
    purchase (Security Agreement). The stated parties to the Security Agreement were
    Fuentes and Eaglemark Savings Bank (Eaglemark). Eaglemark identified itself as “a
    2
    subsidiary of Harley-Davidson Credit Corp.” “ESB” was defined as Eaglemark and its
    successors and assigns. The Security Agreement was signed only by Fuentes; no one
    signed it on Eaglemark’s behalf.
    The Security Agreement included an “Itemization of Amount Financed”
    (capitalization altered), which specified that, aside from sales taxes and license fees
    payable to the government, Eaglemark was to pay the loan proceeds to Riverside.
    The Security Agreement also included an arbitration clause, which, as relevant
    here, provided: “The parties acknowledge and agree that this clause and the Federal
    Arbitration Act (
    9 U.S.C. § 1
     et seq.) shall govern any and all Claims (defined below)
    between You . . . on the one hand, and ESB and/or any of ESB’s successors, assigns,
    parents, subsidiaries, or affiliates and/or any employees, officers, directors, agents, of the
    aforementioned on the other hand. The parties agree to arbitrate any and all claims,
    controversies, or disputes including but not limited to those arising out of or relating in
    any way to Your loan or account, this [Security Agreement], advertising or claims
    relating to this [Security Agreement] or the sale of this [Security Agreement], . . . as well
    as recovery of any claim under this [Security Agreement] (collectively ‘Claims’). Any
    Claims, including but not limited to the applicability of this arbitration clause, shall be
    resolved by neutral binding arbitration . . . .”
    It also provided, “[T]his [Security Agreement] . . . will be governed by the laws of
    the State of Nevada and applicable Federal law.”
    3
    Finally, it included a provision, required by federal law (
    16 C.F.R. § 433.2
    ),
    stating: “Any holder of this consumer credit contract is subject to all claims and defenses
    which the debtor could assert against the seller of goods or services obtained with the
    proceeds hereof.”
    II
    PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    Fuentes brings this action as a putative class action. The operative complaint
    alleges that Riverside and other defendants “routinely advertise new, assembled
    motorcycles to consumers in a misleading manner . . . . As a consequence . . . ,
    consumers are routinely misled about the true prices of buying new, assembled
    motorcycles, and end up paying fees and charges which are: (a) misrepresented, inflated,
    or double-billed; (b) false and fraudulent; (c) illusory; and/or (d) improperly disclosed,
    itemized, and/or summed.” It asserts causes of action for negligence, false advertising,
    unfair competition, and violations of the Consumers Legal Remedies Act (Civ. Code,
    § 1750 et seq.).
    Riverside filed a petition to compel arbitration. After hearing argument, the trial
    court denied the petition.
    It explained: “The arbitration provision is solely in the agreement between
    [Fuentes] and Eaglemark . . . , to which [Riverside] was not a party. The agreement
    expressly identifies the scope of the obligation to arbitrate as being limited to those
    ‘between’ plaintiff ‘on the one hand, and ESB and/or any of ESB’s successors, assigns,
    4
    parents, subsidiaries, or affiliates . . . on the other hand.’ In light of that language, there
    is no intent that the arbitration provision extend to claims between the plaintiff and a third
    party like [Riverside]. Nor is the [court] persuaded that [Fuentes] is equitably estopped
    from denying the application of the arbitration provision to this lawsuit.”
    III
    RIVERSIDE HAS NO STANDING TO INVOKE THE ARBITRATION CLAUSE
    A.     General Legal Principles.
    “‘Code of Civil Procedure section 1281.2 allows a party to an arbitration
    agreement to petition to compel arbitration. By stating that a party to an arbitration
    agreement may petition to compel arbitration, the statute assumes that a proceeding to
    compel arbitration will be between the signatories to the agreement.’ [Citation.]
    “‘Nonsignatory defendants may enforce arbitration agreements “where there is
    sufficient identity of parties.” [Citation.] Enforcement is permitted where the
    nonsignatory is the agent for a party to the arbitration agreement [citation], or the
    nonsignatory is a third party beneficiary of the agreement [citation]. In addition, a
    nonsignatory may enforce an arbitration agreement under the doctrine of equitable
    estoppel.” (Jenks v. DLA Piper Rudnick Gray Cary U.S. LLP (2015) 
    243 Cal.App.4th 1
    ,
    8-9, fn. omitted.)
    “Where, as here, the evidence is not in conflict, we review the trial court’s denial
    of arbitration de novo. [Citation.]” (Pinnacle Museum Tower Assn. v. Pinnacle Market
    Development (US), LLC (2012) 
    55 Cal.4th 223
    , 236.)
    5
    We face a preliminary question regarding choice of law. The Security Agreement,
    which contains the arbitration clause, provides that Nevada law applies. In their briefs,
    however, the parties do not discuss Nevada law; the only state law on which they rely is
    that of California.1 “‘“[G]enerally speaking the forum will apply its own rule of decision
    unless a party litigant timely invokes the law of a foreign state . . . .”’ [Citations.]”
    (Washington Mutual Bank, FA v. Superior Court (2001) 
    24 Cal.4th 906
    , 919.) Because
    “[t]he parties and the trial court assumed that California law applies . . . we may apply
    California law . . . .” (Brown v. Grimes (2011) 
    192 Cal.App.4th 265
    , 275.)
    B.     Standing as a Party.
    Riverside contends that the Purchase Agreement and the Security Agreement
    constitute a single contract, and hence it is a party to the arbitration clause.
    Under Civil Code section 1642, “[s]everal contracts relating to the same matters,
    between the same parties, and made as parts of substantially one transaction, are to be
    taken together.” Here, the Purchase Agreement and the Security Agreement, by their
    terms, were not between the same parties; thus, Civil Code section 1642 does not apply.
    More generally, however, “where two or more written instruments are executed
    contemporaneously, with reference to each other, for the purpose of attaining a
    preconceived objective, they must all be construed together and effect given if possible to
    the purpose intended to be accomplished; and this principle controls whether each of the
    1       Indeed, Riverside concedes that “Nevada substantive law [does not] apply
    in this context.”
    6
    several instruments was signed by all or only some of the parties to the transaction.
    [Citation.]” (Goodman v. Severin (1969) 
    274 Cal.App.2d 885
    , 895.)
    “‘While it is the rule that several contracts relating to the same matters are to be
    construed together [citation], it does not follow that for all purposes they constitute one
    contract.’” (Hartford Accident & Indemnity Co. v. Sequoia Ins. Co. (1989) 
    211 Cal.App.3d 1285
    , 1300.) The rule is simply a particular application of the more general
    principle that “[w]e construe [a] contract in light of the circumstances under which it was
    made . . . . [Citation.]” (Medical Staff of Doctors Medical Center in Modesto v. Kamil
    (2005) 
    132 Cal.App.4th 679
    , 683.)
    For example, in Amtower v. Photon Dynamics, Inc. (2008) 
    158 Cal.App.4th 1582
    ,
    two corporations entered into an agreement to merge (Merger Agreement), which
    included an attorney fee clause. (Id. at pp. 1588, 1591, 1605-1606.) At the same time,
    the president of one of the corporations (see 
    id. at p. 1587
    ) entered into an agreement
    with the other corporation regarding the stock that he acquired in the merger (Affiliate
    Agreement); it did not include an attorney fees clause. (Id. at pp. 1588, 1591, 1606.)
    Ultimately, the president sued the other corporation, asserting causes of action based on
    the Affiliate Agreement, but lost. (Id. at pp. 1590-1591, 1605.)
    The prevailing corporation argued that it was entitled to attorney fees because
    (among other things) “the Affiliate and Merger [A]greements were interdependent
    components of the same transaction and, therefore, should be construed together.”
    (Amtower v. Photon Dynamics, Inc., supra, 158 Cal.App.4th at p. 1609.) The appellate
    7
    court held that the attorney fee clause did not apply. It acknowledged the general
    principal that separate contracts, entered into as part of a single transaction, even if by
    different parties, must be construed together. (Id. at pp. 1609-1610, citing Harm v.
    Frasher (1960) 
    181 Cal.App.2d 405
    .) Nevertheless, it concluded that “nothing in
    Frasher, or the general rule as stated in Civil Code section 1642, supports the conclusion
    that, where the contracts form part of a single integrated transaction, a discrete term
    contained in one agreement is necessarily applicable to the parties to one of the other
    agreements.” (Id. at p. 1610.)
    In sum, then, the fact that the Purchase Agreement and the Security Agreement
    could be considered one transaction is not dispositive. Rather, just as when any issue
    turns on contractual interpretation, we must look to the mutual intent of the parties. (Civ.
    Code, § 1636; Ameron Internat. Corp. v. Insurance Co. of State of Pennsylvania (2010)
    
    50 Cal.4th 1370
    , 1378.) “‘Such intent is to be inferred, if possible, solely from the
    written provisions of the contract.’ [Citations.] ‘If contractual language is clear and
    explicit, it governs.’ [Citation.]” (State of California v. Continental Ins. Co. (2012) 
    55 Cal.4th 186
    , 195.)
    The arbitration clause itself specified the entities to which it applied. It applied to
    “Claims . . . between You . . . on the one hand, and ESB and/or any of ESB’s successors,
    assigns, parents, subsidiaries, or affiliates and/or any employees, officers, directors,
    agents, of the aforementioned on the other hand.” To state the obvious, Riverside is not
    8
    Eaglemark. Also, as far as the record shows, Riverside is not a successor, assign, parent,
    subsidiary,2 affiliate,3 employee, officer, or director of Eaglemark.
    In sum, then — leaving aside Riverside’s claim that it was an agent of Eaglemark,
    which we discuss in part III.C, post — Riverside was not a party to the arbitration clause
    and was not a nonparty expressly specified as able to invoke the arbitration clause.
    C.     Standing as an Agent.
    Riverside contends that it is entitled to compel arbitration because it is an agent of
    Eaglemark. As mentioned, the arbitration clause required arbitration of claims between
    Fuentes and Eaglemark’s agents. And even when an arbitration clause does not expressly
    extend to agents, an agent for a party may be able to enforce an arbitration clause.
    Riverside asserts that it was Eaglemark’s agent because it could bind Eaglemark as
    the lender in any given motorcycle sale transaction. (See Rental Housing Owners Assn.
    of Southern Alameda County, Inc. v. City of Hayward (2011) 
    200 Cal.App.4th 81
    , 91
    [agency is a relationship in which “one party, the agent, ‘represents another, called the
    principal, in dealings with third persons.’”].) We disagree, for three reasons.
    2      Riverside repeatedly refers to Eaglemark as “the subsidiary lender” or
    simply “the subsidiary.” From the context, this seems to mean merely that Eaglemark
    was subject to all claims and defenses that the buyer could assert against Riverside.
    However, it is an odd and potentially misleading term to use to describe this concept.
    3       In the trial court, counsel for Riverside conceded that there was “not
    sufficient evidence before the Court” to show that Riverside was an affiliate of
    Eaglemark.
    9
    First, there was no evidence that Riverside actually had this power. “Because the
    existence of agency is generally a question of fact, it logically follows that agency must
    be established with evidence.” (Zimmerman v. Superior Court (2013) 
    220 Cal.App.4th 389
    , 401.) Here, all the evidence showed was that Fuentes entered into a financing
    agreement on Riverside’s premises on the same day as he purchased a motorcycle from
    Riverside. For all we know, Riverside had to contact Eaglemark and obtain its approval
    for each and every financing agreement.
    Riverside asserts a number of facts which, in its view, prove agency. These
    include that: (1) “A typical motor vehicle sale is conditioned upon the sale being
    financed after a purchase.” (2) “Harley-Davidson purchases” are “unique” in that “the
    motorcycle sale and financing occur at the same time.” (3) “[T]he purchase price is paid
    specifically to the dealer simultaneously with the lender obtaining a security interest in
    the motorcycle.” However, there was no evidence of any of these facts. Again, all the
    evidence showed was that the customer entered into the two agreements at the same time.
    Riverside also points to the boilerplate allegation of Fuentes’s complaint that all of
    the defendants were agents of each other. The named defendants included Riverside,
    Harley-Davidson, Inc., and Harley-Davidson Motor Company, Inc., but they did not
    include Eaglemark. To fill this logical gap, Riverside notes that the Security Agreement
    identified Eaglemark as “[a] subsidiary of Harley-Davidson Credit Corp.” However, the
    named defendants also did not include Harley-Davidson Credit Corp. There is no
    10
    evidence regarding the relationship, if any, between Harley-Davidson Credit Corp. and
    the named defendants.
    Second, as a general rule, a dealer does not act as the agent of the financing
    agency simply because the dealer used forms supplied by the financing agency. (Bescos
    v. Bank of America (2003) 
    105 Cal.App.4th 378
    , 396; LaChapelle v. Toyota Motor Credit
    Corp. (2002) 
    102 Cal.App.4th 977
    , 992; see also Luck v. Primus Automotive Financial
    Services, Inc. (Ala. 2000) 
    763 So.2d 243
    , 246-247 [lender provided dealer with forms and
    with a handbook containing guidelines for leases that it would accept].) Riverside may
    be aware of these cases; it appears to be trying to get around them by arguing that Harley-
    Davidson financing is “unique.” As already discussed, however, they have not shown
    that it is unique in any way that would prove agency.
    Third, even assuming that Riverside was Eaglemark’s agent, Fuentes’s claims are
    made against Riverside in its own capacity, not in its (supposed) capacity as Eaglemark’s
    agent. This precludes Riverside from invoking the arbitration clause. (McCarthy v.
    Azure (1st Cir. 1994) 
    22 F.3d 351
    , 359-361 [where plaintiff and corporation, but not
    corporation’s agent, were parties to arbitration clause, agent could not compel arbitration
    of plaintiff’s claims against him in his individual capacity].) Eaglemark had no reason to
    give its agents a right to compel arbitration of their own disputes with its borrowers.
    “However broad may be the terms of a contract, it extends only to those things
    concerning which it appears that the parties intended to contract.” (Civ. Code, § 1648.)
    11
    “Most courts have held that a nonsignatory who is the agent of a party to a
    contract containing an arbitration clause may compel the other parties to the contract to
    arbitrate their claims against him or her for liability arising out of the contract . . . but not
    other claims. [Citations.]” (Knight et al., Cal. Practice Guide: Alternative Dispute
    Resolution (The Rutter Group 2017) ¶ 5.266.5, p. 5-274, ellipsis in original.) Riverside’s
    asserted liability arises out of the Purchase Agreement, not out of the Security
    Agreement.
    D.      Standing as a Third Party Beneficiary.
    Next, Riverside contends that it was entitled to enforce the arbitration clause as a
    third party beneficiary of the Security Agreement. It points out that it was the intended
    recipient of the loan proceeds.
    “A third party beneficiary may enforce a contract expressly made for his benefit.
    [Citation.] And although the contract may not have been made to benefit him alone, he
    may enforce those promises directly made for him. [Citations.]” (Murphy v. Allstate Ins.
    Co. (1976) 
    17 Cal.3d 937
    , 943.)
    But “a third party beneficiary . . . can only enforce those promises made directly
    for his benefit. [Citation.]” (Clark v. California Ins. Guarantee Assn. (2011) 
    200 Cal.App.4th 391
    , 398.) “A third party should not be permitted to enforce covenants made
    not for his benefit, but rather for others. He is not a contracting party; his right to
    performance is predicated on the contracting parties’ intent to benefit him. [Citations.]
    As to any provision made not for his benefit but for the benefit of the contracting parties
    12
    or for other third parties, he becomes an intermeddler.” (Murphy v. Allstate Ins. Co.,
    supra, 17 Cal.3d at p. 944 [judgment creditor of insured tortfeasor is a third party
    beneficiary of the insurance policy but cannot enforce the policy’s covenant of good
    faith].)
    Turning to the specific topic of arbitration, “a third party beneficiary of an
    arbitration agreement may enforce it. [Citations.]” (Ronay Family Limited Partnership
    v. Tweed (2013) 
    216 Cal.App.4th 830
    , 838.) But “[t]o invoke the third party beneficiary
    exception, [a third party beneficiary] ha[s] to show that the arbitration clause . . . was
    ‘made expressly for [its] benefit.’ [Citation.]” (Ibid., italics added.)
    We accept, for the sake of argument, that Riverside was the third party beneficiary
    of Eaglemark’s promise to pay the loan proceeds to it. The arbitration clause, however,
    had its own list of intended third party beneficiaries; as we have already discussed,
    Riverside was not among them. Thus, the contract affirmatively disproves any intent that
    the arbitration clause should benefit Riverside.
    What is particularly overreaching about Riverside’s third party beneficiary
    argument is that it is trying to enforce the arbitration clause against Fuentes. However, it
    was Fuentes who — by making a promise to repay, a promise to pay interest, and other
    promises — conferred on Riverside its right to the loan proceeds. If Riverside has any
    rights as a third party beneficiary, they should run against Eaglemark, not Fuentes.
    13
    E.       Standing as a Result of Equitable Estoppel.
    Finally, Riverside contends that Fuentes is equitably estopped to deny the
    applicability of the arbitration clause.
    “A nonsignatory plaintiff may be estopped from refusing to arbitrate when he or
    she asserts claims that are ‘dependent upon, or inextricably intertwined with,’ the
    underlying contractual obligations of the agreement containing the arbitration clause.
    [Citation.] ‘The focus is on the nature of the claims asserted . . . .’ [Citation.] . . .
    ‘“[T]he plaintiff’s actual dependence on the underlying contract in making out the claim
    against the nonsignatory . . . is . . . always the sine qua non of an appropriate situation
    for applying equitable estoppel.’” [Citation.] ‘[E]ven if a plaintiff’s claims “touch
    matters” relating to the arbitration agreement, “the claims are not arbitrable unless the
    plaintiff relies on the agreement to establish its cause of action.’” [Citation.] ‘The
    fundamental point’ is that a party is ‘not entitled to make use of [a contract containing an
    arbitration clause] as long as it worked to [his or] her advantage, then attempt to avoid its
    application in defining the forum in which [his or] her dispute . . . should be resolved.’
    [Citation.]” (Jensen v. U-Haul Co. of California (2017) 
    18 Cal.App.5th 295
    , 306, italics
    in original.)
    We do not perceive any way in which Fuentes is relying on the Security
    Agreement to establish his own causes of action. Riverside argues: “Th[e] allegedly
    false price and costs were advertised at the time of sale contemporaneously with
    [Fuentes]’s acquiring the loan to finance his motorcycle purchase. [Riverside] then
    14
    inputted those allegedly false costs in the [Security Agreement], which [Fuentes] signed
    at [Riverside].” As we understand this, it reduces to an argument that the loan includes
    the amount of the improper charges and fees. That merely means that Fuentes may have
    a defense to paying the full amount of the loan to Eaglemark. Arguably, he would be
    relying on the Purchase Agreement in any action attacking the Security Agreement. But
    this is not a two-way street. He is not relying on the Security Agreement in this action
    attacking the Purchase Agreement. Even if he had paid cash for the motorcycle, his
    complaint would be identical.
    Riverside points out that its counsel argued that “without this [Security
    Agreement], [Fuentes] would not have a case,” and the trial court responded, “That may
    be true.” However, it immediately went on to rule that Fuentes was not estopped to
    dispute that. In context, it appears to have been merely accepting counsel’s position for
    the sake of argument. In any event, as our review is de novo, we are not bound by any
    findings (much less comments) by the trial court.
    We therefore conclude that equitable estoppel does not apply.
    IV
    DISPOSITION
    The order appealed from is affirmed. Fuentes is awarded costs on appeal against
    Riverside.
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    RAMIREZ
    P. J.
    15
    We concur:
    SLOUGH
    J.
    FIELDS
    J.
    16