Dan's Trucking, Inc., V Kerr Contractors Inc ( 2014 )


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  •                                                                                                                    F t LLED
    130U E OF APPEALS
    DR/ SON II
    2014 AUG 19   Ali 9: 35
    F
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGrF-?                                                         T, CITY
    :.,
    DIVISION II
    DAN' S TRUCKING, INC.,                                                               No. 44342 -2 -II
    Respondent,
    v.
    KERR        CONTRACTORS,                INC.,      LIBERTY                      PUBLISHED OPINION
    MUTUAL            GROUP,        INC.,    a/ k/ a    SAFECO
    INSURANCE               COMPANY         OF      AMERICA,
    bond nos. 6709272, 6709273, 5581430,
    Appellants.
    STATE OF WASHINGTON, WASHINGTON
    STATE DEPARTMENT OF
    TRANSPORTATION,
    Defendants.
    BJORGEN, A.C. J. —       Kerr Contractors, Inc. and Liberty Mutual Insurance Group, Inc.,
    a/ k/ a   Safeco Insurance      Company      of    America (Kerr), appeal a superior court order granting a
    motion by Dan' s Trucking, Inc. to strike Kerr' s request for a trial de novo following an
    arbitrator' s decision awarding Dan' s Trucking $6, 979. 57 in attorney fees. Kerr contends that the
    trial court erred in granting the motion to strike because it was entitled to a trial de novo under
    Mandatory        Arbitration Rule (MAR) 7. 1.           We hold that, because resolution of the parties'
    attorney fees issue remained within mandatory arbitration, Kerr was entitled to a trial de novo on
    that   issue    under   MAR 7. 1.   Accordingly, we reverse the trial court' s order granting Dan' s
    Trucking' s      motion   to   strike and remand       for trial de   novo on   the attorney   fee issue.
    No. 44342 -2 -II
    FACTS
    The Washington State Department of Transportation awarded a contract to Kerr to make
    improvements to State Route 14 in Clark County, Washington. Kerr subcontracted with Dan' s
    Trucking to haul asphalt for the highway improvement project. A dispute arose between the
    parties, and Dan' s Trucking filed a complaint against Kerr for breach of contract and negligence
    in Thurston County Superior Court. The superior court transferred the case to mandatory
    arbitration. Prior to the arbitration hearing, the parties settled Dan' s Trucking' s underlying
    claims, but did not resolve the amount of attorney fees to be awarded to Dan' s Trucking. Kerr
    memorialized      the   parties'   settlement agreement       in   an e -mail   that   stated, "   We received authority
    from   our client   for the   following   offer:   1. Payment from Kerr to Dan' s of $3, 971. 38; and 2. Fees
    in   an amount    to be determined     by the   arbitrator;   3. In   exchange     for dismissal." Clerk' s Papers
    CP) at 28. Kerr also sent the following e -mail to the arbitrator indicating that the parties had
    settled their primary dispute:
    As I said in my voicemail to you yesterday, the parties have settled this matter,
    and therefore we need to cancel the arbitration hearing scheduled for tomorrow,
    6/ 28.
    However, as part of the settlement, the parties have agreed that you will decide
    the   amount of      attorney fees   awarded   to Dan'       s.   Our preference would be to brief
    the issue and then hold a telephonic hearing on the matter with you.
    CP at 29. The arbitrator subsequently awarded $ 6, 979. 57 in attorney fees to Dan' s Trucking.
    The form on which the arbitrator entered his arbitration award contained the following preprinted
    language:
    Twenty days after the award has been filed with the clerk, if no party has sought a
    trial de novo, the prevailing party, on notice to all parties, may present to the
    Assigned Judge a judgment on the arbitration award for entry as final judgment in
    this case.
    2
    No. 44342 -2 -II
    CP at 21.
    After Kerr timely requested a trial de novo, Dan' s Trucking filed a motion in superior
    court to strike Kerr' s request, asserting that Kerr was not entitled to a trial de novo under MAR .
    7. 1 because the parties had privately settled their dispute. The motion further asserted that the
    arbitrator was        acting   as a private arbitrator under              the Uniform Arbitration Act (UAA),          chapter
    7. 04A RCW, when he decided the amount of attorney fees to be awarded to Dan' s Trucking,
    rather than as an arbitrator under MAR 3. 2. Following a hearing, the trial court entered an order
    granting Dan' s Trucking' s motion to strike Kerr' s request for a trial de novo. The trial court
    later entered a judgment against Kerr awarding Dan' s Trucking $6, 979. 57 in attorney fees, the
    amount       determined      appropriate       through    arbitration, as well as $           11, 663. 17 in supplemental
    attorney fees. Kerr timely appeals.
    ANALYSIS
    I. REQUEST FOR A TRIAL DE NOVO
    The issue raised by this appeal is whether the trial court erred in granting Dan' s
    Trucking' s         motion   to   strike   Kerr' s   request   for   a   trial   de   novo.   Our resolution of this issue turns
    on whether the arbitrator' s award of attorney fees to Dan' s Trucking was governed by the UAA
    or by chapter 7. 06 RCW as implemented by the MARs. If under the UAA, the trial court
    properly granted Dan' s Trucking' s motion to strike Kerr' s request for a trial de novo. If under
    chapter 7. 06 RCW as implemented by the MARs, the trial court erred because Kerr was entitled
    to   a   trial de   novo under      MAR 7. 1.        We hold that the MARs governed the arbitrator' s attorney fee
    determination and, therefore, the trial court erred by granting Dan' s Trucking' s motion to strike
    Kerr' s request for a trial de novo.
    3
    No. 44342 -2 -II
    The application of court rules to a set of facts is a question of law that we review de novo.
    Russell v. Maas, 
    166 Wash. App. 885
    , 889, 
    272 P.3d 273
    , review denied, 
    174 Wash. 2d 1016
    ( 2012).
    As with other court rules, we interpret the MARs " as though they were drafted by the
    Legislature."         Wiley   v.   Rehak, 
    143 Wash. 2d 339
    , 343, 
    20 P.3d 404
    ( 2001).               Thus, we construe the
    MARs consistently with their purpose " to reduce congestion in the courts and delays in hearing
    civil cases."     Perkins Coie         v.   Williams, 84 Wn.      App.   733, 737, 
    929 P.2d 1215
    ( 1997);        
    Wiley, 143 Wash. 2d at 343
    .   We also give effect to the plain meaning of a court rule, as " discerned from
    reading the rule as a whole, harmonizing its provisions, and using related rules to help identify
    the legislative intent        embodied       in the   rule."   State v. Chhom, 
    162 Wash. 2d 451
    , 458, 
    173 P.3d 234
    2007).
    Chapter 7. 06 RCW, as implemented by the MARs, requires the mandatory arbitration of
    certain civil claims. RCW 7. 06. 010 -.030; MAR 1. 2. In Thurston County, mandatory arbitration
    proceedings       apply to     civil "[ c]   laims   valued    up to $ 50, 000,   exclusive of   interest   and costs."   MAR
    1. 2; Thurston County Local MAR 1. 2. The MARs do not apply to arbitration by private
    agreement or under other statutes, unless                 the   parties so stipulate.   MAR 1. 1; MAR 8. 1.         MAR 7. 1
    provides that an aggrieved party to a mandatory arbitration decision may request a trial de novo
    in the superior court.
    With exceptions not relevant to our circumstances, the UAA governs private agreements
    to   arbitrate   disputes. RCW 7. 04A.030.               The UAA does not apply to arbitration under the MARs.
    4
    No. 44342 -2 -II
    RCW 7. 04A. 030( 3).        RCW 7. 04A.230 governs judicial review of contractually agreed arbitration
    1
    awards under        the UAA    and   does   not contain a right   to   a   trial de   novo.
    Kerr and Dan' s Trucking agree that they entered into mandatory arbitration under the
    MARs, and that they settled their primary dispute prior to the arbitrator issuing a decision. The
    parties disagree, however, whether the unresolved attorney fees issue remained within mandatory
    arbitration or whether their settlement provided for private arbitration of the unresolved attorney
    fees issue under the UAA.
    We interpret settlement agreements in the same manner in which we interpret other
    contracts.       Mut. of Enumclaw Ins. Co.       v.   USF Ins. Co., 
    164 Wash. 2d 411
    , 424 n.9, 
    191 P.3d 866
    2008). "    In doing so, we attempt to determine the intent of the parties by focusing on their
    objective manifestations as expressed            in the [ settlement]       agreement."           McGuire v. Bates, 169
    1
    RCW 7. 04A.230 provides in part:
    1) Upon motion of a party to the arbitration proceeding, the court shall vacate an
    award if:
    a) The award was procured by corruption, fraud, or other undue means;
    b) There was:
    i) Evident partiality by an arbitrator appointed as a neutral;
    ii) Corruption by an arbitrator; or
    iii) Misconduct by an arbitrator prejudicing the rights of a party to the arbitration
    proceeding;
    c) An arbitrator refused to postpone the hearing upon showing of sufficient cause
    for postponement, refused to consider evidence material to the controversy, or
    otherwise conducted the hearing contrary to RCW 7. 04A. 150, so as to prejudice
    substantially the rights of a party to the arbitration proceeding;
    d) An arbitrator exceeded the arbitrator's powers;
    e) There was no agreement to arbitrate, unless the person participated in the
    arbitration proceeding without raising the objection under RCW 7. 04A. 150( 3) not
    later than the commencement of the arbitration hearing; or
    f) The arbitration was conducted without proper notice of the initiation of an
    arbitration as required in RCW 7. 04A.090 so as to prejudice substantially the
    rights of a party to the arbitration proceeding.
    5
    No. 44342 -2 -II
    Wn.2d 185, 189, 
    234 P.3d 205
    ( 2010).                   When determining the intent of contracting parties, we
    apply the " context rule" adopted by our Supreme Court in Berg v. Hudesman, 
    115 Wash. 2d 657
    ,
    667, 
    801 P.2d 222
    ( 1990).               Under the Berg context rule:
    the intent of the parties to a particular agreement may be discovered not only from
    the actual language of the agreement, but also from " viewing the contract as a
    whole, the subject matter and objective of the contract, all the circumstances
    surrounding the making of the contract, the subsequent acts and conduct of the
    parties     to   the   contract,     and the reasonableness of respective interpretations
    advocated by the parties."
    Scott   Galvanizing, Inc.           v.   Nw. EnviroServices, Inc., 
    120 Wash. 2d 573
    , 580 -81, 
    844 P.2d 428
    1993) ( quoting          
    Berg, 115 Wash. 2d at 663
    ); Stender   v.    Twin   City Foods,   Inc., 
    82 Wash. 2d 250
    , 254,
    
    510 P.2d 221
    ( 1973)).
    A contract provision is ambiguous when its terms are uncertain or when its terms are
    capable of        being    understood as      having     more   than   one   meaning."       Mayer v. Pierce County Med.
    Bureau, Inc., 80 Wn.            App.      416, 421, 
    909 P.2d 1323
    ( 1995).              We construe any ambiguity in the
    settlement agreement against                the drafter, here Kerr. Rouse           v.   Glascam Builders, Inc., 
    101 Wash. 2d 127
    , 135, 
    677 P.2d 125
    ( 1984).                Additionally, the " strong public policy favoring finality of
    arbitration dictates that any ambiguity with respect to which statute the parties have invoked —
    042
    chapter      7.         or chapter   7. 06 — be   resolved in favor of binding arbitration under chapter 7. 04."
    Dahl    v.   Parquet & Colonial Hardwood Floor Co., Inc.,                      
    108 Wash. App. 403
    , 412, 
    30 P.3d 537
    2001).
    2 Chapter 7. 04 RCW was replaced by chapter 7. 04A RCW. See Laws of 2005, ch. 433.
    6
    No. 44342 -2 -II
    The parties' settlement agreement, as drafted by Kerr, stated that the terms of the parties'
    settlement were " 1. Payment from Kerr to Dan' s of $ 971. 38; and 2. Fees in an amount to be
    3,
    determined    by the   arbitrator;    3. In   exchange     for dismissal." CP at 28. The parties disagree
    whether these terms constituted a full settlement of their claims with an associated agreement to
    privately resolve the attorney fees issue through the UAA or, instead, merely constituted a partial
    settlement of their claims with the attorney fees issue remaining within mandatory arbitration.
    We hold that the parties' intent, as discerned from all the circumstances surrounding the creation
    of the settlement terms and from the subsequent conduct of the parties, was to settle Dan' s
    Trucking' s underlying claims, while leaving the attorney fees issue within mandatory arbitration.
    
    Berg, 115 Wash. 2d at 663
    .
    MAR 7. 1 contemplates that resolution of a party' s request for attorney fees is within the
    purview of    mandatory      arbitration,     stating in   part, "   Any request for a trial de novo must be filed
    within   20 days   after   the   arbitrator files   proof of service of the     later   of: ( 1)    the award or (2) a
    decision   on a   timely   request for costs or     attorney fees." ( Emphasis        added.)          Even more to the
    point,   MAR 3. 2( a)( 8)   states   that   an arbitrator   has the authority to "[ a] ward costs and attorney
    fees   as authorized   by law." These provisions leave no doubt that in the arbitration begun under
    the MARs, the arbitrator had authority to decide whether to award attorney fees.
    The remaining question, then, is whether the parties intended to convert the arbitration of
    attorney fees from one under the MARs to one under the UAA. The parties' agreement, as
    expressed in the e -mail from Kerr to the arbitrator and in the settlement agreement was that the
    arbitrator would decide the amount of attorney fees awarded to Dan' s Trucking. These
    statements could conceivably be read as either the conversion of arbitration to a private
    7
    No. 44342 - -II
    2
    proceeding under the UAA or as an acknowledgment that the arbitrator would exercise his
    authority under the MARs to decide attorney fees. In context, though, it is not reasonable to read
    these brief notations of agreement to effect both a shift from one set of rules to another and a
    waiver of a trial de novo, when they said nothing about the UAA, the MARs, or a trial de novo.
    A more plausible reading is that these notations were merely an attempt to be clear as to who
    would decide the matter of attorney fees. Further, Thurston County' s Local MAR 4. 4( a)
    provides that to effectuate a settlement of a claim assigned to mandatory arbitration, the parties
    must   first " notify the     court and arbitrator       promptly          of the settlement." (   Emphasis in original)
    There is no evidence in the record that the parties promptly notified the trial court of its
    settlement before the arbitrator decided the issue of attorney fees.
    While we continue to adhere to the interpretive rules that ambiguities should be resolved
    against the drafter and in favor of binding arbitration, these rules do not compel strained readings
    of the parties' intent. The most reasonable interpretation of the parties' expressions of agreement
    to continue arbitration with the assigned arbitrator, and the absence of notice under Thurston
    County Local MAR 4.4( a), is that they did not intend to convert the MAR arbitration to one
    under the UAA. Accordingly, Dan' s Trucking' s suit remained within mandatory arbitration
    when the arbitrator resolved the issue of attorney fees, and Kerr was entitled to a trial de novo on
    that   issue   under   MAR 7. 1.       For these reasons, we reverse the trial court' s grant of the motion by
    Dan'   s   Trucking    to   strike   Kerr'   s request   for   a   trial   de   novo.
    No. 44342 -2 -II
    II. ATTORNEY FEES ON APPEAL
    RAP 18. 1 provides that we may award attorney fees on appeal where authorized by
    applicable law. Kerr requests such attorney fees under former RCW 39. 08. 030 ( 2009) 3 and
    RCW 60. 28. 021. Former RCW 39. 08. 030( 1) provides in relevant part:
    I] n any suit or action brought against such surety or sureties by any such person
    or corporation to recover for any of the items hereinbefore specified, the claimant
    shall be entitled to recover in addition to all other costs, attorney' s fees in such
    sum as the court shall adjudge reasonable.
    This provision authorizes the award of attorney fees to a claimant " in an action brought against a
    performance bond where the surety contests a right to recover, denies the allegations in a
    complaint, and seeks    dismissal   of an action."   Campbell Crane &   Rigging Servs., Inc. v.
    Dynamic Intl AK, Inc., 145 Wn.       App.   718, 727, 
    186 P.3d 1193
    ( 2008).   RCW 39. 08. 030 does
    not contain any language authorizing the award of attorney fees to a prime contractor who
    contests a subcontractor claimant' s suit. Similarly, RCW 60. 28. 021 does not contain any
    language authorizing the award of attorney fees to Kerr under these circumstances.
    Accordingly, we deny Kerr' s request for attorney fees on appeal. Dan' s Trucking also
    requests attorney fees on appeal. Because Kerr prevailed on appeal, we deny Dan' s Trucking' s
    request.
    3 Former RCW 39. 08. 030 was revised in 2013, but this revision does not affect the subsection
    cited.
    9
    No. 44342 -2 -II
    CONCLUSION
    We reverse the trial court' s order granting Dan' s Trucking' s motion to strike and remand
    for trial de novo on the attorney fee issue.
    We concur:
    10