Erick Hallick v. Greenpoint Real Estate Development Fund, LLC ( 2023 )


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  •        COURT OF APPEALS
    DECISION                                       NOTICE
    DATED AND FILED                   This opinion is subject to further editing. If
    published, the official version will appear in
    the bound volume of the Official Reports.
    May 25, 2023
    A party may file with the Supreme Court a
    Sheila T. Reiff           petition to review an adverse decision by the
    Clerk of Court of Appeals      Court of Appeals. See WIS. STAT. § 808.10
    and RULE 809.62.
    Appeal No.        2021AP1052                                           Cir. Ct. No. 2021CV304
    STATE OF WISCONSIN                                    IN COURT OF APPEALS
    DISTRICT IV
    ERICK HALLICK,
    PETITIONER-RESPONDENT,
    V.
    GREENPOINT ASSET MANAGEMENT II, LLC AND MICHAEL G. HULL,
    RESPONDENTS-APPELLANTS,
    CHRYSALIS FINANCIAL LLC, CHRISTOPHER NOHL, GREENPOINT
    GLOBAL MITTELSTAND I, LLC, GREENPOINT REAL ESTATE
    DEVELOPMENT FUND, LLC, GREENPOINT FINE ART FUND, LLC,
    GREENPOINT ASSET MANAGEMENT, LLC, GREENPOINT ASSET
    MANAGEMENT IV, LLC, GREENPOINT ASSET MANAGEMENT V, LLC,
    BLUEPOINT INVESTMENT COUNSEL, LLC,
    RESPONDENTS.
    APPEAL from an order of the circuit court for Dane County:
    VALERIE BAILEY-RIHN, Judge. Affirmed.
    No. 2021AP1052
    Before Kloppenburg, Fitzpatrick, and Nashold, JJ.
    Per curiam opinions may not be cited in any court of this state as precedent
    or authority, except for the limited purposes specified in WIS. STAT. RULE 809.23(3).
    ¶1      PER CURIAM. Erick J. Hallick (“Hallick”) entered into an
    agreement (“Settlement Agreement” or “Agreement”) that resolved Hallick’s
    claims against the settling entities which were pending in prior arbitration and
    litigation.1 The Settlement Agreement provided that an “initial payment” and a
    “final payment” totaling $14,000,000 be made to Hallick. When the final payment
    was not made, Hallick returned to arbitration to enforce the Settlement Agreement.
    In the ensuing arbitration, Hallick and the participating Respondents disputed
    whether the Settlement Agreement imposes liability for the final payment due
    Hallick on all of the Respondents or only one specific Respondent; the dispute
    matters because that one Respondent had declared bankruptcy and its assets were
    not available to satisfy the final payment. Also in the ensuing arbitration, some of
    the participating Respondents moved to amend their response to Hallick’s
    Statement of Claim to assert counterclaims alleging that Hallick breached the
    Settlement Agreement and his duty of good faith and fair dealing.
    ¶2      The arbitrator issued a written decision and order concluding that,
    based on the arbitrator’s interpretation of the Settlement Agreement, the
    Agreement imposes joint and several liability on all of the Respondents; the
    1
    In this opinion, we refer to the entities against which Hallick asserted his claims and
    which signed the Settlement Agreement by the term used in the Agreement: “the Respondents.”
    Not all of the Respondents participated in the ensuing arbitration and the instant litigation. For
    ease of reading, we will sometimes refer to the Respondents that participated in the ensuing
    arbitration and made the arguments addressed in this appeal as “the participating Respondents.”
    2
    No. 2021AP1052
    arbitrator also denied the motion to amend. The arbitrator granted an award to
    Hallick in the amount of $13,625,000, which was the remaining amount of the
    final payment due under the Settlement Agreement.
    ¶3   Hallick sought confirmation of the arbitration award in the circuit
    court. Some of the participating Respondents objected and moved to vacate the
    arbitration award. The circuit court denied the motions to vacate and confirmed
    the arbitration award. Two of the participating Respondents, Greenpoint Asset
    Management II, LLC and Michael G. Hull (collectively, “Greenpoint II”), appeal.2
    ¶4   On appeal, Greenpoint II makes two arguments: (1) the arbitrator
    exceeded his powers when he manifestly disregarded Wisconsin contract law in
    interpreting the Settlement Agreement to impose joint and several liability on all
    of the Respondents; and (2) the arbitrator imperfectly executed his powers when
    he denied Greenpoint II’s motion to amend its response to assert counterclaims
    against Hallick.
    ¶5   We conclude that the arbitrator did not exceed his powers by
    manifestly disregarding Wisconsin contract law because there is a reasonable basis
    in the Settlement Agreement for his interpretation of the Agreement. We also
    conclude that the arbitrator did not imperfectly execute his powers when he denied
    the motion to amend based on the arbitrator’s explanation that the counterclaims
    are not relevant to the purpose of the arbitration, which is to enforce the
    Agreement as the arbitrator interpreted it. Accordingly, we affirm the circuit
    court.
    2
    Two additional appellants, Chrysalis Financial, LLC and Christopher Nohl, were
    voluntarily dismissed on notice that they had settled their dispute with Hallick.
    3
    No. 2021AP1052
    BACKGROUND
    ¶6      The following undisputed facts are taken from the arbitration
    decision and order.
    ¶7      In April 2019, Hallick entered into a Settlement Agreement with a
    number of Respondents, including Greenpoint II, to resolve all of Hallick’s claims
    asserted against the Respondents pending in prior arbitration and litigation, with
    the exception of certain claims that were explicitly carved out of the Agreement
    and that are not at issue in this appeal.
    ¶8      The Settlement Agreement resolved Hallick’s claims for a total of
    $14,000,000.    The total included an initial payment of $375,000 to be made
    shortly after the execution of the Settlement Agreement, and a final payment of
    $13,625,000 to be made by July 21, 2019. The initial payment was made, but the
    final payment was not. We will present additional details regarding the contents
    of the Settlement Agreement in the discussion that follows.
    ¶9      In the summer of 2019, Hallick returned to arbitration to enforce the
    Settlement Agreement and invoked a provision in the Agreement calling for an in-
    kind distribution of assets in the possession of one of the Respondents, Greenpoint
    Tactical Income Fund (“GTIF”), to satisfy the final payment. These procedures
    “came to a halt” when GTIF filed for bankruptcy protection in October 2019.
    ¶10     In September 2020, Hallick filed in the arbitration proceeding a
    Statement of Claim to enforce the Settlement Agreement against all of the
    Respondents (“the named Respondents”), except GTIF and another Respondent
    4
    No. 2021AP1052
    that were both in bankruptcy.3 The Statement of Claim alleged that the named
    Respondents breached the Settlement Agreement by not making the final payment
    and that each named Respondent is jointly and severally liable for the amount
    remaining unpaid. The Respondents do not dispute that Hallick’s claim was
    properly before the arbitrator.
    ¶11    Two of the named Respondents settled with Hallick prior to the
    arbitration decision and the claims against them were dismissed. Five of the
    named Respondents defaulted when they did not appear before the arbitrator. The
    remaining named Respondents (as noted above, “the participating Respondents”)
    formed two separate groups and each group responded to Hallick’s claim, denying
    liability.
    ¶12    Pertinent to this appeal, the arbitrator addressed two issues: (1) “the
    liability, if any, of the [Respondents] under the Settlement Agreement” for the
    amount remaining unpaid to Hallick; and (2) whether one group of the
    participating Respondents should be allowed to amend its response in order to
    assert counterclaims alleging that Hallick breached the Settlement Agreement and
    his duty of good faith and fair dealing.4
    ¶13    As to the first issue, as we now summarize, the arbitrator concluded
    that “each of the [R]espondents [that signed the Settlement Agreement] is jointly
    3
    The Respondent other than GTIF that was in bankruptcy does not matter to the issues
    on appeal; therefore, we do not mention that Respondent again.
    4
    The arbitrator also addressed, and rejected, the participating Respondents’ arguments
    that the arbitration proceedings should be stayed pending GTIF’s bankruptcy because GTIF is a
    necessary party, and that the participating Respondents should be excused from performance
    because GTIF’s declaration of bankruptcy frustrated the purpose of the Settlement Agreement.
    Greenpoint II does not make these arguments on appeal and we do not address them further.
    5
    No. 2021AP1052
    and severally liable for the $13,625,000 obligation each agreed to assume by
    entering into the Agreement. They have each breached the Agreement by not
    paying.”       As to the second issue, the arbitrator denied the motion to amend
    because the subject of the proposed counterclaims has “nothing to do with the
    dispute between the parties to this arbitration [and, therefore,] the interests of
    justice are not served by allowing the amendment.”
    ¶14      Hallick petitioned the Dane County Circuit Court to confirm the
    arbitration award.          Some of the participating Respondents objected to the
    confirmation and moved to vacate the arbitration award.
    ¶15      After briefing and oral argument, the circuit court denied the
    motions to vacate the arbitration award and confirmed the award. Greenpoint II
    appeals.
    DISCUSSION
    ¶16      Greenpoint II seeks to vacate the arbitrator’s award under WIS.
    STAT. § 788.10(1)(d) (2021-22), which provides that “the court … must make an
    order vacating the [arbitration] award … [w]here the arbitrators exceeded their
    powers, or so imperfectly executed them that a mutual, final and definite award
    upon the subject matter submitted was not made.”5 As stated, Greenpoint II
    argues that:         (1) the arbitrator exceeded his powers when he “manifestly
    disregarded Wisconsin contract law” in interpreting the Settlement Agreement;
    5
    All references to the Wisconsin Statutes are to the 2021-22 version unless otherwise
    noted.
    6
    No. 2021AP1052
    and (2) the arbitrator imperfectly executed his powers when he denied the motion
    to amend to assert counterclaims.
    ¶17    Whether an arbitration decision must be vacated presents a question
    of law that the court reviews de novo. Orlowski v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins.
    Co., 
    2012 WI 21
    , ¶14, 
    339 Wis. 2d 1
    , 
    810 N.W.2d 775
    . We address each of
    Greenpoint II’s arguments in turn.
    I. The Arbitrator Did Not Exceed His Powers.
    ¶18    Arbitrators exceed their powers through “perverse misconstruction,
    positive misconduct, a manifest disregard of the law, or when the award is illegal
    or in violation of strong public policy.” Baldwin-Woodville Area Sch. Dist. v.
    West Cent. Educ. Ass’n-Baldwin Woodville Unit, 
    2009 WI 51
    , ¶21, 
    317 Wis. 2d 691
    , 
    766 N.W.2d 591
     (quoted source omitted). Greenpoint II argues that the
    arbitrator “manifestly deviated from applicable Wisconsin law regarding the
    interpretation of contracts” when he interpreted the Settlement Agreement as
    providing that all of the Respondents that signed the Agreement are jointly and
    severally liable for the $13,625,000 balance remaining after Hallick was paid the
    initial $375,000.
    A. Applicable Standard of Review and Legal Principles
    ¶19    Our review of an arbitrator’s award under WIS. STAT. § 788.10(1)(d)
    is highly deferential, as this summary of Wisconsin case law explains:
    The standard for our review of the arbitrator’s
    decision is the same as that for the circuit court, and we
    review the arbitrator’s decision without deference to the
    decision of the circuit court. The scope of the court’s
    review is limited. We presume the arbitrator’s decision is
    valid, and we disturb it only where invalidity is shown by
    clear and convincing evidence. Essentially the court’s role
    7
    No. 2021AP1052
    is supervisory in nature—to insure that the parties receive
    what they bargained for when they agreed to resolve certain
    disputes through final and binding arbitration. Courts may
    not overturn an arbitrator’s decision for “mere errors of
    fact or law, but only when perverse misconstruction or
    positive misconduct [is] plainly established, or if there is a
    manifest disregard of the law, or if the award itself is illegal
    or violates strong public policy.” The rationale for not
    vacating awards because of an error of fact or law is that,
    when parties have agreed to submit an issue to arbitration
    and have chosen the arbitrator, they have agreed to be
    bound by the arbitrator’s judgment, whether correct or
    incorrect as a matter of fact or law.
    Madison Teachers Inc. v. Madison Metro. Sch. Dist., 
    2004 WI App 54
    , ¶9, 
    271 Wis. 2d 697
    , 
    678 N.W.2d 311
     (citations omitted) (emphasis added).
    ¶20    In Wisconsin, “a settlement agreement is a contract and is governed
    by the traditional requirements for contracts.” American Nat. Prop. & Cas. Co. v.
    Nersesian, 
    2004 WI App 215
    , ¶14, 
    277 Wis. 2d 430
    , 
    689 N.W.2d 922
    . “When
    construing contracts … [the] goal is to ascertain the true intentions of the parties as
    expressed by the contractual language.” Town Bank v. City Real Est. Dev., LLC,
    
    2010 WI 134
    , ¶33, 
    330 Wis. 2d 340
    , 
    793 N.W.2d 476
     (quoted source omitted).
    “[T]he best indication of the parties’ intent is the language of the contract itself.”
    
    Id.
    ¶21    “An arbitrator obtains authority only from the contract of the parties
    and therefore is confined to the interpretation of that contract and cannot ignore
    that contract when making an award.” Lukowski v. Dankert, 
    184 Wis. 2d 142
    ,
    152, 
    515 N.W.2d 883
     (1994). As stated, in reviewing the arbitrator’s construction
    of the contract, we do not determine which construction—the arbitrator’s or the
    appellant’s—is more reasonable. Baldwin-Woodville, 
    317 Wis. 2d 691
    , ¶22; see
    also Lukowski, 
    184 Wis. 2d at 153
     (“[T]his court will not upset the award even if
    this court might have decided the matter differently.”). Instead, we will uphold the
    8
    No. 2021AP1052
    award if there is “some reasonable foundation for the interpretation of the contract
    offered in the decision.” 
    Id.
     In other words, “[t]he law is not violated, nor is the
    authority derived from the contract exceeded, so long as there is a rational basis
    for the” arbitrator’s interpretation of the contract. 
    Id.
    B. The Settlement Agreement
    ¶22    The relevant provisions in the Settlement Agreement are as follows.
    The Settlement Agreement begins with the following paragraph:
    This Settlement Agreement (this “Agreement”) is
    entered into as of the 13th April, 2019 by and among
    Claimant Erick J. Hallick (“Claimant” or “Hallick”) and
    Respondents Greenpoint Tactical Income Fund LLC,
    Greenpoint Fine Art Fund LLC, Greenpoint Real Estate
    Development Fund LLC, Greenpoint Global Mittelstand
    Fund I LLC, Greenpoint Asset Management LLC,
    Greenpoint Asset Management II LLC, Greenpoint Asset
    Management IV LLC, Greenpoint Asset Management V
    LLC, Chrysalis Financial LLC, GP Rare Earth Trading
    Account LLC, Jennifer Weis[s]bach Art Advisory LLC,
    Bluepoint Investment Counsel LLC, Michael G. Hull,
    Patrick F. Hull, Christopher Nohl, and Jennifer Weissbach
    (together the “Respondents”), collectively Claimant and
    Respondents are “the Parties” or, singularly, in context, “a
    Party.”
    ¶23    The Settlement Agreement continues with four “Recitals,” which are
    “specifically incorporated into th[e] Agreement.” Two of the recitals relate that
    Hallick and the Respondents were involved in arbitration and engaged in
    mediation. The third recital states:
    C. Respondent Greenpoint Tactical Income Fund
    LLC (“GTIF”) and its managers, Chrysalis Financial LLC
    and Greenpoint Asset Management II LLC, are currently in
    negotiations to sell certain gem and mineral assets held by
    the GTIF, (the “Potential Sales”), which, if completed, will
    be sufficient to pay Hallick $14,000,000 pursuant to the
    terms below.
    9
    No. 2021AP1052
    The fourth recital states, “The purpose of this Settlement is to resolve all claims
    asserted by Hallick against Respondents except those claims that have been
    explicitly carved out.” As noted above, the claims carved out are not germane to
    the issues on appeal.
    ¶24    The Settlement Agreement continues with a section titled
    “Agreement.” This section starts with the following payment provisions:
    1. Initial Payment. Respondents agree to pay
    Hallick $375,000, (the “Initial Payment”), by check or
    wired funds on or before the later of April 21, 2019 or
    twenty (20) days after the execution of this Agreement.
    2. Final Payment. Respondents agree to pay
    Hallick $13,625,000, (the “Final Payment”), by check or
    wired funds, on or before July 21, 2019, (“the Payment
    Period”). The Parties agree that Hallick shall have the
    option of extending the Payment Period in his sole
    discretion. Greenpoint Tactical Income Fund LLC and its
    managers shall keep Hallick apprised of the status of any
    potential and completed sales of gems and minerals.
    ¶25    Paragraph three, titled “In-Kind Distribution,” provides:         “In the
    event that Respondents do not make the Final Payment within the Payment Period
    … Hallick shall be entitled to take possession of and title to $15,000,000 worth of
    the gem and/or mineral assets of the GTIF, less any payments previously made
    pursuant to this Agreement, including the Initial Payment, (the ‘In-Kind
    Distribution’).” The paragraph then describes the process by which Hallick can
    “effectuate” the in-kind distribution, addressing details such as appraisal,
    valuation, and timing.
    ¶26    Paragraph seven is titled “Representation and Warranty” and states:
    Respondents GTIF, Chrysalis Financial LLC,
    Christopher Nohl, and Greenpoint Asset Management II
    LLC represent and warrant that GTIF will retain sufficient
    assets to cover the amounts due to Hallick under this
    10
    No. 2021AP1052
    Agreement. GTIF, Chrysalis Financial LLC, Christopher
    Nohl, and Greenpoint Asset Management II LLC further
    represent and warrant that if the Potential Sales are
    completed and the GTIF has sufficient liquidity considering
    its other obligations and liabilities, they will pay Hallick the
    Final Payment due hereunder with said proceeds. Even if
    GTIF lacks sufficient funds to make the entirety of the
    Final Payment, it will pay Hallick as much of the Final
    Payment as is reasonably practicable in light of its available
    liquidity.
    The paragraph further specifies what activities GTIF may or may not engage in to
    ensure it pays Hallick as much of the final payment as possible.
    ¶27    Paragraph eight, titled “Release of Claims,” states that, except for
    certain claims that are not germane to the issues on appeal, “Claimant and
    Respondents fully and forever discharge each other … from any and all claims and
    causes of action … that are or could have been asserted in, or relate to or arise out
    of the allegations or facts in the Litigation[.]”
    ¶28    Paragraph nineteen, titled “Enforcement,” provides that “this
    Settlement Agreement shall be enforceable by the arbitrator, Hon. John Markson.”
    ¶29    The Settlement Agreement ends with signatures by Hallick and all of
    the Respondents.
    C. The Arbitrator’s Award
    ¶30    As stated, the arbitrator interpreted the Settlement Agreement as
    providing that all of the Respondents, not only GTIF, are jointly and severally
    responsible for the final payment due Hallick.
    ¶31    The arbitrator began by stating the applicable legal principles,
    including that the Settlement Agreement is a contract and that resolving the
    dispute involves ascertaining the intent of the signatories to the Agreement from
    11
    No. 2021AP1052
    the words in the contract.     The arbitrator determined that the Agreement is
    unambiguous and, thus, is to be construed without the use of extrinsic evidence.
    ¶32     The arbitrator then determined that paragraph two of the Settlement
    Agreement “clear[ly]” states that each of the Respondents named in the
    Agreement agrees to pay Hallick $13,625,000.            The arbitrator based this
    determination on the words in paragraph two—“Respondents agree to pay Hallick
    $13,625,000 (the ‘Final Payment’), by check or wired funds, on or before July 21,
    2019, (‘the Payment Period’).”—and on the definition of “Respondents” in
    paragraph one as including all of the signatories to the Agreement against which
    Hallick had asserted claims.       The arbitrator reasoned that to interpret the
    Settlement Agreement as making GTIF solely responsible for the final payment
    would require ignoring the language in paragraph two and render it meaningless,
    and would render paragraph two and the signatures of all of the other Respondents
    superfluous.
    ¶33     The arbitrator explained that none of the paragraphs specifically
    referencing GTIF point to a different interpretation. The arbitrator noted that the
    recital that refers to GTIF’s ongoing negotiations to sell assets states what may be
    a historical fact and the hope that the negotiations would succeed and furnish the
    funds to pay Hallick. However, the arbitrator found no language in the recital that
    limits the Respondents’ obligation to pay under paragraph two “to whatever GTIF
    may realize from the sale of the assets.”
    ¶34     The arbitrator noted that the paragraphs describing the in-kind
    distribution similarly reflect the hope that GTIF would make the final payment,
    but explained that describing one “path” to that payment “does not define the
    obligations of the parties to the Agreement.” According to the arbitrator, these
    12
    No. 2021AP1052
    paragraphs state only that Hallick was entitled to an in-kind distribution if he
    chose that path, not that he was entitled to an in-kind distribution if the final
    payment was not made. Consistent with the Agreement, when Hallick tried to
    take that path but was “blocked” when GTIF declared bankruptcy, he was “now
    taking another path by returning to paragraph [two].”                As for the warranty
    paragraph providing measures to protect GTIF’s ability to pay Hallick, the
    arbitrator noted that the participating Respondents failed to explain “how taking
    steps to protect one party’s ability to pay lets the others off the hook when they’ve
    agreed to pay, as they did in paragraph [two].”
    ¶35      The arbitrator explained how his interpretation “gives effect to” and
    “harmonizes all the provisions” pointed to by the participating Respondents.
    Specifically:
    Each of the Respondents is responsible for the payment of
    $13,625,000, as paragraph [two] says. At the same time
    GTIF had assets it was trying to sell to garner an amount
    sufficient to pay Mr. Hallick (Recital C). If it could not sell
    them within the Payment Period, paragraph [three] provides
    that Mr. Hallick then “shall be entitled to take possession of
    and title to $15,000,000 worth of” the assets. That
    paragraph and the next one, paragraph [four], go on to
    prescribe a process to effectuate that in-kind distribution,
    should Mr. Hallick elect that process. And throughout it
    all, the provisions outlined in paragraph [seven] are in place
    to provide some protection from undermining GTIF’s
    ability to pay.
    The arbitrator reasoned that, if only GTIF is liable for making the final payment to
    Hallick, then nothing is required by the Respondents other than GTIF and there is
    no reason for them to be signatories to the Agreement.
    ¶36      Finally, the arbitrator considered what liability to impose consistent
    with his interpretation that all of the Respondents agreed to pay Hallick the
    13
    No. 2021AP1052
    amount due him after the initial payment was made. The arbitrator concluded that,
    even though the Settlement Agreement does not use the exact words “joint and
    several liability,” the Agreement created a joint and several obligation when all of
    the Respondents agreed to pay Hallick. The arbitrator recited the rule for joint and
    several liability as stated in the “Restatement (Second) of Contracts, sec. 289,” as
    providing that “[w]here two or more parties to a contract promise the same
    performance to the same promisee, each is bound for the whole performance
    thereof, whether his duty is joint, several, or joint and several.” The arbitrator
    noted that the rule is not inconsistent with Wisconsin law and applied the rule to
    conclude that “each of the [R]espondents is jointly and severally liable for the
    $13,625,000 obligation each agreed to assume by entering into the Agreement.”
    D. Analysis
    ¶37    Greenpoint II acknowledges that the arbitrator properly recited the
    applicable law but argues that he disregarded that law in interpreting the language
    of the Settlement Agreement.      However, as the arbitrator explained, he gave
    meaning to all of the relevant provisions in the Agreement when he determined,
    based on the language in those provisions, that: (1) the provisions specifically
    referencing the Respondents require that they will make the payment due Hallick;
    and (2) the provisions specifically referencing GTIF describe alternative paths for
    making that payment that may have been preferred but were not exclusive and did
    not relieve the other Respondents of the liability for making the payment that they
    agreed to.   Accordingly, we conclude that there is a reasonable basis in the
    Agreement for the arbitrator’s interpretation and, therefore, the arbitrator did not
    exceed his powers in reaching that interpretation. We next explain why we reject
    Greenpoint II’s somewhat overlapping arguments to the contrary.
    14
    No. 2021AP1052
    ¶38   Greenpoint II argues that the arbitrator’s interpretation improperly
    put too much weight on paragraph two of the Settlement Agreement, rendered
    certain provisions superfluous, and disregarded the Agreement’s failure to use the
    term “joint and several liability.” However, as we have summarized above, the
    arbitrator explained why he rejected these same arguments. Moreover, as to the
    Agreement’s failure to use the term “joint and several liability,” Hallick cites to
    case law supporting the rule relied on by the arbitrator as to this issue, and
    Greenpoint II does not challenge that case law in its reply brief. See United Coop.
    v. Frontier FS Coop., 
    2007 WI App 197
    , ¶39, 
    304 Wis. 2d 750
    , 
    738 N.W.2d 578
    (appellant’s failure to respond in reply brief to an argument made in response brief
    may be taken as a concession). Essentially, these are arguments that the arbitrator
    applied contract law differently from how Greenpoint II would apply it to reach an
    interpretation different from the one that Greenpoint II would reach. These are not
    arguments that the arbitrator manifestly disregarded contract law. We do not upset
    arbitration awards when a party simply disagrees with the arbitrator’s
    interpretation or argues that a different interpretation is better. See Baldwin-
    Woodville, 
    317 Wis. 2d 691
    , ¶22 (In reviewing an arbitrator’s award, “we do not
    determine which construction—the arbitrator’s or the [appellant’s]—is more
    reasonable.”).
    ¶39   Greenpoint II argues that the payment terms in the Settlement
    Agreement focus only on the assets of GTIF, thus reflecting the “principal
    purpose” of the agreement and “overarching intent” of the signatories to the
    agreement as being to make the final payment to Hallick solely based on GTIF’s
    assets.     However, the arbitrator explained that the signatories’ inclusion of
    provisions in the contract specifying where they hoped or preferred the final
    payment will come from does not make that source of the payment the sole
    15
    No. 2021AP1052
    remedy, given that the signatories also included the provision stating that all of the
    Respondents agreed to make the final payment to Hallick.
    ¶40    Greenpoint II’s argument appears to be that contract law requires
    that a contract be interpreted to relieve a party from liability for a payment that it
    agrees to make when the contract does not specify how the party will make that
    payment; i.e., because the Settlement Agreement does not reference the other
    Respondents’ assets, the Respondents’ agreement to pay has no meaning. First,
    this argument ignores the language in paragraph two specifying that the
    Respondents shall make the final payment “by check or wired funds.” Second,
    Greenpoint II cites no law supporting this general proposition. Moreover, the
    arbitrator explained that such an interpretation of the Settlement Agreement would
    render superfluous both the paragraph stating the non-GTIF Respondents’
    agreement to pay and their signatures to the Agreement. Greenpoint II points to
    no language in the Agreement that limits Hallick to pursuing only GTIF’s assets.
    This failure defeats Greenpoint II’s argument that there is no reasonable
    foundation for the arbitrator’s interpretation that all of the Respondents are liable
    independent of the availability of GTIF’s assets.
    ¶41    In a similar vein, Greenpoint II argues that the arbitrator misapplied
    contract law by failing to construe the Settlement Agreement’s detailed provisions
    pertaining to the process for effectuating payment via GTIF’s assets, as requiring
    that the GTIF-assets-based path to payment is the exclusive path. However, the
    arbitrator reasonably explained why he rejected the “exclusive path”
    interpretation.   Because the arbitrator’s interpretation to the contrary has a
    reasonable foundation in the Agreement, Greenpoint II’s assertion of error does
    not show a manifest disregard of contract law.
    16
    No. 2021AP1052
    ¶42      In sum, we conclude that there is a reasonable basis in the Settlement
    Agreement for the arbitrator’s interpretation to impose joint and several liability
    on all of the Respondents.        Accordingly, Greenpoint II’s argument that the
    arbitrator exceeded his powers in reaching that interpretation fails.
    II. The Arbitrator Did Not Imperfectly Execute His Powers.
    ¶43      Greenpoint II argues that the arbitrator “so imperfectly executed [his
    powers] that a mutual, final and definite award upon the subject matter submitted
    was not made,” when he denied Greenpoint II’s motion to amend its response to
    assert counterclaims against Hallick. See WIS. STAT. § 788.10(1)(d).
    ¶44      Arbitrators imperfectly execute their powers when they “fail[] to
    perform the duty placed upon them by the submission” of the subject matter in
    arbitration. Loren Imhoff Homebuilder, Inc. v. Taylor, 
    2022 WI App 14
    , ¶47,
    
    401 Wis. 2d 510
    , 
    973 N.W.2d 836
    , (quoting Garstka v. Russo, 
    37 Wis. 2d 146
    ,
    149–50, 
    154 N.W.2d 286
     (1967)).6 “When a matter is submitted to arbitrators and
    a final and definite award covering all the subject matter submitted is not made,
    the arbitration has failed to serve its purpose and should not be accepted.”
    Garstka, 
    37 Wis. 2d at 150
     (concluding that, when the arbitrators in a contract
    dispute were assigned to decide two issues and decided only one of the two issues
    in the award, the arbitrators had imperfectly executed their powers in violation of
    the statute).
    6
    Garstka v. Russo, 
    37 Wis. 2d 146
    , 149–50, 
    154 N.W.2d 286
     (1967) addressed the
    application of WIS. STAT. § 298.10(1)(d) (1977-1978), which was the previous numbering for
    WIS. STAT. § 788.10(1)(d) and worded identically.
    17
    No. 2021AP1052
    ¶45     Here, Greenpoint II alleged that Hallick breached the Settlement
    Agreement and his duty of good faith and fair dealing when he engaged in ex parte
    communications with the appraiser contrary to the Agreement. Greenpoint II
    further alleged that those communications resulted in a reduced valuation of
    GTIF’s assets that limited GTIF’s ability to realize the fair market value of its
    assets and adversely affected GTIF’s ability to satisfy the Final Payment, through
    either the sale of those assets or Hallick’s taking possession of those assets.7 The
    arbitrator accepted Greenpoint II’s allegations as true for the purpose of deciding
    whether to grant the motion to amend. The arbitrator concluded that the subject of
    the proposed counterclaims has “nothing to do with the dispute between the parties
    to this arbitration [and, therefore,] the interests of justice are not served by
    allowing the amendment.”
    ¶46     In explaining his reasoning, the arbitrator clarified that the purpose
    of the Settlement Agreement, as stated in Recital D and paragraph two of the
    Agreement, is to settle Hallick’s claims against all of the Respondents that were in
    the prior arbitration and litigation by paying Hallick.                 The arbitrator further
    clarified that the issue to be decided in this arbitration proceeding, which was
    initiated by Hallick to enforce the Settlement Agreement, is the liability of the
    non-GTIF Respondents under the Agreement. The arbitrator stated that Hallick’s
    7
    We generally refer to the two mechanisms of payment based on GTIF’s assets
    referenced in the Settlement Agreement—the potential sale of the assets and Hallick’s taking
    possession of the assets through the in-kind distribution—as “the disposition of GTIF’s assets.”
    As implicitly recognized by Greenpoint II, it is evident from the arbitrator’s discussion taken as a
    whole, that the arbitrator’s repeated references to the effect of Hallick’s communications on the
    mechanism involving the in-kind distribution of GTIF’s assets to satisfy the final payment due
    Hallick implicitly extended to the potential sale of the assets contemplated in one of the recitals.
    Both aspects of the Settlement Agreement concern the one path of making the final payment to
    Hallick based on the disposition of GTIF’s assets, and it is that path that is the focus of the
    arbitrator’s explanation of his decision denying the motion to amend.
    18
    No. 2021AP1052
    alleged breach of the appraisal provision would only be relevant to the task of
    enforcing the Settlement Agreement if the arbitrator were to conclude that the
    alleged breach was so significant that it would destroy the essential purpose of the
    Agreement and excuse the non-GTIF Respondents’ performance under the
    Agreement. The arbitrator explained that, because the alleged breach based on the
    ex parte appraisal communications concerns only one non-exclusive aspect of the
    Agreement (payment based on the disposition of GTIF’s assets), the alleged
    breach has “nothing to do with the purpose of the [Agreement—settling the claims
    of all of the Respondents by paying Hallick], much less operate[s] to destroy that
    purpose.” The arbitrator also explained that the second counterclaim, that Hallick
    breached his duty of good faith and fair dealing, would similarly not excuse the
    Respondents’ obligations and would only concern the same non-exclusive aspect
    that does not bear on the purpose of the Settlement Agreement or the task of
    enforcing it.
    ¶47      As further explained by the arbitrator, Hallick’s alleged interference
    with the appraisal process concerns one path to making the final payment based on
    the disposition of GTIF’s assets, but has no bearing on the Respondents’
    agreement to pay Hallick separate from the disposition of GTIF’s assets. The
    arbitrator stated that Hallick’s alleged communications with the appraiser might at
    most affect the path for payment based on the disposition of GTF’s assets, which
    is but one path “by which the essential object of the Agreement—settling the case
    by paying Mr. Hallick—might be satisfied. It is not itself the object of the
    Agreement.” Given that purpose, the issue before the arbitrator was “Hallick’s
    right, if any, under the Agreement, to pursue the other [R]espondents for the
    amount he is owed under the Settlement Agreement” under the other path stated in
    19
    No. 2021AP1052
    the Agreement. The arbitrator concluded that the proposed counterclaims have
    nothing to do with that issue and, therefore, denied the motion to amend.
    ¶48    We conclude that the arbitrator properly denied Greenpoint II’s
    motion to amend on the basis that the counterclaims are not relevant to the purpose
    of the arbitration, which was to enforce Hallick’s claims under the Settlement
    Agreement.    Specifically, consistent with the arbitrator’s interpretation of the
    Agreement, the counterclaims concern only one path, based on the disposition of
    GTIF’s assets, to making the final payment due Hallick under the Agreement. The
    counterclaims do not relate to the path chosen by Hallick as provided by the
    Agreement, payment by all of the other Respondents. Consequently, denying
    Greenpoint II’s motion to amend to assert the counterclaims did not prevent the
    arbitrator from making “a final and definite award covering all the subject matter
    submitted” and did not prevent the arbitration from “serv[ing] its purpose.” See
    Gartska, 
    37 Wis. 2d at 150
    .       Accordingly, the arbitrator did not imperfectly
    execute his powers when he denied Greenpoint II’s motion to amend to assert the
    counterclaims.
    ¶49    Greenpoint II’s argument on appeal essentially reiterates its
    argument regarding the interpretation of the Settlement Agreement, that there is
    only one anticipated outcome from the contract, payment by GTIF based on the
    disposition of its assets, and therefore Hallick’s alleged interference with the value
    of GTIF’s assets constituted a material breach to the essential object of the
    Settlement Agreement. However, this argument, which amounts simply to the
    argument that the counterclaims are critical to the Agreement as Greenpoint II
    interprets it, fails because the arbitrator rejected that interpretation and we have
    rejected Greenpoint II’s challenge to his interpretation.
    20
    No. 2021AP1052
    ¶50    To repeat, the arbitrator’s award clearly states his conclusion that,
    under the Agreement, the disposition of GTIF’s assets does not provide the sole
    path for satisfying the final payment due Hallick. Thus, these counterclaims
    concerning only the appraisal and valuation of GTIF’s assets are not relevant to
    the other path for payment provided in the Settlement Agreement, namely all of
    the Respondents’ agreement to make that payment regardless of the availability of
    GTIF’s assets. As Greenpoint II appears to concede (stating, in its reply brief, that
    “[t]he question before the Arbitrator was whether [Hallick] was entitled to recover
    a judgment against [Greenpoint II]”), it is this other path that Hallick asserted in
    seeking to enforce the Agreement and it is whether Hallick is entitled to that path
    under the Agreement that the arbitrator was tasked with deciding.
    ¶51    In sum, in explicitly addressing Greenpoint II’s counterclaims and
    explaining why the counterclaims do not bear on the ultimate conclusion the
    arbitrator was tasked with making, which is whether all of the Respondents are
    liable for the final payment due Hallick, the arbitrator fulfilled his entire duty
    under the Settlement Agreement by rendering “a mutual, final and definite award
    upon the subject matter.” See WIS. STAT. § 788.10(1)(d). Thus, the arbitrator did
    not imperfectly execute his powers.
    CONCLUSION
    ¶52    For the reasons stated above, we affirm.
    By the Court.—Order affirmed.
    This    opinion   will   not    be   published.    See   WIS. STAT.
    RULE 809.23(1)(b)5.
    21
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2021AP001052

Filed Date: 5/25/2023

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 9/9/2024