Seeno Litigation - The Deadly Superior Court
KAHN v. CHETCUTI and the Contra Costa Narcotics Taskforce
KAHN v. CHETCUTI
Court of Appeal, First District, Division 5, California.
Philip KAHN et al., Plaintiffs and Respondents, v. Benny CHETCUTI, Jr., Defendant and Appellant.
No. A096670.
Decided: August 12, 2002
In this dispute arising from the sale of a home to respondents, seller Benny Chetcuti, Jr., appeals from a judgment confirming an award in a contractual arbitration and denying his petition to correct the award. He contends (1) the arbitrator exceeded his powers, and (2) the arbitrator erred procedurally when he awarded attorney fees and costs to respondents. In the published portion of the opinion, we interpret the parties' agreement to authorize the arbitrator to determine whether the prevailing party's act of filing a complaint before an obligatory mediation barred the award of attorney fees to that party. That determination, we conclude, is not subject to judicial review. We reject the second argument in the unpublished portion of our opinion and affirm the trial court's judgment.
I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
In March 1995, appellant purchased a residence located on Edgehill Drive in Burlingame as a business investment. Appellant renovated the property and then listed it for sale. Respondents Philip and Mara Kahn purchased the residence from appellant in June 1996 for $455,000. The purchase agreement contained clauses stating that any disputes arising out of the contract must be mediated, and if that was unsuccessful, submitted to binding arbitration. The agreement also provided that the prevailing party in any arbitration or other legal proceedings was entitled to reasonable attorney fees, with a limitation on the right to fees where an arbitrator determined that a party otherwise entitled to fees resisted mediation.
In April 1998, Lori Lutzker, an attorney representing respondents, sent a letter to appellant alleging he had failed to disclose certain defects that were present in the residence. Acknowledging the alternative dispute resolution clauses in the purchase agreement, Lutzker demanded that appellant submit the dispute to mediation.
Gerald Filice, an attorney, replied to Lutzker's letter on appellant's behalf. He denied that appellant had made any misrepresentations, but he agreed to “undertake” mediation. He urged Lutzker to submit the names of potential mediators.
In the weeks that followed, Lutzker and Filice exchanged a series of letters trying to select an appropriate mediator. That process was still not complete by late June 1998, and Lutzker became concerned that the statute of limitations for certain claims respondents had against appellant might pass. Hoping to “avoid [an] unnecessary legal action” Lutzker drafted an agreement and sent it to Filice, asking him to waive “all applicable statutes of limitations during the time when we are attempting to resolve the dispute through mediation and arbitration.”
Filice refused to sign the agreement. Therefore, on July 2, 1998, Lutzker filed a complaint against appellant on respondents' behalf. Respondents did not intend to proceed with the litigation. They filed the complaint solely to preserve their legal rights. In fact, Lutzker prepared a stipulation proposing to stay the action pending the conclusion of the arbitration.
The mediation was conducted in September 1998. It was unsuccessful. The parties then proceeded to arbitration.
An arbitration hearing was conducted before an attorney selected by the parties, William L. Nagle, on three days in January and February 2001. During the arbitration, both parties agreed that the issue of attorney fees would be litigated after the arbitrator had issued his initial award.
On February 15, 2001, the arbitrator issued his award and memorandum of decision. He ruled respondents were entitled to $100,000 in damages, but that those damages were subject to a $50,000 setoff based on sums respondents had received from their broker and real estate agent. Thus respondents were awarded $50,000 from appellant. The arbitrator also ruled respondents were the prevailing parties and that they were entitled to their attorney fees and costs under the terms of the arbitration agreement.
On April 3, 2001, respondents filed a memorandum with the arbitrator setting forth the fees and costs they had incurred. Appellant then filed what he described as a motion to strike and to tax costs. He raised two issues that are relevant here. First, appellant argued the arbitrator exceeded his authority when he awarded attorney fees and costs to respondents because respondents had filed a complaint before the mediation hearing. According to appellant, that act (filing the complaint) precluded an award of fees and costs under the terms of the purchase agreement. Second, appellant argued the arbitrator lacked jurisdiction to award fees and costs because respondents' application for those fees and costs was a “correction” to the arbitration award that was not “timely” under the California arbitration statutes. (See Code Civ. Proc.,1 § 1280 et seq.)
The arbitrator held a hearing on the fee request on May 14, 2001. On May 31, 2001, the arbitrator issued his written ruling awarding respondents $83,289.75 in attorney fees, plus $13,638.95 in costs.
Appellant then filed a petition in the San Mateo Superior Court seeking to correct the arbitration award. As is relevant here, he raised the same two issues that he raised before the arbitrator in his motion to strike and to tax costs.
On June 18, 2001, respondents filed a petition to confirm the arbitration award.
Both petitions were heard by the court at a hearing on July 17, 2001. The court denied appellant's motion to correct the award and granted respondents' request to confirm. In addition, the court awarded respondents an additional $3,690 in attorney fees. This appeal followed.
II. DISCUSSION
A. Did the Arbitrator Exceed his Power?
Appellant contends the trial court should have granted his motion to correct the arbitration award because the arbitrator exceeded his powers when it awarded attorney fees and costs to respondents. Whether the arbitrator exceeded his powers presents a question of law that we decide de novo on appeal. (Creative Plastering, Inc. v. Hedley Builders, Inc. (1993) 19 Cal.App.4th 1662, 1666, 24 Cal.Rptr.2d 216.)
The pivotal question a court must answer when deciding whether an arbitrator exceeded his powers is whether the arbitrator had the authority to rule on a particular issue under the terms of the controlling arbitration agreement. (Creative Plastering, Inc. v. Hedley Builders, Inc., supra, 19 Cal.App.4th at p. 1666, 24 Cal.Rptr.2d 216; Southern Cal. Rapid Transit Dist. v. United Transportation Union (1992) 5 Cal.App.4th 416, 422, 6 Cal.Rptr.2d 804; cf. DiRussa v. Dean Witter Reynolds, Inc. (2d Cir.1997) 121 F.3d 818, 824.) Here, the purchase agreement contains a clause that specifically authorized an award of attorney fees and costs. It states, “Should any legal or equitable action, arbitration or other proceeding between Buyer and Seller arise out of this agreement, the prevailing party shall be awarded reasonable attorney's fees and court or arbitration costs in addition to any other judgment or award.” Clearly the arbitrator had the power to award fees and costs.
Appellant contends the arbitrator exceeded his powers because he awarded fees and costs to respondents even though such an award was prohibited under the facts of this case. Appellant bases his argument on the mediation clause contained in the purchase agreement, which states in part, “Buyer [and] Seller ․ agree to and shall mediate any dispute or claim between them arising out of this contract․ The mediation shall be held prior to any court action or arbitration․ Should the prevailing party attempt an arbitration or a court action before attempting [to] mediate, THE PREVAILING PARTY SHALL NOT BE ENTITLED TO ATTORNEY FEES THAT MIGHT OTHERWISE BE AVAILABLE TO THEM IN A COURT ACTION OR ARBITRATION․” (Italics in original.) Appellant contends respondents were not entitled to fees and costs under this language because they filed a complaint against him before the mediation hearing and thus they “attempt[ed] ․ a court action before attempting [to] mediate.” Under these circumstances, appellant contends, the arbitrator exceeded his powers when he made such an award.
We must reject appellant's argument. The arbitration clause in the purchase agreement states that the arbitrator was authorized to decide “[a]ny dispute or claim in law or equity arising out of this contract or any resulting transaction․” One dispute or claim the arbitrator was authorized to decide under this broad language was whether respondents had in fact “attempt[ed] ․ a court action before attempting [to] mediate.” By rejecting appellant's motion to strike and to tax costs, the arbitrator impliedly concluded respondents had not “attempt[ed] ․ a court action before attempting [to] mediate.” (Cf. Rosenquist v. Haralambides (1987) 192 Cal.App.3d 62, 67, 237 Cal.Rptr. 260 [“courts must indulge every reasonable intendment to give effect to arbitration proceedings”]; Griffith Co. v. San Diego Col. for Women (1955) 45 Cal.2d 501, 516, 289 P.2d 476, [same]; see also Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. v. Intel Corp. (1994) 9 Cal.4th 362, 381, 36 Cal.Rptr.2d 581, 885 P.2d 994 [courts must defer to an arbitrator's implied findings].) The arbitrator did not “exceed his powers” when he decided an issue he was clearly authorized to decide.
Appellant seems to contend that because respondents filed a complaint against him before the mediation hearing the arbitrator had no alternative but to conclude that respondents had “attempt[ed] ․ a court action before attempting [to] mediate.” However “the merits of a controversy that has been submitted to arbitration are not subject to judicial review. This means that we may not review the validity of the arbitrator's reasoning, the sufficiency of the evidence supporting the award, or any errors of fact or law that may be included in the award.” (Harris v. Sandro (2002) 96 Cal.App.4th 1310, 1313, 117 Cal.Rptr.2d 910.)
Our deference to the arbitrator's implied ruling should not be interpreted as meaning that we somehow disagree with his decision. Absent a restriction to the contrary, “ ‘arbitrators ․ may base their decision upon broad principles of justice and equity, and in doing so may expressly or impliedly reject a claim that a party might successfully have asserted in a judicial action.’ ” (Moncharsh v. Heily & Blase (1992) 3 Cal.4th 1, 10-11, 10 Cal.Rptr.2d 183, 832 P.2d 899, quoting Sapp v. Barenfeld (1949) 34 Cal.2d 515, 523, 212 P.2d 233.) “ ‘[A]rbitrators are not bound to award on principles of dry law, but may decide on principles of equity and good conscience, and may make their award ex aequo et bono [according to what is just and good].’ ” (Id. at p. 11, 10 Cal.Rptr.2d 183, 832 P.2d 899, quoting Muldrow v. Norris (1852) 2 Cal. 74, 77.)
Here, the evidence shows respondents filed a complaint against appellant prior to the mediation hearing. However, the evidence also shows respondents only did so because the statute of limitations for some of their claims was about to pass, and appellant's counsel refused to sign an agreement waiving the statute of limitations. Furthermore, the evidence shows respondents did not intend to pursue the suit, and that they filed it only to preserve their legal rights. The arbitrator reviewing this evidence could reasonably conclude respondents did not, in any real sense, “attempt ․ a court action before attempting [to] mediate.”
Appellant's final argument on this issue is that the arbitrator exceeded his power as that concept is interpreted in DiMarco v. Chaney (1995) 31 Cal.App.4th 1809, 37 Cal.Rptr.2d 558. We disagree. In DiMarco, the parties to a real estate transaction submitted their dispute to arbitration under a contract that said the prevailing party “shall be entitled to reasonable attorney's fees and costs.” (Id. at p. 1812, fn. 1, 37 Cal.Rptr.2d 558.) The arbitrator ruled the seller was the prevailing party but declined to award her fees and costs. The appellate court ruled the arbitrator had exceeded his powers under those circumstances because “having made a finding [the seller] was the prevailing party, the arbitrator was compelled by the terms of the agreement to award her reasonable attorney fees and costs.” (Id. at p. 1815, 37 Cal.Rptr.2d 558.) 2
DiMarco is distinguishable because here, the arbitrator did not find that respondents had “attempt[ed] ․ a court action before attempting [to] mediate.” Indeed precisely the opposite is true. By rejecting appellant's motion to strike and tax costs, the arbitrator impliedly made an opposite finding. DiMarco is inapposite.
We conclude the arbitrator did not exceed his powers when he awarded respondents their attorney fees and costs.3
B. Did the Arbitrator Err Procedurally when he Awarded Attorney Fees and Costs? **
III. DISPOSITION
The judgment confirming the award and denying appellant's petition to correct the award is affirmed.
FOOTNOTES
FN1. Unless otherwise indicated, all further section references will be to the Code of Civil Procedure.. FN1. Unless otherwise indicated, all further section references will be to the Code of Civil Procedure.
2. Our Supreme Court recently took note of the decision in DiMarco but declined to decide whether its reasoning was correct. (See Moshonov v. Walsh (2000) 22 Cal.4th 771, 779, 94 Cal.Rptr.2d 597, 996 P.2d 699.) We too need not state an opinion on the issue because the case is distinguishable.
3. Having reached this conclusion, we need not reach respondents' argument that any limitation on the right of the prevailing party to recover attorney fees would be unenforceable.
FOOTNOTE. See footnote *, ante.
JONES, P.J.
We concur: STEVENS and SIMONS, JJ.
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Questions linger about Pittsburg hillside work – East Bay Times
More than a year after an investigation into grading work by a prominent local developer in the hills southwest of Pittsburg, it remains unclear whether any legal action will be taken.
In January 2008, the California Department of Fish and Game and city of Pittsburg investigated the reshaping of the hills high atop the western portion of the San Marco subdivision by homebuilder Albert Seeno III’s Discovery Builders, including possible destruction of a seasonal stream. Results were brought to the Contra Costa County District Attorney’s Office and state Attorney General’s Office in July 2008.
No decision has been made about filing a case, Contra Costa deputy district attorney Lon Wixson said last week. That office is handling the matter.
“We haven’t filed anything, but we haven’t closed the case, either. We’re trying to close the loop on some additional information,” Wixson said. “It’s not a simple case; there are a lot of factors, which is part of the problem in making the decision.”
Once the additional information is assessed, the district attorney’s office can decide whether to proceed with a case or drop the matter, he said.
If a case is filed, the district attorney’s office would pursue civil but not criminal charges, he added.
The state Department of Water Resources has not ruled out taking legal action regardless of the district attorney’s decision, department spokeswoman Katie Hart said.
Last year’s investigation examined whether the stream bed was improperly altered, sustained erosion and habitat damage, and whether Discovery Builders violated permit conditions, said Nicole Kozicki, a warden with the Department of Fish and Game. The investigation was prompted when Kozicki discovered grading activity while driving on Highway 4 in the winter of 2007, noting that it violated a stipulation of a 1997 agreement for when work can be done.
That agreement between Albert Seeno Jr.’s West Coast Home Builders and Fish and Game allowed some fill work on wetlands, provided that a new, larger wetlands be created. That permit expired in December 2005.
The grading work added subdrains — or underground piping to collect excess water — behind a series of dams that “changed the hydrology of the watershed,” she said.
No additional information or record of any valid permit under which Discovery Builders was operating was found, said Joe Sbranti, Pittsburg’s assistant city manager. As a result, Pittsburg retroactively collected a $7,086 fee from Discovery for a grading permit, he said.
Discovery understands the requirements regarding permits, but in this case failed to obtain one in advance of the grading work, he said.
Other permits for grading the streambed would be issued by the Army Corps of Engineers and Department of Water Resources. Those agencies found the permits to be expired as well, Kozicki said last year.
The lack of action by the city and district attorney’s office is “unconscionable,” said Seth Adams, land programs manager for regional environmental group Save Mount Diablo.
“Nobody appears to be willing to move forward or do anything,” he said. “The reality is there is a mile of illegal grading from Highway 4 to the ridge line overlooking Concord. It’s not like there’s a lack of evidence.”
Further, he said, Pittsburg has “set a bad precedent that developers can ignore their regulations and get away with it.”
Seeno representatives could not be reached for comment. An attorney for the Seeno companies said last year that they think they have been in compliance with all applicable laws.
Pittsburg has been working with officials from Discovery Builders on a policy for dealing with future issues, Sbranti said.
A periodic review of the San Marco subdivision will come before the Pittsburg City Council soon, covering more than 75 conditions of requirements and memorandums associated with the project and what Discovery is doing to meet the requirements, Sbranti said.
Language in the March 1990 development agreement between Pittsburg and Seeno’s Seecon Financial Construction Co. allows for some permitted grading, but grading in excess of Pittsburg hillside regulations requires further approvals.
The Seeno family of homebuilders has been investigated and fined multiple times over the past several years for suspected environmental violations, including a $3 million settlement in January 2008 concerning grading work at an Antioch subdivision in 2005. The Seenos did not admit fault or liability in settling that case.
The company also agreed to pay $1 million in fines and restitution after pleading guilty to violating the federal Endangered Species Act in 2001 for killing threatened red-legged frogs and destruction of the frog habitat at San Marco.
JOB LOSSES SAP MORALE OF WORKERS - PLEASANT HILL MAN'S SUICIDE POINTS UP A RISING ANXIETY OVER OUTSOURCING AND THE TECH ECONOMY
The Outsourcing Suicide
JOB LOSSES SAP MORALE OF WORKERS - PLEASANT HILL MAN'S SUICIDE POINTS UP A RISING ANXIETY OVER OUTSOURCING AND THE TECH ECONOMY
Pete Bennett and friend Lee P. started a protest at the Concord Tech Campus regarding the duboious, doubtful and unlikely suicide of Bank of America programmer Kevin Flanagan.
2004 Kinder Morgan Explosion
Bennett traveled through the Broadway Bypass heading to court with Judge Golub where Bennett was laden with triple fines. This explosion and related investigation was rigged but the real owners lead the the 1990 Witness Murder in Bennett vs. Southern Pacific
JOB LOSSES SAP MORALE OF WORKERS - PLEASANT HILL MAN'S SUICIDE POINTS UP A RISING ANXIETY OVER OUTSOURCING AND THE TECH ECONOMY
In his oldest son's Pleasant Hill home, Tom Flanagan occasionally curses
as he walks through the halls and gathers his son Kevin's belongings:
the black-and-white photos his son developed in his makeshift darkroom,
the household products he had a tendency to buy in bulk, the box-loads
of books on computer programming.
More than once, Flanagan shakes his head. "It's a shame," he says. "We
lost a good friend and a good mind."
One month ago, Kevin Flanagan took
his life in the parking lot of Bank of America's Concord Technology
Center, on the afternoon after he was told he had lost his job.
It was "the straw that broke the
camel's back," his father said, even though the 41-year-old software
programmer suspected it was coming. He knew that his employer, Bank of
America Corp., like other giant corporations weathering the economic
storm, was cutting high-tech jobs. He knew that Bank of America was
sending jobs overseas. He had seen his friends and coworkers leave until
only he and one other person remained on the last project Flanagan
worked on.
Flanagan took steps to soften the blow. He considered studying law,
and even made a list of California schools he was interested in
researching. He applied for other jobs at the bank, but didn't receive
responses.
In e-mails to his father, Flanagan sounded lighthearted. "I'm safe!"
he would write in his Friday missives. "I'm safe for another week."
But Flanagan apparently masked the
depth of the distress he felt as he fought to save his position. "He
felt like he was fighting a large corporation that pretty much didn't
care," his father said. "This final blow was so devastating. He couldn't
deal with it." The father said he saw no other signs of depression
before his son's suicide.
It is unclear if Flanagan lost his job because it had been sent
overseas, or because the bank was slimming down because of the tight
economy. Lisa Gagnon, a Bank of America spokeswoman, declined to
comment, saying, "We're deeply saddened by this tragedy. We send our
prayers to his friends, colleagues and family."
But his death underscores the
anxiety that has swelled among technology workers at Bank of America and
elsewhere as more businesses shift high-tech jobs and responsibilities
to contractors offshore even as they cut jobs in the United States.
A report by Forrester Research
projects that, led by the information-technology industry, 3.3 million
service jobs and $136 billion in wages will move from the United States
to such countries as India and Russia over the next decade or so.
Another survey by A.T. Kearney said
that U.S. financial-services companies are planning to send overseas 8
percent of their workforces, thus saving them more than $30 billion.
Coupled with a rough economy and
high unemployment, the phenomenon has left U.S. workers looking over
their shoulders, wondering if their overseas counterparts could soon
replace them. Blue-collar manufacturing jobs have for years crossed U.S.
borders and waters. Some workers are bitter that white-collar,
high-paying technology jobs are next.
"It could be me," said a Bank of
America information-technology employee who spoke on the condition of
anonymity. "It could be anybody."
Flanagan's parents say that he complained about the company's move to
shift jobs out of the United States and talked about taking care of
problems that contractors in India couldn't solve.
"Outsourcing has led to tragedy for
us," said Tom Flanagan. "We are devastated."
Flanagan landed at Bank of America
seven years ago after spending time at a San Francisco technology
company and at ChevronTexaco Corp.
The Concord Technology Center, a cluster of four buildings that opened
in 1985, employs programmers such as Flanagan to develop software
programs that handle jobs like wire transfers. Throughout the Bay Area,
the bank employs some 13,400 workers; the bank would not release the
number of workers at the Concord center.
About two years ago, Bank of
America created the Global Delivery Center to identify projects that
could be sent offshore[JNI2]. In the fall of 2002, it signed agreements
with Infosys, whose U.S. headquarters are in Fremont, and Tata
Consulting Services, two of the largest players in
information-technology consulting and services in India.
Overall, this deal should affect no
more than 5 percent of the bank's 21,000 employees, or about 1,100 jobs,
in its technology and operations division, Gagnon said. So far, it has
been less than that, she added.
But Gagnon declined to say how many U.S. and Concord workers have been
affected so far.
"It's important to note that just because we decide there is a good
business reason to send a project (overseas) does not mean it will
necessarily result in job displacement," she said.
Employees at Concord, who spoke on
condition of anonymity, described shrinking project teams as work is
shuffled around. One veteran worker said that in the middle of a
project, he and his team members were asked to hand over documentation
and explain their work to a group of engineers from India. He and his
co-workers were then transferred to another project. A short time later,
he lost his job.
Gagnon confirmed this, saying that in some cases it made sense to have
workers train their overseas successors before they are let go.
"The knowledge transfer is
essential to continue to provide our customers with the best possible
services and solutions," Gagnon said.
One software engineer, who was laid
off about two months ago, said that he lost his job because the bank was
tightening its budget. But he argued that had other technology jobs not
been moved offshore, he would have had more opportunity to shift
jobs.
The harshest critics have called Flanagan's death an example of the
collateral damage brought on by businesses expanding their offshore
operations. A former software programmer said that morale in the office
is so low that some employees feel like they're on "death row."
"Every day you think, 'Is this the
day I'm gone?'" he said. "The next day you think, 'Is this the day I'm
gone?' The stress builds up."
But other Concord employees have taken it in stride. "It's a fact of
life in business," said one worker. "It's not perfect here, but it's a
pretty darn good place to work," he said.
Proponents say that hiring
technology workers overseas will make the company stronger: For one, it
cuts costs. A contractor in India, the most popular locale, is typically
paid $10,000, compared with $100,000 for a U.S. worker with the same
skills. Proponents argue that this allows companies to stay competitive,
saving and creating U.S. jobs.[JNI3]
Growing overseas does not
necessarily translate into a loss in the United States, said Debashish
Sinha, principal analyst for information technology services at Gartner,
a research group.
"Very rarely is there a direct staff substitution," he said. "Very
rarely will a U.S. enterprise lay off their internal IT folk to hire an
external offshore service provider."
But as offshore workers graduate
from basic jobs to more sophisticated technology work, critics here
wonder if there will be high-paying, high-tech jobs left in the United
States.
"There's a huge hole opening up here and no one is seeing it,"
said Pete Bennett, a former technology consultant in Danville who is now in the mortgage
industry. He founded NoMoreH1B.com to protest businesses bringing in non-U.S. workers through the
government's visa programs for highly skilled workers, a program that he
believes helped fuel businesses' move to transfer jobs offshore.
A few weeks before his death, Tom
Flanagan helped his son on yet another home improvement project in his
Pleasant Hill fixer-upper. That night, they stayed up until 4 in the
morning, "just shooting the breeze."
They often had these long
discussions, about California politics, about the Enron debacle, about
other world issues. They would argue until they couldn't keep their eyes
open.
"He would never give up," Flanagan said. "He would never give up. But
he gave up."
In a note that he left behind, Kevin Flanagan said that he felt like
he had finally found his home when he moved to Pleasant Hill and landed
his job at Bank of America.
"He loved working there," his father said. "He loved his house. He
loved it here. He was happy. This was his life."
Ellen Lee covers technology and
telecommunications. She can be reached at 925-952-2614 or
elee@cctimes.com.
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