WAYMOND M. BROWN, Judge.
This is a nursing-home negligence case, filed by Dana Couch Heide on behalf of Marc Stephen Williams, an incapacitated person. But the issue here is whether the circuit court should have granted a motion to compel arbitration. The court denied the motion filed by Advocat, Inc.; Diversicare Management Services Co.; and Diversicare Leasing Corp. d/b/a Arbor Oaks Health & Rehabilitation Center (collectively referred to as "Advocat") after finding that Advocat waived its right to compel arbitration by failing to attach the arbitration agreement to its initial answer. Advocat has filed this interlocutory appeal, seeking enforcement of the arbitration agreement. It argues (1) that it timely raised its right to arbitration, (2) that Arkansas Rule of Civil Procedure 10(d) did not operate to waive its right to arbitration, (3) that any defect in its previous pleadings was cured by its amended answer, and (4) that Heide was not prejudiced by its amended answer. We hold that Advocat validly raised the defense of arbitration when it filed a motion to compel — and attached a copy of the arbitration agreement to the motion — three months after the filing of the lawsuit. Therefore, we reverse and remand for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
In April 2009, Heide filed a nursing-home-negligence complaint against Advocat. Advocat filed an answer denying liability. In addition, Advocat presented a number of affirmative defenses, including that "the plaintiff's claims are subject to arbitration." While there was an arbitration agreement, the agreement was not attached to the initial answer.
In July 2009, Advocat filed a motion to compel arbitration. Attached to the motion was the arbitration agreement, purportedly signed by Heide on behalf of Williams. The agreement encompassed a number of claims, including "common law or statutory negligence, gross negligence, malpractice, or any other claim based on any departure from accepted standards of medical or nursing care." The agreement also provided that it would be governed by the Federal Arbitration Act (which allows the arbitration of tort claims),
In September 2009, Advocat filed an amended answer. This time, it attached the arbitration agreement. Heide immediately filed a motion to strike the amended answer, claiming that Advocat previously waived its right to arbitration and that allowing the amended answer would be prejudicial to her. Advocat argued that the amended answer was proper under the rules of civil procedure and should have been allowed.
By two letter opinions, the circuit court granted Heide's motion to strike the amended answer and denied Advocat's motion to compel arbitration. The circuit court wrote that amendments to pleadings were appropriate unless prejudice would result therefrom. But it found that Heide would be prejudiced here because, by allowing the amended answer, she would be denied her constitutional right to a jury trial. It also noted that parties often insist on strict compliance with the rules of civil procedure and that defenses may be waived when they are not properly and timely asserted. As for the motion to compel arbitration, the circuit court ruled that Advocat failed to properly raise arbitration as a defense when it did not attach the arbitration agreement, which was necessary under Arkansas Rule of Civil Procedure 10(d). It also noted that Advocat admitted jurisdiction and venue, requested dismissal of the complaint, and conducted discovery on the merits. These findings form the basis of an order entered in December 2009, and this appeal followed.
The question here is whether the circuit court should have stricken Advocat's amended answer and denied its motion to compel arbitration. Advocat asks us to enforce the arbitration agreement. It argues that it timely raised its arbitration defense and that the circuit court should not have applied Rule 10(d) to find that it waived its arbitration defense. It also contends that any deficiencies in its initial answer were cured in its amended answer and that Heide did not suffer any prejudice when it amended its answer. In response, Heide argues that Rule 10(d) required Advocat to attach a copy of the arbitration agreement to its answer to effectively plead arbitration as an affirmative defense and that the failure to do so constituted a waiver of the defense. She further asserts that the amended answer prejudiced her because Advocat's waiver of its arbitration defense freed her to present her case to a jury. Finally, Heide contends that, if we reverse the circuit court's decision, she is entitled to discovery on the issue of whether the arbitration agreement is enforceable.
Our rules of appellate procedure allow for interlocutory appeals from orders denying a motion to compel arbitration.
We begin by determining whether Advocat waived its right to present its arbitration defense when it failed to attach the arbitration agreement in the initial pleading. Advocat clearly pleaded that it was entitled to arbitration, but it did not attach the arbitration agreement to its answer. The following analysis by Newbern and Watkins is persuasive:
Here, Advocat filed an answer, and it moved to compel arbitration shortly thereafter (and only three months after the instigation of the lawsuit). While Advocat failed to include the arbitration agreement in its initial answer, it included the document in its motion. Thus, it appears that Advocat timely asserted a right to compel arbitration.
In ruling that Advocat waived its right to plead arbitration, the circuit court relied on Arkansas Rule of Civil Procedure 10(d), which requires a copy of any written instrument or document upon which a claim or defense is based to be attached to the pleading in which such a claim or defense is averred.
This case is different. Unlike the appellant in Crow, Advocat timely filed an answer; it simply failed to follow a procedure that Newbern and Watkins suggest it did not have to follow: preserve the right to compel arbitration in its initial pleading. Thus, we hold that Crow is inapplicable here. But this does not end our inquiry.
A party could waive its right to arbitration by taking affirmative steps in an action allegedly covered by an arbitration agreement. Newbern and Watkins cite three factors that a court must consider when determining whether a party has waived its right to arbitration: the length of the litigation, the party availing itself of the opportunity to litigate, and prejudice to the opposing party.
In her brief, Heide relies on Ozark Kenworth, Inc. v. Neidecker
But in both Neidecker and Neal, the complaining party was prejudiced by the amendment. In Neidecker, the appellant lost the right to bring a suit against a third-party defendant. In Neal, the amendment came too late to substitute a proper party in the lawsuit. Heide argues that she would lose her fundamental right to a jury trial if the court allowed the amendment, but if the arbitration agreement is valid, then that right was already waived before the filing of the lawsuit. Again, the failure to attach the arbitration agreement to the initial pleading, by itself, did not prejudice Heide to the point that Advocat should be precluded from asserting its right to arbitration by way of the motion to compel arbitration.
We also reverse the order to strike the amended answer. Parties are allowed to amend their pleadings at any time without leave from the court as long as the amendment does not prejudice his or her adversary.
Our decision to reverse does not require us to compel arbitration or order the circuit court to do so. Advocat urges us to enforce the arbitration agreement, while Heide argues that she is entitled to conduct discovery in the event that we reverse the circuit court. Because the circuit court reviewed the matter on procedural grounds only, we offer no opinion as to the validity of the arbitration agreement. The decision to enforce the arbitration agreement and to allow the parties additional discovery on the matter remains with the circuit court.
Reversed and remanded.
HART and BAKER, JJ., agree.