Filed: Jul. 21, 2005
Latest Update: Feb. 12, 2020
Summary: UNPUBLISHED UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT No. 04-1467 GENERAL ELECTRIC CAPITAL CORPORATION, Plaintiff - Appellee, versus UNION CORP FINANCIAL GROUP INCORPORATED, a/k/a Lion Financial, a/k/a S and S Financial, a/k/a Chase Banking and Trust, formerly known as BancUnion Trust; HECTOR ESTRADA; MARTHA ESTRADA, a/k/a Martica Estrada, a/k/a Marta Estrada; MICHAEL SAGARO, Defendants - Appellants, and ATHENA BEAUTY INCORPORATION, and its Directors-Trustees; BEAUTICIAN DESIGN CENTE
Summary: UNPUBLISHED UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT No. 04-1467 GENERAL ELECTRIC CAPITAL CORPORATION, Plaintiff - Appellee, versus UNION CORP FINANCIAL GROUP INCORPORATED, a/k/a Lion Financial, a/k/a S and S Financial, a/k/a Chase Banking and Trust, formerly known as BancUnion Trust; HECTOR ESTRADA; MARTHA ESTRADA, a/k/a Martica Estrada, a/k/a Marta Estrada; MICHAEL SAGARO, Defendants - Appellants, and ATHENA BEAUTY INCORPORATION, and its Directors-Trustees; BEAUTICIAN DESIGN CENTER..
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UNPUBLISHED
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
No. 04-1467
GENERAL ELECTRIC CAPITAL CORPORATION,
Plaintiff - Appellee,
versus
UNION CORP FINANCIAL GROUP INCORPORATED, a/k/a
Lion Financial, a/k/a S and S Financial, a/k/a
Chase Banking and Trust, formerly known as
BancUnion Trust; HECTOR ESTRADA; MARTHA
ESTRADA, a/k/a Martica Estrada, a/k/a Marta
Estrada; MICHAEL SAGARO,
Defendants - Appellants,
and
ATHENA BEAUTY INCORPORATION, and its
Directors-Trustees; BEAUTICIAN DESIGN CENTER
INCORPORATED; BEAUTICIAN SUPPLY AND EQUIPMENT
COMPANY, and its Directors-Trustees; INDOFF
INCORPORATED, t/a Salon Depot; DONALD E.
GERTLER; DOE INCORPORATED, 1 through 10; JOHN
AND JANE DOES, 1 through 10,
Defendants.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of
Maryland, at Greenbelt. Peter J. Messitte, District Judge. (CA-
03-3285-PJM)
Argued: May 25, 2005 Decided: July 21, 2005
Before LUTTIG and SHEDD, Circuit Judges, and Eugene E. SILER, Jr.,
Senior Circuit Judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the
Sixth Circuit, sitting by designation.
Reversed and remanded by unpublished opinion. Senior Judge Siler
wrote the opinion, in which Judge Luttig and Judge Shedd joined.
ARGUED: Joseph Peter Drennan, Alexandria, Virginia; Ronald I.
Strauss, Miami, Florida, for Appellants. Steven Neal Leitess,
LEITESS, LEITESS, FRIEDBERG & FEDDER, P.C., Owings Mill, Maryland,
for Appellee. ON BRIEF: Patrick M. Donahue, Annapolis, Maryland,
for Appellants. Gordon S. Young, Andrew L. Cole, LEITESS, LEITESS,
FRIEDBERG & FEDDER, P.C., Owings Mill, Maryland, for Appellee.
Unpublished opinions are not binding precedent in this circuit.
See Local Rule 36(c).
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SILER, Senior Circuit Judge:
Plaintiff General Electric Capital Corporation (“GE”) sued
Florida defendants Union Corp Financial Group Incorporated, Hector
Estrada, Martha Estrada, and Michael Sagaro (collectively
“BancUnion”) in the United States Court for the District of
Maryland alleging, inter alia, fraud, breach of contract, and
violations under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations
Act (“RICO”). The district court denied BancUnion’s motion to
compel arbitration, holding that the agreement did not apply to the
current dispute. We reverse and remand.
I.
In May 2000, GE and BancUnion executed a Broker Agreement,
under which BancUnion would solicit customers who needed to obtain
lease financing and then assign the leases to GE. The Broker
Agreement states, “In return for [BancUnion’s] efforts in
connection with any transaction submitted by [it] and accepted by
[GE, GE] shall, if the transaction is [accepted], pay [to BancUnion
GE’s] standard brokerage fee thereon in accordance with [GE’s] then
current brokerage fee schedule.”
The Broker Agreement purported to apply to “all transactions
submitted by [BancUnion] to [GE] after the execution hereof.
However, in the event that separate assignment agreements are
entered into with respect to specific transactions, the terms of
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the separate assignment agreements shall prevail.” Furthermore,
the Broker Agreement contained an Oregon choice of law clause and
stated that any “controversy or claim arising out of or related to
this Agreement or the breach hereof shall be settled by
arbitration.” Furthermore, a party seeking to enforce any portion
of the Broker Agreement in litigation “shall be entitled to a
reasonable attorney fee . . . with all costs and expenses incurred
in pursuit hereof.” After the agreement was executed, GE allowed
BankUnion to access standard forms, including the assignment form.
The assignment form designated that BancUnion would give GE
the right to receive “all rental payments, renewal rental payments,
claims and rights to monies due and to become due under the Lease,”
and BancUnion warranted that the leases assigned would be “genuine
and enforceable.” Unlike the Broker Agreement, the assignments do
not contain an arbitration clause. Instead, the assignment states
that in “the event of legal action with regard to the terms of this
Assignment, the parties hereto agree that any court of general
jurisdiction in the State of Oregon shall have jurisdiction over
such controversy.”
In November 2003, GE filed a complaint against BancUnion
alleging, inter alia, RICO violations and fraud with respect to
several assignments. BancUnion filed a motion to stay the
proceeding and compel arbitration, which the district court denied
because the assignments do not mandate arbitration.
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II.
We review de novo the district court’s conclusions regarding
arbitrability. Long v. Silver,
248 F.3d 309, 315 (4th Cir. 2001).
To determine if a dispute should be arbitrated, we must
affirmatively answer two questions: 1) did the parties have a valid
agreement to arbitrate? if so, 2) does the arbitration agreement
apply to the dispute at hand? See, e.g., Alamria v. Telcor Int’l,
Inc.,
920 F. Supp. 658, 663 (D. Md. 1996). Because “arbitration is
a matter of contract,” parties cannot “be required to submit to
arbitration any dispute which [they have] not agreed so to submit.”
AT&T Tech., Inc. v. Comm. Workers of Am.,
475 U.S. 643, 648 (1986).
When making this determination, we should apply “ordinary state-law
principles that govern the formation of contracts.” First Options
of Chicago, Inc. v. Kaplan,
514 U.S. 938, 944 (1995). Because the
contract so specifies, Oregon law applies to this dispute.
An agreement to arbitrate clearly exists between GE and
BancUnion in the Broker Agreement, so we must next determine its
scope, keeping in mind the presumption favoring arbitration, see
Alamria, 920 F. Supp. at 663 (“However, if an agreement is silent
or ambiguous regarding whether a particular dispute is arbitrable,
. . . it is assumed that the dispute is subject to arbitration.”)
(citing First
Options, 514 U.S. at 945) (emphasis in original),
which flows from the “liberal federal policy favoring arbitration
agreements.” Moses H. Cone Mem’l Hosp. v. Mercury Constr. Corp.,
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460 U.S. 1, 24-25 (1983) (noting that “any doubts concerning the
scope of arbitrable issues should be resolved in favor of
arbitration”). Additionally, “the heavy presumption of
arbitrability requires that when the scope of the arbitration
clause is open to question, a court must decide the question in
favor of arbitration.” Am. Recovery Corp. v. Computerized Thermal
Imaging, Inc.,
96 F.3d 88, 92 (4th Cir. 1996) (citation omitted)
(noting that this presumption is a matter of federal law). Indeed,
we will not deny a request to arbitrate unless “it may be said with
positive assurance that the arbitration clause is not susceptible
of an interpretation that covers the asserted dispute.”
Id.
(citation omitted).
The scope of an arbitration clause in one contract can extend
to a dispute arising under a second contract, provided that the
dispute “significantly relates” to the first
agreement. 96 F.3d at
93; see also
Long, 248 F.3d at 316. In American Recovery, the
parties entered into an overarching contract which contained an
arbitration
clause, 96 F.3d at 90, and a separate, non-compete
agreement which did not.
Id. When a dispute arose under the non-
compete agreement, we held that the dispute should be arbitrated
because “the test for an arbitration clause of this breadth is not
whether a claim arose under one agreement or another, but whether
a significant relationship exists between the claim and the
agreement containing the arbitration clause.”
Id. at 94; see also
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Cara’s Notions, Inc. v. Hallmark Cards, Inc.,
140 F.3d 566, 571
(4th Cir. 1998) (applying an arbitration clause in one contract to
a dispute originating from another contract because the arbitration
clause purported to apply to all disputes between the parties). As
in American Recovery, GE and BancUnion have an overarching Broker
Agreement which contains an arbitration clause. Even though GE
sued BancUnion under the assignments, the arbitration agreement
extends to such disputes arising under the assignments because they
“significantly relate” to the Broker Agreement.
Oregon contract law also mandates reversal because the terms
of an unambiguous contract should be enforced. See Joseph Educ.
Ass’n v. Joseph Sch. Dist. No. 6,
43 P.3d 1187, 1190 (Or. App.
2002); see also Yogman v. Parrott,
937 P.2d 1019, 1021 (Or. 1997)
(en banc). A contractual provision is ambiguous if it is
“reasonably capable of more than one construction.” Joseph Educ.
Ass’n, 43 P.3d at 1190 (citation omitted). If there is an
ambiguity, then we should interpret the contract by looking to
extrinsic evidence and “maxims of construction,” with “any doubts
about arbitrability . . . resolved in favor of arbitration.”
Id.
The assignments are silent on the issue of arbitration, despite
the presence of a clause in each referencing litigation as a
potential dispute-resolution forum. However, nothing in the
assignments prevents the arbitration clause from being read into the
assignments, and the Broker Agreement contemplates that its terms
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will supplement the assignments. Additionally, the assignments
state that in “the event of legal action,” the parties agree to
litigate the case in court in Oregon. The arbitration clause in the
Broker Agreement does not contradict the litigation clause because
“the event of legal action” may still exist either to compel
arbitration or to raise post-arbitration legal challenges. At best,
the assignments’ silence on this issue is a latent ambiguity and
must be resolved in favor of arbitration. Cara’s
Notions, 140 F.3d
at 571 (“[I]f the arbitration clause [is] ambiguous as to its scope,
our decision would be guided by the strong federal policy favoring
arbitrability, based on the Arbitration Act and repeatedly
recognized by the Supreme Court and this Circuit.”); see also
Portland Fire Fighters’ Ass’n, Local 43 v. City of Portland,
45 P.3d
162, 168 (Or. App. 2002). Accordingly, we reverse the decision of
the district court.
The individual defendants, too, are afforded the protections
of BancUnion’s arbitration clause because they are BancUnion’s
officers, directors, or shareholders. See
Long, 248 F.3d at 320 (“A
non-signatory may invoke an arbitration clause under ordinary state-
law principles of agency or contract.”); see also Int’l Paper Co.
v. Schwabedissen Machinsen & Anlagen,
206 F.3d 411, 417 (4th Cir.
2002) (noting that an agency relationship would allow a non-
signatory to enforce an arbitration agreement by the principal)
(citing Thomson-CSF, S.A. v. Am. Arbitration Ass’n,
64 F.3d 773, 776
(2d Cir. 1995)).
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Finally, BancUnion is entitled to attorney’s fees for defending
this action in litigation. The contract clearly states that if
“action is taken to enforce any term of this Agreement, the
prevailing party in such action shall be entitled to a reasonable
attorney fee.”
Reversed and remanded to the district court with instructions
to compel arbitration and award attorney’s fees consistent with this
opinion.
REVERSED AND REMANDED
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