Court Opinion

ID: 4654407
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-01-25 22:18:47.802484+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:58:40.271678
License: Public Domain

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

 BENJAMIN WOOLLEY, an individual                    )           No. 81218-1-I
 residing in the State of Washington,               )
                                                    )           DIVISION ONE
                         Respondent,                )
                                                    )
                 v.                                 )           UNPUBLISHED OPINION
                                                    )
 EL TORO.COM, LLC, a Delaware                       )
 limited liability company; HTTP                    )
 HOLDINGS, LLC, a Wyoming                           )
 corporation; and DANIEL KIMBALL, an                )
 individual residing in the state of                )
 Kentucky,                                          )
                                                    )
                         Appellant.                 )
                                                    )

       HAZELRIGG, J. — Appellants challenge the trial court’s determination that

only some claims at issue in this case are subject to arbitration. The written

agreement between the parties expressly incorporates the American Arbitration

Association’s commercial rules and provides that an arbitrator is to determine

whether claims are subject to arbitration.              Therefore, the trial court erred in

determining the arbitrability of the parties’ claims and we reverse.

                                            FACTS

       Due to the procedural posture of this case, many of the facts remain

disputed by the parties. Those set out in this opinion are derived from the briefing

  Citations and pinpoint citations are based on the Westlaw online version of the cited material.
No. 812181-I/2

and record on appeal, but with the understanding that this is not a fact finding court

and proper findings of fact will be determined in future proceedings after remand.

        El Toro.com, LLC (El Toro) and HTTP Holdings, LLC (HTTP),1 both based

in Kentucky, are in the business of developing, marketing, and licensing an online

platform that implements a proprietary data sharing model that allows for a

marketplace to utilize the value of personally identifiable information, without the

need for the information to leave the source.

        Around June 2012, Daniel Kimball reached out to Benjamin Woolley about

joining him at El Toro, a new business venture he had undertaken. The two

contemplated that Woolley would receive an ownership interest in exchange for

his work with the business. Woolley also began working as an independent

contractor for El Toro. Effective January 1, 2015, the executives of El Toro,

including Woolley, formed HTTP for the purpose of owning their collective interest

in and managing El Toro. All the executives voluntarily ceded their shares in El

Toro to HTTP and, in return, were provided HTTP membership interests and

became interest holders in HTTP. As a result, no individuals own interest in El

Toro; it is entirely owned by HTTP.

        In 2017, the interest holders of HTTP, including Woolley, entered into an

“Amended and Restated Operating Agreement of HTTP Holdings, LLC” (2017

Operating Agreement). This 2017 Operating Agreement restructured HTTP to

provide for two classes of ownership. The agreement also contained an arbitration

        1Daniel Kimball is a member of HTTP and the initial manager of the company. He was
sued by Woolley in his personal capacity, along with HTTP and El Toro, and, as such, is one of the
named appellants. For clarity, we refer to the numerous appellants collectively as HTTP.

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No. 812181-I/3

provision setting forth the agreement of all interest holders to resolve any dispute

as to their rights or liabilities under the agreement by arbitration in accordance with

American Arbitration Association (AAA) commercial rules. That section of the

agreement states:

       18.7 Arbitration. Except as otherwise provided in Section 18.3(b), if
       any dispute shall arise between the Interest Holders as to their rights
       or liabilities under this Agreement, the dispute shall be exclusively
       determined, and the dispute shall be settled, by arbitration in
       accordance with the commercial rules of the American Arbitration
       Association. The arbitration shall be held in Louisville, Kentucky
       before a panel of three arbitrators, all of whom shall be chosen from
       a panel of arbitrators selected by the American Arbitration
       Association (or such other independent dispute resolution body to
       which they shall mutually agree). Each of the parties to the dispute
       shall select one arbitrator and the two arbitrators so selected shall
       select a third arbitrator. If the two arbitrators are unable to agree on
       the third arbitrator, the third arbitrator shall be selected by the
       American Arbitration Association (or such other independent body to
       which they shall mutually agree). The decision of the arbitrators shall
       be final and binding upon the Interest Holders and the Company and
       judgment upon such award may be entered in any court of competent
       jurisdiction. The costs of the arbitrators and of the arbitration shall be
       borne one-half by each of the parties. The costs of each party’s
       counsel, accountants, etc., as well as any costs solely for their
       benefit, shall be borne separately by each party. EACH OF THE
       INTEREST HOLDERS HEREBY ACKNOWLEDGES THAT THIS PROVISION
       CONSTITUTES A WAIVER OF THEIR RIGHT TO COMMENCE A LAWSUIT IN ANY
       JURISDICTION WITH RESPECT TO THE MATTERS WHICH ARE REQUIRED TO
       BE SETTLED BY ARBITRATION AS PROVIDED IN THIS SECTION 18.7.

       In the period between October 16, 2015 and January 14, 2019, HTTP

directly and through El Toro, made various payments to Woolley separate from his

regular member distributions. Woolley was an employee of HTTP between June

2016 and February 1, 2019, when he was terminated. On the date of termination,

HTTP delivered a demand to Woolley seeking a return of the payments he

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No. 812181-I/4

received separate from his wages as an employee and member distributions. In

the termination letter, HTTP characterized the payments as advances.

       In March 2019, Woolley filed suit in Snohomish County Superior Court

seeking recovery for unpaid wages, a declaratory judgment under a wage rebate

theory as to the characterization of the extra payments, and a separate declaratory

judgment regarding Woolley’s ownership interest in the businesses.             HTTP

initiated arbitration with Woolley in May 2019. HTTP brought five claims, two of

which addressed the merits of Woolley’s ownership interest claims and those

concerning the characterization of the extra payments.

       In June 2019, HTTP filed a motion to dismiss Woolley’s wage claims and to

stay the claims on the payments and ownership interest pending resolution of the

arbitration proceeding. Woolley filed a cross-motion regarding arbitrability. The

trial court continued the hearing on the pending motions and the parties engaged

in discovery in both the superior court action and the arbitration proceeding.

       Following discovery in both proceedings, HTTP amended its claims in the

arbitration action so that only those that were substantively the same as Woolley’s

payment characterization and ownership interest claims remained.             Woolley

amended his complaint in the trial court to dismiss two of his claims regarding

failure to pay wages, leaving only those addressing his asserted ownership interest

and the payment characterization. As to the ownership claim, Woolley argues he

retained an interest in El Toro that is entirely independent of his ownership interest

in HTTP. He disputes HTTP’s characterization of the extra payments as advances

that he must repay.

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No. 812181-I/5

       The parties provided the trial court with supplemental briefing on their cross-

motions and a hearing was set for January 29, 2020. However, the trial court

continued the hearing based on a clerical error. The same day that the trial court

hearing was set, the AAA panel conducted an evidentiary hearing on whether

HTTP’s claims regarding the advances and ownership interest fell within the scope

of the arbitration provision of the 2017 Operating Agreement. On February 7,

2020, the AAA panel issued an order concluding that Woolley had signed the 2017

Operating Agreement and was bound by the arbitration provision. The panel

further determined that both the ownership interest and advances claims were

arbitrable.

       The trial court requested a copy of the AAA order and Woolley’s counsel

provided it to the court. Oral argument on the cross-motions was held on February

25, 2020. The trial court granted in part and denied in part HTTP’s motion to

compel arbitration. Specifically the court’s order stated:

       Defendant’s Motion to Compel Arbitration is GRANTED as to: (i) the
       dispute regarding Plaintiff Benjamin Woolley’s ownership interest in
       HTTP Holdings, LLC, (ii) the dispute regarding how to characterize
       payments by HTTP Holdings, LLC to Mr. Woolley or on his behalf
       after November 30, 2017, and (iii) whether Mr. Woolley is obligated
       to repay payments he received from HTTP Holdings, LLC on or after
       November 30, 2017.
              Except as provided above, Defendant’s Motion to Compel
       Arbitration is DENIED and any arbitration proceeding in conflict with
       this order is STAYED.

HTTP appealed.

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No. 812181-I/6

                                      ANALYSIS

I.       Determination of Arbitrability

         Appellants challenge the trial court’s determination that some of the claims

were not subject to the arbitration provision of the 2017 Operating Agreement.

HTTP argues that this was a question for the arbitrator and not the court. We

agree.

         This court reviews a trial court’s decision on a motion to compel arbitration

de novo. Raven Offshore Yacht, Shipping, LLP v. F.T. Holdings, LLC, 199 Wn.

App. 534, 538, 400 P.3d 347 (2017). “An arbitration clause is a matter of contract

and is enforceable as a contract term.” Id. at 537. “An arbitration agreement only

applies to those issues the parties have agreed to submit to arbitration.” Id. at 538.

The Uniform Arbitration Act2 provides that the “court shall decide whether an

agreement to arbitrate exists or a controversy is subject to an agreement to

arbitrate.” RCW 7.04A.060(2). However, parties to an agreement may contract to

delegate the question of arbitrability to the arbitrator. Raven Offshore, 199 Wn.

App. at 538.

         The issue before us is whether the parties’ agreement delegated the

question of arbitrability to an arbitrator. The trial court’s unchallenged finding of

fact #1 states, “Plaintiff signed the Amended and Restated Operating Agreement

of HTTP Holdings, LLC dated November 30, 2017 (‘HTTP Amended Operating

Agreement’).” Because this finding of fact is not challenged it is treated as a verity

on appeal. Young v. Toyota Motor Sales, U.S.A., 196 Wn.2d 310, 317, 472 P.3d

         2   Ch. 7.04A RCW.

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No. 812181-I/7

990 (2020). The court further concluded that the 2017 Operating Agreement is

effective as to Woolley. The Supreme Court of the United States “has consistently

held that parties may delegate threshold arbitrability questions to the arbitrator, so

long as the parties’ agreement does so by ‘clear and unmistakable’ evidence.”

Henry Schein, Inc. v. Archer and White Sales, Inc., 139 S. Ct. 524, 530, 202 L. Ed.

2d 480 (2019). “[I]f a valid agreement exists, and if the agreement delegates the

arbitrability issue to an arbitrator, a court may not decide the arbitrability issue.” Id.

       Here, the arbitration provision in the 2017 Operating Agreement states, “if

any dispute shall arise between the Interest Holders as to their rights or liabilities

under this Agreement, the dispute shall be exclusively determined, and the dispute

shall be settled, by arbitration in accordance with the commercial rules of the

American Arbitration Association.” This section of the agreement then concludes

in bold,

       EACH  OF THE INTEREST HOLDERS HEREBY ACKNOWLEDGES THAT THIS
       PROVISION CONSTITUTES A WAIVER OF THEIR RIGHT TO COMMENCE A
       LAWSUIT IN ANY JURISDICTION WITH RESPECT TO THE MATTERS WHICH ARE
       REQUIRED TO BE SETTLED BY ARBITRATION AS PROVIDED IN THIS SECTION
       18.7.

       Commercial Arbitration Rule 7(a) of the AAA provides, “[t]he arbitrator shall

have the power to rule on his or her own jurisdiction, including any objections with

respect to the existence, scope, or validity of the arbitration agreement or to the

arbitrability of any claim or counterclaim.” Similarly, the court in Raven Offshore

reviewed an arbitration provision that provided arbitration to be conducted in

accordance with the rules of the Maritime Arbitration Association of the United

States, the question before the court was whether such a provision constituted

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No. 812181-I/8

“clear and unmistakable evidence” of the parties’ intent to delegate the issues of

arbitrability to the arbitrator. 199 Wn. App. at 538-41. This court determined that

such a provision is binding and delegates the threshold question of arbitrability to

the arbitrator, not the trial court. Id. at 541-42. In Healy v. Seattle Rugby, LLC,

this court recently reiterated that if the parties have a valid agreement to arbitrate,

there is no risk that the parties will be forced to arbitrate a matter outside of that

agreement. __ Wn. App. __, 476 P.3d 583 (2020). This court will not entertain the

use of a gateway issue to circumvent arbitration. Id.

       After concluding that the 2017 Operating Agreement was effective as to

Woolley, the trial court concluded that there was a temporal limit on the issues to

which it applied. However, once it was determined that the agreement was signed

by and effective as to Woolley, the threshold question of arbitrability was no longer

before the court based on the plain language of that agreement. As such, the

scope of the arbitration, including any temporal or issue-based limits, are to be

determined by an arbitrator.

       Woolley advances no authority as to why the parties would not be bound to

the AAA’s commercial rules surrounding the threshold question of arbitrability

expressly incorporated into the arbitration provision of the 2017 Operating

Agreement. Further, Raven Offshore makes clear that such an agreement is

binding in our state. As such, the trial court erred when it determined that, while

the arbitration provision was signed and binding as to Woolley, the arbitrability of

                                         -8-
No. 812181-I/9

certain claims should not be determined by the arbitrator.                    Accordingly, we

reverse.3

        Reversed.

WE CONCUR:

        3
        Woolley renews his argument from the trial court in his response brief that the arbitration
agreement is unconscionable. He has not cross-appealed the trial court’s rejection of his
unconscionability argument, so we decline to consider it on appeal. See RAP 10.3(b)

                                               -9-