Court Opinion

ID: 2644825
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2013-12-04 15:57:34.645872+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:54:10.676676
License: Public Domain

Cite as 2013 Ark. App. 704

                ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS
                                     DIVISION III
                                    No. CV-13-348

                                               Opinion Delivered   December 4, 2013

 ESCAPES! INC., ESCAPES TO THE   APPEAL FROM THE BENTON
 GULF, INC., ESCAPES! PROPERTY   COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT
 MANAGEMENT, INC., ESCAPES!      [NO. CV-12-1956]
 TRAVEL CHOICES, LLC, KENT
 BURGER, and NEFF BASORE
                      APPELLANTS
                                 HONORABLE XOLLIE DUNCAN,
 V.                              JUDGE

 PALM BEACH VACATION
 OWNERS ASSOCIATION, INC.,
 NATALIE BOBSIN, HARRY E.         REVERSED AND REMANDED
 BOBSIN, JOHN POPE, RODNEY A.
 WATSON, SR., DAVID S. BARLEY,
 CASEY J. PLAGGE, JULIA R. LEIGH,
 ISAAC LEIGH, and ROBERT
 EDWARDS
                        APPELLEES

                         BRANDON J. HARRISON, Judge

      Escapes! Inc., Escapes to the Gulf, Inc., Escapes! Property Management, Inc.,

Escapes! Travel Choices, LLC, Kent Burger, and Neff Basore appeal a Benton County

Circuit Court order that dismissed a declaratory-judgment case against Palm Beach

Vacation Owners Association, Inc., Natalie Bobsin, Harry E. Bobsin, John Pope, Rodney

A. Watson, Sr., David S. Barley, Casey J. Plagge, Julia R. Leigh, Isaac Leigh, and Robert

Edwards (collectively “Palm Beach”).

      We reverse the circuit court’s order and remand for further proceedings.

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                                Cite as 2013 Ark. App. 704

       Escapes! Inc., Escapes! Property management, LLC, and Escapes! Travel Choices,

LLC (collectively “Escapes”) are affiliated companies based in Arkansas. Escapes was the

primary developer of The Palm Beach Resort, a condominium group in Orange Beach,

Alabama.    A portion of the condominiums at the Resort are timeshares.           After the

condominiums were developed, Escapes retained a contract with The Palm Beach

Vacation Owners Association to provide management services for the resort. A 2004

agreement between the parties—the Resort Affiliation Agreement—provides that Escapes

will manage the resort and provide certain reservation services to Palm Beach.         The

Resort Affiliation Agreement has a forum-selection and choice-of-law provision that

designates Arkansas as the “exclusive” jurisdiction and venue for legal action and which

states that Arkansas law governs the agreement.

       In early 2012, The Palm Beach Vacation Owners Association filed a declaratory

action in Alabama state court that, among other things, asked the court to terminate the

Resort Affiliation Agreement under the Alabama Condominium Act. Escapes removed

the Alabama state declaratory-judgment case to federal court. While in federal court,

Palm Beach Vacation Owners Association amended its complaint to add eight new parties

and six more claims; Escapes also cross-claimed against Palm Beach. In June 2012, the

United States District Court for the Southern District of Alabama granted Escapes’ motion

“to compel arbitration of certain claims.” It also granted, in part, Palm Beach’s motion for

leave to file an amended complaint. In July 2012, the case was submitted to the American

Arbitration Association.   In October 2012, Escapes moved to dismiss the arbitration

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proceedings, citing the Resort Affiliation Agreement’s forum-selection clause that

designated Arkansas as the exclusive forum for any legal action.

       The same day that Escapes moved to dismiss the federal-arbitration matter, it filed a

one-count, declaratory-judgment case in Benton County Circuit Court. Among other

things, the Arkansas case asked the court to find that Escapes’ Resort Affiliation

Agreement with Palm Beach was valid and that the court had exclusive jurisdiction over

“all claims concerning the interpretation and/or enforcement of the [Resort Affiliation

Agreement].”

       Palm Beach moved to dismiss Escapes’ complaint in lieu of answering it and

attached exhibits containing pleadings and orders from the Alabama litigation.         Palm

Beach asked the circuit court to dismiss Escapes’ declaratory-judgment claim for a host of

reasons:

    It had no subject matter jurisdiction because part of the Alabama federal
     lawsuit was about real property in Alabama.

      It lacked personal jurisdiction.

    The Resort Affiliation Agreement’s forum-selection clause is unenforceable.

    The court would abuse its discretion if it did not dismiss the declaratory-
     judgment complaint under Arkansas’s Declaratory Judgment Act because
     Alabama litigation was currently pending over the same issues alleged in the
     Arkansas declaratory-judgment complaint.

      Escapes waived the forum-selection clause.

Escapes responded to Palm Beach’s motion to dismiss by arguing the following:

    The court has subject-matter jurisdiction because this declaratory judgment
     action is not an in rem case and the court has original jurisdiction under Ark.
     Const. amend. 80 § 6(A).

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    The circuit court has personal jurisdiction because the Palm Beach
     defendants agreed to a forum-selection clause, which acts as a consent to
     personal jurisdiction.

    The contract’s forum-selection clause is enforceable because Palm Beach has
     not argued that “they would be effectively be deprived of their day in court
     as a result of the forum selection clause” as is required under Arkansas law to
     make a forum-selection clause unenforceable.

       The circuit court is not required to dismiss the complaint because of
       pending arbitration in Alabama when the modern trend allows declaratory-
       judgment actions to decide the enforceability of forum-selection clauses.

    The Alabama arbitration litigation is not relevant to waiver and, in any
     event, Escapes filed in Arkansas state court after Palm Beach filed in
     Alabama federal court.

       A state declaratory-judgment action is not a permissive or compulsory
       counterclaim in the Alabama federal arbitration case.

       Palm Beach’s reply brief expanded its argument by saying that most of the parties’

agreement was governed by Alabama law, and that the Arkansas forum-selection clause at

best governs only a sliver of the issues. Palm Beach also argued that Escapes’ declaratory-

judgment case in Arkansas was preempted by the Federal Arbitration Act. For Palm

Beach, the bottom line was that all declaratory-judgment related claims can and should be

resolved in Alabama.

       Having held no hearing on the motion to dismiss, the circuit court entered a final

order in February 2013. The order treated Palm Beach’s motion to dismiss as one for

summary judgment and dismissed Escapes’ complaint.

       The order, which refers to various agreements between the parties and their

predecessors in interest, mentions a 2004 agreement that required the parties to submit to

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Arkansas jurisdiction. The order also acknowledges Alabama pleadings that Palm Beach

attached as exhibits to its motion. The heart of the circuit court’s order states:

                The Court believes that, in light of the nature of the time share
       development within the condominium development, the fact that Alabama
       law governs the condominium development and the ownership and use of
       the condominium development, and the fact that Arkansas law as the
       governing law applies only to the Resort Affiliation Agreement, the lawsuit
       first filed in Alabama is the appropriate place to litigate the issues between
       the parties.
                It is, therefore, ordered that the Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss is
       treated as a Motion for Summary Judgment and is hereby granted.

       Escapes argues here that the court’s dismissal was mistaken for procedural reasons

and because genuine issues of material fact exist. Palm Beach argues that we should affirm

because the court’s decision was a discretionary refusal to render a declaratory judgment, a

power Palm Beach says the circuit court has under Ark. Code Ann. § 16-111-108.

       We hold that the court’s order does not state a sufficient legal reason to end the

case. The circuit court stated in its order that “the fact that Alabama law governs the

condominium development and the ownership and use of the condominium

development” was a basis to end the case. But the court provided no reason why this

point supported a dismissal, and we cannot confidently supply one under the

circumstances.    The Resort Affiliation Agreement expressly recites that it “shall be

governed by, and shall be construed in accordance with the laws of the State of Arkansas.”

The parties themselves dispute whether the Alabama Uniform Condominium Act applies

to timeshare owner associations. And we have no rulings by the circuit court on whether

the Alabama Act applies in whole or in part to The Palm Beach Vacation Owners

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Association. We also lack a ruling on the Arkansas forum-selection clause contained in

the parties’ contract.

       The court also wrote that “the lawsuit first filed in Alabama is the appropriate place

to litigate the issues between the parties.”        But it provided no legal reason why the

Arkansas case must be dismissed just because a related case in Alabama was also pending.

That litigation related to the Arkansas declaratory-judgment case was first filed in Alabama

is not itself a sufficient reason to dismiss Escapes’ Arkansas case. Even if the Alabama

litigation encompasses the same claims and parties as the Arkansas declaratory-judgment

case—a procedural fact we do not know—we have held that when the same claim,

involving the same parties, is before the courts of different states, then the cases may

proceed independently of each other. White v. Toney, 37 Ark. App. 36, 39, 823 S.W.2d
921, 923 (1992); Cotton v. Cotton, 3 Ark. App. 158, 623 S.W.2d 540, 542 (1981).

       We do not accept Palm Beach’s argument that the court exercised its discretion to

dismiss under Ark. Code Ann. § 16-111-108 and City of Fort Smith v. Didicom Towers, Inc.,

362 Ark. 469, 209 S.W.3d 344 (2005). The court did not cite the statute, any line of

cases that applied the statute, or discuss its dismissal in discretionary terms.

       The court had before it detailed briefs on subject-matter jurisdiction, personal

jurisdiction, the Arkansas Declaratory Judgment Act, the enforceability of a forum-

selection clause, waiver, federal preemption, and other issues. Yet the order does not cite

or discuss any of these points and does not otherwise provide a sufficient legal basis to

dismiss the declaratory-judgment action that Escapes filed. This case was simply not ripe

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for a dismissal. So we reverse the order of dismissal and remand for further proceedings.

We need not address the remainder of Escapes’ arguments on appeal.

       Reversed and remanded.

       PITTMAN and WYNNE, JJ., agree.

       Matthews, Campbell, Rhoads, McClure & Thompson, P.A., by: David R. Matthews and

Sarah L. Waddoups, for appellants.

       Davis, Clark, Butt, Carithers & Taylor, PLC, by: William Jackson Butt, II, and J.

David Dixon, for appellees.

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