Court Opinion

ID: 4637049
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2020-11-24 22:57:05.063294+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:58:37.554098
License: Public Domain

No. 19-0905 – Home Inspections of VA and WV, LLC v. Hardin                      FILED
                                                                           November 24, 2020
                                                                             EDYTHE NASH GAISER, CLERK

Hutchison, Justice, dissenting:                                              SUPREME COURT OF APPEALS
                                                                                 OF WEST VIRGINIA

              Whenever this Court confronts a case with the word “arbitration,” the true

issue in the case invariably has nothing to do with arbitration. Instead, the issue focuses

on some picayune problem every lawyer addressed in their contracts class the first year of

law school. Invariably, somewhere in the case file we find a lawyer or judge who gets all

misty-eyed with reverence because somebody said the word “arbitration,” like it has some

mystical effect. At its root, though, the case always turns on some basic contract formation

issue like offer, acceptance, or consideration, or some contract defense like waiver or

unconscionability.

              That’s what this case is: a run-of-the mill fact pattern with a run-of-the-mill

law-school legal issue. It’s a well-worn tale: plaintiff Hardin contracted to buy two homes

and then hired defendant Home Inspections of VA and WV to give the properties a review.

The inspection was or was not negligent, it supposedly misses defects, the plaintiff

completed the purchase and discovered the defects, and the plaintiff sued the inspector.

              This appeal, of course, has nothing to do with the merits of the parties’ claims

and defenses. No, this case is about the inspection company’s contract. After the inspection

was complete, the inspection company had the plaintiff sign a contract. 1 That contract has

              The manner in which this contract was formed suggests some element of
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procedural unconscionability. The terms of the contract also suggest substantive
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the clause that is the center of this appeal. It has a title saying “Arbitration,” but the one-

sentence paragraph that follows says absolutely nothing about arbitration:

              Any dispute concerning the interpretation of this agreement or
              arising from this inspection report, except for inspection fee
              payment, shall be resolved informally between the parties.

unconscionability because, under the majority opinion’s interpretation, the lopsided
contract precludes the homeowner from every going to court while simultaneously
permitting the home inspector to go to court on the one issue most likely to engender a
dispute: payment of the inspection fee.

               Our case law holds that “[a] contract term is unenforceable if it is both
procedurally and substantively unconscionable.” Syl. pt. 20, in part, Brown v. Genesis
Healthcare Corp., 228 W. Va. 646, 724 S.E.2d 250 (2011) (emphasis added). This holding,
however, seems to directly conflict with the Uniform Commercial Code, with permits a
court to find a contract term unenforceable if it is only substantively unconscionable. See
W. Va. Code § 46-2-302 (“If the court as a matter of law finds the contract or any clause
of the contract to have been unconscionable at the time it was made the court may refuse
to enforce the contract[.]”). Other state courts have also found that “[s]ubstantive
unconscionability alone is sufficient to support a finding of unconscionability.” McKee v.
AT & T Corp., 191 P.3d 845, 857 (Wash. 2008).

            I believe Syllabus Point 20 of Brown deserves to be reconsidered and
modified. As the Supreme Court of Missouri found,

              it is inaccurate to suggest that an agreement or provision must
              be separately found to be both procedurally and substantively
              unconscionable to be invalid. It is more accurate to state that
              a court will look at both the procedural and substantive aspects
              of a contract to determine whether, considered together, they
              make the agreement or provision in question unconscionable.

Eaton v. CMH Homes, Inc., 461 S.W.3d 426, 432-33 (Mo. 2015) (cleaned up).

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              My first thought reading this clause was the obvious one: whatever lawyer

wrote this should be stripped of his license. I am all for brevity in writing, but this

paragraph is beyond brief. It is ambiguous and downright meaningless. The heading does

say “arbitration,” but what follows has nothing to do with arbitration. My research revealed

that this clause was taken from a form “home inspector contract” that is floating around in

the legal world. That form has a complete arbitration clause with details about how to

conduct an arbitration, details that, sadly, some lawyer got their hands on and butchered to

create the pitiful little clause above. What the majority opinion fails to acknowledge is, a

federal court has looked at the form home inspector contract and concluded that the above

clause has absolutely nothing to do with arbitration.

              In Harkleroad v. Claxton, No. CV 408-167, 2009 WL 10678091 (S.D. Ga.

June 10, 2009), a federal judge in Georgia looked at a lawsuit between a homeowner and

a home inspector over a supposedly negligent inspection (which, as I said, is a run-of-the-

mill fact pattern). When the homeowner sued, the home inspector responded with a motion

to compel arbitration.    The Georgian home inspector’s contract had the following,

complete, arbitration clause:

              Arbitration: Any dispute concerning the interpretation of this
              agreement or arising from this inspection and report, except
              one for inspection fee payment, shall be resolved informally
              between the parties or by arbitration conducted in accordance
              with the rules of a recognized arbitration association except
              that the parties shall select an arbitrator who is familiar with
              the home inspection industry. The arbitrator shall conduct
              summary judgment motions and enforce full discovery rights
              as a court would as provided in civil proceedings by legal code.

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2009 WL 10678091, at *1 (emphasis added).

              In the instant case, the drafter deliberately excised all of the language that

actually talked about arbitration. In the instant case, the clause says cases “shall be resolved

informally between the parties;” in the Georgia case, the paragraph said cases “shall be

resolved informally between the parties or by arbitration,” then described the arbitration

process the parties agreed to follow.

              The homeowner in Georgia argued that the phrase “shall be resolved

informally between the parties” was “vague and ambiguous.” The federal court agreed,

but then said the ambiguity in the phrase was offset by the phrase “or by arbitration.” As

the federal court said, the “shall be resolved informally” “language can reasonably be

interpreted to mean that if the parties cannot settle any disputes between themselves

without resorting to legal measures, i.e. ‘informally,’ then they must arbitrate (as opposed

to going to court).” Id. at *3.

              Somehow the majority opinion failed to recognize, like the federal court in

Georgia, that the clause at issue in this case says nothing more than that the parties should

try to settle disputes between themselves without resorting to legal measures. To the extent

the clause has the word “arbitration” in the title, the word has no agreed-upon effect to the

parties who formed the contract.

              Ambiguity exists in a contract when a term or condition is uncertain in

meaning or can be fairly understood in more than one way. “The term ‘ambiguity’ is

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defined as language reasonably susceptible of two different meanings or language of such

doubtful meaning that reasonable minds might be uncertain or disagree as to its meaning.”

Syl. pt. 4, Estate of Tawney v. Columbia Nat. Res., L.L.C., 219 W. Va. 266, 633 S.E.2d 22

(2006). “Contract language is considered ambiguous where an agreement's terms are

inconsistent on their face or where the phraseology can support reasonable differences of

opinion as to the meaning of words employed and obligations undertaken.” Syl. pt. 6, State

ex rel. Frazier & Oxley, L.C. v. Cummings, 212 W. Va. 275, 569 S.E.2d 796 (2002). See

also Williams v. Precision Coil, Inc., 194 W. Va. 52, 65 n. 23, 459 S.E.2d 329, 342 n. 23

(1995) (“A contract is ambiguous when it is reasonably susceptible to more than one

meaning in light of the surrounding circumstances and after applying the established rules

of construction.”).

              In this case, the phraseology that the drafter used in the disputed clause

supports reasonable differences of opinion.        The circuit court wisely reached this

conclusion. This is not a “did so/did not” situation where one party says the clause is

ambiguous and the other says it is not. The circuit judge, and two justices on this Court,

say the clause makes no sense. Even the majority opinion says the language is vague

because “there are various methods of informally resolving a dispute.” ___ W.Va. ___,

___, ___ S.E.2d ___, ___ (Nov. 19, 2020) (Slip. Op. at 9). So despite centuries of law

holding that ambiguous contracts are construed against the drafter, the majority opinion

gives this inspection contract a construction favorable to the drafter.

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              What really troubles me is the majority opinion’s conclusion. The majority

concludes, on the one hand, that the clause is “clear” and shows the parties’ unambiguous

agreement to arbitrate. But on the other hand, the majority opinion concedes that the clause

says absolutely nothing about the parties’ agreement to arbitrate. It does not say who

should conduct the arbitration, how or by what rules it should be conducted, when, where,

or most importantly, who should pay. The majority opinion just points out that the Federal

Arbitration Act (9 U.S.C. § 5) and the West Virginia Revised Uniform Arbitration Act (W.

Va. Code § 55-10-13) empower the circuit court to appoint an arbitrator.

              Speaking as a former circuit judge, and in the context of this case, I am

flummoxed how a judge is supposed to write the parties a new arbitration agreement. This

is not a situation where the parties have clearly agreed to a contract and the judge is just

helping fill in some blanks, guided by the parties’ intent. No, the majority opinion is

actually telling the judge to create out of whole cloth a new arbitration contract. Not only

is there an arbitrator to be appointed, the judge also gets to pick the rules that the arbitrator

will use, define when and where the arbitration will take place, and can decide who will

pay the arbitrator and how much that arbitrator gets paid.

              An even more troubling implication of the majority opinion is this: what if

the judge imposes contractual terms on the parties that are unconscionable or unfair? Can

the parties really object, if the judge is simply giving effect to the meaningless language in

their contract? In this case, the defendant home inspector is demanding that the so-called

“arbitration clause” be enforced and is demanding that the circuit judge, supposedly, “fill

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in a few blanks.” Does that mean the judge can appoint as arbitrator a lawyer paid for

exclusively and lavishly by the defendant who is demanding arbitration? Can the judge

order that the arbitration be conducted in the judge’s courtroom under the Rules of Civil

Procedure and the Rules of Evidence, with an informal advisory panel of six neutral

members of the community to help resolve questions of fact? In the future, can a defendant

honestly complain that the judge’s arbitration terms were not contemplated by the parties

in their original agreement? Because, frankly, nothing seems to have been contemplated

by the home inspector’s lawyer when the “arbitration clause” in this case was drafted, so it

is impossible to say what the parties’ meant by the clause.

              I do not believe that circuit judges should be in the business of writing entire

contracts for litigants, whether they pertain to arbitration or not. The circuit court saw that

this clause was incomprehensible and refused to enforce it because it was ambiguous and

meaningless. I dissent because the majority opinion saw the word “arbitration” and

decided to give it whatever meaning they chose, without understanding the far-reaching

consequences.

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