Court Opinion

ID: 893206
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2013-06-05 18:49:07.047335+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:05:36.119149
License: Public Domain

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                                                       New Mexico Compilation
                                                     Commission, Santa Fe, NM
                                                    '00'04- 13:39:21 2012.11.01
Certiorari Denied, September 24, 2012, No. 33,771

       IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO

Opinion Number: 2012-NMCA-103

Filing Date: July 24, 2012

Docket No. 30,663

LOREN LYNDOE, PHYLLIS LYNDOE,
MANUEL TOLEDO, ISABEL TOLEDO,
GLENDA COUNCIL, ROBERT COUNCIL,
RON ARMSTRONG, LAURA ARMSTRONG,
PATRICIA SANCHEZ, FRANCISCA CABRIALES,
JAKE LAMFERS, MARTA LAMFERS,
CAL PALMER, VERONICA PALMER,
HEATHER JAMES, HAAMID HAKAM,
BAXTER BACKER, CAROLYN BACKER,
JARED HUNTER, JACQUELINE HUNTER,
SILVINO SUAREZ, JOHANNA DUNCAN,
RICHARD HOEHNE, ANABEL NAJERA,
JEANNETTE PAZ, ROBERT BRUHN,
JAKE NUTTALL, DIANE NUTTALL,
RON STONE, STELLA STONE,
YVONNE BALDONADO, ROBERT ROBLES,
TINA ROBLES, JOSEPH CRAIG, ALISA SHTROMBERG,
JESSE MAGALLANEZ, PAMELA TAFOYA,
ROBERT BONILLA, ALICIA BONILLA,
RUBEN VALENZUELA, YVETTE VALENZUELA,
IGNACIO SANCHEZ, WENDY SCHMIDT,
MARCUS DECLOUETTE, DANIELLE DECLOUETTE,
MADELEINE R. MANI, SANJAY CHANDRAN,
PATRICK YOKOYAMA, ROSEANNE YOKOYAMA,
TREVOR BRASEL, KRISTI BRASEL,
JOSE CARTER, EMILY CARTER,
CALVIN LUCERO, ERIN GARCIA, and
LAKANA SANGADEJ,

       Plaintiffs-Appellees,

and

ELIZABETH FERNANDEZ, GERARDO LOPEZ,

                                        1
JAMES CORWELL, and KERRI CORWELL,

       Plaintiffs,

v.

D.R. HORTON, INC., and
DRH SOUTHWEST CONSTRUCTION, INC.,

       Defendants-Appellants,

and

CURB SOUTH, LLC,

       Defendant.

APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF VALENCIA COUNTY
JOHN W. POPE, District Judge

Guebert Bruckner P.C.
Terry R. Guebert
Don Bruckner
Albuquerque, NM

for Appellees

Collins & Collins, P.C.
Alysan Boothe Collins
Albuquerque, NM

for Appellees Lucero & Erin Garcia

Crowley & Gribble, P.C.
Clayton E. Crowley
Albuquerque, NM

for Appellee Lakana Sangedej

Landry & Ludewig, L.L.P.
Stephanie Landry
Margaret C. Ludewig
Albuquerque, NM

                                     2
Saucedo Chavez PC
Christopher T. Saucedo
Iris L. Marshall
Albuquerque, NM

for Appellants

                                        OPINION

FRY, Judge.

{1}     The district court ordered the consolidation of all arbitrations between Defendants
D.R. Horton, Inc. and DRH Southwest Construction, Inc. (collectively, Horton) and
Plaintiffs, who are owners of homes built and sold by Horton in the Sagebrush Subdivision
at Huning Ranch in Los Lunas, New Mexico. We conclude that Plaintiffs satisfied all of the
elements required for consolidation by NMSA 1978, Section 44-7A-11 (2001), of New
Mexico’s Uniform Arbitration Act (UAA), NMSA 1978, §§ 44-7A-1 to -32 (2001).
Therefore, we affirm the district court’s order.

I.     BACKGROUND

{2}      In November 2009, Plaintiffs sued Horton and other defendants seeking damages
and rescission, alleging that they had experienced various deficiencies in their Horton-built
homes, many of which were caused by the settlement of subsurface soils. Plaintiffs also
alleged that their purchase agreements with Horton contained arbitration agreements, and
they asked the district court to compel Horton to litigate their claims in a consolidated
arbitration in accordance with Section 44-7A-11 of the UAA.

{3}     In pleadings filed with the court, Horton acknowledged that the parties’ dispute was
subject to the purchase agreements’ arbitration clause. However, Horton opposed
consolidation of all of the claims into one arbitration and instead proposed a separate
arbitration with each household. Consequently, Plaintiffs filed a motion to compel a
consolidated arbitration between Horton and Plaintiffs who had signed purchase agreements
with Horton. Plaintiffs argued that Section 44-7A-11 of the UAA permits consolidation of
separate arbitration proceedings if certain requirements are met. Section 44-7A-11 states:

              (a)     Except as otherwise provided in Subsection (c), upon motion
       of a party to an agreement to arbitrate or to an arbitration proceeding, the
       court may order consolidation of separate arbitration proceedings as to all or
       some of the claims if:

                       (1)   there are separate agreements to arbitrate or separate
       arbitration proceedings between the same persons or one of them is a party
       to a separate agreement to arbitrate or a separate arbitration proceeding with

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       a third person;

                       (2)     the claims subject to the agreements to arbitrate arise
       in substantial part from the same transaction or series of related transactions;

                        (3)     the existence of a common issue of law or fact creates
       the possibility of conflicting decisions in the separate arbitration proceedings;
       and

                      (4)     prejudice resulting from a failure to consolidate is not
       outweighed by the risk of undue delay or prejudice to the rights of or
       hardship to parties opposing consolidation.

              (b)      The court may order consolidation of separate arbitration
       proceedings as to some claims and allow other claims to be resolved in
       separate arbitration proceedings.

               (c)   The court may not order consolidation of the claims of a party
       to an agreement to arbitrate if the agreement prohibits consolidation.

{4}     Plaintiffs argued that all of the statutory elements supporting consolidation existed
because the arbitration agreements were entered into with Horton; Plaintiffs’ claims arose
from the same series of home sales by Horton in the Sagebrush Subdivision since 2006; all
of Plaintiffs’ homes experienced similar problems; and Horton would not be prejudiced by
a consolidated arbitration because such a proceeding would likely be more efficient than
separate proceedings. Horton responded that Plaintiffs failed to establish (1) the statutory
element requiring related transactions because Plaintiffs were not part of the same series of
contractual negotiations; (2) the element requiring common issues of law or fact creating the
possibility of conflicting decisions; and (3) the element related to prejudice because a
consolidated arbitration would result in undue delay due to the widely varying claims of
individual Plaintiffs.

{5}     Following a hearing, the district court announced in a letter decision that it would
grant Plaintiffs’ motion and order a consolidated arbitration before a single arbitrator. The
district court later denied Horton’s motion for reconsideration, found that the order
compelling consolidation was final for purposes of appeal, and stayed the proceedings
pending appeal. This appeal followed.

II.    DISCUSSION

{6}    The parties agree that Plaintiffs’ claims against Horton are subject to arbitration, and
the only dispute is whether the district court properly ordered the consolidated arbitration.
Horton challenges the district court’s order based on three arguments, which we combine
into two. First, Horton contends that the district court did not have jurisdiction to order a

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consolidated arbitration because there were no arbitration proceedings pending at the time
of the order. Second, it argues that consolidation was improper because Plaintiffs failed to
satisfy the statutory factors necessary for consolidation and because permitting consolidation
would thwart federally established policy and improperly allow the arbitrator to dictate
public policy.

A.      Standard of Review

{7}     Horton argues that all of its arguments are subject to de novo review. We disagree
in part. First, as we clarify below, Horton’s argument regarding the district court’s alleged
lack of jurisdiction is misplaced. Horton’s argument has nothing to do with jurisdiction;
instead, Horton’s contention is that a statutory prerequisite for consolidation of the
arbitrations was not met. This involves a question of statutory construction, which we
review de novo. Estate of Nauert v. Morgan-Nauert, 2012-NMCA-037, ¶ 8, 274 P.3d 799.

{8}     Second, we disagree with Horton’s contention that the propriety of the district court’s
order requiring consolidated arbitrations is subject to de novo review. The statutory
provision permitting consolidation uses language associated with discretion. It provides that
a court “may order consolidation of separate arbitration proceedings” under certain
circumstances. Section 44-7A-11(a) (emphasis added). In addition, the commentary to the
uniform law on which our UAA is modeled clarifies that the provision permitting
consolidation “gives courts discretion to consolidate separate arbitration proceedings.” Unif.
Arbitration Act § 10 cmt. 3, 7 U.L.A. 42 (2000) (emphasis added); see Cummings v. Budget
Tank Removal & Envtl. Servs, LLC, 260 P.3d 220, ¶ 14 (Wash. Ct. App. 2011) (explaining
that “[b]ecause the statute says the court ‘may’ order consolidation, [the court] review[s] the
decision for an abuse of discretion”). Consequently, we review the district court’s order
compelling the consolidated arbitration for abuse of discretion.

B.      Jurisdiction to Order Consolidated Arbitration

{9}     Horton claims that the consolidation provision of the UAA, Section 44-7A-11,
requires that there be pending separate arbitration proceedings before a court has the power
to order a consolidated arbitration. In support, Horton relies on the title of the statute, which
reads “Consolidation of separate arbitration proceedings,” and a Hawaii case, In re United
Pub. Workers, AFSCME, Local 646, AFL-CIO, 244 P.3d 609, 613 (Haw. Ct. App. 2010).

{10} We are not persuaded. Despite the title of Section 44-7A-11, the body of the statute
clearly states that a court “may order consolidation of separate arbitration proceedings”
pursuant to a motion “of a party to an agreement to arbitrate or to an arbitration
proceeding.” Section 44-7A-11(a) (emphasis added). A common sense reading of this
language establishes that consolidation may be ordered even if no arbitration proceeding is
pending, providing there are agreements to arbitrate. Here, Plaintiffs were parties to
virtually identical arbitration agreements with Horton, and the statutory requirement was
satisfied. We reject Horton’s contrary, overly technical interpretation of Section 44-7A-11.

                                               5
{11} Given our interpretation of Section 44-7A-11, we are also unpersuaded by the Hawaii
court’s decision in United Pub. Workers. In interpreting a statutory provision nearly
identical to Section 44-7A-11, that court employed the same hyper-technical reading urged
by Horton. It stated that “[w]here there are no separate proceedings to consolidate, a
fundamental prerequisite is not met, and this provision is inapplicable.” United Pub.
Workers, 244 P.3d at 614. The court relied on what it considered to be the plain language
of the statute permitting consolidation “of separate arbitration proceedings.” Id. Apart
from this reliance on only a portion of the statute’s language, the court gave no persuasive
reason for prohibiting consolidation of not-yet-pending arbitrations when, as in the present
case, there is no dispute among the parties that arbitration is the proper forum for resolution
of the claims at issue. Requiring the initiation of each separate arbitration before permitting
consolidation is inefficient and unnecessary.

{12} We also clarify that, contrary to Horton’s argument, satisfaction of the statutory
requirements has nothing to do with the district court’s jurisdiction. Subject matter
jurisdiction is defined as the power of a court to hear and determine cases. Mares v. Kool,
51 N.M. 36, 41, 177 P.2d 532, 535 (1946). That power is conferred by the sovereign
authority that organizes the courts. Id. The subject matter jurisdiction of New Mexico
district courts is established by the New Mexico Constitution. N.M. Const. art. VI, § 13.
New Mexico district courts are courts of general jurisdiction having the power to hear all
matters not excepted by the constitution and those matters conferred by law. See ACLU of
N.M. v. City of Albuquerque, 2008-NMSC-045, ¶ 7, 144 N.M. 471, 188 P.3d 1222. In the
present case, the UAA confers jurisdiction on the district court to hear motions for
consolidation of arbitration proceedings as well as many other matters pertaining to
arbitrations. Therefore, the district court had subject matter jurisdiction to hear and rule on
the motion for consolidation filed by Plaintiffs.

C.      Propriety of Consolidation

1.      Statutory Elements Supporting Consolidation

{13} Section 44-7A-11 permits the consolidation of separate arbitrations when four factors
are satisfied. Horton challenges Plaintiffs’ showing in connection with only three of the four
factors. It claims that Plaintiffs failed to establish (1) that their claims arose “in substantial
part from the same transaction or series of related transactions” as required by Subsection
(a)(2); (2) that “a common issue of law or fact create[d] the possibility of conflicting
decisions in the separate arbitration proceedings” as required by Subsection (a)(3); and (3)
that the prejudice from a failure to consolidate outweighed any potential prejudice to Horton,
as required by Subsection (a)(4).

{14} With respect to the element requiring the same transaction or related transactions,
Plaintiffs alleged that all of their claims arise from their purchase of homes built and sold by
Horton in the same subdivision since 2006. Horton based the subdivision’s site development
plan on a geotechnical report prepared by Vinyard & Associates, Inc., and, since purchasing

                                                6
their homes, Plaintiffs experienced deficiencies in their residences, many of which appear
to be caused by soil settlement as evidenced by reports prepared by Horton’s expert
engineer. Thus, although the underlying cause of the soil settlement is in dispute, Plaintiffs
nonetheless have demonstrated that their claims arise out of the series of purchase
transactions between themselves and Horton and the series of homes constructed by Horton
in reliance on the Vinyard report.

{15} Horton argues that Plaintiffs have not satisfied the related-transaction element
because their claims arise from thirteen different form purchase agreements for 37 or 38
home sales that proceeded to closing on different dates.1 We fail to see how different form
agreements and different closing dates would remove this series of sales from the statutory
category of “related transactions.” Plaintiffs have alleged sufficient facts to satisfy this
element supporting consolidation.

{16} The consolidation statute also requires “a common issue of law or fact” that “creates
the possibility of conflicting decisions” if the arbitrations proceed separately. Section 44-
7A-1(a)(3). Plaintiffs argue that their claims share common issues involving the settlement
of their respective homes and similar resulting damage, including cracks and separation.
They maintain that multiple separate arbitrations, as opposed to one consolidated arbitration,
could result in conflicting decisions. For example, one Plaintiff could be awarded rescission
or damages while another Plaintiff with similar home deficiencies could receive no recovery.

{17} Horton contends that Plaintiffs have failed to satisfy this element because they
presented no evidence supporting this element and because Horton’s engineer opined that
some deficiencies were caused by something other than negligent construction. Horton is
incorrect. Plaintiffs presented considerable evidence of deficiencies common to their homes,
including photographs and engineering reports attributing the deficiencies to soil settlement.
While it is true that Plaintiffs did not present an engineering report for every home and that
some engineering reports attribute some home deficiencies to over-watering or causes other
than negligent construction, these issues do not result in failure to satisfy the common-issue
element of Section 44-7A-11(a)(3). The question of whether to consolidate separate
arbitrations is a threshold question for the district court and does not require definitive proof.
The statute requires only common issues of law or fact, not common established facts.
Plaintiffs have satisfied this element.

{18} Finally, Plaintiffs have satisfied Section 44-7A-11(a)(4)’s element because they have
demonstrated that any prejudice to Horton does not outweigh the potential prejudice of
conflicting outcomes that could result from failure to consolidate. As the district court noted
in its decision letter, “having one arbitrator will be able to facilitate the arbitrations and move
the case along as opposed to [multiple] arbitrators . . . making inconsistent rulings.”

        1
         In its brief in chief, Horton states that 38 homes are involved while Plaintiffs state
in their brief that 37 homes are the subject of their claims.

                                                7
{19} Horton argues that “its contractual rights would be compromised with consolidation”
because Horton had no expectation when it entered into the arbitration agreements that there
was the possibility of a consolidated arbitration. This argument is not persuasive because
it was Horton that drafted the arbitration agreements, and it could have easily included a
provision prohibiting consolidation. Section 44-7A-11(c) provides that “[a] court may not
order consolidation of the claims of a party to an agreement to arbitrate if the agreement
prohibits consolidation.” Moreover, “the mere desire to have one’s dispute heard in a
separate proceeding is not in and of itself the kind of proof sufficient to prevent
consolidation.” Unif. Arbitration Act § 10 cmt. 3, 7 U.L.A. at 43. The type of prejudice
contemplated by Section 44-7A-11(a)(4) as overriding the prejudice from non-consolidation
includes the existence of conflicting provisions in the separate arbitration agreements
regarding “arbitrator selection procedures, standards for the admission of evidence and
rendition of the award, and other express terms of the arbitration agreement.” Unif.
Arbitration Act § 10 cmt. 3, 7 U.L.A. at 43. Horton does not argue that any of the express
terms of the arbitration agreements are in conflict. Therefore, Plaintiffs have satisfied the
element in Section 44-7A-11(a)(4).

{20} Horton also argues that Plaintiffs were required to establish the existence of all
statutory elements supporting consolidation through the introduction of evidence and that
the district court should have entered findings of fact and conclusions of law in support of
its order requiring consolidation. We disagree. As previously noted, the question of
consolidation is a threshold question answered by the district court based on allegations or
evidence satisfying it that the elements supporting consolidation exist. Horton has cited no
authority for the proposition that the consolidation question requires an evidentiary hearing.
See ITT Educ. Servs., Inc. v. Taxation & Revenue Dep’t, 1998-NMCA-078, ¶ 10, 125 N.M.
244, 959 P.2d 969 (explaining that appellate courts will not consider propositions that are
unsupported by citation to authority). In addition, Rule 1-052 NMRA, which governs the
necessity for findings and conclusions, provides that “[f]indings of fact and conclusions of
law are unnecessary in decisions on motions under Rule 1-012, 1-050 or 1-056 NMRA or
any other motion except as provided in Paragraph B of Rule 1-041 NMRA.” The motion for
consolidation in this case is not an excepted motion and, as a result, findings and conclusions
were not required.

{21} In our view, Plaintiffs’ satisfaction of all of the statutory elements supporting
consolidation leads to the conclusion that the district court did not abuse its discretion in
ordering a single, consolidated arbitration. However, Horton also claims that considerations
beyond the statutory elements mandate reversal of the district court’s decision. We now turn
to those arguments.

2.     Horton’s Other Arguments

{22} Horton appears to parse Plaintiffs’ single motion into two separate motions—one to
compel arbitration and one to compel a consolidated arbitration. With respect to the motion
to compel arbitration, Horton argues that the motion should have been denied as a matter of

                                              8
law because Horton agrees to arbitration. We fail to see how Horton’s approach would make
sense or further the case’s progress. Because the parties agreed that arbitration was the
appropriate method for resolving Plaintiffs’ claims, it would make no sense to deny the
motion to compel arbitration.

{23} As to the order requiring the arbitrations to be consolidated, Horton’s argument is
somewhat difficult to follow. It appears that Horton asserts two reasons—other than
Plaintiffs’ alleged failure to satisfy the statutory elements for consolidation—supporting its
contention that the order of consolidation was erroneous: (1) federal law regarding class
action arbitrations establishes public policy requiring denial of consolidation as a matter of
law; and (2) allowing consolidation permits the arbitrator to create public policy.

a.     Federal Law Regarding Class Action Arbitrations

{24} Horton argues that the district court, by ordering consolidation, “has created
something akin to a class action without subjecting . . . Plaintiffs to the class action
standards.” As a result, Horton maintains, “the district court fundamentally changed the
nature of the arbitration to such a degree that it cannot be presumed the parties consented to
it.” In support of this argument, Horton relies primarily on Stolt-Nielsen S.A. v. AnimalFeeds
Int’l Corp., which held that “a party may not be compelled under the [Federal Arbitration
Act] to submit to class arbitration unless there is a contractual basis for concluding that the
party agreed to do so.” 130 S. Ct. 1758, 1775 (2010). This argument is not persuasive for
two reasons.

{25} First, in Stolt-Nielsen there was no statutory provision governing the availability of
class arbitration while in the present case, Section 44-7A-11 expressly provides for
consolidated arbitration under certain circumstances. Stolt-Nielsen involved the United
States Supreme Court’s reversal of an arbitration panel’s decision to imply an agreement to
permit class arbitration when the arbitration agreement itself was silent on the subject. 130
S. Ct. at 1766, 1777. Notably, the Federal Arbitration Act, maritime law, and state law did
not answer the question of whether class arbitration was available in the absence of express
consent. Id. at 1768-69. These circumstances are not analogous to those in the present case,
given the existence of Section 44-7A-11.

{26} Second, we fail to see how a consolidated arbitration involving specific, named
parties is the same as a class arbitration. As the Court noted in Stolt-Nielsen, in a class
arbitration, the arbitrator’s award may “adjudicate[] the rights of absent parties” as well as
the rights of named parties. 130 S. Ct. at 1776. This cannot occur in the consolidated
arbitration ordered in this case by the district court because only named parties with
arbitration agreements will participate. In addition, the rules governing class arbitrations,
presumably derived from the rules governing class litigation, are quite different from the
statutory elements required for consolidated arbitration. For example, prerequisites for class
arbitration would include numerosity so great that joinder of all class members is
impracticable, common issues of law or fact predominating over issues affecting individual

                                              9
class members, and certification of the class. See generally Rule 1-023 NMRA.

b.      Risk of Arbitrator Creating Public Policy

{27} Horton argues that “[t]he district court’s misinterpretation of [the consolidation
statute] must be addressed by this Court to prevent the creation of public policy by the
arbitrator.” Horton maintains that “allow[ing] consolidation of similarly situated plaintiffs
rather than requiring that the arbitration agreements . . . arise from the same transaction or
related transaction allows the arbitrator too much discretion” in the resolution of discovery
disputes and of questions regarding the consolidation of evidentiary hearings involving more
than one home.

{28} We fail to see how an arbitrator’s control over the procedural aspects of the
consolidated arbitration will result in the creation of public policy. Instead, the arbitrator can
reasonably orchestrate the arbitration to streamline the process, avoid duplication of effort,
and resolve the individual claims in a consistent manner. In our view, consolidation of the
individual homeowners’ arbitrations is consistent with the purpose of arbitration, which is
“to further judicial economy by providing a quick, informal, and less costly alternative to
judicial resolution of disputes.” K.R. Swerdfeger Constr., Inc. v. UNM Bd. of Regents,
2006-NMCA-117, ¶ 26, 140 N.M. 374, 142 P.3d 962 (internal quotation marks and citation
omitted). The district court did not abuse its discretion by ordering consolidation of
Plaintiffs’ arbitrations.

CONCLUSION

{29} For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the district court’s order consolidating the
arbitrations between Plaintiffs and Horton.

{30}    IT IS SO ORDERED.

                                                ____________________________________
                                                CYNTHIA A. FRY, Judge

WE CONCUR:

____________________________________
JONATHAN B. SUTIN, Judge

____________________________________
J. MILES HANISEE, Judge

Topic Index for Lyndoe v. D.R. Horton, Inc., No. 30,663

APPEAL AND ERROR

                                               10
Standard of Review

CIVIL PROCEDURE
Arbitration
Final Order

COMMERCIAL LAW
Uniform Arbitration Act

JURISDICTION
Appellate Jurisdiction
Subject Matter

REMEDIES
Arbitration

STATUTES
Interpretation

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