Judge: Armen Tamzarian, Case: 22STCP04273, Date: 2023-01-13 Tentative Ruling
Case Number: 22STCP04273 Hearing Date: January 13, 2023 Dept: 52
Petitioners
DriveTime Car Sales Company, LLC, d/b/a DriveTime and BridgeCrest Acceptance
Corporation’s Petition to Vacate Contractual Arbitration Award
Petitioners
DriveTime Car Sales Company, LLC, d/b/a DriveTime and BridgeCrest Acceptance
Corporation petition to vacate an arbitration award entered in favor of
respondent James Lee Hubert. In
response, Hubert requests that the court confirm the award.
“If a petition or response under this chapter is
duly served and filed, the court shall confirm the award as made, whether
rendered in this state or another state, unless in accordance with this chapter
it corrects the award and confirms it as corrected, vacates the award or dismisses
the proceedings.” (CCP § 1286.)
Courts have limited authority to vacate an
arbitration award. “A court’s power to correct or vacate an erroneous
arbitration award is closely circumscribed.”
(Heimlich v. Shivji (2019) 7 Cal.5th 350, 367.) “An arbitrator’s legal or factual error in
determining which party prevailed may not be reversed.” (Ibid.) “It is within the power of the arbitrator to
make a mistake either legally or factually.
When parties opt for the forum of arbitration they agree to be bound
by the decision of that forum knowing that arbitrators, like judges, are
fallible.” (Id. at p. 370,
internal quotes and alterations omitted.)
Petitioners argue the arbitrator exceeded
her powers by issuing an award including a public injunction against them. The award provides, “DriveTime is prohibited
from using the Buy Option Summary Form in California unless and until DriveTime
(1) revises the Buy Option Summary for to include an Itemization of Amount
Financed as set forth in Civil Code section 2982(a) and (2) institutes policies
and procedures whereby DriveTime will provide the customer with a copy of his
or her signed Buy Option Summary form before delivering the vehicle to the
customer.” (Walser-Jolly Decl., Ex. G,
Final Award, p. 33.)
Petitioners rely on a doctrine known as
the Broughton-Cruz rule. In Broughton
v. Cigna Healthplans of California (1999) 21 Cal.4th 1066, 1084, the
California Supreme Court held “a CLRA injunctive relief action is not subject
to arbitration.” Cruz v. PacifiCare
Health Systems, Inc. (2003) 30 Cal.4th 303, 316 held the same for
injunctive relief that would benefit the general public under Business and
Professions Code sections 17200 and 17500.
The Ninth Circuit, however, held that the
Federal Arbitration Act “preempts the Broughton-Cruz rule.” (Ferguson v. Corinthian Colleges, Inc. (9th
Cir. 2013) 733 F.3d 928, 937 (Ferguson).) “By exempting from arbitration claims for
public injunctive relief under the CLRA, UCL, and FAL, the Broughton–Cruz rule
similarly prohibits outright arbitration of a particular type of claim,” and
therefore conflicts with the FAA. (Id.
at p. 934)
Moreover, as respondent argues, Broughton
and Cruz considered whether a party could enforce an agreement to
arbitrate claims for injunctive relief.
That is not the same question as whether an arbitrator has the power to
issue a public injunction. Neither case
held that an arbitrator exceeds her powers by doing so. Their language discussing that subject is dicta. As Ferguson stated, “[I]n creating
the Broughton–Cruz rule, the California court was motivated by
its conclusion that the public injunction sought by the plaintiffs was ‘beyond
the arbitrator’s power to grant.’
[Citation.] But that premise is
not necessarily true. Corinthian
concedes, and we agree, that an arbitrator generally has the authority to enter
injunctive relief against a party that has entered into an arbitration
agreement.” (Ferguson, supra, 733
F.3d at p. 937.)
Here, the parties’ arbitration agreement provides
that it is governed by the FAA and that “[t]he arbitrator is authorized and
given the power to award all remedies that would apply if the action were
brought in court.” (Herman Decl., Ex. 1,
p. 4.) Those remedies include a public
injunction.
Petitioners contend that McGill v.
Citibank, N.A. (2017) 2 Cal.5th 945 (McGill) reaffirmed the Broughton-Cruz
rule and therefore binds this court, as opposed to the persuasive authority
from the Ninth Circuit in Ferguson.
McGill did not reaffirm the Broughton-Cruz rule. As the California Supreme Court stated, “[T]he
Broughton-Cruz rule is not at issue in this case.” (Id. at p. 956.)
Instead, the question was whether a
contract could waive the substantive right to a public injunction as a
remedy—not whether an agreement could waive the procedural right to seek that
injunction in court. The Court relied on
the principle that “a provision in any contract—even a
contract that has no arbitration provision—that purports to waive, in all fora,
the statutory right to seek public injunctive relief under the UCL, the CLRA,
or the false advertising law is invalid and unenforceable under California law.” (McGill, supra, 2 Cal.5th at p.
962.) Moreover, like Broughton
and Cruz, in McGill the California Supreme Court addressed the
enforceability of a contract—not the enforceability of an arbitrator’s award.
The arbitrator did not exceed her
powers. The final award does not
contravene any well-defined and dominant public policy.
Respondent’s Request for Attorney Fees
In
his response, Hubert seeks $5,685.50 in attorney fees and costs. The prevailing party may recover costs on a
petition to vacate or confirm an arbitration award. (CCP § 1293.2.) Such costs include attorney fees when
permitted by statute, contract, or law.
(CCP § 1033.5(a)(10).) As the
arbitrator found, Hubert “is the prevailing party and is entitled to an award
of attorney fees” under Civil Code section 2983.4. (Walser-Jolly Decl., Ex. G-B, Post-Interim
Award Regarding Attorney Fees, p. 2.) Hubert
prevailed on this petition and is therefore entitled to recover his expenses,
including attorney fees.
Disposition
The
petition to vacate arbitration award is denied. The court hereby confirms the
arbitration award. The court will sign
the proposed judgment submitted by respondent James Lee Hubert.