Kirk v. Ratner
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Kirk, an actress, using a pseudonym, entered into a confidential settlement agreement in August 2017 with four entertainment industry executives, who used fictitious names in the agreement and documents filed in the superior court. The agreement contained an arbitration clause. The executives filed a demand for arbitration in June 2020, asserting breach of contract, interference with contract, and civil extortion. The executives obtained from an emergency arbitrator a preliminary injunction prohibiting the actress, her fiance, and two others from disclosing confidential information as that term is defined in the settlement agreement, including any disclosures in court documents, and from initiating any lawsuit against the executives in violation of the arbitration provisions in the settlement agreement.
Kirk and her fiance filed a petition in superior court to vacate the preliminary injunction. Because the emergency arbitrator’s ruling was not an “award” under Code of Civil Procedure section 1283.4,1 the court dismissed the petition for lack of jurisdiction. The court of appeal dismissed their appeal as taken from a non-appealable order. An arbitrator's interim rulings are not reviewable until the final award is entered; no appeal is available from a court's dismissal of a petition to vacate such an interim ruling.
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