TIMOTHY A GROSSKLAUS V SUSAN R GROSSKLAUS
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STATE OF MICHIGAN
COURT OF APPEALS
TIMOTHY A. GROSSKLAUS,
UNPUBLISHED
December 9, 2003
Plaintiff/CounterdefendantAppellee,
v
No. 240124
Wayne Circuit Court
LC No. 98-816343-DM
SUSAN R. GROSSKLAUS,
Defendant/CounterplaintiffAppellant.
Before: Schuette, P.J., and Cavanagh and White, JJ.
PER CURIAM.
The parties submitted their divorce action to binding arbitration. After the arbitrator
issued awards, plaintiff moved to vacate the awards under MCR 3.602. The circuit court
concluded that common-law, not statutory, arbitration was involved, the arbitration agreement
was voidable and the parties were not bound to accept the awards. Defendant appeals as of right.
We reverse and remand for further proceedings.
I
In May 1998, plaintiff filed a complaint for divorce. Defendant filed a countercomplaint.
In February 1999, the parties stipulated to submit the case to binding arbitration1 and the court
appointed an arbitrator. In April 1999, the parties entered into a “Matrimonial Binding
Mediation Agreement” with the arbitrator, which outlined the terms of the arbitration process.
Arbitration took place between June 1999 and February 2000. The arbitrator issued several
separate awards, the final one being in August 2000.
1
The terms “mediation” and “arbitration” were used interchangeably below. “Binding
mediation is functionally the same as binding arbitration,” and both are reviewed under the same
rules. Frain v Frain, 213 Mich App 509, 511; 540 NW2d 741 (1995). We will use the term
“arbitration” in this opinion, unless the context requires otherwise.
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In September 2000, plaintiff filed a motion in the circuit court to vacate the arbitration
awards pursuant to MCR 3.602(J) and (K). In a decision issued on April 3, 2001, the circuit
court found that because the parties’ agreement did not contain a clause allowing the arbitrator’s
decision to be incorporated into a circuit court judgment, the parties engaged in only commonlaw arbitration, rather than statutory arbitration, which is not governed by the court rule. The
court held that the parties’ agreement governed the scope of the arbitrator’s authority and,
because the arbitrator failed to render his decision within forty-five days after the proceedings
ended, contrary to the parties’ agreement, the agreement was voidable and the parties were not
bound to accept the awards. The court suggested that the parties could agree to modify the
agreement. Plaintiff then filed a notice of intent to void the mediation agreement.
In October 2001, defendant filed a motion to reform the parties’ agreement to reflect the
parties’ intent that the arbitrator’s decision would be binding and reduced to judgment. On
February 4, 2002, the circuit court entered its order dismissing the case. Defendant’s motion for
reconsideration was denied. Defendant filed a claim of appeal from the order of dismissal.
II
We first address plaintiff’s challenge to this Court’s jurisdiction. Plaintiff argues that
defendant is precluded from raising issues pertaining to the circuit court’s April 3, 2001,
decision, because defendant did not timely file a claim of appeal therefrom. We disagree.
With certain exceptions not applicable here, this Court has jurisdiction of an appeal of
right from final judgments or orders only. MCR 7.203(A)(1). A final order in a civil action is
the first order that disposes of all the claims and adjudicates the rights and liabilities of all the
parties, including such an order entered after reversal of an earlier final judgment or order. MCR
7.202(7)(a)(i). The final order for purposes of appeal is not necessarily the last order in the
lower court file. Dean v Tucker, 182 Mich App 27, 30; 451 NW2d 571 (1990).
The circuit court’s April 3, 2001, decision concluded that the arbitration agreement was
voidable by either party and that it could not enter judgment on the arbitration awards. The court
also offered the parties options on how to proceed. The court’s April 3, 2001, order did not
dispose of the parties’ claims and, therefore, was not a final order appealable as of right. Thus,
defendant could not have filed an appeal as of right from that order. The February 4, 2002, order
of dismissal was the final order in this case. Having timely filed a claim of appeal from that
order, defendant properly may raise any issue on appeal relating to the court’s prior orders.
Dean, supra at 31.
III
We also reject plaintiff’s argument that the circuit court is without jurisdiction to enter
judgment on the award because it was issued well over a year ago. MCR 3.602(I). Plaintiff filed
his motion to vacate the award under MCR 3.602. The court held hearings and requested
supplemental memoranda and proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law. Defendant’s
submissions requested findings rejecting all of plaintiff’s claims. Defendant also presented a
Judgment of Divorce, which included:
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This divorce case comes before the Court after Binding Mediation on all
contested issues. A Stipulated Order appointing Scott Bassett as Binding
Mediator was entered on February 17, 1999; both parties and their respective
lawyers executed a Binding Mediation Agreement on April 17, 1999 granting the
Binding Mediator authority to rule on all issues. The Binding Mediator has issued
a Final Binding Mediation Award Re: Child Custody and Parenting Time; a
Revised Final Binding Mediation Award Re: Child Custody and Parenting Time;
a Binding Mediation Award Re: Property and Financial Issues; and a
Clarification of Binding Mediation Award Re: Property and Financial Issues[.]
Thereafter, plaintiff Timothy A. Grossklaus filed a Motion to Vacate Binding
Mediation Award and defendant filed an Answer to the Motion, and thereafter a
Supplemental Responsive Memorandum. The court considered the arguments of
counsel, the exhibits received, and testimony; the court received and considered
the proposed Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law submitted by counsel for
both parties. The Court entered an Order denying plaintiff’s motion to vacate the
Binding Mediation Award, and therefore approves the Binding Mediation Award.
The plaintiff has entered his proofs from which it satisfactorily appears to the
Court that the statutory grounds for divorce and the jurisdictional residency
requirements have been established.
The remainder of the Judgment of Divorce incorporated the arbitrator’s award.
Defendant thus requested that judgment be entered on the award within the one-year
period. The circuit court’s erroneous decision that the court rule did not apply cannot operate to
deprive it of jurisdiction to enter a judgment under the court rule on remand.
IV
We next consider whether the circuit court correctly ruled that the arbitration involved
was common-law arbitration. If the parties’ agreement does not provide that judgment shall be
entered in accordance with the arbitrator’s decision, common-law, rather than statutory,
arbitration is involved. Beattie v Autostyle Plastics, Inc, 217 Mich App 572, 578; 552 NW2d
181 (1996).
In this case, the circuit court’s February 17, 1999, order for binding mediation provides:
It is further ordered that upon submission of the Binding Mediator’s report
to the Court that a Judgment of Divorce shall be prepared in compliance with the
Binding Mediator’s report and submitted to the Wayne County Circuit Court for
entry.
Although similar language does not appear in the parties’ Matrimonial Binding Mediation
Agreement, that agreement provides:
This Agreement is entered into between the parties regarding the marriage
of Susan R. Grossklaus and Timothy A. Grossklaus, Case NO. 98-816343-DM,
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currently pending in the Wayne County Circuit Court, Family Division, State of
Michigan, and pursuant to the court order dated the 17th day of February, 1999.
[Emphasis added.]
Because the agreement expressly refers to the court’s earlier February 17, 1999, order,
the circuit court should have construed the two writings together and considered them as parts of
the same agreement. Culver v Castro, 126 Mich App 824, 826; 338 NW2d 232 (1983); see also
Hetrick v Friedman, 237 Mich App 264, 269; 602 NW2d 603 (1999). When viewed in this
manner, it is apparent that the parties’ agreement contains the requisite language providing that
judgment shall enter in accordance with the arbitrator’s decision. Therefore, the circuit court
erred in concluding that the parties engaged in only common-law, rather than statutory,
arbitration, and that the court rule was thus not applicable.
V
Defendant argues that the circuit court erred in vacating the arbitrator’s awards for the
reasons given. However, the court did not vacate the awards, but rather, ruled that the parties’
agreement was voidable. Further, because the court believed the court rule did not apply, it did
not consider whether plaintiff was entitled to have the awards vacated under MCR 3.602(J).
We will consider aspects of this issue that can be resolved as a matter of law on this
record. Koster v June’s Trucking, Inc, 244 Mich App 162, 168; 625 NW2d 82 (2000). MCR
3.602(J) provides in pertinent part:
(1) On application of a party, the court shall vacate an award if:
(a) the award was procured by corruption, fraud, or other undue
means;
(b) there was evident partiality by an arbitrator appointed as a
neutral, corruption of an arbitrator, or misconduct prejudicing a party's
rights;
(c) the arbitrator exceeded his or her powers; or
(d) the arbitrator refused to postpone the hearing on a showing of
sufficient cause, refused to hear evidence material to the controversy, or
otherwise conducted the hearing to prejudice substantially a party's rights.
An arbitrator exceeds his authority when he acts beyond the material terms of the contract from
which he draws his authority, or in contravention of controlling principles of law. Dohanyos v
Detrex Corp (After Remand), 217 Mich App 171, 176; 550 NW2d 608 (1996). Arbitrators
derive their authority from the parties’ contract and arbitration agreement and are bound to act
within those terms. Id.
Plaintiff argued that the arbitrator exceeded his authority when he issued additional
awards after issuing his first final custody and parenting time award on June 15, 2000. Because
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there is nothing in the parties’ agreement prohibiting the arbitrator from rendering his decision in
a piecemeal fashion, we conclude that this is not a proper basis to vacate the awards.
Plaintiff also argued that the arbitrator exceeded his authority by failing to issue his final
decision within forty-five days of the last arbitration hearing, which occurred on February 10,
2000. Plaintiff relies on the following provision of the parties’ agreement:
Upon completion of the hearing, if no settlement is reached, the Binding
Mediator will issue an Award in writing and deliver a copy of said award to each
party or their respective attorney by hand delivery or mail within forty-five (45)
days or as otherwise established by agreement by the parties and the Binding
Mediator, with said award being final and binding upon both parties, subject only
to the rules and law applicable to said binding mediation.
However, there is no indication that time was of the essence. The parties’ agreement
does not contain a provision making time of the essence, and nothing about the nature of the
agreement or the circumstances under which it was executed suggests an understanding that time
was of the essence. See In re Day Estate, 70 Mich App 242, 246; 245 NW2d 582 (1976). We
note that the first award was issued well after the forty-five day period, and plaintiff did not
object at that time. We conclude that the time frame expressed in the parties’ agreement was not
a material term of the contract. Accordingly, by failing to comply with this provision, the
arbitrator did not act outside the material terms of the contract and, therefore, did not exceed his
powers within the meaning of MCR 3.602(J) when he failed to render an award within the stated
time frame.
Plaintiff also argued that the arbitrator improperly found that he was at fault for the
breakdown of the marriage. Because this matter is directed at the merits of the arbitrator’s
decision, it is not a proper basis for upsetting the arbitrator’s awards. Dohanyos, supra at 177.
Plaintiff’s remaining claims, which are addressed to mediator partiality, the award of the
Island Building Company, defendant’s statements of fact during the arbitration proceedings, and
whether the arbitrator failed to follow procedural and substantive law, shall be addressed by the
court on remand for consideration of the party’s motions under MCR 3.602. Additionally, on
remand, the court shall consider defendant’s claim that relief is warranted because plaintiff failed
to fully disclose an interest he may have held in property at 28802 Coleman, in Grosse Isle.
Reversed and remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. We do not
retain jurisdiction.
/s/ William D. Schuette
/s/ Mark J. Cavanagh
/s/ Helene N. White
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