GRAND SUMMIT HOTEL CONDOMINIUM UNIT OWNERS' ASSOCIATION v. L.B.O. HOLDING, INC. D/B/A Attitash Mountain Resort
GRAND SUMMIT HOTEL CONDOMINIUM UNIT OWNERS' ASSOCIATION v. L.B.O. HOLDING, INC. D/B/A Attitash Mountain Resort
Opinion
The plaintiff, the Grand Summit Hotel Condominium Unit Owners' Association (Association), filed claims against the defendant, L.B.O. Holding, Inc. d/b/a Attitash Mountain Resort (Attitash), arising from Attitash's alleged failure to maintain a cooling tower at the Grand Summit Hotel and Conference Center (Condominium) in Bartlett. Attitash moved to dismiss the Association's claims, arguing that they were barred by a provision, which required arbitration of certain disputes, in a management agreement (the Agreement) between the parties. The Trial Court ( Ignatius , J.) denied Attitash's motion to dismiss, *516 ruling that the Association's claims fall outside of the scope of the provision. The trial court subsequently approved this interlocutory appeal. See Sup. Ct. R. 8. We affirm and remand.
The following facts are drawn from the interlocutory appeal statement. The Association is comprised of the residential and commercial owners of the Condominium. It is responsible for managing, or arranging for the management of, the Condominium. To fulfill that obligation, the Association hired Attitash to manage the property under the terms of the Agreement. Under the Agreement, the Association agreed to pay the "Actual Costs" of operating the Condominium, which the Agreement defines, in part, as "the total cost to [the] Manager of operating the Condominium" including "all costs, charges, and expenses of every kind and description fairly attributable to the operation, management or maintenance of the Association." As manager of the Condominium, Attitash has assumed the responsibility to arrange and supervise all repairs, replacements, and maintenance, and to "[n]egotiate and enter into on behalf of the Association such service and maintenance contracts as may be required ... including ... contracts for ... equipment maintenance."
Between 2011 and the spring of 2013, Attitash retained a commercial heating and cooling contractor to provide maintenance of the Condominium's heating and cooling system, including winterizing the cooling tower each fall. However, Attitash failed to enter into a contract with that contractor - or with any other contractor - to provide winterizing services in the fall of 2013, and the cooling tower was not properly winterized for the winter of 2013-2014. In the spring of 2014, the contractor inspecting the cooling system discovered that it had been damaged during the winter and was unfit for use.
Shortly thereafter, Attitash informed the Association of the damage and represented that, although it had entered into a maintenance contract for the cooling tower that covered the fall of 2013, the contractor had failed to winterize the cooling tower. Attitash subsequently represented to the Association that the cooling tower had failed because it had reached the end of its useful life. During the summer of 2014, Attitash rented a temporary cooling tower. In anticipation of the summer of 2015, it arranged to have the damaged cooling tower repaired. Attitash incurred more than $200,000 in costs, which the Association paid.
In 2016, the Association filed this action asserting claims against Attitash for breach of contract, breach of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing, negligence, and violation of the Consumer Protection Act. Attitash moved to dismiss, arguing that the suit was barred because the Agreement contains a provision that requires arbitration for disputes over "Actual Costs." The disputes provision states:
The [Association] shall have thirty (30) days from the rendition of a statement by [Attitash] for both the Management Fee or of the Actual Cost within which to protest the nature, amount or method by which such amount was determined. If the matter cannot be resolved by the parties within thirty (30) days thereafter, it shall be rendered to an independent public accountant for a decision, which decision shall be binding on both parties.
The trial court denied Attitash's motion, concluding that the provision does not "require[ ] mandatory arbitration for all matters leading to the actual costs that were incurred in this case." The trial court further ruled that review by an accountant "would not be appropriate for disputes involving contract negotiation, representations *517 made by the contracting parties, disputes over the effective date of a contract, compliance with the terms of a contract, inadequate work performed by [Attitash], and other assertions made by [the Association]." This interlocutory appeal followed.
Our standard of review on a motion to dismiss is "whether the allegations in the plaintiff's pleadings are reasonably susceptible of a construction that would permit recovery."
Lamprey v. Britton Constr.
,
As a threshold matter, Attitash argues that this dispute should be governed by the Federal Arbitration Act (FAA),
We assume, without deciding, that this choice of law issue is properly before us. However, we need not decide whether federal or state law controls because, in regard to the issues on appeal, federal and state law are the same. Indeed, in its brief, Attitash acknowledges that the "New Hampshire [a]rbitration [s]tatute [m]irrors the FAA and [r]equires the [s]ame [r]esult." (Bolding omitted.) Under both federal and state law, a presumption of arbitrability applies to arbitration clauses.
See
John A. Cookson Co. v. N.H. Ball Bearings
,
*518
Attitash next argues that, because the provision at issue is an arbitration clause, the presumption in favor of arbitrability applies.
See
N.H. Ball Bearings
,
Finally, Attitash argues that the Association's claims come within the scope of the provision because the Association, by alleging that Attitash should bear the cost of the damage to the cooling tower, is disputing the "nature" of an Actual Cost. Attitash asserts that the Association was, therefore, required to comply with the process set forth in the provision: protest the nature, amount or method of the Actual Cost within 30 days from the rendition of the statement and then, if the parties cannot resolve the matter within a subsequent 30-day period, submit the dispute to an accountant for a binding decision. Attitash argues that, because the Association did not protest the costs within the time frame set forth in the disputes provision, the Association's claims are now time-barred.
The Association counters that the provision does not apply because its claims do "not challenge the nature, amount or method" by which the Actual Costs related to the cooling tower were calculated. Rather, the Association argues that its claims arise from Attitash's misconduct - Attitash's failure to properly maintain the cooling tower, and Attitash's subsequent misrepresentations to the Association about the cause of the damage - and, therefore, fall outside the scope of the provision. We agree with the Association.
Interpretation of the scope of an arbitration agreement presents a question of law for this court.
See
N.H. Ball Bearings
,
*519
Further, in determining whether a claim falls within the scope of an arbitration clause, we focus on the substance of the factual allegations, not the legal theory asserted.
See
Dunn & Sons, Inc. v. Paragon Homes of New Eng., Inc.
,
Attitash argues that the Association's claims fall within the scope of the provision because they arise from a dispute about the "nature" of the Actual Costs incurred due to the cooling tower damage. The Agreement does not define "nature." Attitash argues that a dispute about the "nature" of an "Actual Cost" is a disagreement as to "its essential character or constitution - i .e. , whether it is ... fairly attributable to the operation, management or maintenance" of the Condominium. Attitash asserts that the Association - in claiming that Attitash should pay for the cost of the cooling tower rental and repair - is challenging whether the expenses are "fairly attributable" to the costs of operation, and, therefore, the Association was contractually required to follow the process outlined in the disputes provision. Although we agree with Attitash as to the meaning of the term "nature" as used in the Agreement, we nonetheless conclude that the Association's claims do not fall within the scope of the provision.
The Association does not dispute that the expenses incurred because of the cooling tower damage were, in fact, "Actual Costs." Instead, the Association's complaint is premised on the following factual allegations: after Attitash failed to ensure that the cooling tower was properly winterized in the fall of 2013, the tower was damaged, and Attitash made misrepresentations to the Association about the cause of the damage. Thus, the Association is not challenging the "nature" of an Actual Cost - that is whether the cooling tower expenses were fairly attributable to the operation, management or maintenance of the Condominium - rather it is claiming that the proper measure of its damages attributable to Attitash's alleged wrongdoing is the cost of the tower rental and repair.
In further support of its argument that the Association's claims fall within the scope of the provision, Attitash relies upon the reasoning of the Second Circuit Court of Appeals in
Genesco
, which held that "[i]f the allegations underlying the claims 'touch matters' covered by the parties' ... agreements, then those claims must be arbitrated, whatever the legal labels attached to them."
Genesco
,
Genesco
is distinguishable because the arbitration clause at issue in that case subjected to arbitration
all
claims and disputes arising out of, or relating to, the parties' agreement.
See
Under these circumstances, the presumption in favor of arbitrability does not override the intention of the parties - as expressed by the Agreement's plain language - that the disputes provision be narrow in scope. Given the language of the provision at issue here, and the fact that the Association does not dispute the nature of Actual Costs, but, rather, seeks damages caused by Attitash's misconduct, we conclude that the Association's claims fall outside the scope of the provision.
We note that each party argues that "accountant remedy" cases from other jurisdictions support its position. An "accountant remedy" provision is an agreement to submit a limited class of disputes - typically disputes regarding calculations required elsewhere in a contract - to an accountant for resolution.
See, e.g.
,
Fit Tech, Inc. v. Bally Total Fitness Holding
,
For example, in
Fit Tech
, the First Circuit Court of Appeals held that an "accountant remedy" provision in the parties' asset purchase agreement subjected to arbitration only those claims arising from the defendant's improper calculation of earnings owed to the plaintiffs, and did not require arbitration of claims premised upon the defendant's wrongful conduct designed to reduce the plaintiffs' earnings.
We conclude that the trial court properly ruled that the Association's claims are outside the scope of the arbitration provision.
Affirmed and remanded .
LYNN, C.J., and HICKS, HANTZ MARCONI, and DONOVAN, JJ., concurred.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Grand Summit Hotel Condominium Unit Owners' Association v. L.B.O. Holding, Inc.. D/B/A Attitash Mountain Resort
- Status
- Published