Notice: This opinion is subject to correction before publication in the P ACIFIC R EPORTER .
Readers are requested to bring errors to the attention of the Clerk of the Appellate Courts,
303 K Street, Anchorage, Alaska 99501, phone (907) 264-0608, fax (907) 264-0878, email
corrections@appellate.courts.state.ak.us.
THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF ALASKA
TROY JOHNSON, )
) Supreme Court No. S-14632
Appellant, )
) Superior Court No. 3AN-11-09709 CI
v. )
) OPINION
THE ALEUT CORPORATION, )
) No. 6813 – August 23, 2013
Appellee. )
)
Appeal from the Superior Court of the State of Alaska, Third
Judicial District, Anchorage, Mark Rindner, Judge.
Appearances: Molly C. Brown and Michael D. White, Patton
Boggs LLP, Anchorage, for Appellant. William J. Evans,
Sedor, Wendlandt, Evans & Filippi, LLC, Anchorage, for
Appellee.
Before: Fabe, Chief Justice, Winfree, Stowers, Maassen, and
Bolger, Justices.
FABE, Chief Justice.
STOWERS, Justice, dissenting.
I. INTRODUCTION
The Aleut Corporation terminated the employment of its chief executive
officer, Troy Johnson. Johnson challenged the termination, and the matter was submitted
to binding arbitration as required by the employment contract, which contained a broad
arbitration clause providing that “[a]ny and all disputes . . . arising out of, relating in any
way to or in connection with this Agreement and/or Executive’s employment with or
termination of employment from the Company . . . shall be solely settled by an
arbitration.” At arbitration, the parties disputed whether The Aleut Corporation had
violated the employment contract by terminating Johnson and whether Johnson’s alleged
breach of contract justified the termination. After determining that The Aleut
Corporation had breached the employment contract, the arbitrator awarded damages to
Johnson.
The Aleut Corporation petitioned the superior court to vacate the
arbitrator’s decision, claiming that the arbitrator had addressed an issue that was never
submitted to arbitration and was thus not arbitrable. The superior court vacated the
arbitration award, concluding that the arbitrator had exceeded his authority, and Johnson
appeals. Because the dispute was arbitrable, we conclude that the arbitrator did not
exceed his authority, and we therefore reverse the superior court’s decision to vacate the
arbitration award.
II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
A. Facts
The Aleut Corporation is one of the 13 regional Native corporations
established in 1972 under the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act.1 Troy Johnson is
an Aleut Corporation shareholder and a business executive. In 2007 The Aleut
Corporation hired Johnson as its new chief executive officer (CEO), and the two parties
negotiated an agreement setting forth the terms of Johnson’s employment.
Paragraph 5 of the employment agreement established that Johnson’s
“Initial Term” as CEO would last three years, ending on March 31, 2010. Paragraph 5
also provided for a two-year “automatic extension” of Johnson’s term, at The Aleut
1
See 43 U.S.C. § 1606 (2007).
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Corporation’s option. To trigger this option term, Paragraph 5 required Johnson to
provide a reminder notice to The Aleut Corporation’s Board of its ability to cancel the
option term. This notice was to be sent to the Board Chair at least 120 days before
March 31, 2010. Upon receiving this reminder notice, The Aleut Corporation was to
have the option to cancel the automatic extension of the term by written notice to
Johnson at least 90 days before March 31, 2010. Paragraph 5 of the employment
agreement provided:
Term. Subject to the provisions for earlier termination set
forth in Paragraph 9, the term of the Executive’s employment
hereunder shall commence on the Effective Date and
terminate (3) years thereafter on March 31, 2010 (the “Initial
Term”). Company shall have an option, exercisable in
writing on or before ninety (90) days prior to the expiration
of the Initial Term, to cancel the automatic extension of the
term of this Agreement for an additional two (2) year period
commencing on April 1, 2010, terminating on March 31,
2012 (the “Option Term”). Executive shall notify the Chair
of the Board, in writing, 120 days before the expiration of the
Initial Term of the Company’s option to cancel, but if he fails
to so notify the Chair of the Board, this Agreement will
expire at the end of the Initial Term. The Initial Term and the
Option Term, if not cancelled by the Company, are herein
called the “Term.” Neither the Company nor Executive will
have any obligation to renew or extend this Agreement
beyond the Term.
(Emphasis in original.) The employment agreement also contained a broadly drafted
arbitration clause: “Any and all disputes between Executive and the Company, however
significant, arising out of, relating in any way to or in connection with this Agreement
and/or Executive’s employment with or termination of employment from the
Company . . . shall be solely settled by an arbitration . . . .”
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Johnson testified that when he negotiated the employment agreement, he
sought a longer initial term because he “wanted that security of a five-year contract” for
his family. He further explained that “having been through the work of changing a
company . . . three years is a pretty short period of time.” Johnson and The Aleut
Corporation agreed that the purpose of the reminder notice provision was to ensure that
the Board would not overlook the option term and inadvertently allow Johnson’s contract
to extend.
In July 2009, as the end of Johnson’s initial three-year term approached,
Johnson and The Aleut Corporation began negotiations for a new contract. On July 22,
2009, Johnson drafted a letter to Sharon Lind, the chair of The Aleut Corporation Board
of Directors, providing the required notice of The Aleut Corporation’s option to cancel
the automatic extension of the term. Johnson created a fax cover sheet for the letter and
attempted to fax the letter to Lind’s office. But a subsequent review of electronic records
from the fax machine at Lind’s office indicated that Lind’s machine never received
Johnson’s fax. Johnson also claimed that he later gave Lind a hard copy of the letter
with a packet of other documents.
The contract negotiations that followed led Johnson to believe that Lind had
received his reminder notice letter. In August 2009, Johnson watched The Aleut
Corporation’s attorney, Thomas M. Daniel, give a presentation to the full Board on the
status of their negotiations. During the presentation, Daniel provided charts describing
the terms of Johnson’s current contract and contract proposals. The “term” section of
the chart stated that Johnson’s contract “automatically extended for 2 more years unless
[The Aleut Corporation] gives notice of cancellation 90 days before expiration.” The
chart did not mention Johnson’s obligation to provide notice. Johnson later testified that
because Daniel’s chart did not mention the requirement for him to provide the reminder
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notice, he assumed that Lind had received his letter reminding The Aleut Corporation of
its option to cancel the automatic extension of the term.
Under Paragraph 5, notice from Johnson would have triggered The Aleut
Corporation’s responsibility to notify Johnson before December 31, 2009 if the company
decided to cancel the automatic extension. The Aleut Corporation did not provide notice
to Johnson of its decision to cancel the automatic extension of his term by that date.
Throughout the contract renewal negotiations, Board Chair Lind sent
inquiries to Daniel, The Aleut Corporation’s attorney, regarding the employment
agreement. Early in the negotiations, Lind asked Daniel a question about the automatic
extension provision in Johnson’s contract. Daniel confirmed that according to the
provision, Johnson’s contract would “automatically renew” for an additional two years
“unless the board affirmatively cancels the extension at least 90 days before the current
contract expires.” (Emphasis in original.) Later, in February 2010, Daniel replied to an
additional question from Lind, remarking that the “notice provisions” in the employment
agreement were “mostly meaningless — the result of last minute changes that were made
when we negotiated the contract.” Meanwhile, the contract negotiations between The
Aleut Corporation and Johnson continued into March 2010 without success.
On March 21, 2010, The Aleut Corporation’s Board informed Johnson that
it would allow Johnson’s contract to expire at the end of the month. The following day,
Johnson and a member of the Board discussed how Johnson might save his job. Johnson
later testified that the Board member’s comments led him to believe that he might retain
his job if he fired Eric Waterman, The Aleut Corporation’s director of operations. After
the meeting, Johnson terminated Waterman and signed a severance and release
agreement with him.
On March 30, 2010, Johnson’s lawyer sent a letter to The Aleut
Corporation declaring that The Aleut Corporation had improperly terminated Johnson’s
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contract because Johnson had faxed the reminder notice to Lind and the Board had not
timely cancelled the option. The next day, Johnson completed his last day of
employment at The Aleut Corporation. On April 9, 2010, Johnson’s attorney sent a
second letter to The Aleut Corporation, proposing a settlement and advising that Johnson
would proceed to arbitration if the parties could not agree on a settlement.
B. Arbitration Proceedings
The arbitration clause of the employment agreement required that “[a]ny
and all disputes . . . arising out of, relating in any way to or in connection” with the
employment agreement “shall be solely settled by an arbitration” conducted in
accordance with the American Arbitration Association rules. Accordingly, Johnson
submitted a statement of claims to the American Arbitration Association on October 15,
2010.
Johnson’s statement of claims argued that The Aleut Corporation had
breached the employment agreement when it terminated his contract. Johnson explained
that he had provided timely notice to the Board reminding it of its option to cancel the
automatic extension and that the Board had failed to provide timely notice that it was
cancelling the automatic extension. Johnson’s statement of claims concluded with a
request that “the arbitrator find the Company failed to timely exercise its option to
terminate the automatic two-year extension of Mr. Johnson’s Contract beyond March 31,
2010,” and “that the Company[’s] termination of Mr. Johnson’s employment as CEO
effective March 31, 2010, constituted a breach by the Company of the Contract.”
The Aleut Corporation responded that Johnson had not in fact provided the
required reminder notice and thus the employment agreement had expired on March 31,
2010. The Aleut Corporation also claimed, as an “[a]ffirmative [d]efense,” that Johnson
had breached the employment agreement by terminating Waterman and obligating The
Aleut Corporation to a severance agreement without the proper authority.
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The parties submitted a joint statement of uncontested facts to the arbitrator.
That statement provided that “Paragraph 5 [of the employment agreement] required
Johnson to notify the Chair of [The Aleut Corporation’s] Board, Sharon Lind, of [The
Aleut Corporation’s] option to cancel the ‘Option Term’ 120 days prior to March 31,
2010, or December 1, 2009.” Their statement described the negotiations of Johnson’s
contract renewal, Johnson’s letter to Lind, Daniel’s statements concerning the option
term, Johnson’s firing of Waterman, and The Aleut Corporation’s termination of
Johnson’s contract.
On April 12 and 13, 2011, Arbitrator Thomas P. Owens, Jr. conducted the
arbitration hearing. The parties disputed whether Johnson’s decision to fire Waterman
constituted a breach of contract. Johnson argued that The Aleut Corporation’s
termination of the employment agreement “had no valid basis” and was a “breach of the
Contract.” He presented evidence that he had provided the requisite reminder notice to
trigger the automatic extension of the term. The Aleut Corporation contended that the
“issue in the case is whether or not Mr. Johnson’s contract automatically extended” and
that “at the end of this arbitration hearing there will be no evidence in this case . . . that
Ms. Lind received that required notice. . . . And that’s the entire case.”
The arbitrator heard testimony from Johnson, Board Chair Lind, Daniel,
The Aleut Corporation’s chief financial officer, and a member of the Board. The
testimony covered a variety of topics, including the parties’ intent surrounding the initial
negotiation of the option term of the employment agreement, Johnson’s decision to fire
Waterman, Johnson’s performance as CEO, the recent contract-renewal negotiations, and
the termination of Johnson’s contract. In particular, Johnson testified that Daniel had
proposed the reminder notice language “so that the board, whoever was in the board at
that time, would be aware that . . . you can cancel this automatic two-year extension.”
Johnson also testified about his performance as CEO, his firing of Waterman, the 2009
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contract negotiations, and his attempts to send the notice letter to Lind. Lind reported
that she had never received Johnson’s notice letter. The arbitrator also heard testimony
from Daniel describing both the initial negotiations of the option term in Johnson’s
employment agreement and the contract renewal negotiations.
In June 2011 Arbitrator Owens issued his decision and award. He
summarized Johnson’s claim: “Claimant claims that Respondent prematurely ended his
employment, in violation of the Contract, and that he is entitled to compensatory
damages as a result of the breach.” The arbitrator determined that to resolve the parties’
dispute, he was required to answer three questions:
1. Did the termination of Claimant[] [Johnson’s]
employment by Respondent [The Aleut Corporation] breach
the Contract?
2. Was the termination of Claimant[] [Johnson’s]
employment justified by [Johnson’s] subsequent breach of
the Contract?
3. What damages, if any, should be awarded in this case?
The arbitrator further explained that “[r]esolution of the issues in this case requires that
the arbitrator interpret the Contract,” and that in light of Alaska contract law
jurisprudence, the primary goal was to “enforce the reasonable expectations of the
parties.”
The arbitrator made detailed findings about the parties’ expectations. He
found “Troy Johnson’s testimony concerning the negotiation of ¶ 5 of the Contract to be
credible and un-contradicted.” He further found “that the reasonable expectations of the
parties regarding the term” of the employment agreement were:
(1) the initial term of the Contract would be three years; (2)
the initial term would be automatically extended for two
additional years unless [The Aleut Corporation] exercised its
option to cancel the automatic extension at least ninety days
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before the scheduled expiration of the initial term; (3) an
extension of the Contract would not accidentally occur on
account of [The Aleut Corporation’s] lack of information
about its right to cancel the automatic extension.
The arbitrator also found that the reminder notice clause was not inserted into the
contract “to create an unrelated, arbitrary pre-requisite that could operate to negate the
automatic extension, regardless of the state of [The Aleut Corporation’s] knowledge
about its rights.” Rather, “the primary intent and expectation of the parties with regard
to the term of the Contract was that the initial three-year term of the Contract would be
automatically extended for two years, unless [The Aleut Corporation] notified Johnson
by December 31, 2009, that it was cancelling the extension.”
The arbitrator found that The Aleut Corporation was independently “well
aware” of the existence of the option term during the summer and fall of 2009, as
evidenced by Daniel’s correspondence with Lind. The arbitrator found that although
Lind had never received the fax of Johnson’s letter, this issue was of “secondary”
importance in light of the conclusion that Johnson’s reminder notice was “not a pre
requisite, the non-occurrence of which would excuse [The Aleut Corporation] from the
obligation to affirmatively notify Johnson of a cancellation in all circumstances,
regardless of the state of its knowledge about its right to cancel.” Accordingly,
Johnson’s failure to provide the reminder notice “did not extinguish [The Aleut
Corporation’s] obligation to timely notify Johnson of a decision to cancel the automatic
extension.” Therefore, the arbitrator determined that by terminating Johnson without
providing timely notice, The Aleut Corporation had “breached the Contract.” The
arbitrator concluded that “[t]o find otherwise would exalt form over substance and betray
the expectations of the parties to the Contract.”
Finally, the arbitrator relied on the employment agreement’s definition of
“cause” for termination, finding that “the conduct of Johnson with regard to Waterman[’s
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termination and severance package] did not constitute willful, reckless or grossly
negligent misconduct that would justify termination of his employment for cause.”
Because the arbitrator decided that The Aleut Corporation had breached the contract
while Johnson had not breached it, the arbitrator awarded damages to Johnson for lost
salary and benefits.
C. The Superior Court’s Decision
Arguing that the arbitrator exceeded his authority, The Aleut Corporation
petitioned the superior court to vacate the arbitration award. The superior court vacated
the arbitrator’s award, concluding that the arbitrator had exceeded his authority by
deciding an issue that was not submitted to arbitration and that the award was therefore
“procedurally unfair.” The superior court reasoned that it was “not reasonably possible
that the scope of the arbitration required the arbitrator to interpret the CEO Contract and
determine if the Reminder Notice was a condition precedent to the automatic renewal.”
It further noted that “[t]his finding is emphatically supported by the fact that the
arbitrator ruled on an issue in a manner contrary to concessions that both parties had
made; namely, the CEO Contract would not renew unless Johnson provided the
Reminder Notice.” As a result, the superior court awarded partial attorney’s fees and
costs to The Aleut Corporation.
Johnson moved for reconsideration, but the superior court denied the
motion. Johnson now appeals, arguing that the superior court erred when it vacated the
arbitration award.
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III. STANDARD OF REVIEW
A superior court’s decision reviewing an arbitration award is subject to de
novo review.2 “An arbitrator’s decision is accorded great deference”3 because “[b]oth
the common law and Alaska statutes evince a strong public policy in favor of
arbitration.”4 To effectuate this public policy, we follow an approach of “minimal court
interference with arbitration,”5 and “[t]his deference extends to both the arbitrator’s
factual findings and the arbitrator’s interpretation and application of the law.” 6 We have
remarked that “as a matter of both policy and law, we are ‘loath to vacate an award made
by an arbitrator,’ ”7 and that “we will interfere with the decision of an arbitrator only in
the most egregious instances.”8
“There are no statutory grounds for review of an arbitrator’s determination
as to the meaning of contract provisions which do not pertain to the issue of
2
See Kinn v. Alaska Sales & Serv., Inc., 144 P.3d 474, 482 (Alaska 2006)
(citing Marathon Oil Co. v. ARCO Alaska, Inc., 972 P.2d 595, 600 (Alaska 1999)).
3
State v. Alaska Pub. Emps. Ass’n, 199 P.3d 1161, 1162 (Alaska 2008)
(citing Alaska State Emps. Ass’n/AFSCME Local 52 v. State, 74 P.3d 881, 882 (Alaska
2003)).
4
Id. (quoting Baseden v. State, 174 P.3d 233, 237 (Alaska 2008)) (internal
quotation marks omitted).
5
Id. (quoting Dep’t of Pub. Safety v. Pub. Safety Emps. Ass’n, 732 P.2d
1090, 1093 (Alaska 1987)) (internal quotation marks omitted).
6
Id. (citing OK Lumber Co. v. Alaska R.R. Corp., 123 P.3d 1076, 1078
(Alaska 2005)).
7
Ahtna, Inc. v. Ebasco Constructors, Inc., 894 P.2d 657, 660 (Alaska 1995)
(quoting Pub. Safety Emps. Ass’n, 732 P.2d at 1093).
8
Bd. of Educ., Fairbanks N. Star Borough Sch. Dist. v. Ewig, 609 P.2d 10,
13 (Alaska 1980) (internal citations and quotation marks omitted).
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arbitrability.”9 And “[w]here one party alleges that the arbitrator has exceeded his or her
authority, we will affirm the arbitrator’s conclusion as to the scope of his or her powers
if ‘the arbitrator’s conclusion is reasonably possible.’ ”10 Thus, “[c]laims that the
arbitrator construed the contract in a manner exceeding his or her powers are reviewable,
but will only be reversed ‘if all fair and reasonable minds would agree that the
construction of the contract made by the arbitrator(s) was not possible under a fair
interpretation of the contract.’ ”11
IV. DISCUSSION
A. The Arbitrator Did Not Exceed His Authority.
Alaska’s Revised Uniform Arbitration Act provides that “the court shall
vacate an award made in the arbitration proceeding if . . . an arbitrator exceeded the
arbitrator’s powers.”12 Johnson argues that the arbitrator’s interpretation of the
employment agreement to determine whether it had been breached was not only within
the scope of his powers but was also “well-supported by the arbitration filings and the
evidence presented at the arbitration hearing.” The Aleut Corporation responds that the
arbitrator exceeded his authority by rendering a decision on an issue that “was not
submitted or contested due to the agreement between the parties.” But “if the arbitrator’s
9
Ahtna, 894 P.2d at 661 (quoting Alaska State Hous. Auth. v. Riley Pleas,
Inc., 586 P.2d 1244, 1247 (Alaska 1978)) (internal quotation marks omitted).
10
Kinn v. Alaska Sales & Serv., Inc., 144 P.3d 474, 482-83 (Alaska 2006)
(quoting Marathon Oil Co. v. ARCO Alaska, Inc., 972 P.2d 595, 600 (Alaska 1999)); see
also Ahtna, 894 P.2d at 661-62 (citing Breeze v. Sims, 778 P.2d 215, 217 (Alaska 1989);
Univ. of Alaska v. Modern Constr., Inc., 522 P.2d 1132, 1137 (Alaska 1974)).
11
Kinn, 144 P.3d at 487 (quoting Modern Constr., 522 P.2d at 1137).
12
AS 09.43.500(a)(4). Alaska’s Revised Uniform Arbitration Act governs
agreements to arbitrate made on or after January 1, 2005. See AS 09.43.300(a). The
employment agreement provides that the agreement shall be governed by Alaska law.
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determination of arbitrability is a reasonably possible one that can seriously be made in
the context in which the contract was made, then the court should affirm that finding.”13
Because we defer to the arbitrator’s interpretation of the dispute submitted and because
the arbitrator had the authority to resolve the arbitrable dispute on a different basis than
asserted by the parties, we conclude that the arbitrator did not exceed his powers.14
1. The arbitrator reasonably interpreted the dispute submitted for
arbitration and that dispute was arbitrable.
We do not review an arbitrator’s interpretation of a contract provision for
ordinary error.15 Instead, we consider an arbitrator’s interpretation of the contract issues
only in the context of reviewing the arbitrability of the dispute.16 An arbitrator’s
determination of the issues submitted for arbitration is “entitled to significant weight.”17
Moreover, “an arbitrator’s interpretation of the question presented for arbitration, like
an arbitrator’s contract interpretation, should not be subjected to plenary review.”18
Although we have held that arbitrators may exceed their authority by addressing a
13
Ahtna, 894 P.2d at 662 (quoting Modern Constr., 522 P.2d at 1137)
(internal citations and quotation marks omitted).
14
See id.; Dep’t of Pub. Safety v. Pub. Safety Emps. Ass’n, 732 P.2d 1090,
1096-97 (Alaska 1987) (giving deference to arbitrator’s interpretation of the questions
submitted to arbitration).
15
See Kinn, 144 P.3d at 487 n.38 (citing Ahtna, 894 P.2d at 660-61).
16
See id. (citing Ahtna, 894 P.2d at 661).
17
Pub. Safety Emps. Ass’n, 732 P.2d at 1097 (quoting Anchorage Med. &
Surgical Clinic v. James, 555 P.2d 1320, 1324 (Alaska 1976), overruled on other
grounds by Ahtna, 894 P.2d at 662) (internal quotation marks omitted).
18
Id. at 1096.
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dispute not submitted to arbitration,19 we have emphasized that “[a]rbitrators need not
be bound by the narrowest interpretation of the issue presented to them.”20 As long as
the arbitrator’s interpretation of the question posed for arbitration is reasonable in light
of the circumstances, we will not interfere with the bargained-for arbitration award.21
There are two reasons for such great deference to the arbitrator on questions submitted
for arbitration:
First, subjecting interpretations of arbitration submissions to
plenary review would [weaken] our intent to foster recourse
to arbitration proceedings for dispute resolution. . . . Second,
a deferential standard of review of submission interpretation
forecloses the possibility that Alaska’s courts will become
mired in numerous disputes involving the exact scope of
submission in arbitration proceedings.[22]
The scope of a demand for arbitration should not be subjected to the same strict standards
of construction that would be applied in formal court proceedings.23
Not only do we defer to the arbitrator’s interpretation of the question
presented, we “apply a presumption in favor of arbitrability,” resolving all doubts in
19
See Sea Star Stevedore Co. v. Int’l Union of Operating Eng’rs, Local 302,
769 P.2d 428, 431-32 (Alaska 1989) (holding that the arbitrator exceeded his authority
by addressing a question that was not submitted to arbitration and actually emerged six
weeks after the original issue arose).
20
Pub. Safety Emps. Ass’n, 732 P.2d at 1096.
21
See id.
22
Id. at 1097 (citing Mobil Oil Corp. v. Indep. Oil Workers Union, 679 F.2d
299, 302 (3d Cir. 1982)).
23
Id. (quoting Kurt Orban Co. v. Angeles Metal Sys., 573 F.2d 739, 740 (2d
Cir. 1978)).
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favor of arbitrability.24 We will affirm the arbitrator’s determination of arbitrability if
it is “reasonably possible.”25
Here, the arbitrator found that the parties had presented a dispute consisting
of three questions:
1. Did the termination of Claimant’s employment by
Respondent breach the Contract?
2. Was the termination of Claimant’s employment
justified by Claimant’s subsequent breach of the Contract?
3. What damages, if any, should be awarded in this case?
We conclude that the arbitrator’s interpretation of the arbitrable dispute was reasonable
and supported by the expansive arbitration clause in the employment agreement,
Johnson’s broad claim for breach of contract in his statement of claims, and the full
evidence submitted to the arbitrator. We also hold that the arbitrator’s determination that
the dispute was arbitrable clearly meets our “reasonably possible” standard.26
a. The arbitration clause of the employment agreement
First, Johnson and The Aleut Corporation agreed in their employment
contract to refer to an arbitrator “[a]ny and all disputes” regarding Johnson’s
employment contract and termination. The language and scope of the negotiated binding
arbitration clause of the employment agreement was quite broad: “Any and all
24
Ahtna, Inc. v. Ebasco Constructors, Inc., 894 P.2d 657, 662 (Alaska 1995)
(citing Univ. of Alaska v. Modern Constr., Inc., 522 P.2d 1132, 1138 (Alaska 1974)); see
also United Steelworkers v. Warrior & Gulf Navigation Co., 363 U.S. 574, 582-83
(1960).
25
Marathon Oil Co. v. ARCO Alaska, Inc., 972 P.2d 595, 600 (Alaska 1999)
(quoting Pub. Safety Emps. Ass’n Local 92 v. State, 895 P.2d 980, 984 (Alaska 1995),
aff’d on reh’g, 902 P.2d 1334 (Alaska 1995)) (internal quotation marks omitted).
26
See id.
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disputes . . . arising out of, relating in any way to or in connection with this Agreement
and/or Executive’s employment with or termination of employment from the
Company . . . shall be solely settled by an arbitration . . . .” Thus, as the arbitrator
concluded, this dispute, which focused on whether the termination of Johnson constituted
a breach of contract, fell squarely within the scope of the contract’s arbitration clause.
b. Johnson’s statement of claims
Moreover, in submitting the dispute to arbitration, Johnson’s claim was
broadly framed: He contended that The Aleut Corporation had breached the employment
agreement by failing to provide timely notice of its decision to terminate him. In his
statement of claims, Johnson requested that “the arbitrator find the Company failed to
timely exercise its option to terminate the automatic two-year extension of Mr. Johnson’s
Contract beyond March 31, 2010, [and] that the Company termination of Mr. Johnson’s
employment as CEO effective March 31, 2010, constituted a breach by the Company of
the Contract.” Johnson’s claim was based on the “company’s breach of the Contract.”
The arbitrator evidently understood Johnson’s claim in this manner, as the arbitrator
summarized the issue before him in similarly broad terms: whether “the termination of
Claimant’s employment by Respondent breach[ed] the Contract.” And in order to
determine whether a contract has been breached, it is predictably necessary to interpret
the language and meaning of the contract that is alleged to have been breached. As the
superior court recognized, “the parties do not appear to have explicitly limited the issues
submitted to the arbitrator.” Although Johnson acknowledged that he “was required to
notify the Chair of the Board in writing 120 days before the initial term expired of the
Company’s option to cancel the automatic extension,” the arbitrator ultimately had the
authority to rely on his “interpretation of . . . [the contract] provisions and his findings
regarding . . . contractual obligations” to determine whether the contract had been
-16- 6813
breached.27 Therefore, Johnson’s statement of claims indicates that the arbitrator’s
interpretation of the arbitrable dispute was reasonable.
c. The evidence presented at the arbitration hearing
Finally, as Johnson correctly observes, the arbitration briefs and hearing
“encompassed much more than the discussion [of] the notice provision.” In light of the
evidence presented, the arbitrator reasonably interpreted the dispute as whether The
Aleut Corporation breached the employment agreement by terminating Johnson. Over
the course of the two-day hearing, the arbitrator heard evidence not only on the narrow
factual issue of Lind’s receipt of Johnson’s notice letter, but also on the initial
negotiation of the employment agreement, the parties’ intent surrounding the provision
for automatic extension of the term, the recent negotiations, and Johnson’s performance
as CEO. And The Aleut Corporation explained that the motivation behind Paragraph 5
was a concern that the provision for terminating Johnson “could be inadvertently
forgotten,” so the attorney decided to include “a ‘triggering’ notice that would remind
the Board of its 90 day notice obligation.” And it was uncontested that The Aleut
Corporation was actually aware of its option to cancel the automatic extension of
Johnson’s term. In sum, the arbitrator reasonably interpreted the nature of the dispute
based on the scope of the evidence presented, and the arbitrator’s determination on
arbitrability was “reasonably possible.”28
27
See Ahtna, 894 P.2d at 663 (affirming the arbitrator’s decision based on the
arbitrator’s interpretation of various joint venture agreement provisions and his findings
on contractual obligations).
28
See Marathon Oil, 972 P.2d at 600; Ahtna, 894 P.2d at 663. The Aleut
Corporation relies on International Association of Machinists & Aerospace Workers,
District 776 v. Texas Steel Co., 639 F.2d 279 (5th Cir. Unit A Mar. 1981). But that
decision supports our deference to arbitration awards and stands for the proposition that
(continued...)
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2. The arbitrator had the authority to provide a different basis
than the parties for resolving the dispute.
“[A]n arbitrator’s misconstruction of a contract is not open to judicial
review, except on questions of arbitrability.”29 We have explained “that the arbitrator’s
reasons for the award will not be scrutinized by the court, so long as he has resolved an
arbitrable dispute.”30 The question presented in this case is whether the arbitrator was
28
(...continued)
arbitrators have broad authority “to decide just what the issue was that was submitted to
it and argued by the parties,” resolve procedural questions, and fashion appropriate
remedies. See id. at 283 (quoting Waverly Mineral Prods. Co. v. United Steelworkers
of Am., 633 F.2d 682, 685 (5th Cir. 1980)). The Aleut Corporation also claims that the
superior court properly decided that Johnson’s concessions on the meaning of
Paragraph 5 limited the issues before the arbitrator. Though the parties’ statement of
uncontested facts provided that “Paragraph 5 required Johnson to notify the Chair of
[The Aleut Corporation’s] Board . . . of [The Aleut Corporation]’s option to cancel,”
Johnson’s mere interpretation of the agreement does not constitute a concession. See
Kingery v. Barrett, 249 P.3d 275, 282 (Alaska 2011) (“ ‘A judicial admission, to be
binding, must be one of fact and not a conclusion of law or an expression of opinion.’ ”
(quoting Hayes v. Xerox Corp., 718 P.2d 929, 931 (Alaska 1986))); Pugliese v. Perdue,
988 P.2d 577, 580-81 (Alaska 1999) (concluding that statements were not binding
admissions because they were not the clear, deliberate, and unequivocal statements of
fact required for a judicial admission). More importantly, the fact that Johnson focused
on one basis for decision — the argument that he had provided actual notice — cannot
preclude the arbitrator from relying on a different basis for decision. See discussion infra
Part A.2.; Ahtna, 894 P.2d at 662-63.
29
OK Lumber Co. v. Alaska R.R. Corp., 123 P.3d 1076, 1078 (Alaska 2005)
(quoting Ahtna, 894 P.2d at 661) (internal quotation marks omitted).
30
Ahtna, 894 P.2d at 663 (upholding arbitrator’s award because arbitrator had
not exceeded scope of authority by relying on a different basis than the parties put forth);
see also Kinn v. Alaska Sales & Serv., Inc., 144 P.3d 474, 488 (Alaska 2006) (affirming
arbitrator’s award because the arbitrator was not so obviously wrong that all fair and
reasonable minds would find it impossible under the contract); OK Lumber, 123 P.3d at
(continued...)
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free to resolve an otherwise arbitrable dispute on a different basis than argued by the
parties.
We answered that question in Ahtna, Inc. v. Ebasco Constructors, Inc.,
where we concluded that arbitrators do have the authority to resolve an arbitrable dispute
on a basis that “differs from that which . . . was initially argued by the claimant.”31 In
that case, Ahtna and Ebasco entered into a joint venture agreement to prepare
construction proposals for a federal radar project that was later canceled.32 After learning
of the cancellation, Ebasco instructed Ahtna to prepare a claim showing its preparation
expenses so that Ebasco could submit the claim to the federal government to seek
remuneration for Ahtna’s significant preparation costs.33 Although Ahtna submitted its
claim to Ebasco, Ebasco failed to submit Ahtna’s claim to the federal government in a
timely manner.34 Ahtna argued that because Ebasco had failed to submit a timely claim
on behalf of Ahtna, it had therefore breached the joint venture agreement and owed
damages for the resulting losses.35
Relying on provisions of the agreement that had not been cited or relied on
by the parties, the arbitrator concluded that Ebasco had breached a different provision
30
(...continued)
1078-79 (concluding that arbitrator had not exceeded powers by resolving a matter of
disagreement under the lease); Dep’t of Pub. Safety v. Pub. Safety Emps. Ass’n, 732 P.2d
1090, 1097 (Alaska 1987) (deciding that the arbitrator had properly interpreted the issues
submitted and that the arbitrator had not exceeded his authority).
31
Ahtna, 894 P.2d at 663.
32
See id. at 658.
33
See id. at 659.
34
See id.
35
See id.
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of the joint venture agreement by failing to reimburse Ahtna directly for its expenses
under the reimbursement clause of the joint venture agreement.36 Ebasco disputed the
arbitration award, claiming that Ahtna had not presented this “reimbursement rationale”
to the arbitrator but rather had argued that Ebasco had failed to timely submit a claim on
behalf of Ahtna stemming from their joint venture.37 Ebasco contended that “the only
issue before the arbitrator in this case was Ebasco’s alleged failure to timely file Ahtna’s
claim, and that by partly basing his award on a separate theory — the reimbursement
rationale — the arbitrator exceeded his jurisdiction.”38
In Ahtna, we upheld the arbitrator’s award, concluding that the arbitrator
had “merely given a basis for the award which differs from that which, according to
Ebasco, was initially argued by the claimant.”39 We recognized that although the
arbitrator’s rationale for the decision may have differed from that argued by the parties,
there were “not two disputes, but one: whether Ebasco breached the [Joint Venture
Agreement].”40 We reasoned that the arbitrator’s reliance on the reimbursement clause
“to resolve a dispute arising under the contract . . . was clearly within the arbitrator’s
power, given [the Joint Venture Agreement’s] command that ‘[a]ll disputes arising out
of this Agreement shall be resolved by arbitration.’ ”41 We also concluded that the
arbitrator’s decision “rest[ed] on the arbitrator’s interpretation of various [Joint Venture
36
See id.
37
See id. at 662.
38
Id. at 663.
39
Id. (emphasis in original).
40
Id.
41
Id. at 662 (second alteration in original).
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Agreement] provisions and his findings regarding Ebasco’s contractual obligations
during the life of the Joint Venture. As such, it resolve[d] a dispute that [arose] out of
the contract, constitute[d] a proper basis for the award, and convince[d] us to reverse the
superior court’s decision.”42
Similarly, the arbitrator’s decision here relied on the arbitrator’s
interpretation of Paragraph 5 of the employment agreement and his findings regarding
the parties’ intent. Even though his rationale for determining that the employment
agreement was breached differed from that asserted by Johnson, the arbitrator had the
broad authority to interpret the provisions of the employment agreement in deciding
whether it had been breached.43 Because the arbitrator resolved an arbitrable dispute —
whether the employment agreement had been breached — and because the arbitrator had
the authority to resolve that question on a different theory than that argued by the parties,
we conclude that the superior court erred in vacating the arbitrator’s award.44
42
Id.
43
See id. at 662-63; see also OK Lumber Co. v. Alaska R.R. Corp., 123 P.3d
1076, 1078-79 (Alaska 2005) (holding that the arbitrator did not exceed his authority
because it was necessary to interpret the contract to resolve the parties’ dispute).
44
The Aleut Corporation further claims that the superior court correctly
“recognized the inherent unfairness resulting from Arbitrator Owens’s decision to
disregard the parties’ agreed upon position.” The superior court noted that, “[a]lthough
not controlling . . . allowing an arbitrator to rule on an issue in a manner contrary to what
the parties agreed upon in their filings violates basic tenets of due process because
neither party receives notice that the issue is under consideration or an opportunity to be
heard.” But here the superior court noted that “the arbitration was procedurally unfair”
for precisely the same reasons as its decision that the arbitrator exceeded his authority.
Because the arbitrator reasonably addressed the issue presented and did not exceed his
authority, we conclude that the arbitration did not violate principles of procedural
fairness.
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B. Attorney’s Fees
Because we reverse the superior court’s decision to vacate the arbitration
award, the award of attorney’s fees and costs must be vacated.
V. CONCLUSION
The arbitrator resolved an arbitrable dispute, and we therefore REVERSE
the superior court’s order vacating the arbitration award. The case is REMANDED with
direction to the superior court to confirm the arbitration award. The superior court’s
award of attorney’s fees and costs is VACATED.
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STOWERS, Justice, dissenting.
In Sea Star Stevedore Co. v. International Union of Operating Engineers,
Local 302, we held that arbitrators “are given broad powers to fashion remedies on
submitted issues. However, an arbitrator does not have the power to reach the merits of
a grievance not submitted to him.”1 Here, from the initiation of the arbitration process
to its close, Johnson repeatedly averred that he was required to provide notice to The
Aleut Corporation in order to trigger his contract extension. Similarly, from the initiation
of the arbitration process to its close, The Aleut Corporation agreed. When the arbitrator
nevertheless reached the issue of whether such notice was required — concluding that
it was not required — he reached an issue not submitted to him by the parties and thereby
exceeded his powers.2 I therefore dissent from the court’s opinion today and would
uphold the decision of the superior court vacating the arbitration award.
In the first paragraph of Johnson’s statement of claims initiating arbitration,
he stated the following: “Johnson was required to notify the Chair of the Board . . . of
the Company’s option to cancel the automatic extension; if he failed to give this notice,
then the automatic extension of the Contract would terminate at March 31, 2010, without
the Company needing to exercise its option to cancel the automatic extension.” Here it
is clear that among the myriad issues Johnson might be submitting to the arbitrator, he
was explicitly not submitting the issue of whether he was required to provide notice.
Rather, at the outset, he conceded that such notice was required. Johnson reiterated this
concession in the joint statement of uncontested facts that the parties submitted to the
arbitrator prior to the arbitration hearing. There, both parties agreed that Johnson’s
1
769 P.2d 428, 431 (Alaska 1989) (citing Hughes Aircraft Co. v. Elec. &
Space Technicians, Local 1553, 822 F.2d 823, 827 (9th Cir.1987)).
2
See AS 09.43.500(a)(4) (providing that “the court shall vacate an award
made in the arbitration proceeding if . . . an arbitrator exceeded the arbitrator’s powers”).
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employment agreement “required Johnson to notify the Chair of [The Aleut
Corporation’s] Board, Sharon Lind, of [The Aleut Corporation’s] option to cancel the
‘Option Term.’ ” Again, it is clear that both parties agreed Johnson was required to
provide notice. If both parties agree on a particular fact, there is no dispute between
them as to that fact — and thus no issue for the arbitrator to decide.
Further, at the arbitration hearing Johnson said and did nothing to call into
question his concession that he was required to provide notice. On the contrary, he
repeatedly affirmed that he was required to provide notice. For example, in Johnson’s
cross-examination of Thomas Daniel, Johnson’s attorney stated that The Aleut
Corporation’s “obligation to provide the notice to Mr. Johnson . . . was only triggered
if Mr. Johnson provided a notice.” Similarly, in Johnson’s closing argument he stated
that “[t]he only way [The Aleut Corporation] was ever obligated to provide notice that
it intended to cancel Mr. Johnson’s two-year automatic extension was if Mr. Johnson
first provided his notice of [The Aleut Corporation’s] obligation.”
In short, Johnson consistently affirmed throughout the arbitration process
that his employment agreement required him to provide notice in order to trigger the
contract extension. The superior court was therefore correct when it concluded that “it
is not reasonably possible that the scope of the arbitration required the arbitrator to
interpret the CEO Contract and determine if the Reminder Notice was a condition
precedent to the automatic renewal. . . . [T]he Court cannot find that where the parties
both agree that a particular outcome will occur if certain conditions are not met, the
arbitrator is free to disregard that agreement. That is exactly what happened in this
case.” Consequently, the superior court correctly ruled that the arbitrator “exceeded his
power when he concluded that his authority included the power to interpret the contract”
with respect to the issue of whether Johnson was required to provide notice.
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In support of its decision today that the arbitrator did not exceed his powers,
the court points to three sources of evidence: (1) the arbitration clause of the
employment agreement; (2) Johnson’s statement of claims; and (3) the evidence provided
at the arbitration hearing. Each of these sources of evidence, however, fails to show that
Johnson submitted the issue of whether he was required to provide notice.
First, it is true that Johnson’s contract included a broad arbitration clause.
It is also true that if Johnson had chosen to submit to arbitration the issue of whether he
was required to provide notice, such issue would have been within the scope of the
arbitration clause and within the arbitrator’s authority to decide. But, regardless of the
scope of the arbitration clause, the arbitrator is empowered to decide only those issues
that are submitted to him.3 Here, despite the breadth of the arbitration clause, Johnson
chose to narrow the scope of the arbitration and concede that at least one aspect of his
employment agreement — whether he was required to provide notice — was not in
dispute.
Second, the court observes that Johnson’s statement of claims was “broadly
framed” and generally based on the “company’s breach of the Contract.” However, the
next-to-last paragraph of Johnson’s statement of claims summarized his claim in the
following terms: “For the foregoing reasons, Mr. Johnson requests the arbitrator find
[The Aleut Corporation] failed to timely exercise its option to terminate . . . [and] that
[the] termination . . . constituted a breach by the [Corporation] of the Contract.”
Nowhere in the foregoing paragraphs of Johnson’s statement of claims did he argue that
he was not required to provide notice; rather, he clearly and explicitly stated that he was
required to provide notice (and argued that he had, in fact, provided such notice).
3
See, e.g., Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. v. Intel Corp., 885 P.2d 994, 1006
(Cal. 1994) (“Even where the parties’ original contract included a broad arbitration
clause, the arbitrator’s powers may be restricted by the limitation of issues submitted.”).
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Finally, the court cites the range of evidence presented at the arbitration
hearing in support of the conclusion that the issue submitted to the arbitrator was broader
than simply the question of whether Lind received Johnson’s notice. But the evidence
Johnson introduced during the hearing was introduced for the purpose of supporting his
argument that he had, in fact, provided notice. As the superior court found, “Johnson
never used the evidence he introduced to put the Reminder Notice provision’s intent at
issue.”
In support of its decision today, the court also relies on our decision in
Ahtna, Inc. v. Ebasco Constructors, Inc., in which we held that an arbitrator may resolve
a contract dispute on grounds that are not submitted by the parties.4 But we did not hold
that an arbitrator may resolve a dispute on grounds that both parties conceded were not
in controversy. In other words, in Ahtna the claimants (Ahtna) may have failed (by
omission) to argue that they were entitled to “reimbursement” under their contract with
Ebasco, but they never affirmatively stated that they were not entitled to such
reimbursement.5 Here, by contrast, Johnson did not merely fail to raise the question of
whether The Aleut Corporation might have been obligated to extend his contract even
if he did not provide notice; rather, he affirmatively and repeatedly stated that The Aleut
Corporation was obligated to extend his contract (or provide timely notice of non-
extension) only if Johnson first provided his notice.
The court today also cites our decision in Department of Public Safety v.
Public Safety Employees Association, explaining that we grant great deference to
arbitrators on questions submitted to arbitration in order to foster recourse to arbitration
4
894 P.2d 657, 662-63 (Alaska 1995).
5
Id. at 659-60.
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proceedings.6 This same policy, however, underlies our responsibility to vacate
decisions when arbitrators have clearly reached issues not submitted to them. As the
superior court points out, arbitration is “inherently a matter of agreement among the
parties.” It stands to reason that parties will be wary of having recourse to arbitration
proceedings if there is the danger that arbitrators will decide issues that both parties have
agreed not to submit to the arbitrator. Further, as The Aleut Corporation argues, “[a]n
arbitrator exceeding his or her authority is fundamentally different than an arbitrator
getting the facts or law of a case wrong” for “when an arbitrator exceeds his or her
authority by deciding an issue undisputed by the parties, the parties do not have even the
opportunity to present their case on that issue.”
In sum, despite Alaska’s strong public policy in favor of upholding
arbitration decisions, I agree with the superior court that this case “presents the rare
scenario where the arbitrator goes beyond the reasonably foreseeable scope of his
authority such that the Court must vacate his award.” This court has created a line of
precedent that gives great — virtually unreviewable — deference to arbitrators’
decisions, even where those decisions are factually and legally erroneous. Today’s
decision extends that deference to also permit an arbitrator to determine what the issue
is to be decided, even where both parties agreed they intended the arbitration to resolve
a different issue. I fear this court has abrogated its responsibility to review virtually any
error in arbitration, and I cannot agree with this decision because I believe the court has
a duty to ensure that — at the least — an arbitrator does not exceed the limits of his
authority. I therefore respectfully dissent.
6
732 P.2d 1090, 1097 (Alaska 1987).
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