J-A23033-19
2020 PA Super 29
DEBRA KOHLMAN, ADMINISTRATRIX : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
OF THE ESTATE OF FAY A. VINCENT, : PENNSYLVANIA
DECEASED :
:
:
v. :
:
:
GRANE HEALTHCARE COMPANY; :
HIGHLAND PARK CARE CENTER, LLC, :
D/B/A HIGHLAND PARK CARE :
CENTER; GRANE ASSOCIATES, LP; :
GRANE ASSOCIATES, INC.; GRANE :
PROPERTIES, INC.; TREBRO, INC.; :
HIGHLAND PARK PROPERTIES, LLC; :
UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH :
MEDICAL CENTER A/K/A UPMC; :
UPMC PRESBYTERIAN SHADYSIDE; :
UPMC SHADYSIDE HOSPITAL :
:
:
APPEAL OF: GRANE HEALTHCARE :
COMPANY; HIGHLAND PARK CARE :
CENTER, LLC, D/B/A HIGHLAND :
PARK CARE CENTER; GRANE :
ASSOCIATES, LP; GRANE :
ASSOCIATES, INC.; GRANE :
PROPERTIES, INC.; TREBRO, INC.; :
HIGHLAND PARK PROPERTIES, LLC : No. 144 WDA 2019
Appeal from the Order Entered January 2, 2019
in the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County
Civil Division at No(s): GD 18-010949
BEFORE: BENDER, P.J.E., KUNSELMAN, J., and MUSMANNO, J.
OPINION BY MUSMANNO, J.: FILED FEBRUARY 10, 2020
Grane Healthcare Company, Highland Park Care Center, LLC d/b/a
Highland Park Care Center, Grane Associates, LP, Grane Associates, Inc.,
Grane Properties, Inc., Trebro Inc., and Highland Park Properties, LLC
J-A23033-19
(collectively, “Defendants”), appeal from the Order denying their Preliminary
Objections seeking to compel arbitration of the claims asserted against
Defendants by Debra Kohlman (“Plaintiff”), Administratrix of the Estate of Fay
A. Vincent (“decedent”). We affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand for
further proceedings.
On January 31, 2017, decedent, who was 67 years old and Plaintiff’s
mother, was discharged from a Pittsburgh hospital (the “Hospital”)1 and
admitted for care and rehabilitation at Highland Park Care Center (“Highland
Park”),2 a skilled nursing home facility located in Pittsburgh. While she was
being admitted, decedent executed a two-page document entitled
“AGREEMENT TO ARBITRATE DISPUTES” (hereinafter, the “Arbitration
Agreement”).3
The Arbitration Agreement provides, in relevant part, as follows:
PLEASE READ CAREFULLY, YOU ARE GIVING UP YOUR
RIGHT TO SUE [HIGHLAND PARK] IN COURT
[Decedent] and [Highland Park] agree that all matters in
dispute between [decedent] and [Highland Park], its agents,
____________________________________________
1 Decedent was treated for various conditions at the Hospital, including
congestive heart failure, diabetes, and pressure ulcers. Decedent remained
in the Hospital for three months, two of which were in the intensive care unit.
2 Defendants collectively owned and operated Highland Park.
3The record does not contain the admission agreement concerning decedent’s
admission into Highland Park. Notably, nor does it explain the circumstances
surrounding decedent’s execution of the Arbitration Agreement and admission
agreement. However, it does indicate that the Arbitration Agreement is a
separate contract from the admission agreement.
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servants, employees, officers, contractors and affiliates
(hereinafter “the parties”), including but not limited to claims for
personal injuries or any controversy or claim between the parties
arising out of or relating to the agreement for admission and for
the provision of nursing facility services, whether by virtue of
contract, tort or otherwise, including the scope of this [A]rbitration
[A]greement and the arbitrability of any claim or dispute[,] shall
be resolved exclusively by binding arbitration. …
***
The parties agree that any administrative fees and costs,
including the fees of the arbitrator, shall be split equally between
the parties, and that each party shall be responsible for their own
attorneys’ fees.[4]
In the event that a court having jurisdiction finds any
portion of this agreement unenforceable, then that portion shall
not be effective and the remainder of the agreement shall remain
effective.
***
[Decedent] retains all rights under federal and state
law to file grievances with or to complain to authorities or
advocacy groups concerning care and treatment.
***
[Decedent] understands that he/she has the right to consult
legal counsel concerning this [A]rbitration [A]greement; that
execution of this [A]rbitration [A]greement is not a condition of
admission or to the furnishing of services to [decedent] by
[Highland Park]; and that this [A]rbitration [A]greement may be
rescinded by written notice delivered to [Highland Park] within ten
(10) days of signature. …
The undersigned certifies that he/she has read this
[A]rbitration [A]greement and that it has been fully explained to
him/her, that he/she understands its contents, and that he/she is
the Resident or a person duly authorized by the Resident or
otherwise to execute this agreement and accept its terms.
____________________________________________
4 We will hereinafter refer to this provision as the “fee-splitting provision.”
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Arbitration Agreement, 1/31/17 (footnote added; bold, underline and heading
capitalization in original). A representative of Highland Park also signed and
dated the Arbitration Agreement. Decedent died approximately three months
after her admission into Highland Park.
On August 27, 2018, Plaintiff filed a Complaint against, inter alia,
Defendants,5 alleging negligence, survival and wrongful death causes of
action. Plaintiff alleged that Defendants were negligent in their care and
treatment of decedent while she was a resident at Highland Park, which
caused her injuries and eventually led to her death. Plaintiff sought
compensatory and punitive damages.
On October 22, 2018, and November 13, 2018, Defendants filed
Preliminary Objections to the Complaint.6 Therein, Defendants asserted, in
relevant part, that Plaintiff’s claims must be resolved via arbitration, pursuant
to the Arbitration Agreement. Plaintiff thereafter filed a Response to the
Preliminary Objections, asserting, inter alia, that the Arbitration Agreement
was unenforceable, void, unconscionable, against public policy, and the
____________________________________________
5The Complaint also named as defendants University of Pittsburgh Medical
Center, a/k/a UPMC, UPMC Presbyterian Shadyside, and UPMC Shadyside
Hospital (collectively, “the UPMC defendants”). The UPMC defendants are not
parties to the instant appeal, and did not file a brief.
6 Defendants did not attach a Notice to Plead to their Preliminary Objections,
as required by Allegheny County Local Rule 1028(c)(2) (providing that if an
issue of fact is raised in preliminary objections, they “must be endorsed with
notice to plead[.]”).
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product of duress. The trial court heard oral argument on the matter on
January 2, 2019, wherein the parties’ respective counsel disputed the
enforceability of the Arbitration Agreement. Importantly to this appeal, the
parties did not engage in any discovery prior to the trial court’s ruling on the
Preliminary Objections.
By an Order dated January 2, 2019, and entered on January 8, 2019,
the trial court denied Defendants’ Preliminary Objection to compel arbitration.
Defendants timely filed a Notice of Appeal. The trial court ordered Defendants
to file a Pa.R.A.P. 1925(b) concise statement of errors complained of on
appeal, and Defendants timely complied. The trial court then issued a Rule
1925(a) Opinion.
In its Opinion, the trial court ruled, in relevant part, as follows:
Plaintiff is entitled to a trial on the wrongful death cause of
action, notwithstanding the Arbitration Agreement.7 See Trial
Court Opinion, 3/13/19, at 4.
“[T]he standards for a valid and enforceable agreement to
arbitrate cannot be met where an ill or damaged patient signs
such an agreement as either an implicit or explicit condition of
admission to a health care facility, such as [Highland Park]
here.” Id.
The “[fee-splitting] provision in the [Arbitration] Agreement[,
which states] that an injured patient has also agreed to pay for
the Arbitrator’s services and to have given up his or her right
to a trial in a court before a judge and jury, where there is no
____________________________________________
7 As we discuss below, Defendants do not dispute that Plaintiff’s wrongful
death action must proceed to court; thus, their claim under the Arbitration
Agreement concerns only the survival action.
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charge to litigants for those services, defines overreach and
chutzpah.” Id.
Defendants failed to meet “their burden to show that
[d]ecedent knew what she was giving up and what expense
she was accepting when she signed” the Arbitration
Agreement. Id. at 4-5.
Defendants’ attempt to enforce the Arbitration Agreement
“with an allegedly elderly woman in frail health and in need of
advanced wound care, is facially unconscionable and procured
under duress[,]” and the Arbitration Agreement is thus void,
and Plaintiff’s survival action must proceed to court. Id. at 4.
On appeal, Defendants present the following issue for our review:
“Whether the court below erred by overruling Preliminary Objections seeking
to compel the matter to arbitration pursuant to a binding agreement to
arbitrate disputes?” Brief for Defendants at 3.
This Court previously set forth our standard of review and the relevant
law as follows:
Our review of a claim that the trial court improperly denied
the appellant’s preliminary objections in the nature of a petition
to compel arbitration is limited to determining whether the trial
court’s findings are supported by substantial evidence and
whether the trial court abused its discretion in denying the
petition.
***
[C]ourts must bear in mind:
(1) arbitration agreements are to be strictly construed
and not extended by implication; and (2) when parties
have agreed to arbitrate in a clear and unmistakable
manner, every reasonable effort should be made to
favor the agreement unless it may be said with
positive assurance that the arbitration clause involved
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is not susceptible to an interpretation that covers the
asserted dispute.
***
Pennsylvania law endorses the nationally accepted liberal
policy favoring arbitration embodied in the Federal Arbitration
Act at 9 U.S.C. §§ 1-16 (“FAA”):
The enactment of the FAA expresses a liberal federal policy
favoring arbitration agreements. Congress[’s] purpose was to
overcome state legislative and judicial efforts to undermine the
enforceability of arbitration agreements, inter alia, by establishing
a substantive rule of federal law placing such agreements upon
the same footing as other contracts. The federal statute thus
requires that a written provision to settle by arbitration a
controversy thereafter arising out of such contract or transaction
shall be valid, irrevocable, and enforceable, save upon any
grounds at law or in equity for the revocation of any contract.
Griest v. Griest, 183 A.3d 1015, 1022 (Pa. Super. 2018) (citations, brackets,
ellipses, footnote and indents omitted).
We are further guided by the reasoning of our Pennsylvania Supreme
Court in Taylor v. Extendicare Health Facilities, Inc., 147 A.3d 490 (Pa.
2016):
[W]hile state courts have attempted to reconcile their state law
contract defenses and public policy protections with the
preemptive effect of the FAA, see, e.g., [AT&T Mobility, LLC v.]
Concepcion[,] 563 U.S. [333,] 342 [(2011)] (recognizing that
“the judicial hostility toward[] arbitration that prompted the FAA
had manifested itself in “a great variety” of “devices and formulas”
declaring arbitration against public policy”), the United States
Supreme Court has endeavored to compel judicial acceptance of
private agreements to arbitrate. The FAA is now perceived as
applying to almost every arbitration agreement, although the
savings clause envisions a limited role for state law. In this
respect, arbitration has come a long way from its origin as a
mutually agreed-upon method of dispute resolution by two
business entities of equal bargaining power, and now is employed
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in a variety of contracts, many of which are contracts of adhesion.
As arbitration clauses proliferate, individuals will ever more
broadly exchange their right to a jury trial for basic consumer
products or nursing home care.
One of the striking consequences of the shift away from the
civil justice system and toward private adjudication is that
corporations are routinely stripping individuals of their
constitutional right to a jury trial. See U.S. Const. amend.
VII (preserving the right to a trial by jury); Pa. Const. art. 1, § 6
(same). While one’s right to a jury trial may be waived, it is not
at all apparent that signatories to arbitration agreements are
aware that they waive their right to a jury trial upon the execution
of an arbitration agreement.
The West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals highlighted this
constitutional concern in Brown et al[.] v. Marmet Health Care
Ctr. et al[.], 228 W. Va. 646, 724 S.E.2d 250 (W.Va. 2011).
Relying in part upon the state constitution’s provision of the right
to a jury trial, W. Va. Const. art. III, § 13, the West Virginia court
criticized the [United States] Supreme Court’s decisions granting
the FAA sweeping preemptive effect. Brown, 724 S.E.2d at
278 (“With tendentious reasoning, the United States Supreme
Court has stretched the application of the FAA from being a
procedural statutory scheme effective only in the federal courts,
to being a substantive law that preempts state law in both the
federal and state courts.”). Based upon its belief that Congress
did not intend for all arbitration agreements to be governed by the
FAA, the state court held that the FAA did not apply to pre-dispute
agreements to arbitrate negligence claims in nursing home
contracts. Id. at 291-92 ([stating that] “[a]s a matter of public
policy under West Virginia law, an arbitration clause in a nursing
home admission agreement adopted prior to an occurrence of
negligence that results in personal injury or death, shall not be
enforced to compel arbitration of a dispute concerning the
negligence.”).
On appeal, the [United States] Supreme Court was
unsympathetic to the [West Virginia] court’s concern for the right
to a jury trial. In a cursory per curiam opinion, the Supreme Court
reversed, and chastised the West Virginia court for “misreading
and disregarding the precedents of this Court interpreting the
FAA.” Marmet [Health Care Ctr., Inc. v. Brown, 565 U.S. 530,
531 (2012) (per curiam)]. The Court held that the state’s public
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policy rationale constituted “a categorical rule prohibiting
arbitration of a particular type of claim,” which the Court held was
“contrary to the terms and coverage of the FAA” and, therefore,
preempted. Id. at [533]; see [also] Nitro-Lift Techs., L.L.C.
v. Howard, 568 U.S. 17 … (2012) (per curiam) (invalidating a
state law that required the validity of non-compete provisions in
employment contracts to be resolved judicially).[FN]
[FN]Interestingly, upon remand from the Supreme Court,
the West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals again
declared that the arbitration agreements at issue could
be invalid, this time based upon common-law grounds of
unconscionability, and remanded for the development of
a record to assess these common-law arguments.
Brown et al v. Marmet Health Care Ctr. et al, 229 W.
Va. 382, 729 S.E.2d 217, 223 (W.Va. 2012)
[(hereinafter, Brown II)].
With this Supreme Court jurisprudence in mind, and
solicitous of our obligation to consider questions of arbitrability
with a “healthy regard for the federal policy favoring arbitration,”
Moses H. Cone [Mem’l Hosp. v. Mercury Constr. Corp.], 460
U.S. [1,] 2[4] [(1983)], we observe that Section 2 of the FAA
binds state courts to compel arbitration of claims subject to an
arbitration agreement. 9 U.S.C. § 2 (providing that arbitration
agreements “shall be valid, irrevocable, and enforceable”). This
directive is mandatory, requiring parties to proceed to arbitration
on issues subject to a valid arbitration agreement, even if a state
law would otherwise exclude it from arbitration. Mastrobuono
v. Shearson Lehman Hutton, Inc., 514 U.S. 52 … (1995).
The only exception to a state’s obligation to enforce an
arbitration agreement is provided by the savings clause, which
permits the application of generally applicable state contract law
defenses such as fraud, duress, or unconscionability,[8] to
____________________________________________
8 Concerning the defense of unconscionability, we have explained that
“[u]nconscionability has generally been recognized to include an absence of
meaningful choice on the part of one of the parties[,] together with contract
terms which are unreasonably favorable to the other party.” Cardinal v.
Kindred Healthcare, Inc., 155 A.3d 46, 53 (Pa. Super. 2017) (citation
omitted).
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determine whether a valid contract exists. [Doctor’s Assocs. v.]
Casarotto, 517 U.S. [681,] 687 [(1996)]; Volt [Info. Scis. v.
Bd. Of Trs.], 489 U.S. [468,] 476 [(1989)]; Perry [v. Thomas],
482 U.S. [483,] 492 n.9 [(1987)].
Taylor, 147 A.3d at 507-09 (Pa. 2016) (footnote added, some footnotes and
brackets omitted).9 Additionally, this Court has explained that “the existence
of an arbitration provision and a liberal policy favoring arbitration does not
require the rubber stamping of all disputes as subject to arbitration.” Pisano
v. Extendicare Homes, Inc., 77 A.3d 651, 661 (Pa. Super. 2013) (citation
omitted).
Initially, Defendants do not dispute that Plaintiff is entitled to a trial on
the wrongful death cause of action, notwithstanding the Arbitration
Agreement. See Brief for Defendants at 32 (citing Pisano, 77 A.3d at 663
(stating that “Pennsylvania’s wrongful death statute creates an independent
action distinct from a survival claim that, although derived from the same
tortious conduct, is not derivative of the rights of the decedent. We conclude,
therefore, that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in determining that
____________________________________________
9 Though the Taylor Court held that the FAA binds state courts to compel
arbitration of claims subject to an arbitration agreement, even if a state law
would exclude it from arbitration, Taylor, 147 A.3d at 509, the court went on
to remand the case to the trial court to afford the parties “the opportunity to
litigate whether there is a valid and enforceable arbitration contract in accord
with generally applicable contract defenses and the FAA’s savings
clause.” Id. at 513.
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Decedent’s contractual agreement with [the nursing home] to arbitrate all
claims was not binding on the non-signatory wrongful death claimants.”)).
We next turn to Defendants’ claim that the trial court erred in denying
their Preliminary Objection to compel arbitration of the survival action, and
ruling that the Arbitration Agreement was unconscionable and, thus, void.
See Brief for Defendants at 15-27.
Because the record has not been sufficiently developed to address
Plaintiff’s contract law unconscionability defense, it would be premature at this
point to reach the merits of Defendants’ claim. In this regard, we are
persuaded by the following argument advanced by Plaintiff:
Plaintiff was not afforded an opportunity to conduct discovery on
the issue of whether a valid and enforceable contract to arbitrate
exists. Instead, Plaintiff set forth grounds upon which the
proffered [A]rbitration [A]greement could be set aside as a matter
of law. But[,] “where material facts are disputed … concerning
the general commercial background underlying a challenged
transaction …[,] fact finding may be necessary.” Salley v. Option
One Mortg. Corp., 925 A.2d 115, 120 (Pa. 2007).[10] In light of
allegations that a contract is unconscionable, “the parties are to
be afforded an opportunity to present evidence as to commercial
setting, purpose and effect to aid the court in its determination.”
Id.
Further, a preliminary objection in the nature of a motion to
compel arbitration “cannot be determined from facts of record.”
Pa.R.Civ.P. 1028(a)(6)[, (c)(2), note]. And “[i]f an issue of fact
is raised, the court shall consider evidence by depositions or
otherwise.” Pa.R.Civ.P. 1028(c)(2).
____________________________________________
10 The Salley Court further stated that although the question of
unconscionability is “ultimately a question of law for the court to decide[,]”
the matter is also “often fact-sensitive[.]” Salley, 925 A.2d at 124.
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Brief for Plaintiff at 20-21 (footnote added; footnote in original omitted).
Indeed, in Taylor, supra, this Court declined to address the plaintiff’s
generally applicable contract defenses, including unconscionability, where
plaintiffs did not have the opportunity to present these issues in the lower
courts, and directed that “[u]pon remand to the trial court, the parties will
have the opportunity to litigate whether there is a valid and enforceable
arbitration contract in accord with generally applicable contract defenses and
the FAA’s savings clause.” Taylor, 147 A.3d at 512-13; see also id., supra
(pointing out that the West Virginia state court, in Brown II, remanded for
the development of a record to assess the plaintiff’s claim of unconscionability
of the nursing home arbitration agreement, where the parties did not have
the opportunity to conduct discovery and develop the record on this matter).
Here, the record was not developed to establish facts surrounding, inter
alia, the following:
decedent’s physical and mental state at the time that she
executed the Arbitration Agreement;11
whether decedent was accompanied by anyone at this time;
the nature of the admission agreement that decedent executed
(and whether the Arbitration Agreement was part of, or buried
within, a potentially lengthy admissions packet that decedent
was required to complete, while in ill health);
____________________________________________
11 We are naturally cognizant that decedent’s death will limit the amount of
facts that can be uncovered surrounding some of the circumstances of
decedent’s execution of the Arbitration Agreement; nevertheless, the parties
are entitled to develop the record on the unconscionability claim. See Taylor,
147 A.3d at 512-13.
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whether the Hospital sent the ill decedent directly to Highland
Park upon her discharge from the Hospital;
whether decedent was aware that she could receive treatment
from other skilled nursing care facilities, and whether she had
the ability to research other options;
whether decedent was economically constrained to enter into
an agreement with Highland Park to provide her care (and
relatedly, whether she had the means to pay for arbitration).
Accordingly, we remand for the parties to conduct discovery, and
develop the record on the defense of unconscionability related to the survival
action, and for a proper consideration by the trial court as to whether the
Arbitration Agreement is unconscionable, based on a complete record. See
Taylor, 147 A.3d at 512-13. Thus, we affirm the trial court’s Order refusing
to compel arbitration of the wrongful death action, and vacate that part of the
Order denying Defendants’ Preliminary Objection seeking to compel
arbitration of the survival action, and remand consistent with the foregoing.
Order affirmed in part and reversed in part. Case remanded for further
proceedings consistent with this Opinion. Jurisdiction relinquished.
Judgment Entered.
Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
Prothonotary
Date: 2/10/2020
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