IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF IDAHO
Docket No. 49933
)
PAT STIFFLER, an individual, )
)
Plaintiff-Appellant, )
)
v. )
)
HYDROBLEND, INC. doing business as HB ) Boise, June 2023 Term
SPECIALTY FOODS, a business )
corporation, ) Opinion Filed: September 8, 2023
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Defendant-Respondent, ) Melanie Gagnepain, Clerk
)
and )
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JOHN DOE CORPORATIONS I-V, )
)
Defendants. )
_______________________________________ )
Appeal from the District Court of the Third Judicial District of the State of Idaho,
Canyon County. Davis VanderVelde, District Judge.
The judgment of the district court is affirmed in part and reversed in part.
Hepworth Law Offices, Boise, for Appellant. Jeffrey Hepworth argued.
Hawley Troxell Ennis & Hawley, LLP, Boise, for Respondent. Tyler Anderson
argued.
_____________________
BRODY, Justice.
This case concerns a wage claim dispute between Pat Stiffler and his previous employer,
Hydroblend, Inc. After a dispute arose concerning incentive pay on an allegedly miscoded account,
Stiffler filed a complaint for unpaid wages, breach of contract, retaliation, and wrongful
termination. The proceedings culminated with two orders from the district court that (1) awarded
summary judgment to Hydroblend concerning treble damages, (2) concluded multiple issues were
governed by an arbitration provision in Stiffler’s employment agreement, and (3) denied summary
judgment where disputed facts remained at issue. Stiffler appeals the district court’s decisions,
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arguing that he is entitled to treble damages on all wages under Idaho’s Wage Claim Act, as well
as severance pay under his 2019 employment contract. Stiffler also argues that the district court
erred by compelling arbitration of some of his claims. For the following reasons, we affirm in part
and reverse in part.
I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
A. Stiffler’s Employment with Hydroblend
For over ten years, Stiffler was employed by Hydroblend, Inc. (“Hydroblend”), a Nampa
corporation that is involved in the food industry. Most recently, Stiffler served as a vice president
of strategy and growth for the company.
For purposes of calculating revenue and expenses, Hydroblend’s accounting system codes
customer accounts and business lines generally as “diversified business” or “house accounts” (also
known as “core accounts”). In 2019, Stiffler entered into a new employment contract with
Hydroblend (the “2019 Contract”), which provided compensation in the form of annual base pay
plus commission-based incentive pay accrued as a percentage of revenue earned on diversified
business accounts assigned to Stiffler. Incentive pay was to be calculated and paid quarterly, with
final yearly incentive pay, if any, to be payable some time prior to March 1 of the year after it
became due. The 2019 Contract also specified that Hydroblend’s accounting system assigns codes
to accounts and business lines, and was “determinative as to whether related income/expenses is
considered Diversified Business.”
In October 2019, Stiffler began working with Diversified Foods & Seasonings, LLC
(“DFS”). DFS was an existing customer previously assigned to another Hydroblend salesman, but
was eventually assigned to Stiffler sometime later that year. DFS was entered into Hydroblend’s
accounting system as a core account, yet Hydroblend paid Stiffler quarterly incentive pay on the
account. This assignment is important because there is conflicting evidence in the record as to how
the DFS account should have been coded. Some evidence suggests that DFS was meant to be coded
as diversified business, which would entitle Stiffler to incentive pay pursuant to his 2019 Contract.
Other evidence suggests that DFS was supposed to be coded as a “house account” or “core
account,” as it was assigned, upon which no commissions would be paid. Nonetheless, Stiffler
received incentive pay for the DFS account for the first three quarters of 2020.
In late 2020, Hydroblend informed Stiffler that it wished to enter into a new employment
contract with him. Stiffler rejected the first proposal, but executed the second proposed contract
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after “much discussion” with Hydroblend. This employment agreement became effective January
1, 2021 (the “2021 Contract”), and contains an integration provision that expressly states that the
2021 Contract constitutes the entire agreement between the parties as of the effective date of the
agreement and that it supersedes and replaces all prior agreements:
On the Effective Date of this Agreement, this Agreement will supersede and replace
all prior agreements between the parties hereto, whether in writing or otherwise,
relating to the subject matter hereof. On the Effective Date of this Agreement, this
Agreement will contain the entire agreement of the parties, and no representations,
inducements, promises, or agreements, oral or otherwise, not embodied herein, will
be of any force or effect.
Additional terms of the 2021 Contract pertinent to this appeal are those involving severance,
compensation, and resolution of claims. Any severance was to be paid as follows: “25% of the
amount of Severance will be paid within ten (10) days of Employee’s last day of work, with the
remaining 75% paid in twelve (12) equal monthly installments every month thereafter.” This
severance-pay provision in the 2021 Contract is the same as the provision in the 2019 Contract.
Similar to the 2019 Contract, compensation consisted of annual base pay and incentive pay, though
under the 2021 Contract Stiffler’s incentive pay became capped and was calculated as a percentage
of revenue earned on “strategic account customers.”
The 2021 Contract also contains a mediation and arbitration clause that did not exist in the
2019 Contract. The mediation and arbitration clause in the 2021 Contract reads as follows:
6.1.1 Mediation. In the event of any controversy or claim arising out of or
relating to this Agreement, or a breach thereof, the parties hereto shall first attempt
to settle the dispute by mediation. The party seeking to mediate any controversy or
claim arising out of or relating to this Agreement shall give the other party advance
written notice of its intent to mediate, and such written notice shall describe in detail
the alleged controversy or claim at issue. Mediation shall be held in Ada or Canyon
County, Idaho, within sixty (60) days of the notice described in the preceding
sentence. Mediation hereunder shall be administered by the American Arbitration
Association under its Mediation Rules. If settlement is not reached at mediation,
any unresolved controversy or claim shall be settled by arbitration as set forth in
Article 7.01(b) below.
6.1.2 Arbitration. Any dispute, controversy or claim arising out of or
relating in any way to this Agreement, including, without limitation, any dispute
concerning the construction, validity, interpretation, enforceability or breach of this
Agreement, that is not settled via mediation shall be exclusively resolved by
binding arbitration upon a party’s submission of the dispute to arbitration. The
demand for arbitration shall be made within a reasonable time after mediation.
Arbitration hereunder shall be administered by the American Arbitration
Association under its Commercial Arbitration Rules.
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The number of arbitrators shall be one. The place of arbitration shall be
Boise, Idaho, and all parties hereto consent to jurisdiction in said city and state.
Judgment on the award rendered by the arbitrator may be entered in any court
having jurisdiction thereof. This agreement to arbitrate shall be specifically
enforceable, and either party may apply to any court with jurisdiction for interim or
conservatory relief, including, without limitation, a proceeding to compel
arbitration.
Notably, “Article 7.01(b),” mentioned in the first paragraph, is not present in the 2021 Contract,
but an arbitration provision still follows the mediation section.
B. Termination and Litigation
In January of 2021, Hydroblend’s executives met, in part, to discuss reconciliation of the
company’s accounts. At that time, executives learned that Stiffler had been receiving incentive pay
on the DFS account, but, as of that meeting, the company had not yet paid Stiffler any 2020 Quarter
4 incentive pay. Because DFS was coded as a core account—and not a diversified business
account—in Hydroblend’s accounting system, Hydroblend decided not to pay Stiffler incentive
pay under the 2019 Contract for the DFS account. Hydroblend explained the decision to Stiffler
on January 22, 2021. About two weeks later, on February 5, Stiffler’s lawyer sent Hydroblend a
letter demanding (1) payment of the 2020 Quarter 4 incentive pay due under the 2019 Contract
and (2) rescission of the 2021 Contract. Hydroblend received the letter on February 8. The letter
instructed all communications regarding legal matters to be directed solely to Stiffler’s counsel,
but stated Stiffler would continue to report to work.
On February 10, Hydroblend responded through counsel, indicating that no incentive pay
was due and declining Stiffler’s request to rescind the 2021 Contract. Counsel for Stiffler replied
in a letter dated February 16, stating Hydroblend’s letter refusing to pay the Quarter 4 incentive
pay constituted termination without cause, and demanding payment of severance pay by February
20. No demand for incentive pay was made at this point other than a statement that legal action
would be pursued with respect thereto. Stiffler filed a complaint the same day. On February 18,
Hydroblend sent a letter confirming Stiffler’s employment was at an end, and tendered base salary
earned through February 1, 2021, along with Stiffler’s final yearly incentive pay (the 2020 Quarter
4 payment). At no time before the initiation of this suit did either party make any attempt to resolve
the dispute through mediation or arbitration.
Stiffler’s complaint against Hydroblend raised claims for unpaid wages, breach of contract,
wrongful termination, and a request to rescind the 2021 Contract. Stiffler alleged that “Hydroblend
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effectively terminated [him] without cause as of February 10, 2021.” Two weeks later, Stiffler
filed an amended complaint that asserted the same claims but included a demand for severance
pay plus treble damages. Hydroblend filed a motion to dismiss and compel arbitration as to
Stiffler’s claims for wrongful termination and rescission of the 2021 Contract. Hydroblend also
filed a motion for summary judgment as to Stiffler’s claim for unpaid wages of his Quarter 4
incentive pay under Idaho Code section 45-615. Multiple depositions, rounds of briefing, and a
hearing on the merits followed.
The district court granted Hydroblend’s motion to dismiss and compel arbitration with
respect to Stiffler’s claims of wrongful termination and rescission of the 2021 Contract. The district
court also granted Hydroblend’s motion for summary judgment as to Stiffler’s unpaid wages claim,
but only as it related to incentive pay. The district court determined that the incentive pay owed to
Stiffler was timely paid by Hydroblend within 10 days of Stiffler’s termination, as required by
Idaho’s Wage Claim Act (I.C. § 45-606(1)). However, because Hydroblend’s summary judgment
motion was limited to the issue of incentive pay, the claim for severance pay remained a viable
issue before the court. Thus, the district court denied Hydroblend’s motion for summary judgment
as to the issue of severance pay.
While Hydroblend’s motions were pending, Stiffler filed a motion and cross-motion for
summary judgment as to his claim for treble damages on the incentive pay and severance pay
prayed for in his amended complaint. He also sought to certify issues for appeal regarding his
wrongful termination and rescission claims under the 2021 Contract. The district court issued an
order clarifying its prior decision, denying Stiffler’s motion for summary judgment as to breach of
contract and wrongful termination (for being moot), and granted Stiffler’s motion to certify the
remaining issues for appeal. Because Hydroblend had requested additional time to respond to
Stiffler’s motion for summary judgment, the case was set for status conference to determine how
the parties wished to proceed on the remaining claim for severance pay. Based on the clarification
of the district court’s prior decision, Stiffler withdrew the motion to certify and opted not to
proceed with the appeal at that time.
The parties thereafter fully briefed Stiffler’s remaining motion for summary judgment on
the issue of breach of contract under the Wage Claim Act. The district court explained that “[t]he
briefing made it clear that relief was being sought in Claim One [unpaid wages] on more grounds
than the [district court] previously understood.” The briefing also clarified that Stiffler’s claim
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sought damages for a breach of contract under the Wage Claim Act on two grounds: (1) failure to
pay incentive pay and (2) failure to pay severance. It was at this time that Hydroblend filed a
motion to reconsider or, in the alternative, a second motion to compel arbitration, seeking to
resolve the severance issue from the district court’s earlier decision on summary judgment. Stiffler
filed a motion to strike multiple declarations from Hydroblend in response, which the district court
denied.
In reviewing Stiffler’s breach of contract claims, the district court concluded that the 2019
Contract controlled the issue of incentive pay earned during 2020. The relevant terms of that
agreement are as follows:
2. COMPENSATION
A. Annual Base Pay: . . .
B. Incentive Pay: Executive shall receive incentive pay as set forth in this
Paragraph 2(b) (“Incentive Pay”). Incentive Pay may be increased by the
Company at any time, but Incentive Pay shall not be subject to an arbitrary or
unreasonable reduction. Incentive Pay shall be prorated if Executive’s
employment is terminated during the year. Incentive Pay shall be calculated
and paid as follows:
(i) Definitions:
“Diversified Business”: are those accounts and business lines that are
assigned to the Company’s Diversified Business Unit. The Company’s
accounting system codes accounts and business lines, and corresponding
revenue and expenses, as “Diversified Business.” For purposes of this
agreement, the Company’s accounting system shall be determinative as to
whether related Income/expenses is considered Diversified Business, but
accounts and business lines will not be removed arbitrarily or unreasonably.
Although there was some evidence that DFS had been assigned or intended to be assigned to
Stiffler’s diversified business unit, and thus accrue incentive pay, the district court found that DFS
was not coded as diversified business in Hydroblend’s accounting system. However, the district
court concluded a genuine issue of material fact remained as to whether DFS was meant to be
coded as a diversified business account or whether Hydroblend had made incentive payments to
Stiffler throughout 2020 in error, which precluded the district court from resolving these claims
on summary judgment. As for severance pay, the district court concluded that summary judgment
was unwarranted because the 2021 Contract controlled. The 2021 Contract provided that severance
pay was only due in a termination without cause situation where Hydroblend’s decision was
“arbitrary” or constituted an “unreasonable action.” Because this created a question of fact for the
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jury, the district court determined that summary judgment on the severance pay claim would be
inappropriate.
The final issue before the district court concerned Hydroblend’s motion to reconsider and
its arguments that the 2021 Contract controlled and mandated arbitration of the claims for unpaid
wages on both severance and incentive pay. Stiffler responded that the 2019 Contract, “which
does not have a mediation/arbitration provision, controls because the facts resulting in the
termination arose out of Hydroblend’s refusal to pay money earned under the 2019 contract.”
Based on the plain language of the two contracts—focusing on the merger and integration
language—the district court concluded that “the language of the 2021 contract limits itself to
dealing with compensation beginning in 2021 and claims arising out of the 2021 contract,” while
“the issue of incentive pay arises under the 2019 contract and is subject to the terms of that
contract.” The court then separated the claims of severance pay and incentive pay. Because
Stiffler’s claim for the incentive pay arose under the 2019 Contract, the court determined it was
not subject to arbitration. However, the court dismissed Stiffler’s claims for severance pay because
it concluded they arose under the 2021 Contract and were therefore subject to its mediation and
arbitration provision. The court then concluded that the severance pay claim needed to be
dismissed so it could be arbitrated.
Stiffler timely appealed.
II. STANDARDS OF REVIEW
“When reviewing the grant of a motion for summary judgment, we apply the same standard
used by the district court in ruling on the motion.” Wattenbarger v. A.G. Edwards & Sons, Inc.,
150 Idaho 308, 317, 246 P.3d 961, 970 (2010) (citing Van v. Portneuf Med. Ctr., 147 Idaho 552,
556, 212 P.3d 982, 986 (2009)). Summary judgment is properly granted when “ ‘the pleadings,
depositions, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no
genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter
of law.’ ” Van, 147 Idaho at 556, 212 P.3d at 986 (quoting I.R.C.P. 56(c)). The court must construe
the record in favor of the nonmoving party, drawing all reasonable inferences in that party’s favor.
Id. If it finds that reasonable minds could differ on conclusions drawn from the evidence presented,
the motion must be denied. Id. The burden of demonstrating the absence of a genuine issue of
material fact falls on the moving party. Id.
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“When ruling on a motion to compel arbitration, the district court applies the same standard
as if ruling on a motion for summary judgment.” Wattenbarger, 150 Idaho at 317, 246 P.3d at 970;
Mason v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 145 Idaho 197, 200, 177 P.3d 944, 947 (2007).
Accordingly, the court exercises free review over questions of arbitrability and may draw its own
conclusions from the evidence presented. Mason, 145 Idaho at 200, 177 P.3d at 947; T3 Enters.,
Inc. v. Safeguard Bus. Sys., Inc., 164 Idaho 738, 744–45, 435 P.3d 518, 524–25 (2019). “A court
reviewing an arbitration clause will order arbitration unless ‘it may be said with positive assurance
that the arbitration clause is not susceptible of an interpretation that covers the asserted dispute.’
Doubts are to be ‘resolved in favor of coverage.’ ” Storey Constr., Inc. v. Hanks, 148 Idaho 401,
412, 224 P.3d 468, 479 (2009) (quoting Int’l Ass’n. of Firefighters, Local No. 672 v. City of
Boise, 136 Idaho 162, 168, 30 P.3d 940, 946 (2001)).
Determining the scope of an arbitration clause is a question of contractual interpretation.
In determining the meaning of a contract, “[w]hen the language of a contract is clear and
unambiguous,” its meaning and legal effect are questions of law over which we exercise free
review. Lamprecht v. Jordan, LLC, 139 Idaho 182, 185, 75 P.3d 743, 746 (2003). “A contract is
ambiguous if it is reasonably subject to conflicting interpretations,” which will render
interpretation of the contract a question of fact. Id. at 185–86, 75 P.3d at 746–47. The relevant
inquiry in determining whether a contract is ambiguous is the meaning intended by the parties at
the time of contracting, not at some future time. Id. at 185, 75 P.3d at 746.
III. ANALYSIS
A. Stiffler is not entitled to treble damages on incentive pay under the Idaho Wage Claim
Act.
In determining whether Stiffler is entitled to treble damages on his Quarter 4 incentive pay
pursuant to the Wage Claim Act, we must review the district court’s determination that Hydroblend
complied with the Act by tendering incentive pay within the applicable time limit under Idaho
Code section 45-606(1). If Hydroblend did not, Stiffler would be entitled to treble damages on
incentive pay based on Idaho Code section 45-615(2). The district court granted Hydroblend’s
summary judgment motion on this issue of treble damages on finding that the Quarter 4 incentive
pay was tendered within the statutory 10-day limit. The court also concluded that the 48-hour rule
under Idaho Code section 45-606(1) did not apply. We agree with the district court’s analysis and
reasoning.
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Before the district court, Stiffler alleged that he had been “effectively terminated . . .
without cause as of February 10, 2021.” Idaho’s Wage Claim Act provides that an employer must
pay all wages due within 10 days of termination, or within 48 hours “if the employee makes written
request . . . for earlier payment of wages.” I.C. § 45-606(1). Failure to comply with this rule may
subject the employer to treble damages. I.C. § 45-615(2). The district court presumed for purposes
of the summary judgment motion that termination occurred on February 10, as Stiffler alleged in
his complaint. Because the final yearly incentive pay was tendered on February 18, the district
court concluded that Hydroblend complied with the Wage Claim Act by tendering payment within
the 10-day limit.
Likewise, the district court concluded that the 48-hour rule had not been triggered here.
Idaho Code section 45-606(1) only requires wages to be paid within 48 hours “if the employee
makes written request . . . for earlier payment of wages.” Here, there was no specific written request
from Stiffler for his incentive pay. His February 16 letter demanded severance pay, but only
warned of imminent litigation in regard to his incentive pay:
Mr. Stiffler demands 25% payment of his severance no later than February 20,
2021. Failure to timely remit payment shall constitute further illegal withholding of
wages in violation of Title 45, Chapter 6, Idaho Code.
Regarding the illegal withholding of Mr. Stiffler’s Q4 Commission, Mr. Stiffler
is left with no other recourse than to pursue a civil action to protect his contractual
rights under law. A copy of the Complaint filed and served in the Third Judicial
District Court for the County of Canyon shall be served in due course.
We agree with the district court’s conclusion that this statement cannot be construed as a demand
for payment earlier than the 10 days required under Idaho Code section 45-606(1).
On appeal, Stiffler argues that Hydroblend anticipatorily breached the 2019 Contract when
it initially refused to pay his Quarter 4 incentive pay on January 20. He argues this issue is
dispositive of the entire case, and he is owed treble damages after Hydroblend unambiguously
repudiated its contractual obligation to pay Stiffler the incentive pay to which he was entitled. He
adds that “[t]he district court notably failed to address the legal doctrine of anticipatory breach in
its legal decision, and ignored the legal significance of [Hydroblend’s] express refusal to pay
Stiffler’s wages on January 22 and February 10, 2021.” Yet he also contends that “[n]o incentive
pay is in dispute, only treble damages.”
Stiffler ignores that the incentive pay is in dispute. The district court determined that
questions of fact remained over whether the 2019 Contract was modified concerning incentive pay
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and, if so, whether there was a breach of that agreement. The district court denied summary
judgment on these issues because they had to be resolved by a fact finder. The only question
examined, and answered, by the district court at the summary judgment stage was whether
Hydroblend paid Stiffler the Quarter 4 incentive pay within 10 days of Stiffler’s termination. I.C.
§ 45-606(1). The district court did not make an affirmative finding as to the date of termination,
nor did it analyze whether Stiffler was entitled to these wages. It only addressed timeliness under
the Wage Claim Act to determine whether treble damages should be assessed against Hydroblend
on the incentive pay tendered to Stiffler. Because Stiffler’s complaint and arguments below alleged
a termination date of February 10, 2021—and Hydroblend tendered payment on February 18—the
incentive-pay wages were timely tendered under Idaho Code section 45-606(1)’s 10-day deadline.
Stiffler also argues that Idaho has a bright line rule when it comes to the award of treble
damages under the Idaho Wage Claim Act. He points to Hales v. King, in which the Idaho Court
of Appeals held that an employee’s right to recover treble damages “was fixed upon the filing of
his complaint.” 114 Idaho 916, 922, 762 P.2d 829, 835 (Ct. App. 1988). Stiffler, however, has
misunderstood the holding in Hales. In that case, the Court of Appeals determined that an
employee’s “right to wages accrued upon his resignation” while his “cause of action for treble
damages” accrued on the eleventh day “when he knew he would not be compensated for unpaid
work.” Id. at 920–22, 762 P.2d at 833–35 (citing Gilbert v. Moore, 108 Idaho 165, 697 P.2d 1179
(1985)). It was not the act of filing a complaint that implicated the treble damages. Rather, the
treble damages accrued because Hales commenced his action on the eleventh day following his
resignation—the day his employer’s response was statutorily late. The Wage Claim Act’s penalty
triggered on that date, and it ripened Hales’ cause of action. The complaint was simply filed at the
same time. See 114 Idaho at 921–22, 762 P.2d at 834–35.
Alternatively, Stiffler argues that whether Hydroblend was required to pay Stiffler the
incentive pay under the 2019 Contract is moot because Hydroblend’s act of tendering payment
was a binding admission that Stiffler was entitled to the incentive pay. Stiffler has not cited a rule
under Idaho law for this position, nor has the district court made a finding as to whether Stiffler
was entitled to incentive pay on these grounds. Like his arguments of an anticipatory breach, the
district court has not rendered a decision on the issue. The district court only concluded that treble
damages could not be owed under Stiffler’s termination timeframe. It never determined whether
Stiffler was entitled to the disputed incentive pay wages—either as a result of a breach or because
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of Hydroblend’s payment under Idaho Code section 45-606. Likewise, the district court has never
addressed Stiffler’s contention that he was entitled to contractual protections of advanced notice,
warning, and opportunity to cure unreasonable reductions in pay under the 2019 Contract. These
issues ultimately concern Stiffler’s contention of a breach of contract and are not properly before
this Court. We will not address them for the first time on appeal. See Neighbors for a Healthy Gold
Fork v. Valley County, 145 Idaho 121, 131, 176 P.3d 126, 136 (2007) (“an appellate court will not
decide issues presented for the first time on appeal”).
In sum, we agree with the district court that treble damages were unwarranted here.
Examining the facts in the light most favorable to Stiffler, and drawing all reasonable inferences
in his favor, Hydroblend was entitled to summary judgment as a matter of law on this claim.
Genuine issues of material fact also precluded an award of summary judgment as to whether the
2019 Contract was breached or modified. Thus, we affirm the district court on these grounds.
B. The 2021 Contract governs Stiffler’s claim for severance pay and, therefore, this
dispute is subject to arbitration.
Stiffler next argues that severance pay and treble damages are owed under the 2019
Contract after he “properly demanded payment of severance for his [t]ermination ‘not for cause’
on February 16, 2021.” He calculates his severance pay, with treble damages, at $1,747,026.80,
and contends that Hydroblend effectively discharged him without cause (“not for cause”) under
his employment agreement by “refusing to tender Stiffler’s [Quarter 4] incentive pay for DFS and
using his sales to other undisputed accounts to illegally withhold and ‘claw back’ payments already
issued” in earlier quarters. Hydroblend argues that the district court did not err in finding that the
2021 Contract governed the entitlement to severance pay and, therefore, it was subject to
arbitration. It also argues that the motion to compel arbitration “is not subject to review through
the litigation process.” We agree that the 2021 Contract governs Stiffler’s severance pay claim,
but disagree with Hydroblend’s assertion that we lack jurisdiction to review the severance pay
claim on appeal.
1. This Court has jurisdiction to hear Stiffler’s appeal on the severance pay claims.
We will first address Hydroblend’s arguments on justiciability and jurisdiction, which are
questions of law over which this Court exercises free review. Doe v. Doe, 158 Idaho 614, 616, 349
P.3d 1205, 1207 (2015). Hydroblend argues that “[a] decision compelling arbitration is not subject
to review through the litigation process,” and that review of dismissing and compelling arbitration
on “Claims Two and Three” [wrongful termination and rescission of the 2021 Contract] are moot.
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Stiffler responds that the dismissal of his “claim to severance under the 2019 contract is an
appealable final order, just like the order of dismissal in Dan Wiebold Ford, Inc. v. Universal
Computer Consulting Holding, Inc., 142 Idaho 235, 240, 127 P.3d 138, 143 (2005).” Further,
“there is a final judgment dismissing all of [his] claims, which is appealable as a matter of right
pursuant to I.A.R. 11(a)(1).” We agree.
In Dan Wiebold, this Court addressed a similar jurisdictional challenge where the lower
court dismissed the plaintiff’s lawsuit on finding all claims were subject to an arbitration provision
of a contract between two corporations. 142 Idaho at 237–38, 127 P.3d at 140–41. This Court
determined that the district court’s order dismissed the lawsuit but did not compel the plaintiff to
participate in arbitration. Id. at 238, 127 P.3d at 141. Because “[a] district court’s order dismissing
a lawsuit is a final judgment which can be appealed,” this Court had jurisdiction to hear the appeal.
Id. Here, the issue concerns Stiffler’s severance pay, which was a claim the district court dismissed
but did not order the parties to arbitrate. There is also a final judgment dismissing most of Stiffler’s
other claims. Thus, we have jurisdiction to review the appeal.
2. The 2021 Contract governs Stiffler’s claim for severance pay.
To determine whether Stiffler’s claim for severance pay was subject to arbitration
proceedings and incorrectly dismissed, we must determine whether the 2019 Contract or 2021
Contract controls Stiffler’s claims for severance and termination. Because this issue presents a
question of contract interpretation, we begin with the language in the documents. Potlatch Educ.
Ass’n v. Potlatch Sch. Dist. No. 285, 148 Idaho 630, 633, 226 P.3d 1277, 1280 (2010). The
interpretation of a clear and unambiguous contract is a question of law, and we must construe the
language “in its plain, ordinary and proper sense, according to the meaning derived from the plain
wording of the instrument.” Id. (quoting C & G, Inc. v. Rule, 135 Idaho 763, 765, 25 P.3d 76, 78
(2001); Fletcher v. Lone Mountain Rd. Ass’n, 162 Idaho 347, 351, 396 P.3d 1229, 1233 (2017)).
On the other hand, “[a] contract term is ambiguous when there are two different reasonable
interpretations or the language is nonsensical.” Potlatch Educ. Ass’n, 148 Idaho at 633, 226 P.3d
at 1280. Determining whether a contract is ambiguous is a question of law, but interpreting an
ambiguous term is an issue of fact. Id.
Both the 2019 Contract and the 2021 Contract allow for severance pay, but the agreements
differ in how they define termination of employment. The 2019 Contract allows for severance pay
where an employee is terminated “Not for Cause,” including “an arbitrary or unreasonable
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demotion or reduction in pay.” (Emphasis added.) The 2021 Contract, in contrast, allows for
severance pay for termination “without cause” under several scenarios, including where there is
“any arbitrary or unreasonable reduction in Employee’s Base Pay.” (Emphasis added.) The
difference between “pay” (2019) and “base pay” (2021) in these definitions indicates that “pay”
under the 2019 Contract includes both base pay and incentive pay.
Importantly, the 2021 Contract specifies that it came into effect on January 1, 2021, and
constitutes the entire agreement between the parties, superseding and replacing all prior
agreements:
On the Effective Date of this Agreement, this Agreement will supersede and replace
all prior agreements between the parties hereto, whether in writing or otherwise,
relating to the subject matter hereof. On the Effective Date of this Agreement, this
Agreement will contain the entire agreement of the parties, and no representations,
inducements, promises, or agreements, oral or otherwise, not embodied herein, will
be of any force or effect.
The 2021 Contract also contains a mediation and arbitration provision, which states: “In the event
of any controversy or claim arising out of or relating to this Agreement, or a breach thereof, the
parties hereto shall first attempt to settle the dispute by mediation.” Where settlement is not reached
at mediation, “any unresolved controversy or claim shall be settled by arbitration.”
“It is well settled that the terms of a written contract may be varied, modified, waived,
annulled, or wholly set aside by any subsequently executed contract, whether that contract be in
writing or parol.” Silver Syndicate, Inc. v. Sunshine Min. Co., 101 Idaho 226, 235, 611 P.2d 1011,
1020 (1979). “To have the effect of complete rescission, the new contract must either explicitly
rescind the earlier contract, or deal with the subject matter of the former contract so
comprehensively as to be complete within itself and to raise the legal inference of substitution, or
it must present such inconsistencies with the first contract that the two cannot in any substantial
respect stand together.” Id. Where “a subsequently executed agreement specifically references and
relies on a former agreement, the two are to be interpreted together, if possible.” Opportunity,
L.L.C. v. Ossewarde, 136 Idaho 602, 607, 38 P.3d 1258, 1263 (2002).
Stiffler would have this Court determine that the 2019 Contract controls because Stiffler’s
wage dispute and claims concern the terms and pay received under the 2019 Contract. He reminds
us that there are no wages in dispute from 2021 forward. However, the new contract clearly
rescinded and replaced the old one. There is an express provision explaining that the 2021 Contract
will “supersede and replace all prior agreements between the parties.” (Emphasis added.) The 2021
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Contract “contain[s] the entire agreement of the parties, and no representations, inducements,
promises, or agreements, oral or otherwise, not embodied herein, will be of any force or effect.”
Even Stiffler concedes in his briefing that he “completed performance of the 2019 Contract when
it ended on December 31, 2020,” at least for the “purposes of incentive compensation.”
Additionally, the two agreements’ terms—including the severance provisions—are too
inconsistent to be considered merged. Pursuant to Silver Syndicate, the 2021 Contract “explicitly
rescind[ed] the earlier contract,” and it “deal[s] with the subject matter of the former contract so
comprehensively as to be complete within itself and to raise the legal inference of substitution.”
101 Idaho at 235, 611 P.2d at 1020.
Stiffler’s contention that all the disputed wages must be controlled by the 2019 Contract is
unavailing. The 2019 Contract may control the wages earned in those periods—including the
Quarter 4 incentive pay at issue in this litigation—but severance pay only comes into effect upon
termination. The date of termination occurred between February 10 and February 16, 2021, after
the 2021 Contract came into effect and rescinded all prior agreements between the parties. Thus,
severance pay is controlled by the 2021 Contract. It was the employment agreement in effect at
the time of Stiffler’s termination, and it requires all disputes arising under it to proceed through
mediation and arbitration. Accordingly, we agree with the district court’s decision to deny
Stiffler’s motion for summary judgment on severance pay. Because the 2021 Contract’s mediation
and arbitration provision governs severance and termination, Stiffler was not entitled to summary
judgment on this claim as a matter of law.
3. The district court did not err in separating Stiffler’s claim for unpaid incentive
wages from his claim for severance pay.
Stiffler next argues that the district court “illegally split[]” his causes of action for unpaid
wages, and that it makes no “legal sense to litigate different remedies of the same dispute before
two separate tribunals.” “Claim splitting” often arises in the context of claim preclusion and res
judicata, and the general rule is that damages sustained or accrued from a single wrongful act must
be claimed and recovered in one action. See Diamond v. Farmers Grp., Inc., 119 Idaho 146, 149,
804 P.2d 319, 323 (1990); Wing v. Hulet, 106 Idaho 912, 917, 684 P.2d 314, 319 (Ct. App. 1984).
See also Claim splitting, Am. L. Prod. Liab. 3d § 55:8 (2023). As this Court has held: “a valid and
final judgment rendered in an action extinguishes all claims arising out of the same transaction or
series of transactions out of which the cause of action arose.” Diamond, 119 Idaho at 150, 804
P.2d at 323.
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Here, however, claim splitting does not apply. There has never been a prior adjudication
of these claims. Rather, the question at issue concerns the proper forums for the adjudication of
issues arising under different employment agreements. Under the Uniform Arbitration Act, a
district court confronted by a motion to dismiss or stay proceedings conducts the inquiry of
whether there is an agreement to arbitrate. Loomis, Inc. v. Cudahy, 104 Idaho 106, 109, 656 P.2d
1359, 1362 (1982). If a dispute is arbitrable, a court’s review of the merits is inappropriate and
“would in many instances emasculate the benefits of arbitration.” Id. The district court determined
that severance pay was an arbitrable claim controlled by the 2021 Contract but that the 2019
Contract controlled the wage claim for incentive pay. In short, two separate issues arose under
Stiffler’s cause of action and the district court only had authority to decide one of them. Thus, the
district court properly split the issues, retained the incentive pay issue for litigation in district court,
and concluded that Stiffler’s entitlement to severance pay had to be resolved through arbitration.
While Stiffler compares his case to Hindmarsh v. Mock, 138 Idaho 92, 57 P.3d 803 (2002),
we do not agree that the case is helpful to his cause. In Hindmarsh, a plaintiff attempted to split
her claims arising from the same automobile collision with a defendant. 138 Idaho at 93, 57 P.3d
at 804. She first sued the defendant in small claims for property damage. A year later, she sued the
same defendant in district court for personal injuries sustained in the crash. Id. This Court barred
this relitigation attempt and explained that the “plaintiff chose her venue.” Id. at 95, 57 P.3d at
806. “[S]he should not only be able to take advantage of the benefits of that choice, but should
also be bound by the consequences.” Id. Like Hindmarsh, Stiffler chose his venue by entering into
an arbitration agreement with Hydroblend. He agreed to mediate and arbitrate all claims arising
under the 2021 Contract, and the district court simply enforced the agreement Stiffler made. The
court explained that the claims had to be split where severance was contractually obligated to be
decided through mediation or arbitration. Only the incentive-pay claim was a decision for judicial
determination.
4. The dismissal of Stiffler’s claims was improper.
The district court erred, however, in concluding that the claims subject to arbitration should
be dismissed and “fully disposed” of, rather than staying the proceedings in district court and
ordering the claims be arbitrated. The Uniform Arbitration Act, which Idaho adopted in 1975,
mandates that
[a]ny action or proceeding involving an issue subject to arbitration shall be
stayed if an order for arbitration or an application therefor has been made under this
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section or, if the issue is severable, the stay may be with respect thereto only. When
the application is made in such action or proceeding, the order for arbitration shall
include such stay.
I.C. § 7-902(d) (emphasis added). A court must also “order the parties to proceed with arbitration”
where a party shows a valid arbitration agreement. I.C. §§ 7-902(a), 7-901. Likewise, the Act
provides for court confirmation of arbitration awards on application of a party. I.C. § 7-911. The
arbitrator’s award is not enforceable until a court enters judgment on it. Bingham Cnty. Comm’n
v. Interstate Elec. Co., a Div. of L.E. Myers Co., 108 Idaho 181, 183, 697 P.2d 1195, 1197 (Ct.
App. 1985).
Here, the district court correctly determined that severance and termination were governed
by the 2021 Contract, and, consequently, were subject to the agreement’s arbitration provision.
But the district court erred in dismissing Stiffler’s claims to “fully dispose[]” of them. The
procedures mandated under the Uniform Arbitration Act provide for courts to retain jurisdiction
while parties arbitrate claims, staying proceedings until confirmation of an award (I.C. § 7-911),
including the award of costs and fees (I.C. § 7-910), is entered by the court. Rather than “dispose”
of Stiffler’s arbitrable claims, the district court should have stayed the proceedings until the parties
returned from arbitration for a confirmation and final judgment, or otherwise moved for dismissal
of the case. Thus, we reverse the district court’s decision insofar as it incorrectly dismissed
Stiffler’s claims.
C. The district court did not err in determining that the claims for wrongful termination
and rescission of the 2021 Contract were arbitrable and governed by the 2021
Contract.
Stiffler raised three claims in his original and amended complaints. The first regarded
unpaid wages, including incentive pay (the Quarter 4 commission) and severance pay under
Idaho’s Wage Claim Act. The second was for wrongful termination, and the third concerned
“voiding and/or rescission” of the 2021 Contract. Like his argument over severance pay, Stiffler
contends that the 2019 Contract governs his claims and argues that they were not subject to the
arbitration provision in the 2021 Contract. In making these arguments, Stiffler raises other related
issues, including an argument that the arbitration provision should be read “narrowly,” and that
Hydroblend waived its right to arbitration. Hydroblend responds that the “incentive pay component
of Claim One [is] fundamentally distinct from the Arbitrable Claims,” it has not waived its right
to arbitrate, and the claims arising under the 2021 Contract were subject to mandatory arbitration.
We will address each argument in turn.
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1. The district court did not err in referring Stiffler’s additional claims to arbitration.
Stiffler contends that the arbitration clause of the 2021 Contract must be read “narrowly”
to be “limited only to claims ‘arising out of’ the 2021 [Contract].” He cites federal jurisdictions to
support his position. Hydroblend responds that Stiffler negotiated and assented to the 2021
Contract, and is ultimately trying to “sidestep the applicability of the 2021 [Contract] by saying
that his termination—which he wrongly asserts triggered a right to severance—was the result of a
dispute under the incentive pay provisions of the 2019 [Contract].”
The arbitrability of a claim is a question of law to be decided by the court. Storey Constr.,
148 Idaho at 412, 224 P.3d at 479. See also Howsam v. Dean Witter Reynolds, Inc., 537 U.S. 79,
84 (2002) (“a disagreement about whether an arbitration clause in a concededly binding contract
applies to a particular type of controversy is for the court.”). “This Court has recognized a strong
public policy which favors arbitration.” Storey Constr., 148 Idaho at 412, 224 P.3d at 479.
Arbitration agreements are “encouraged and given explicit recognition as effective means to
resolve disputed issues,” id., with doubts “resolved in favor of arbitration.” Mason v. State Farm
Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 145 Idaho 197, 201, 177 P.3d 944, 948 (2007). “A court reviewing an
arbitration clause will order arbitration unless ‘it may be said with positive assurance that the
arbitration clause is not susceptible of an interpretation that covers the asserted dispute.’ ” Storey
Constr., 148 Idaho at 412, 224 P.3d at 479 (quoting United Steelworkers of Am. v. Warrior & Gulf
Nav. Co., 363 U.S. 574, 582 (1960)).
Like the issue of severance pay, Stiffler’s claim for wrongful termination arises under the
2021 Contract. Not only did Stiffler’s termination occur in 2021, after the 2019 Contract was
superseded and replaced, but Stiffler’s remaining claim also plainly deals with “voiding and/or
rescission” of the 2021 Contract. He is expressly requesting rescission of the 2021 Contract itself.
Because these claims deal with contesting the validity of the agreement, or alleged conduct under
its terms, these claims are disputes “arising out of or relating in any way to” the 2021 Contract. As
we noted in discussing severance pay, the 2021 Contract was the only employment agreement in
effect at the time of Stiffler’s termination.
While Stiffler is correct that the basis of his termination stems from Hydroblend’s failure
to pay the Quarter 4 incentive pay owed under the 2019 Contract, the applicable provisions
governing his termination are those in effect at the time of his termination in 2021. As the district
court articulated: “although some of the relevant facts occurred while the 2019 contract was in
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effect, the termination itself occurred, and was a result of, events that occurred subsequent to the
execution of the 2021 contract.” Thus, we affirm the district court’s determination that the claims
for wrongful termination and contract rescission are governed by the 2021 Contract’s arbitration
provision.
Stiffler points to other jurisdictions to support his argument that this Court must read the
arbitration provision’s language through a “narrow” lens, instead of a “broad” interpretation, to
conclude that the “narrow 2021 mediation/arbitration clause does not apply to the breach of the
2019 contract under the plain language of the agreement itself.” This argument is unavailing. Not
only does Stiffler rely on rules from other jurisdictions, but his argument negates the plain and
broad language in the 2021 Contract.
For example, Stiffler relies on a federal case that instructed courts to consider two questions
in determining the scope of an arbitration clause. Mut. Ben. Life Ins. Co. v. Zimmerman, 783 F.
Supp. 853, 869 (D.N.J. 1992). Zimmerman determined that a court must consider two questions:
“(1) is the arbitration agreement broad or narrow?; (2) if narrow, does the dispute involve a
‘collateral’ agreement?” Id. “If a clause is narrow, the court is the body to determine whether the
dispute or the conduct in issue falls within the arbitration clause.” Id. Additionally, “[i]f the court
determines the dispute falls within the scope of the arbitration agreement, it must refer the dispute
to arbitration without considering the merits.” Id. Zimmerman recognized that the language at
issue—“any dispute or difference hereafter arising”—was “clearly broad,” but there were
additional words of limitation that meant the clause was not a general arbitration clause for “any”
dispute. Id. at 870. This limiting language included: “as a condition precedent to any right of action
hereunder,” and “with reference to the interpretation, application, or other effect of this
Agreement.” Id. (brackets omitted).
No such language exists in the 2021 Contract. The mediation provision states that any
controversy or claim arising out of the employment agreement is subject to mediation and
arbitration. There are no words that narrow this interpretation.
In the event of any controversy or claim arising out of or relating to this Agreement,
or a breach thereof, the parties hereto shall first attempt to settle the dispute by
mediation. The party seeking to mediate any controversy or claim arising out or
relating to this Agreement shall give the other party advance written notice of its
intent to mediate, and such written notice shall describe in detail the alleged
controversy or claim at issue. . . . If settlement is not reached at mediation, any
unresolved controversy or claim shall be settled by arbitration as set forth . . . below.
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(Emphasis added.) Similarly, the arbitration provision controls any controversy or claim
arising out of, or related in any way, to the 2021 Contract:
Any dispute, controversy or claim arising out of or relating in any way to this
Agreement, including, without limitation, any dispute concerning the construction,
validity, interpretation, enforceability or breach of this Agreement, that is not
settled via mediation shall be exclusively resolved by binding arbitration upon a
party’s submission of the dispute to arbitration.
(Emphasis added.) Both provisions repeatedly use the broad language that “any controversy or
claim arising out of or relating to” the agreement is subject to mediation or, where mediation is
unsuccessful, arbitration. There is no limiting language to narrow the scope of the claims subject
to this dispute resolution. Having determined that the dispute falls within the scope of the 2021
Contract’s arbitration agreement, the district court was correct to refer the dispute to arbitration
without considering the merits of Stiffler’s claims.
2. Hydroblend did not waive its right to arbitration.
Stiffler also contends that Hydroblend waived its right to arbitration by availing itself of
the district court’s jurisdiction on filing an answer to his complaint and seeking summary judgment
on the incentive pay portion of his first claim. Hydroblend argues it “has always recognized that
the incentive pay component of Claim One arises under the 2019 [Contract],” and the district court
was the appropriate forum to seek relief on that issue. Hydroblend is correct.
Stiffler points us to the Ninth Circuit, which has concluded that “the question whether a
party waived its right to arbitrate on the basis of its litigation conduct is a question of arbitrability”
and is a dispute “for judicial determination unless the parties clearly and unmistakably provide
otherwise.” Martin v. Yasuda, 829 F.3d 1118, 1123 (9th Cir. 2016). “Seeking a decision on the
merits of a key issue in a case indicates an intentional and strategic decision to take advantage of
the judicial forum.” Newirth by & through Newirth v. Aegis Senior Cmtys., LLC, 931 F.3d 935,
941 (9th Cir. 2019). The Ninth Circuit has since instructed that a court must “consider the totality
of the parties’ actions,” and “ask whether those actions holistically ‘indicate a conscious decision
. . . to seek judicial judgment on the merits of the arbitrable claims, which would be inconsistent
with a right to arbitrate.’ ” Armstrong v. Michaels Stores, Inc., 59 F.4th 1011, 1015 (9th Cir. 2023)
(quoting Hill v. Xerox Bus. Servs., LLC, 59 F.4th 457, 473 n.19 (9th Cir. 2023)).
This case law is unhelpful to Stiffler’s claims. Not only are the cases not binding authority
in Idaho, but the facts are markedly different from the situation at bar. Both Martin and Newirth
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dealt with long periods of litigation on the merits of arbitrable claims. In Martin, the defendants
“spent seventeen months litigating the case,” including “devoting ‘considerable time and effort’ to
a joint stipulation structuring the litigation, filing a motion to dismiss on a key merits issue,
entering into a protective order, answering discovery, and preparing for and conducting a
deposition.” 829 F.3d at 1126. Similarly, in Newirth, the parties spent 11 months “actively engaged
in the discovery process.” 931 F.3d at 939. Here, however, Hydroblend sought arbitration on
arbitrable claims the same day it filed its answer to Stiffler’s complaint. It also only sought
summary judgment on one claim arising under the 2019 Contract, which was the issue of incentive
pay. Hydroblend never sought judicial relief on the merits of claims it believed to be, and were
later found, arbitrable. Hydroblend sought only to dismiss and compel arbitration on the claims
arising under the 2021 Contract.
Accordingly, we cannot agree with Stiffler that there was litigation conduct by Hydroblend
that amounted to a waiver of its right to arbitration. Hydroblend appears to have immediately
sought to enforce its rights to arbitration under the 2021 Contract, and sought a judicial remedy
only on the incentive pay issues that arose under the earlier 2019 Contract (which lacked a binding
arbitration provision). Thus, Hydroblend did not waive its right to arbitration on any of the claims.
3. Stiffler’s alternative arguments are unavailing.
In addition to the preceding arguments, Stiffler raises two alternative arguments on appeal
challenging whether the 2021 Contract and its arbitration provision are found to be controlling.
First, he argues that Hydroblend materially breached the contract by withholding wages and
retroactively reducing his pay. He contends that this breach excused his performance and
obligation to arbitrate. This argument is circular in its reasoning. Stiffler claims that he is excused
from an enforceable arbitration provision because of an alleged breach by Hydroblend, but those
are facts and merits which he must first prove in arbitration. The very performance he claims
excuses him from arbitration cannot be established outside of it.
Even if this Court were to review Stiffler’s breach-of-contract argument on appeal, there is
no decision from the lower court to review. Whether Hydroblend breached its employment
contract with Stiffler is not a determination this Court can make for the first time on appeal. See
Neighbors for a Healthy Gold Fork, 145 Idaho at 131, 176 P.3d at 136 (“review on appeal is
limited to those issues raised before the lower tribunal and that an appellate court will not decide
issues presented for the first time on appeal.”). Indeed, the district court specifically concluded
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that “[w]hether the refusal to pay 2020 Q4 incentive pay was ‘an arbitrary or unreasonable
demotion or reduction of pay’ is . . . a question of fact, making summary judgment not
appropriate.” We will not usurp the district court’s role as the finder of fact and make the
determination for the first time on appeal.
Second, Stiffler contends the 2021 Contract was not a “knowing, intelligent, and voluntary
waiver” of his constitutional right to a trial by jury. Stiffler specifically argues that the 2021
Contract “does not make any reference to [his] constitutional right to trial by jury,” and that the
“ambiguity of [Hydroblend’s] proposed arbitration provision is a substantive and procedural
violation of [his] Due Process rights.” Once again, this was not a decision made by the district
court, and—as Hydroblend points out—Stiffler ignores the plain language of his agreement that
“[a]ny dispute, controversy or claim arising out of or relating in any way to this Agreement,”
including its enforceability, “shall be exclusively resolved by binding arbitration . . . .”
Accordingly, we are unpersuaded by Stiffler’s alternative arguments that Hydroblend’s
motion to compel arbitration should have been denied.
D. Neither party is entitled to attorney fees on appeal.
Both parties seek attorney fees on appeal. Stiffler seeks an award of attorney fees under
Idaho Code section 45-615(2) of the Wage Claim Act, while Hydroblend seeks fees under Idaho
Code sections 12-120(3) and 12-121. This Court has previously determined that section 12-121 is
not an appropriate source for awarding attorney fees in wage claim disputes, even where other
claims were involved. See Bilow v. Preco, Inc., 132 Idaho 23, 33, 966 P.2d 23, 33 (1998) (denying
attorney fees where an employee sought an award under I.C. § 12-120(3), alleging unpaid wages
and breach of contract). “The [Wage Claim] Act provides any judgment awarded to a plaintiff
under the Act ‘may include all costs and attorney’s fees reasonably incurred in connection with
the proceedings.’ ” Lunneborg v. My Fun Life, 163 Idaho 856, 873, 421 P.3d 187, 204 (2018)
(quoting I.C. § 45-615). In short, “Idaho Code [sections] 45-615 and 45-617 are the exclusive code
sections under which an employee may recover attorney fees whenever the underlying cause of
action is a wage claim pursuant to I.C. § 45–617(4).” Bilow, 132 Idaho at 33, 966 P.2d at 33. See
also Hawes v. W. Pac. Timber, LLC, 167 Idaho 896, 917, 477 P.3d 950, 971 (2020). Likewise,
Idaho Code section 45-612(2) is the “exclusive remedy for attorney fees available to an employer
when an employee has brought a claim for wages.” Polk v. Larrabee, 135 Idaho 303, 315, 17 P.3d
247, 259 (2000).
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Stiffler has raised multiple issues before this Court, but his underlying cause of action is a
wage claim dispute brought under Idaho’s Wage Claim Act. He is the only party who has claimed
attorney fees under the correct section of the Idaho Code. However, Stiffler failed to establish that
he is “entitled to recover from the defendant either the unpaid wages plus the penalties . . . or
damages in the amount of three (3) times the unpaid wages found due and owing, whichever is
greater.” I.C. § 45-615(2). Thus, we will not make an award of attorney fees to either party in this
appeal.
IV. CONCLUSION
On reviewing the merits on appeal, we conclude that the district court’s orders should be
affirmed in part and reversed in part. We reverse the district court’s dismissal of Stiffler’s arbitrable
claims because they should have been stayed, not dismissed. However, we affirm the district
court’s determination that the 2019 Contract controls the issue of incentive pay while the
remaining claims arose under the 2021 Contract and its arbitration agreement. As the prevailing
party, Hydroblend is entitled to costs on appeal pursuant to Idaho Appellate Rule 40(a).
Chief Justice BEVAN, and Justices STEGNER, MOELLER and ZAHN, CONCUR.
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