IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA
No. COA23-710
Filed 2 April 2024
Gaston County, No. 21 CVS 4249
JOHN GRIFFING, Plaintiff,
v.
GRAY, LAYTON, KERSH, SOLOMON, FURR & SMITH, P.A.,
Defendant/Counterclaimant,
v.
JOHN GRIFFING, Counterclaim Defendant.
Appeal by defendant/counterclaimant from order entered 30 May 2023 by
Judge Reginald E. McKnight in Gaston County Superior Court. Heard in the Court
of Appeals 9 January 2024.
Pangia Law Group, by Amanda C. Dure, and Joseph L. Anderson, for plaintiff-
appellee.
Bell, Davis & Pitt, P.A., by Edward B. Davis and Kevin J. Roak, for defendant-
appellant.
ZACHARY, Judge.
This case returns to this Court upon the trial court’s entry of a revised order
following our vacatur and remand in Griffing v. Gray, Layton, Kersh, Solomon, Furr
& Smith, P.A. (“Griffing I”), 287 N.C. App. 694, 883 S.E.2d 129, 2023 WL 2127574
(2023) (unpublished). Defendant Gray, Layton, Kersh, Solomon, Furr & Smith, P.A.
GRIFFING V. GRAY, LAYTON, KERSH, SOLOMON, FURR & SMITH, P.A.
Opinion of the Court
(“Gray Layton”), a North Carolina law firm, appeals the trial court’s order denying
Gray Layton’s motion to compel arbitration. After careful review, we affirm.
I. Background
This appeal concerns a series of four agreements between Gray Layton,
Plaintiff John Griffing, and various third parties. The central issue before us is
whether Plaintiff’s claims against Gray Layton are subject to arbitration under the
provisions of these agreements.
The first agreement (“the Shareholder Agreement”) is between Plaintiff and
Gray Layton. Plaintiff signed the Shareholder Agreement when he “joined Gray
Layton as a shareholder on or about 6 March 2000.” Griffing I, at *1. “The
[S]hareholder [A]greement d[oes] not contain an arbitration clause.” Id.
The second agreement (“the COBRA Properties Agreement”) is between
Plaintiff; COBRA Properties, L.L.P. (“COBRA Properties”); and its existing members.
This agreement arose in conjunction with Gray Layton’s offer to Plaintiff to join the
firm:
Together with its offer to join the firm, Gray Layton offered
Plaintiff the option to buy into COBRA Properties, . . . the
entity from which Gray Layton leased office space. On or
about 20 April 2001, Plaintiff bought into COBRA
Properties, and in August 2018, he purchased an
additional interest in the partnership.
Id. Under the terms of the COBRA Properties Agreement, the members of COBRA
Properties receive prorated shares of the net profits, including rental income. The
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COBRA Properties Agreement contains an arbitration clause; it provides that “[a]ny
controversy or claim arising out of or relating to this Agreement, or the breach
thereof, shall be settled, if allowed by law, by arbitration[.]” By entering into the
COBRA Properties Agreement, Plaintiff “agree[d] to be bound . . . as if he were an
original signatory.”
The third agreement (“the COBRA Lease”) is the rental agreement pursuant
to which Gray Layton leased office space from COBRA Properties. Id. Under the
COBRA Lease, Gray Layton’s office rent was scheduled to increase by three percent
annually. Id. The COBRA Lease does not contain an arbitration clause. Id.
The fourth agreement (“the Class Action Agreement”) is an intrafirm
agreement between Gray Layton and two of its associate attorneys. Plaintiff signed
the Class Action Agreement not as an individual party, but rather as a “participating
attorney” within the terms of the contract:
In 2012, the shareholders of Gray Layton “decided to accept
a large class action case on a contingent fee basis.” The
Gray Layton shareholders entered into an agreement with
two associates regarding the class action lawsuit, pursuant
to which “[t]he individual shareholders in [Gray Layton]
agreed to pay the expenses and overhead for the class
action litigation.” In addition, the associates agreed to
“devote a substantial amount of time and attention” to the
lawsuit in exchange for each receiving ten percent of the
gross attorney’s fees. Seventy percent of the gross fees were
to be “divided in shares among the undersigned
‘Participating Attorneys’ ”; Plaintiff signed the agreement
as one such “participating attorney.”
Id. (alterations in original). The Class Action Agreement contains an arbitration
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clause, which provides that “the parties agree to submit their dispute(s) to binding
arbitration to be conducted in Gastonia, NC.” Id.
As we detailed in Griffing I, the present case began once Plaintiff left Gray
Layton:
On 31 October 2019, Plaintiff left Gray Layton as a result
of the financial burden of “carrying his overhead for his
profit center” and “paying for firm overhead to the other
shareholders.” On 25 October 2021, Plaintiff filed a
complaint in Gaston County Superior Court against Gray
Layton, alleging breach of contract and failure to provide
Plaintiff with a shareholder accounting or to allow Plaintiff
to inspect Gray Layton’s books and records.
Concerning the breach of contract claim, Plaintiff asserted
that Gray Layton “violated the shareholder agreements as
well as other side agreements” by failing to: (1) buy back
his stock in Gray Layton within sixty days of his departure
from the firm; (2) buy back his stock “at the agreed upon
price”; (3) “adequately compensate Plaintiff for the revenue
stream he brought into the firm”; (4) “properly allocate
overhead against the cost centers that used the services
provided by the entire firm”; (5) pay the COBRA Properties
partners “the 3% rent increases as required by the lease”
between Gray Layton and COBRA Properties; and (6)
reimburse Plaintiff for the expenses that he advanced for
the class action lawsuit. Plaintiff attached to his complaint
copies of the [Shareholder Agreement], the [COBRA
Properties Agreement], the [COBRA Lease], and the [Class
Action Agreement].
Id. (cleaned up).
Gray Layton filed an answer in which it generally denied Plaintiff’s
allegations, advanced several affirmative defenses, and asserted counterclaims for
breach of contract and conversion. Id. at *2. Gray Layton also filed a motion to compel
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arbitration, id., which included a motion to stay all proceedings pending arbitration.
By order entered on 24 February 2022, the trial court denied Gray Layton’s motion
with prejudice, concluding that “this matter is not subject to arbitration[.]”
Following Gray Layton’s appeal, this Court vacated and remanded the matter
to the trial court because the “order contain[ed] no findings of fact evincing the
rationale underlying the trial court’s decision to deny Gray Layton’s motion.” Id. at
*3 (cleaned up). As we explained:
Plaintiff attached four agreements to his complaint, and he
alleged with regard to the breach of contract claim that
“Gray Layton has violated the [Shareholder Agreement] as
well as other side agreements.” Two of the four referenced
agreements contained mandatory arbitration clauses.
However, the court neglected to state which, if either, of
the two it considered to be valid agreements to arbitrate
between these parties or whether the disputes raised in
this action fall within the scope of any such valid
agreement.
Id. (cleaned up).
Post-remand, on 30 May 2023, the trial court entered a revised order
containing additional findings of fact. The trial court found:
1. . . . Gray Layton moved to compel arbitration in the claim
filed by Plaintiff . . . arising out of [Plaintiff]’s breach of
contract action against Gray Layton seeking damages owed
to [Plaintiff] as a result of expenses and overhead expended
pursuant to the Shareholder Agreement between Gray
[Layton] and [Plaintiff]. See Exhibit A, [the] Shareholder
Agreement.
2. The basis of the breach of contract action arises out of
the Shareholder Agreement entered into between Gray
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Layton and [Plaintiff] on March 6, 2000.
3. [Plaintiff] further alleged failures of Gray Layton to
adequately compensate him for the revenue he brought
into the firm; the failure to purchase [Plaintiff]’s stock in
Gray Layton at the agreed upon price or time; the failure
of Gray Layton to pay [COBRA] Properties, LLP partners
rent increases required by the lease; and the failure to
adequately compensate [Plaintiff] for his interest in the
class action matter.
4. There is no arbitration clause in the Shareholder
Agreement.
5. The party seeking arbitration must show that the parties
mutually agreed to arbitrate their disputes. See Hager v.
Smithfield E. Health Holdings, LLC, 264 N.C. App. 350,
361, 526 S.E.2d 567, 575 (2019). Because the Shareholder
Agreement between Gray Layton and [Plaintiff] lack[s] a
binding arbitration agreement, it cannot serve as the basis
to compel arbitration.
6. . . . Gray Layton also cited to three other agreements as
grounds for its motion to compel arbitration: (1) the
[COBRA Properties Agreement]; (2) the [COBRA Lease];
and (3) the Class Action [Agreement].
7. The [COBRA Properties Agreement] is entered into
between [COBRA] Properties, LL[P] and [Plaintiff],
individually. The Court finds that Cobra Properties, LL[P]
is an entirely separate entity from the parties in this
matter and no privity exists between the parties, nor does
this dispute fall within the scope of the arbitration
agreement contained in the Partnership Agreement. The
Cobra Properties Partnership Agreement cannot compel
arbitration in this matter.
8. The [COBRA Lease] contains no arbitration clause.
Without a mutual agreement to arbitrate, arbitration may
not be compelled. The [COBRA] Lease cannot compel
arbitration.
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9. The [Class Action Agreement] is entered into between
Gray Layton and its [associate attorneys]. The court finds
that the [Class Action Agreement] contains an arbitration
clause, but it does not apply between firm partners;
instead, detailing how the firm divides fees with the
[associate attorneys]. Moreover, [Plaintiff] was not an
individual party to the [Class Action Agreement]. The
present dispute between [Plaintiff] and Gray Layton does
not fall within the scope of the arbitration agreement
within the [Class Action Agreement] and is not grounds to
compel arbitration in this matter. See Ellis-Don Constr.,
Inc. v. HNTB Corp., 169 N.C. App. 630, 635, 610 S.E.2d
293, 296 (2005).
(Cleaned up).
Based on these findings of fact, the trial court again denied Gray Layton’s
motion to compel arbitration. Gray Layton timely filed notice of appeal.
II. Interlocutory Jurisdiction
As was the case in Griffing I, the trial court’s order denying Gray Layton’s
motion to compel arbitration is interlocutory “because it does not determine all of the
issues between the parties and directs some further proceeding preliminary to a final
judgment.” Jackson v. Home Depot, U.S.A., Inc., 276 N.C. App. 349, 354, 857 S.E.2d
321, 326 (2021) (citation omitted). “Ordinarily, interlocutory orders are not
immediately appealable. However, this Court has previously determined that an
appeal from an order denying arbitration, although interlocutory, is immediately
appealable because it involves a substantial right which might be lost if appeal is
delayed.” Id. (cleaned up).
In the “Statement of the Grounds for Appellate Review” section of its opening
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brief, Gray Layton has sufficiently demonstrated that the trial court’s interlocutory
order affects this substantial right. Additionally, Gray Layton correctly notes that the
trial court’s order is immediately appealable pursuant to N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1-
569.28(a)(1) (2021) (providing an immediate right of appeal from “[a]n order denying
a motion to compel arbitration”). Accordingly, this interlocutory order is properly
before us.
III. Discussion
Gray Layton argues that the trial court erred by denying its motion to compel
arbitration because this case “contains multiple valid arbitration clauses, and public
policy favors arbitration.” Specifically, Gray Layton argues that Plaintiff is bound to
arbitrate his claims against Gray Layton by the arbitration clauses in the COBRA
Properties Agreement and the Class Action Agreement. For the reasons that follow,
we disagree.
A. Standard of Review
“North Carolina has a strong public policy favoring the settlement of disputes
by arbitration.” Johnston Cty. v. R.N. Rouse & Co., 331 N.C. 88, 91, 414 S.E.2d 30, 32
(1992). “However, before a dispute can be settled in this manner, there must first
exist a valid agreement to arbitrate. The party seeking arbitration bears the burden
of proving the parties mutually agreed to the arbitration provision.” Jackson, 276
N.C. App. at 356, 857 S.E.2d at 327 (cleaned up).
“The question of whether a dispute is subject to arbitration is an issue for
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judicial determination. A trial court’s conclusion as to whether a particular dispute
is subject to arbitration is a conclusion of law, which this Court reviews de novo.” Id.
(cleaned up). “On appeal, findings of fact made by the trial court are binding upon the
appellate court in the absence of a challenge to those findings.” Id.
B. Analysis
“The determination of whether a particular dispute is subject to arbitration
involves a two-step analysis requiring the trial court to ascertain both (1) whether
the parties had a valid agreement to arbitrate, and also (2) whether the specific
dispute falls within the substantive scope of that agreement.” Id. (cleaned up). The
first step of this analysis—whether the parties had a valid agreement to arbitrate—
is the dispositive issue in this case.
It is undisputed that neither the Shareholder Agreement nor the COBRA
Lease contains an arbitration clause. Accordingly, Gray Layton seeks to enforce
against Plaintiff one of the arbitration clauses appearing in either the COBRA
Properties Agreement or the Class Action Agreement. Gray Layton’s arguments are
unpersuasive.
1. The COBRA Properties Agreement
Gray Layton first argues that Plaintiff is bound to arbitrate his claims against
Gray Layton by the arbitration clause in the COBRA Properties Agreement. In
response, Plaintiff maintains that Gray Layton cannot enforce that arbitration clause
against him because Gray Layton was not a party to that agreement. Gray Layton
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does not dispute that fact, but argues instead that the trial court erred by failing to
consider whether Plaintiff is equitably estopped from denying his burdens under the
COBRA Properties Agreement—including its arbitration agreement.
“A nonsignatory to an arbitration clause may, in certain situations, compel a
signatory to the clause to arbitrate the signatory’s claims against the nonsignatory
despite the fact that the signatory and nonsignatory lack an agreement to arbitrate.”
Smith Jamison Constr. v. APAC-Atl., Inc., 257 N.C. App. 714, 717, 811 S.E.2d 635,
638 (2018) (cleaned up). “One such situation exists when the signatory is equitably
estopped from arguing that a nonsignatory is not a party to the arbitration clause.”
Id. (citation omitted). “Estoppel is appropriate if in substance the signatory’s
underlying complaint is based on the nonsignatory’s alleged breach of the obligations
and duties assigned to it in the agreement.” Id. (cleaned up).
Gray Layton focuses on Plaintiff’s years of accepting the benefits of the COBRA
Properties Agreement—namely, his share of the rent payments that Gray Layton has
made to COBRA Properties. Yet in doing so, Gray Layton overlooks the essential
question of whether Plaintiff “asserted claims in the underlying suit that, either
literally or obliquely, assert a breach of a duty created by the contract containing the
arbitration clause.” Id. at 718, 811 S.E.2d at 638 (citation omitted). Here, Gray
Layton’s argument fails.
In his complaint, Plaintiff primarily alleges that Gray Layton violated the
Shareholder Agreement “as well as other side agreements[.]” The only allegation that
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plausibly concerns COBRA Properties is Plaintiff’s assertion that Gray Layton
“[f]ail[ed] to pay [the COBRA Properties] partners the 3% rent increases as required
by the [COBRA L]ease.” However, this is not an assertion of “a breach of a duty
created by the contract containing the arbitration clause.” Id. (emphasis omitted).
The breach asserted is Gray Layton’s alleged failure to pay the increased rent to
COBRA Properties—a duty created by the COBRA Lease, which again, does not
contain an arbitration provision—not Gray Layton’s alleged failure to pay Plaintiff
his share of rental income under the COBRA Properties Agreement. Neither does
Plaintiff’s complaint rely upon any alleged breach of duty created by the COBRA
Properties Agreement.
Clearly, then, Plaintiff “is not attempting to assert claims against [Gray
Layton] that are premised upon any contractual and fiduciary duties created by the
contract containing the arbitration clause.” Id. at 720, 811 S.E.2d at 640. Accordingly,
Gray Layton fails to show that Plaintiff should be equitably estopped from denying
that his breach of contract claim is subject to the COBRA Properties Agreement’s
arbitration clause.
In sum: Gray Layton was not a party to the COBRA Properties Agreement,
and Plaintiff is not attempting to assert claims against Gray Layton that are
premised upon any duty created by the COBRA Properties Agreement. Therefore,
Gray Layton cannot enforce the COBRA Properties Agreement’s arbitration clause
against Plaintiff.
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2. The Class Action Agreement
Gray Layton next argues that Plaintiff agreed to be bound as a signatory to the
Class Action Agreement, which contains an arbitration clause. Gray Layton contends
that the trial court “placed improper weight and stopped its analysis after finding
that [Plaintiff] was not an ‘individual party to the’ Class Action Agreement.” Unlike
the COBRA Properties Agreement, it is undisputed that Gray Layton was a signatory
to the Class Action Agreement.
Nonetheless, the plain text of the Class Action Agreement demonstrates that
the parties to that intrafirm agreement were Gray Layton and the two associates who
agreed to undertake the extensive class-action representation that was the subject of
the contract. Moreover, the breach of contract alleged in Plaintiff’s complaint that
most closely falls within the ambit of the Class Action Agreement is the contention
that Gray Layton “[f]ail[ed] to reimburse [Plaintiff] for the expenses he advanced in
the class action matter.” Although Plaintiff signed it as a participating attorney, the
Class Action Agreement contains no provision that creates any right of
reimbursement for a participating attorney’s advanced expenses. It strains credulity
to suggest that the arbitration provision contained in the agreement between Gray
Layton and two of its associates regarding profit-sharing for the associates’ class-
action representation simultaneously manifests the agreement of one of Gray
Layton’s participating attorneys to arbitrate a claim that Gray Layton failed to
reimburse him for advanced expenses.
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Accordingly, as with the COBRA Properties Agreement, Plaintiff “is not
attempting to assert claims against [Gray Layton] that are premised upon any
contractual and fiduciary duties created by” the Class Action Agreement. Id. Plaintiff
is therefore not bound, as a signatory to the Class Action Agreement, to arbitrate the
claims he raises in the instant action, nor is he estopped from denying that he is
bound by the arbitration clause in the Class Action Agreement.
In the alternative, Gray Layton argues that, as a third-party beneficiary to the
Class Action Agreement, Plaintiff is bound to arbitrate the claims advanced in the
case at bar.
“The third-party beneficiary doctrine usually applies to allow a third[ ]party to
enforce a contract executed for [the third party’s] direct benefit.” Jarman v. Twiddy
& Co. of Duck, Inc., 289 N.C. App. 319, 326, 889 S.E.2d 488, 495 (2023). In order to
assert rights under a contract as a third-party beneficiary, the third party “must
show: (1) that a contract exists between two persons or entities; (2) that the contract
is valid and enforceable; and (3) that the contract was executed for the direct, and not
incidental, benefit of the third party.” Michael v. Huffman Oil Co., Inc., 190 N.C. App.
256, 269, 661 S.E.2d 1, 10 (2008) (cleaned up), disc. review denied, 363 N.C. 129, 673
S.E.2d 360 (2009). “When a party seeks enforcement of a contract as a third-party
beneficiary, the contract must be construed strictly against the party seeking
enforcement.” Id.
Importantly, “our Courts have required [a third party] to show a direct—rather
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than incidental—benefit for purposes of invoking the third-party beneficiary
doctrine.” Jarman, 289 N.C. App. at 327, 889 S.E.2d at 496. “A person is a direct
beneficiary of the contract if the contracting parties intended to confer a legally
enforceable benefit on that person.” Id. at 327–28, 889 S.E.2d at 496 (citation
omitted). “[T]he determining factor as to the rights of a third-party beneficiary is the
intention of the parties who actually made the contract. The real test is said to be
whether the contracting parties intended that a third person should receive a benefit
which might be enforced in the courts.” Id. at 328, 889 S.E.2d at 496 (cleaned up).
Here, as explained above, the direct beneficiaries of the Class Action
Agreement are Gray Layton and the two associates with whom Gray Layton agreed
to share profits. Further, despite Gray Layton’s claim that Plaintiff “benefitted by
sharing in any recovery stemming from the Class Action” Agreement, that benefit
was not intended directly by the agreement between Gray Layton and its two
associates. It is clear that Plaintiff cannot be considered a direct—rather than
incidental—beneficiary of the Class Action Agreement.
Finally, the arbitration clause in the Class Action Agreement “do[es] not
provide any direct benefit to Plaintiff[ ] or evidence any intent to provide a direct
benefit to Plaintiff[.]” Id. at 328–29, 889 S.E.2d at 496. Construing the Class Action
Agreement “strictly against the party seeking enforcement[,]” Michael, 190 N.C. App.
at 269, 661 S.E.2d at 10 (cleaned up), we conclude that Gray Layton fails to show that
Plaintiff is anything more than an incidental beneficiary. Plaintiff is therefore not
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bound by the Class Action Agreement’s arbitration clause.
IV. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, the trial court’s order is affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
Judges STROUD and TYSON concur.
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