IN THE SUPREME COURT OF
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No. 06-0943
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In
re Fleetwood
Homes of
Fleetwood
Enterprises, Inc.,
Relators
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On Petition for Writ of
Mandamus
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PER CURIAM
Parties that
“conduct full discovery, file motions going to the merits, and seek arbitration
only on the eve of trial” waive any contractual right to arbitration. In re Vesta Ins. Group, Inc., 192
S.W.3d 759, 764 (
Fleetwood
Enterprises, Inc., manufactures mobile homes. In
January 2005 it signed a dealer agreement with Gulf Regional Services, Inc., an
owner and developer of mobile home parks in southeast
After Gulf filed suit in October 2005, Fleetwood filed an answer demanding arbitration, but did not actually move to compel arbitration until July 2006. Gulf opposed the motion on two grounds: express waiver and unconscionability.
“[A] party
waives an arbitration clause by substantially invoking the judicial process to
the other party’s detriment or prejudice.”
Gulf argues that Fleetwood expressly waived arbitration, pointing to several emails from Fleetwood’s counsel regarding a proposed trial setting, culminating in the following:
I have reviewed the Setting Request and would ask that we try to get a setting in March . . . . Given the documentation I received last week and the work we need to do as a result of those documents, Fleetwood is not going to be in a position to try this case in December. If you are agreeable to this, we could sign an agreed Setting Request, otherwise, I will have to oppose the request after you submit it and request a later setting.
We need not decide whether Gulf is correct that express waiver is governed by different rules than those that govern implied waiver, as we disagree that this rises to the level of an express waiver. Nothing in this communication expressly waives arbitration or revokes the arbitration demand Fleetwood included in every answer it filed.
Instead, the
question here is whether Fleetwood impliedly waived arbitration by
failing to pursue its arbitration demand for eight months while discussing a
trial setting and allowing limited discovery. We have already answered that
question “No.” In EZ Pawn Corp. v. Mancias, we
held a party had not waived arbitration by filing an answer, discussing a
docket-control order, sending written discovery, noticing a deposition, and
agreeing to postpone a trial setting. 934 S.W.2d 87, 90
(
As in EZ
Pawn, the evidence here is legally insufficient to support a finding of
prejudice. Gulf does not explain how it possibly could have been prejudiced by
exchanging emails about a trial setting. Moreover, while these communications
are a factor to be considered in the totality-of-the-circumstances, they are not
the only factors. See id. at ___. Here,
Fleetwood took no depositions, although it noticed one deposition before cancelling it.[1] It served one set of written discovery
the day before it moved to compel arbitration. It filed no dispositive motions, nor did it wait until the eve of trial
to move to compel. Taken together, these actions are not enough to overcome the
presumption against waiver. See In re Vesta
Ins. Group, Inc., 192 S.W.3d 759, 763 (
Gulf also
argues the arbitration clause is substantively unconscionable, citing two
reasons. First, it asserts that arbitration limits its right to discovery. But
limited discovery is one of arbitration’s “most distinctive features.”
Second, Gulf
asserts the agreement here is unconscionable because it allows the prevailing
party to recover attorney’s fees. It is true that absent a contractual agreement
like this,
Because Gulf has failed to show that Fleetwood waived its contractual right to arbitration, we conditionally grant Fleetwood’s petition for writ of mandamus and direct the trial court to compel arbitration. We are confident that the trial court will promptly comply, and our writ will issue only if it does not.
OPINION DELIVERED: June 20, 2008
[1] Gulf deposed three Fleetwood representatives, but does not explain how it was prejudiced in being allowed to do so. See Perry Homes, ___ S.W.3d at ___ (“[A] party who requests lots of discovery is not prejudiced by getting it and taking it to arbitration in the same way [as] a party who produces lots of discovery . . . .”) (emphasis in original).