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All articles tagged '"Court of Appeals"'

135 articles found

Texarkana COA Upholds MSA Where Mediator Resolved Dispute Regarding Scope

By Beth Graham - April 19, 2011
The Texarkana Court of Appeals has upheld a mediation settlement agreement (“MSA”) in a divorce proceeding where the mediator was called upon to resolve a factual dispute concerning the scope of the mediation. In In re Allen, No. 06-10-00085-CV (Tex. App. – Texarkana, March 30, 2011), Daphne and James Allen entered into a mediation settlement agreement during divorce proceedings which resulted in the division of a large piece of property that inc

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San Antonio Appeals Court Holds Signatory May Not Waive Non-Signatory’s Right to Arbitrate

By Beth Graham - April 14, 2011
The San Antonio Court of Appeals has held that a signatory’s waiver of its right to arbitrate could not be imputed to its non-signatory agent. In Garcia v. Huerta, No. 04-10-00688-CV (Tex. App. – San Antonio, March 30, 2011) Albert Garcia appealed a trial court’s order which denied arbitration against Edward and Margarita Huerta. The Huertas obtained a home equity loan from Wells Fargo and entered into an arbitration agreement with Wells Fargo as

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Ninth Circuit Affirms Mediated Facebook Settlement

By Beth Graham - April 12, 2011
The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals has enforced a mediation confidentiality agreement and refused to nullify a mediated settlement agreement. In Facebook v. ConnectU, Inc., No. 08-16873, (9th Cir., April 11, 2011), Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss sued Mark Zuckerberg in Massachusetts claiming he stole the idea for the social networking site Facebook from them. Zuckerberg countersued the Winklevosses and their social networking site, ConnectU, in Cal

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Supreme Court of Texas Holds TAA Applies Where No Evidence to the Contrary Demonstrated

By Beth Graham - April 5, 2011
The Supreme Court of Texas has held in a per curiam opinion that the Texas General Arbitration Act (TAA) applied to a dispute where a party invoked the TAA in a hearing on a motion to compel arbitration and no evidence was offered to show the TAA did not apply despite that the motion itself failed to invoke the act. In Ellis v. Schlimmer, No. 10-0243 (Tex., April 1, 2011), Ron and Tana Schlimmer purchased a home in Corpus Christi, TX from Veronic

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Dallas COA Holds Arbitration Clause Illusory and Unenforceable

By Beth Graham - March 25, 2011
The Dallas Court of Appeals has held that certain language contained in an employee handbook rendered the contained and referenced arbitration and mediation agreements illusory and unenforceable. In Weekley Homes, L.P. v. Rao, No. 05-10-00570 (Tex. App. – Dallas, March 22, 2011), Len Rao, former Division President of David Weekley Homes, filed a lawsuit against the company which alleged breach of contract, conversion, breach of fiduciary duty, li

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Dallas COA Refuses to Seal Arbitration Award Despite Parties’ Agreement

By Beth Graham - March 21, 2011
The Dallas Court of Appeals has held that a trial court properly rejected a party’s motion to seal an arbitration award as part of an enforcement petition despite the existence of a confidentiality agreement between the parties. In McAfee v. Weiss, 05-09-01102-CV (Tex. App. – Dallas, March 16, 2011), Kevin M. Weiss filed a petition to confirm an arbitration award against McAfee in state court. Weiss, a former president at McAfee, Inc. was t

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Beaumont COA Holds Section 9 of the FAA Established One Year SOL

By Beth Graham - March 18, 2011
The Beaumont Court of Appeals has held in a memorandum opinion that Section 9 of the Federal Arbitration Act (“FAA”) established a mandatory one year statute of limitations for the enforcement of arbitral awards. In Arthur v. FIA Card Services, N.A., No. 09-09-00520-CV, (Tex. App. – Beaumont, March 10, 2011), Sally LaRue Arthur (“LaRue”) appealed a judgment which confirmed a National Arbitration Forum (“NAF”) award because she was served with a m

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Dallas Court of Appeals Vacates Arbitral Award Due to Arbitrator’s Non-Disclosure

By Beth Graham - January 12, 2011
The Dallas Court of Appeals has vacated an arbitration award because the arbitrator failed to disclose that he served as arbitrator in another case involving one party’s representative and a related company. In Alim v. KBR (Kellogg, Brown & Root) – Halliburton, No. 05-09-00395-CV, (Tex. App. – Dallas, Jan 10, 2011), Mohammad Alim was employed by KBR (Kellogg, Brown & Root) – Halliburton (“KBR”) and filed “an arbitration claim for em

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Houston Appeals Court Holds U.S. Courts Lack Authority Under Arbitration Agreement

By Beth Graham - January 6, 2011
In an interesting case currently on appeal to the Supreme Court of Texas, the Houston [1st] Court of Appeals vacated a trial court’s order appointing a three-person arbitration panel because the court was not the authority contemplated in the parties’ arbitration agreement. In In re Aramco Services Co., No. 01-09-00624-CV, (Tex. App. – Houston [1st], March 19, 2010), DynCorp International, LLC and Aramco entered into a contract for a comput

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Corpus Christi Appeals Court Affirms Arbitration Award

By Beth Graham - November 30, 2010
The Corpus Christi Court of Appeals has affirmed an arbitration award stemming from an irrevocable family settlement agreement. In In re Cantu, No. 13-08-00708-CV, (Tex. App. — Corpus Christi, November 18, 2010), several disputes arose between the seven children of an elderly widow regarding her care and custody and the disposition of her estate. Following a court-ordered mediation, all seven of the widow’s children entered into an irrevoca

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Disputing is published by Karl Bayer, a dispute resolution expert based in Austin, Texas. Articles published on Disputing aim to provide original insight and commentary around issues related to arbitration, mediation and the alternative dispute resolution industry.

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