Wisconsin 
Lawyer
  Vol. 79, No. 12, December 
  2006
Borst Clarifies Arbitration Procedures 
  The Wisconsin Supreme Court's opinion in Borst v. Allstate 
Insurance 
    Co. has clarified several ill-defined aspects of the 
arbitration process, including the role of party-appointed arbitrators, 
the 
    right of parties to seek equitable relief due to arbitrator 
partiality, and the taking of discovery. 
 
by Mark A. Frankel 

ue to its many 
advantages as 
an alternative to litigation, arbitration is a popular choice among 
parties seeking an 
  efficient resolution of a wide range of legal disputes. Arbitration 
tends to be a more private and less expensive alternative 
  than formal litigation. It has greater finality and is generally 
quicker than litigation. Arbitration also allows disputing parties 
  to choose a tribunal that is likely to have more technical expertise 
about a specific industry or type of dispute than a 
  typical judge or jury may have. However, for arbitration to function 
efficiently and remain an attractive litigation 
  alternative, parties must have a high degree of certainty about the 
procedural ground rules underpinning the arbitration option. 
 As a result of the Wisconsin Supreme Court's recent decision in 
Borst v. Allstate Insurance 
  Co.,1 important procedural aspects of 
arbitration have been significantly clarified. Because the arbitration 
process and 
  alternative dispute resolution (ADR) generally exist outside the 
immediate purview of close judicial scrutiny, many 
  assumptions about how arbitration operates have evolved within the ADR 
community. On those infrequent occasions when 
  appellate courts are asked to rule on the validity of a disputed 
arbitration outcome, the court has an opportunity to reshape 
  long-held institutional perceptions about the process. The Wisconsin 
Supreme Court decision in Borst clarified several ill-defined 
aspects of the arbitration process. 
  
Mark A. Frankel, U.W. 1973, is a shareholder with 
LaFollette Godfrey & Kahn, Madison. He authored the State Bar of 
Wisconsin ADR Section amicus brief in Borst.
 
 In Borst, the supreme court established several new 
principles that further delineate the arbitration process. 
  The court held that a party-appointed arbitrator now is presumed to be 
a true neutral in the arbitration 
  decision-making process, unless explicitly designated as an advocate 
for the appointing party in a tripartite 
  arbitration2. An arbitrator with a 
potentially disqualifying bias or affiliation with one of the parties is 
not relieved of that bias merely by making a 
  full disclosure of that bias or relationship in advance of the 
arbitration. An aggrieved party in arbitration now has 
  the recognized right to seek equitable judicial relief before the 
arbitration hearing based on a claim of undue partiality on 
  the part of an arbitrator. Finally, the supreme court established 
that, in the absence of explicit contractual authority 
  authorizing prearbitration discovery, an arbitrator has no inherent 
discretion to authorize the taking of discovery in an 
  arbitration proceeding. These newly articulated principles, while 
easily defensible, differ from many commonly accepted 
  beliefs concerning how the arbitration process works. 
Background of the Borst Dispute 
Borst arose out of an uninsured motorist accident in 
November 2000. After receiving treatment for injuries he 
  suffered in the accident, Russell Borst sought reimbursement from 
Allstate Insurance Co. under the uninsured motorist clause 
  of his automobile insurance policy. Allstate raised the issue of 
Borst's contributory negligence as a potential cause of 
  his own injuries. Allstate offered to settle with Borst for an amount 
only half of that claimed by Borst because, in 
  Allstate's view, Borst's negligence was partially 
responsible for causing the accident. Borst rejected Allstate's 
settlement offer 
  and demanded arbitration under his policy. 
 Borst's insurance policy contained an "If we can't agree" 
provision specifying that if the parties could not agree on 
  an amount to settle a claim, the dispute would be resolved by 
arbitration under the rules of the American 
  Arbitration Association (AAA). The contract further specified that 
each side was to select 
  an arbitrator and that the two party-appointed arbitrators would then 
select a third arbitrator. A written decision of two of the three 
arbitrators would resolve the disputed issues. 
 Allstate selected attorney Rick Hills as its designated arbitrator. 
Borst immediately objected to the neutrality of Hills' 
  appointment on the ground that Allstate was a regular client of Hills' 
law firm. Hills asserted that, despite his firm's representation 
  of Allstate, he could still serve as a neutral arbitrator. Hills and 
Borst's appointed arbitrator then jointly selected a third arbitrator. 
  Borst challenged Allstate's selection of Hills as an arbitrator in 
circuit court, but he did not succeed in having Hills removed as 
  an arbitrator. The three arbitrators, over Borst's objection, 
authorized the taking of discovery by use of depositions, 
interrogatories, 
  and the provision of medical releases. 
 The arbitration panel unanimously determined that Borst's total 
damages were only $3,531 and that his net award 
  was $1,765.50, after a 50 percent reduction for Borst's contributory 
negligence. Borst then challenged the confirmation of the 
  arbitration award in circuit court under Wis. Stat. section 788.10, on 
the ground that, because Hills' law firm regularly represented 
  Allstate, Hills was unduly partial to Allstate. The circuit court 
determined there were no rules governing bias and because there was 
  a presumption of validity, the circuit court confirmed the arbitration 
award under Wis. Stat. section 788.09. Borst appealed, and 
  the court of appeals certified the case to the Wisconsin Supreme 
Court. 
Impartiality Required of a
  Party-appointed Arbitrator
Arbitrators serve in what is, essentially, a judicial capacity, 
  albeit in a nonjudicial setting. One of the hallmarks of the 
judicial 
  system is that judges are expected to be impartial concerning the 
disputes that come before them. Tripartite arbitration is historically 
  an area in which arbitrator impartiality has not always been presumed. 
To the contrary, many lawyers and courts have assumed that 
  an arbitrator appointed by one of the parties is expected to function 
more as an advocate for the appointing party than as a 
  true neutral.3 
 The supreme court recognized in Borst that there has been a 
great deal of confusion and uncertainty about the appropriate 
  role of a party-appointed arbitrator in tripartite arbitrations. It 
had been commonly accepted practice within certain industries to 
  appoint a designated arbitrator known to be and expected to be 
sympathetic to the appointing 
  party.4 Until 2004, the AAA's 
  commercial arbitration rules explicitly presumed that a 
party-appointed arbitrator would be an advocate for the appointing 
party. In 2004, 
  the AAA, in conjunction with an American Bar Association taskforce, 
updated the AAA's commercial arbitration rules to specify 
  a rebuttable presumption of neutrality for all arbitrators, including 
party-appointed arbitrators. 
 The Wisconsin Supreme Court accepted the position advocated by the 
State Bar of Wisconsin Alternative Dispute 
  Resolution (ADR) Section5 that, unless the 
parties expressly designate their appointed arbitrators to function in 
an advocacy capacity, party-appointed arbitrators should be presumed to 
function as true neutrals. There are several advantages to this 
resolution of the 
  issue. First, it serves to eliminate the significant confusion that 
previously existed among arbitrators and practitioners as to the 
  appropriate role of the party-appointed arbitrator. This role 
clarification should reduce post arbitration disputes over the 
impartiality of 
  appointed arbitrators. Parties still retain the right to contractually 
specify that appointed arbitrators in their disputes will function in 
  other than a neutral role, free from impartiality requirements. 
Second, absent a contractual choice to use partial arbitrators, the 
  decision expands the functional decision-making from just the one 
historically neutral arbitrator, to all three neutral arbitrators. 
 From the practitioner's point of view, the strategic focus in 
selecting an arbitrator now shifts to seeking an arbitrator with 
  the experience and credibility to make an informed, impartial, and 
intelligent decision. Previously, counsel frequently focused 
  on selecting an arbitrator with the presumed ability to persuade the 
one neutral arbitrator to accept counsel's position on the merits 
  of the dispute. 
 Evident Partiality and the Role of 
  Full Disclosure 
Allstate argued that, because Hills had declared his impartiality and 
fully disclosed his law firm's relationship with Allstate, there 
  was no basis to reject the arbitration award based on a claim of 
evident partiality under Wis. Stat. section 788.10(1)(b). The 
  supreme court strongly rejected the argument that neutrality only 
requires a full disclosure of potentially conflicting relationships. 
 The court specified the standard for determining whether an 
arbitrator has demonstrated evident partiality under Wis. 
  Stat. section 788.10(1)(b). If there is "clear, plain and 
apparent" evidence of bias, so that a reasonable person would have 
serious 
  doubts about the impartiality of the arbitrator to serve on a neutral 
arbitration panel, the award will not be confirmed. The court 
  concluded, as a matter of law, that Hills' substantial, ongoing 
attorney/client relationship with Allstate met the test for evident 
partiality, 
  and the court ordered the arbitration award vacated. The supreme court 
made clear that arbitrators are not held to the same standard 
  of impartiality as judges. However, recusal or vacation of an award 
will be required when the disclosure reveals the existence of 
  a substantial relationship between an arbitrator and one of the 
parties, something more than a "
 casual, innocent, 
  superficial, insignificant or inconsequential 
" 
relationship. 
 The larger question for the court was whether a party is entitled to 
challenge the impartiality of an appointed arbitrator before 
  a final award is rendered. The court ultimately concluded that 
affording the right to a prearbitration judicial challenge to 
  the impartiality of an arbitrator enhances the efficiency of the 
arbitration 
  process.6 The supreme court concluded that 
circuit courts 
  have the equitable authority to order a party to select another 
arbitrator, if necessary to assure the impartiality of an arbitration 
process. 
Arbitrators' Authority to Order 
  Prehearing Discovery 
In the absence of an express contractual agreement on discovery, the 
parties presented a significant dispute over the extent 
  of prehearing discovery allowable in arbitration. Borst asserted that, 
given the relatively simple nature of the insurance claim 
  dispute, no prehearing discovery should have been permitted. 
Conversely, Allstate argued that, because the Wisconsin Legislature 
  had expressly authorized the use of court-approved depositions under 
Wis. Stat. section 788.07, the legislature also must have 
  implicitly authorized the use of less expensive forms of discovery. To 
the surprise of many practitioners, the court held that, because there 
  is no statutory authority specifying discovery in arbitration (outside 
of depositions under section 788.07), arbitrators have no 
  inherent ability to determine the necessity and scope of allowable 
discovery. 
 The clear alternative for lawyers concerned about ensuring the 
potential availability of discovery in arbitration is to specify, in 
  the arbitration agreement, the extent and types of discovery that will 
be available if arbitration ultimately is used. 
  Alternatively, contracting parties by reference may incorporate 
publicly available arbitration rules specifying discovery rules that 
will be used 
  as part of the arbitration process.7 
Because arbitration is, at its core, a matter of contract, courts should 
have little or no reluctance 
  to approve discovery procedures that the parties themselves have 
contractually agreed to in advance of any subsequent 
  arbitration disputes. 
Conclusion 
Borst presents lawyers and their clients with a clearer 
understanding of exactly how arbitration is designed to operate in 
  Wisconsin. This new clarity should reduce parties' concerns that 
procedural disputes will result in unnecessary post-hearing litigation 
after 
  an arbitration award has been rendered. 
Endnotes 
Wisconsin 
Lawyer