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Try CasePortal for FreeJ. Jenkins finds the lower court properly determined that an arbitration agreement, signed by a health care agent, does not bind the principal to its terms. A patient at a skilled nursing facility had executed a medical power of attorney prior to being admitted. The power of attorney designated a specific person to act as his agent concerning health care matters, and when the patient experienced a medical circumstance that required a stay at a skilled nursing facility, his agent signed a contract for the patient to be admitted and a separate arbitration agreement. When the patient was discharged and decided to file suit against the nursing facility regarding his care, the nursing facility asked the court to compel arbitration per the agreement. But the lower court found that the patient’s admission was not contingent upon the agent signing the separate arbitration agreement, therefore the arbitration agreement was outside the scope of the agent’s authority, as it was not a health care decision at that point. Affirmed.