Showing posts with label gentry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gentry. Show all posts

Thursday, 20 June 2013

Supreme Court Upholds Express Class Action Waivers Regardless of Individual Claim's Value

Italian Colors restaurant challenged American Express's fees as violating anti-trust laws by filing a class action. But Colors signed an arbitration clause excluding class claims.   Colors argued that the cost of proving its case would be multiples of whatever it might recover.  Therefore, Colors contended, the class waiver impermissibly interfered with its ability to sue under federal law.  The Second Circuit court of appeals agreed with this premise, citing what is known as the "effective vindication" rule.  Under that rule, courts have held that arbitration agreements are invalid under the Federal Arbitration Act unless they permit "effective vindication" of federal statutory rights.

The Supreme Court, 5-3 with Justice Sotomayor recused, held that Colors is bound by its agreement to arbitrate, regardless of whether it is economically feasible to arbitrate its individual claim.  The majority's point is that Congress did not say in the anti-trust laws that a litigant must be able to bring a class action, or that litigation must be economically feasible.  Nothing in the arbitration agreement precluded or limited Colors' rights under the anti-trust law.  Further, anti-trust lawsuits and the Sherman Act predated the class action device.

The Court wrote:
Respondents argue that requiring them to litigate their claims individually—as they contracted to do—would contravene the policies of the antitrust laws. But the antitrust laws do not guarantee an affordable procedural path to the vindication of every claim.


The dissent (penned by Justice Kagan, with Ginsburg and Breyer concurring) essentially wrote that when the cost of bringing a claim under a federal statute significantly outweighs the potential recovery, then a class action right must be preserved as well.  The dissent stated that the majority opinion all but doomed Colors' case by rendering it prohibitively expensive to arbitrate.  Justice Kagan characterized the majority's response to that contention as, "Too darn bad."

This decision addresses class action waivers under federal law, not state law.  However, the majority does not appear to consider it a big difference whether the issue is if the FAA preempts state law or conflicts with federal law:

In dismissing AT&T Mobility [v. Concepcion] as a case involving pre-emption and not the effective-vindication exception, the dissent ignores what that case established—that the FAA’s command to enforce arbitration agreements trumps any interest in ensuring the prosecution of low value claims. The latter interest, we said, is “unrelated” to the FAA. 563 U. S., at ___ (slip op., at 17). Accordingly, the FAA does, contrary to the dissent’s assertion, see post, at 5, favor the absence of litigation when that is the consequence of a class-action waiver, since its “ ‘principal purpose’ ” is the enforcement of arbitration agreements according to their terms.
This last point undermines the California Supreme Court's focus on "low value" claims (like wage-hour matters) as a factor in determining if a class action waiver is valid.   We are waiting to see what the California high court plans to do with its decision in Gentry v. Superior Court, which the court is reconsidering.

This decision is American Express Co. v. Italian Colors Rest.  and the opinion is here.







Monday, 23 July 2012

Court of Appeal Upholds Arbitration Agreement

Nelsen v. Legacy Partners (opinion here) is the latest decision from the court of appeal to address the validity of arbitration agreements in California, after recent federal developments (Concepcion, DR Horton, etc.). 

The issues, as usual, are whether the arbitration agreement is "unconscionable," or violates public policy, and therefore is unenforceable as a contract.

The arbitration agreement was located at the end of a long handbook. Not surprisingly, the court first found that the agreement was "procedurally unconscionable,"  because
It was part of a preprinted form agreement drafted by LPI that all of LPI‘s California property managers were required to sign on a take-it-or-leave-it basis. The arbitration clause was located on the last two pages of a 43-page handbook. While the top of page 42 contains a highlighted prominent title ―TEAM MEMBER ACKNOWLEDGMENT AND AGREEMENT,‖ the title makes no reference to arbitration and the arbitration language itself appears in a small font not set off in any way to stand out from the rest of the agreement or handbook. Moreover, unless Nelsen happened to be conversant with the rules of pleading in the Code of Civil Procedure, the law and procedure applicable to appellate review, and the rules for the disqualification of superior court judges, the terms and rules of the arbitration referenced in the clause would have been beyond her comprehension.
So, now the courts say that failing to attach the Code of Civil Procedure makes an agreement procedurally unconscionable.  What happened to "everyone is bound to know the law?" or "ignorance is no excuse?"  Also, by saying that the agreement is not in a different font, the court is imposing a requirement that does not apply to other contracts.  That's not supposed to be allowed, demonstrating once again that the unconscionability doctrine is just an end run around Federal Arbitration Act preemption.

However, the court then turned to "substantive" unconscionability, which must also exist for an arbitration agreement to be invalidated.  In this case, though, the arbitration agreement was pretty much lifted verbatim from a California Supreme Court decision. (Little v. Auto Stiegler, Inc. (2003) 29 Cal.4th 1064.)  So, the Court did not find substantive unconscionability.

But Nelsen then argued that, regardless of unconcsionability, the arbitration agreement violated "public policy" under the California Supreme Court's decision in  Gentry v. Superior Court (2007) 42 Cal.4th 443.  In particular, Nelsen argued that the arbitration agreement barred her from bringing a class claim in arbitration because the agreement was silent as to class claims.

The court of appeal held that, indeed, the silent agreement did not encompass class-based claims.
However, the court then decided that Gentry did not invalidate the arbitration agreement because Nelsen did not adequately support the argument to the trial court.  That is, Gentry does not invalidate "all" class action waivers, so you have to establish the Gentry "factors," which Nelsen did not do.  In ruling this way, the court sidestepped whether Gentry remains good law.

Finally, the court decided that the National Labor Relations Board's decision in DR Horton was not binding and that the court would not follow it. The court noted that the decision was issued by just 2 Board members and that the issue of whether class action waivers are enforceable are beyond the Board's normal expertise.

So, another arbitration agreement survives.