In recent decades, the U.S. Supreme Court has largely sided
with big business over workers, consumers, and small businesses when victims of
wage theft,
fraud,
and monopolist market abuses[1] band together to prove
their case in open court. This past week was a rare exception for potentially
millions of transportation workers across the United States.
Brief Background
The FAA generally requires courts to enforce arbitration clauses according to the terms of such clauses, which businesses have forced on individuals in the workplace, in consumer contracts, and in many other contexts (e.g., nursing homes that allegedly cause their residents to die from substandard care). However, Section 1 of the FAA provides an important exception to this general rule, exempting “contracts of employment of seamen, railroad employees, or any other class of workers engaged in foreign or interstate commerce” from the otherwise strict enforcement of arbitration agreements. 9 U.S.C. § 1.
Upshot of the New Prime Decision
Writing for an 8-0 majority, Justice Gorsuch’s opinion in New Prime Inc. v. Oliveira contains two key takeaways: (1) transportation workers are entitled to their day in court even if both sides signed an arbitration agreement and the transportation workers are classified (or arguably misclassified) as independent contractors, and (2) before ordering workers, consumers, and others to secret, one-on-one binding arbitration under the Federal Arbitration Act (“FAA”), courts still have the power to decide whether any exceptions apply that would allow these groups to have their day in open court.
The Majority’s Reasoning in New Prime
The New Prime majority
relied heavily on the text and structure of Sections 1-4 of the FAA to hold
that a business cannot take away a court’s authority to decide whether the
exception contained in Section 1 applies to a particular dispute. No. 17-340,
2019 WL 189342, at **3-4 (U.S. Jan. 15, 2019). The Court noted that Section 3’s
mandate to enforce arbitration agreements according to their terms is limited
by Section 1’s exclusion for “contracts of employment of seamen, railroad
employees, or any other class of workers engaged in foreign or interstate
commerce.” Id. at *4 (citing 9 U.S.C.
§ 1).[2] Based on the FAA’s “terms
and sequencing” of its statutory provisions, the Court concluded that “a court
should decide for itself whether § 1's ‘contracts of employment’ exclusion
applies before ordering arbitration.” Id.
Finding that it has authority to review whether the
exception in Section 1 applies to Mr. Oliveira’s arbitration agreement with his
former employer, the Court went on to address whether Mr. Oliveira’s written
agreement with New Prime was a “contract[] of employment” as the term is used
in Section 1 of the FAA. Here, the Court determined that the original meaning
of “contracts of employment” in 1925 included both the modern idea of an
employer/employee relationship and also true independent contractors. Id. at **6-7. The Court swatted down the
company’s attempt to argue that the Court should ignore the plain text of the
FAA, and instead make from whole cloth a general federal policy of compelling
all disputes to arbitration. (“Unable to squeeze more from the statute's text,
New Prime is left to appeal to its policy. … By respecting the qualifications
of § 1 today, we respect the limits up to which Congress was prepared to go
when adopting the Arbitration Act.”) (internal citations and quotation marks
omitted). Id. at *9.
If you are a transportation worker like the lead
plaintiff in the New Prime, Dominic
Oliveira,[3] know that you are entitled
to your day in court to recover your lost wages and expenses.
[1] Justice Kagan’s
dissent in this case, Italian Colors,
sums up the state of play well:
Here is the nutshell version of this case,
unfortunately obscured in the Court's decision. The owner of a small restaurant
(Italian Colors) thinks that American Express (Amex) has used its monopoly
power to force merchants to accept a form contract violating the antitrust
laws. The restaurateur wants to challenge the allegedly unlawful provision
(imposing a tying arrangement), but the same contract's arbitration clause
prevents him from doing so. That term imposes a variety of procedural bars that
would make pursuit of the antitrust claim a fool's errand. So if the
arbitration clause is enforceable, Amex has insulated itself from antitrust
liability—even if it has in fact violated the law. The monopolist gets to use its monopoly power to insist on a contract
effectively depriving its victims of all legal recourse.
And
here is the nutshell version of today's opinion, admirably flaunted rather than
camouflaged: Too darn bad.
Am. Exp. Co. v.
Italian Colors Rest.,
570 U.S. 228, 240 (2013) (emph. added).
[2] The Court also drew
upon the then-contemporary 1925 legal landscape in which “Congress had already
prescribed alternative employment dispute resolution regimes for many
transportation workers. And it seems Congress “did not wish to unsettle” those
arrangements in favor of whatever arbitration procedures the parties' private
contracts might happen to contemplate.” Id.
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