In a close 5-4 decision in Epic Systems Corp. v. Lewis, the U.S. Supreme Court recently ruled that the Federal Arbitration Act unequivocally provides parties the ability to enter into arbitration agreements requiring individual arbitration proceedings, such that employees waive their ability to bring or join a class action. Likewise, the Court rejected the employees’ […]
In a close 5-4 decision in Epic Systems Corp. v. Lewis, the U.S. Supreme Court recently ruled that the Federal Arbitration Act unequivocally provides parties the ability to enter into arbitration agreements requiring individual arbitration proceedings, such that employees waive their ability to bring or join a class action. Likewise, the Court rejected the employees’ argument that Section 7 of the National Labor Relations Act prohibits employees from waiving such class-action rights.
So, what does this mean for employers? Obviously, many employers are thrilled that they are able to prevent the spectre of a class action by requiring employees to enter into agreements for individual arbitration proceedings as a condition of employment. But employers should consider two things before doing so.
First, are you prepared to conduct multiple individual arbitration hearings? Class actions were created as a device to allow plaintiffs to band together to bring claims as a group, when a single plaintiff had little or no incentive to bring a claim individually. A plaintiff with a $100 claim probably won’t bring suit. But, if an employer’s arbitration agreement with an employee requiring individual arbitration provides that the employer will pay the expense of an arbitrator, an employee with a minor claim has nothing to lose by seeking arbitration — and hundreds or thousands of individual arbitration proceedings can drive up costs just as easily as potential class-action liability.
Second, if you do wish to have employees waive class claims in favor of individual arbitration proceedings, make sure the arbitration agreement actually contains such a provision. It’s possible for an arbitrator to handle class claims — the rules of the American Arbitration Association provide for it, for example — so it is not sufficient simply to state that employees agree to arbitration; the agreement would also need to state that arbitration proceedings would be on an individual basis, with employees waiving class claims. Of course, an employer may decide that a class-wide arbitration is preferable to multiple individual arbitration hearings, and draft the agreement accordingly.
Bottom line, the Supreme Court majority found that arbitration agreements are enforceable as the Federal Arbitration Act intended — a result that turned out to be quite epic for employers.
Michael D. Billok is a member (partner) in the law firm of Bond, Schoeneck & King PLLC. He regularly represents employers in state and federal court, defending against actions alleging violations of employment laws, including class actions, as well as collective and class actions under the Fair Labor Standards Act and New York Labor Law. This viewpoint article is drawn from a May 22 posting on the law firm’s New York Labor and Employment Law Report.