SC- Death of Employee Rights - Employers Can Force Arbitration on Employees

Nathan Newman nathan at newman.org
Wed Mar 21 09:24:47 PST 2001


Today, the Supreme Court signed the death warrant for most employee rights and essentially made most federal and state anti-discrimination and employment rights laws a dead letter. The Supreme Court ruled that employees can be forced to give up their right to ever sue a company in an employment dispute, even when the employer violates the law, in favor of arbitration systems chosen by that employer.

Traditionally, courts do not review such private arbitration decisions, even in many cases where the arbitrators make mistakes in interpreting the legal rights of the employees.

It is hard to overstate how deadly this decision is to every category of employee rights.

This decision by the Court was based on the 1925 Federal Arbitration Act, used by this supposedly "pro states rights" court to essentially block all state regulation of employee rights in favor of mandatory arbitration.

Progressive activists must make it a priority to amend the FAA to block such mandatory arbitration and restore workplace legal rights.

-- Nathan Newman =========

New York Times -- March 21, 2001 Court Gives Employers Right to Force Worker Arbitration By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Filed at 10:58 a.m. ET

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Employers can force workers to take job-related disputes to arbitration rather than to court, the Supreme Court ruled Wednesday in a decision that will have broad effects on American workplaces.

Agreements to arbitrate workplace disputes are enforceable even if the employer required the worker to sign the agreement in order to be hired, the court said. Ruling 5-4 for Circuit City Stores, the justices said a gay former employee cannot sue over alleged harassment at work.

Arbitration has increasingly been used to resolve a wide variety of disputes including employment discrimination claims. Supporters of arbitration say it is less complicated and less expensive than a lawsuit.

But employees' advocates say the process can be tilted toward employers and that workers forfeit certain rights. Appeals often are limited, damages can be capped and fact-finding can be restricted.

A number of federal appeals courts had ruled that employers could require arbitration of workplace disputes. But a San Francisco-based appeals court disagreed in 1999 and refused to enforce Circuit City's arbitration agreement.

When Adams went to work for the electronics retailer in Santa Rosa in 1995, he was required to sign a document agreeing to arbitrate ``any and all ... claims, disputes or controversies'' related to his employment.

In 1997, Adams sued Circuit City in California state court, saying he resigned after being repeatedly harassed at work because he is gay.

Circuit City asked a federal judge to rule that the 1925 Federal Arbitration Act required Adams to go to arbitration instead. The law makes commercial arbitration agreements enforceable in federal court.

However, the law contains an exception that was at the center of Wednesday's case. The arbitration law does not apply to employment contracts for ``seamen, railroad employees or any other class of workers engaged in foreign or interstate commerce.''

Circuit City contended that the exception from the arbitration-enforcement law was limited to workers actually involved in moving goods from one state to another.

But Adams' lawyers argued that the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals was correct in ruling that the exception swept much more broadly. The appeals court said the arbitration-enforcement law did not apply to employment or labor contracts at all.

The Supreme Court majority said the 9th Circuit interpretation is unworkable and would spawn more lawsuits instead of limiting them.

The phrase ``engaged in commerce'' should be read plainly and narrowly, Justice Anthony M. Kennedy wrote for himself, Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist and Justices Antonin Scalia, Clarence Thomas and Sandra Day O'Connor.

Otherwise, the exception for certain classes of workers is meaningless, and the task of figuring out who is covered and who is not would be too complex, he wrote. A broad exception would ``call into doubt the efficacy of alternative dispute resolution procedures adopted by many of the nation's employers, and in the process undermine'' the Federal Arbitration Act, he wrote.

Justice John Paul Stevens wrote a dissenting opinion in which he accused the majority of ``playing ostrich'' to the legislative and historical context of the arbitration law and its consequences.

That history includes opposition to the arbitration law from organized labor, which feared it would force courts to enforce unfair labor contracts, Stevens wrote for himself and Justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Stephen J. Breyer. Justice David H. Souter filed a separate dissent.

While arbitration has since become a favored employment tool and the Supreme Court has previously strengthened its enforcement, the majority decision Wednesday resurrects the reasons labor feared arbitration enforcement in 1925, Stevens wrote.

``When the court simply ignores the interest of the unrepresented employee, it skews its interpretation with its own policy preferences,'' Stevens wrote.

The case is Circuit City Stores v. Adams, 99-1379.

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On the Net: Supreme Court web site: http://www.supremecourtus.gov

Copyright 2001 The New York Times Company



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