IN THE MISSOURI COURT OF APPEALS
WESTERN DISTRICT
MEGHANN PATRICK, )
Respondent, )
)
v. ) WD81344
)
ALTRIA GROUP DISTRIBUTION ) FILED: March 5, 2019
CO., et al., )
Appellants. )
Appeal from the Circuit Court of Jackson County
The Honorable Marco Roldan, Judge
Before Division Two: Alok Ahuja, P.J., and Thomas H. Newton
and Mark D. Pfeiffer, JJ.
Meghann Patrick is a former employee of Altria Group Distribution
Company. After her employment was terminated, Patrick sued Altria and a
supervisor at Altria, alleging employment-related claims under the Missouri
Human Rights Act, § 213.010, RSMo et seq. The defendants moved to compel
arbitration and stay the civil action. The circuit court denied the defendants’
motion, and they appeal. We affirm.
Factual Background
Patrick was hired by Altria in November 2007 as a Territory Sales Manager.
At the time she began her employment, Patrick agreed to a dispute resolution
program which included an arbitration provision.
In February 2012, Altria distributed to employees a revised dispute
resolution agreement, which superseded the earlier agreement.1 Patrick executed
the revised agreement on February 10, 2012. The agreement established a dispute
resolution program which provided various options for addressing workplace
disputes. The program describes four dispute resolution options: The Open Door
Policy, The Company Ombudsperson, Mediation, and Arbitration. The first three
dispute resolution mechanisms were optional and non-binding. By contrast, under
the agreement all workplace disputes were subject to mandatory and binding
arbitration.
The agreement defined a covered “dispute” to mean
any legal or equitable claim, demand, dispute or controversy, whether
based in tort, in contract, under statute, by common law, or alleging a
violation of any legal obligation, by and between the Parties, that
arises out of or relates in any way to the employment relationship
between [Patrick] and [Altria] . . . including claims which relate to,
arise from, concern or involve in any way:
....
2. separation from employment of an Employee, whether
involuntary, voluntary or “constructive”, the terms and conditions of
employment, the cessation of employment, wages alleged to be owed
which are required to be paid pursuant to state or federal statute, and
benefits (including any modification, amendment or termination of a
benefit plan) or incidents of employment with [Altria];
....
4. any other matter arising out of or related in any way to
the employment relationship between [Patrick] and [Altria] including,
by way of example and without limitation, allegations of:
discrimination or harassment based on race, sex, religion, age, marital
status, pregnancy, national original or disability or other bases; unpaid
1 The 2012 agreement consisted of two separate documents: an “Agreement to
the Dispute Resolution Program,” which both Altria and Patrick executed; and the “Dispute
Resolution Program” itself, which was incorporated by reference into the Agreement.
Because the distinction between the two documents is not relevant to the issues raised in
this appeal, for ease of reference we refer to the two documents collectively as “the
agreement.”
2
wages or expenses; harassment prohibited by state or federal statute
or the common law; retaliation or whistleblower claims, including
workers’ compensation retaliation; defamation; infliction of emotional
distress; and violation(s) of any federal, state, local or other
governmental constitution, statute, ordinance, regulation or common
law.
The agreement excluded from the definition of a “dispute” (1) issues relating to the
formation, interpretation or enforceability of the agreement; (2) any claim that the
class action waiver in the agreement is void or voidable; and (3) any claim for
workers’ compensation benefits, state disability insurance benefits, or
unemployment compensation benefits.
The agreement provided that, “[i]n the event you and [Altria] are unable to
resolve, or choose not to resolve, any such legal dispute through any of the other
dispute resolution options, you and [Altria] agree to arbitrate any such legal dispute
under the terms of the Program rather than pursue a lawsuit.”
The agreement gave Altria the power to unilaterally amend or terminate the
dispute resolution program. The agreement defined a “Material Amendment” as “a
change or modification of the Program that significantly changes a substantive
provision relating to arbitration under the Program, such as a change in the
allocation of fees and costs, the Disputes covered, or the limitations on remedies.” A
“Non-Material Amendment” was defined as “any change to the Program which is
not a Material Amendment.” The agreement provided:
1. [Altria] may make a Non-Material Amendment at any
time with or without notice.
2. [Altria] may make a Material Amendment at any time,
provided that:
a) no such amendment will apply to a Dispute
previously submitted to arbitration under the Program; and
b) no such amendment will be effective until notice of
the amendment is published to Employees in a reasonable
manner, such as electronically through [Altria’s] Intranet or
3
electronic mail system (proof of actual receipt by an Employee is
not necessary).
3. [Altria] may terminate this Program at any time,
provided that:
a) the Program will remain in full force and effect for
any Dispute previously submitted to arbitration under the
Program; and
b) termination will not be effective until 30 days after
notice of termination is published to Employees in a reasonable
manner, such as electronically through [Altria’s] Intranet or
electronic mail system (proof of actual receipt by an Employee is
not necessary).
Altria terminated Patrick’s employment in March 2016. Patrick filed an
administrative complaint against Altria and supervisor John Hartnett with the
Missouri Human Rights Commission. Following receipt of a right to sue letter from
the Commission, Patrick filed suit against Altria and Hartnett in the Circuit Court
of Jackson County on July 21, 2017.2 She asserted claims under the Missouri
Human Rights Act for gender discrimination, sexual harassment/hostile work
environment, and retaliation.
Altria filed a Motion to Compel Arbitration and Stay Action. The motion
alleged that a valid and binding arbitration agreement existed between Patrick and
Altria, which required Patrick to pursue her claims in arbitration. Patrick opposed
the motion. She argued, among other things, that the dispute resolution agreement
was not enforceable because it was not supported by adequate consideration.
The circuit court denied Altria’s motion to compel arbitration. It concluded
that because Altria was given the right to unilaterally modify or terminate the
dispute resolution agreement, the agreement was not supported by mutual
consideration, and was therefore “invalid and unenforceable.”
2 We refer to Altria and Hartnett collectively as “Altria” in the remainder of
this opinion.
4
Altria appeals.3
Discussion
Altria argues that the circuit court erred in denying its Motion to Compel
Arbitration and Stay Action because the parties were bound by a valid and
enforceable arbitration agreement that was supported by adequate consideration.
In response, Patrick argues, among other things, that Altria’s promises in the
dispute resolution agreement were illusory and do not constitute bargained for
consideration, because Altria retained the unilateral right to modify or terminate its
obligations under the agreement.
The issue of “[w]hether the trial court should have granted a motion to
compel arbitration is a question of law decided de novo.” Ellis v. JF Enters., LLC,
482 S.W.3d 417, 419 (Mo. 2016) (citation omitted).
When faced with a motion to compel arbitration, we must
consider three factors. First, we must determine whether a valid
arbitration agreement exists. Second, if a valid arbitration agreement
exists, we must determine whether the specific dispute falls within the
scope of the arbitration agreement. Third, if a valid arbitration
contract exists, and if the subject dispute is within the scope of the
arbitration provision, then we must determine whether the arbitration
agreement is subject to revocation under applicable contract principles.
In making these determinations, we should apply the usual rules of
state contract law and canons of contract interpretation.
Frye v. Speedway Chevrolet Cadillac, 321 S.W.3d 429, 434-35 (Mo. App. W.D. 2010)
(citations and internal quotation marks omitted).
“Under both the Federal Arbitration Act, 9 U.S.C. § 1 et seq., and the
Missouri Uniform Arbitration Act, chapter 435, RSMo, whether the parties entered
into an enforceable arbitration agreement is a preliminary issue for the court to
3 The order denying Defendants’ motion to compel arbitration is immediately
appealable. Lawrence v. Beverly Manor, 273 S.W.3d 525, 527 n.2 (Mo. 2009) (“This Court
recognizes the appealability of orders denying arbitration despite the fact that such orders
are not final judgments, under the influence, if not the command of provisions of the
Federal Arbitration Act and the Missouri Uniform Arbitration Act relating to appealability
of such orders.”) (citing 9 U.S.C. § 16(a)(1)(B) and § 435.440.1, RSMo).
5
decide, applying Missouri law.” Johnson v. Vatterott Educ. Ctrs., Inc., 410 S.W.3d
735, 738 (Mo. App. W.D. 2013) (citations omitted). In Missouri, “[t]he essential
elements of any contract, including one for arbitration, are offer, acceptance, and
bargained for consideration.” Baker v. Bristol Care, Inc., 450 S.W.3d 770, 774 (Mo.
2014) (citation and internal quotation marks omitted).
The only contractual element at issue in this case is whether the parties
exchanged consideration for the Agreement. “Consideration consists either of a
promise (to do or refrain from doing something) or the transfer or giving up of
something of value to the other party.” Id. (citation and internal quotation marks
omitted). Mutual promises can constitute adequate consideration to support an
enforceable contract.
[B]ilateral contracts are supported by consideration and enforceable
when each party promises to undertake some legal duty or liability.
These promises, however, must be binding, not illusory. A promise is
illusory when one party retains the unilateral right to amend the
agreement and avoid its obligation.
Id. at 777 (citations omitted); see also Soars v. Easter Seals Midwest, 563 S.W.3d
111, 116 (Mo. 2018); Frye, 321 S.W.3d at 442 (“A contract that purports to exchange
mutual promises will be construed to lack legal consideration if one party retains
the unilateral right to modify or alter the contract as to permit the party to
unilaterally divest itself of an obligation to perform the promise initially made.”).
In Baker, the Missouri Supreme Court found an employer’s promise to
arbitrate its claims against an employee to be illusory where the employer retained
the “‘right to amend, modify or revoke this agreement upon thirty (30) days’ prior
written notice to the Employee.’” 450 S.W.3d at 776 (quoting agreement). Because
the agreement permitted the employer to modify the arbitration agreement
retroactively, the Supreme Court held that it was illusory and could not supply
adequate consideration. The Court explained:
6
The fact that Bristol must give prior written notice of an amendment
to the arbitration agreement does not preclude Bristol from giving
Baker prior written notice that, effective in thirty days, Bristol
retroactively is disclaiming a promise made in the arbitration
agreement. For instance, if in the course of an ongoing arbitration
process, Bristol concluded that the process was not favorable, Bristol
could provide Baker notice that, effective in 30 days, it no longer would
consider itself bound by the results of the arbitration. While the
dissent concludes summarily that no court would adopt a construction
of the agreement allowing Bristol to disclaim or modify its arbitration
promises unilaterally at any time for its own benefit, the fact remains
that the language of the agreement would permit Bristol to do just
that.
. . . . Contracts, like the arbitration agreement in this case, that
permit unilateral, retroactive amendment are deemed illusory and do
not constitute consideration to create an enforceable contract.
Id. at 777 (citations omitted).
The fact that an employer has the unilateral right to amend an arbitration
agreement may not render the agreement illusory, if the employer’s power to modify
the agreement is meaningfully restricted. In Frye, 321 S.W.3d 429, we recognized
that “limiting an employer's unilateral right to amend an arbitration agreement to
amendments that [(1)] are prospective in application and [(2)] about which
employees have been afforded reasonable advance notice may prevent an employer's
mutual promise from being rendered illusory.” Id. at 443.
In this case, the agreement gives Altria the unilateral right to make
“material amendments” to the dispute resolution agreement, which may include
“change[s] in the allocation of fees and costs, the Disputes covered, or the
limitations on remedies.” Altria’s right to make such material—and unilateral—
modifications is not limited in the fashion Frye contemplated: (1) the agreement
does not limit material modifications to prospective-only application; and (2) the
agreement does not require Altria to give advance notice of material modifications
to employees. Instead, the agreement only prohibits material amendments from
affecting “a Dispute previously submitted to arbitration under the Program”—which
7
means that a material amendment could apply to claims which have accrued, and of
which Altria has notice, but which have not yet been submitted to arbitration.
(Such “accrued-but-unasserted” claims would include claims in which an employee
had invoked the voluntary and non-binding dispute resolution mechanisms
specified in the agreement.) In addition, the agreement does not require that Altria
provide advance notice of material amendments to its employees: the agreement
provides that material amendments become effective upon the publication of notice
to employees, meaning that employees are given contemporaneous—but not
advance—notice of material amendments to the dispute resolution agreement.4
Thus, under Altria’s dispute resolution agreement, if an employee had
complained to the company about alleged employment discrimination, but had not
yet commenced arbitration proceedings, Altria would have the ability to modify the
dispute resolution agreement to eliminate discrimination claims from the scope of
arbitrable disputes, and the employee would have no ability to invoke arbitration
before that modification became effective. Given Altria’s ability to materially
modify the dispute resolution agreement with respect to accrued claims, and
without prior notice to employees, its promise to arbitrate is illusory, and cannot
constitute adequate consideration to support the dispute resolution agreement’s
enforceability.
Although we are not aware of any reported Missouri decisions addressing this
precise issue, numerous courts in other jurisdictions have held that a party’s
promise to arbitrate is illusory where it retains the unilateral right to modify the
arbitration agreement with respect to claims which have accrued, but are not yet in
arbitration. In some of these cases, the courts have held that the application of
4 The material amendments provision contrasts with the agreement’s
termination provision, which provides that Altria may not terminate the program “until 30
days after notice of termination is published to Employees.” (Emphasis added.)
8
unilateral contract modifications to accrued-but-unasserted claims renders an
arbitration agreement illusory, even if the other party is provided with advance
notice of the contract modifications. As the California Court of Appeal explained in
a case in which an employer could alter an arbitration agreement on 30 days’ notice,
applicable to any claims for which arbitration had not yet been initiated:
We do not suggest the Agreement is unenforceable solely
because it exempts filed claims from contract changes. Rather, the
Agreement fails because it exempts only filed claims—it does not go far
enough. The Agreement should also exempt claims that have accrued
or are known to the employer that are not filed within 30 days.
Otherwise, Neiman Marcus would have the unfettered unilateral right
to modify the arbitration process or terminate the Agreement as to
those claims. It would retain the ability to pick and choose the claims
it wants to arbitrate, making the company's performance optional and
thus illusory.
....
The vice of the modification provision in this case is that it
allows the employer to manipulate the arbitration process, tailoring it
to fit specific cases, either by making the process more difficult or more
expensive for the employee, or by revoking the Agreement in the belief
that a judicial forum is preferable. Accordingly, if a claim has accrued
or if the employer knows about a claim, all parties to the Agreement
should be bound by the version in effect at that time; no changes
should apply after the point of accrual or knowledge.
Peleg v. Neiman Marcus Grp., Inc., 140 Cal. Rptr.3d 38, 61, 63 (App. 2012) (Texas
law) (emphasis added; citations, brackets, and internal quotation marks omitted).5
In other cases, courts have held that arbitration promises are illusory where
a party has the unilateral right to modify an arbitration agreement with respect to
accrued-but-unasserted claims, and the other party is not given advance notice of
5 See also, e.g., Moua v. Optum Servs., Inc., 320 F. Supp.3d 1109, 1113–14
(C.D. Cal. 2018); Totten v. Kellogg Brown & Root, LLC, 152 F. Supp.3d 1243, 1252–53 (C.D.
Cal. 2016); Cummings-Reed v. United Health Group, 2:15-CV-02359-JAM-AC, 2016 WL
1734873, at *3–4 (E.D. Cal. May 2, 2016); Keanini v. United Healthcare Servs., Inc., 33 F.
Supp. 3d 1191, 1197–99 (D. Haw. 2014); Reyes v. United Healthcare Servs., Inc., 2014 WL
3926813, at *2–*3 (C.D. Cal. Aug. 11, 2014); Flemma v. Halliburton Energy Servs., Inc., 303
P.3d 814, 822 (N.M. 2013).
9
the modifications (so that it could initiate arbitration under the unmodified
agreement). As the Texas Court of Appeals explained, without advance notice of
contract modifications,
once a claim arises, the forum in which that claim will be decided
hinges not on mutually binding promises, but on a race between
employer and employee, with the party who acts first controlling the
outcome. While [the employer] may force the employee to fulfill her
promise and arbitrate claims, the employer is bound to its own
reciprocal promise only when the employee reaches the arbitrator's
door before the employer can unilaterally revise or terminate the
agreement without notice and at its own discretion. Because [the
employer’s] ability to select which claims it arbitrates is restrained
only by the speed at which it can alter or terminate the Agreement
before formal arbitration commences, its promise was illusory.
Temp. Alts., Inc. v. Jamrowski, 511 S.W.3d 64, 70 (Tex. App. 2014). These cases
hold that a contracting party must be given sufficient advance notice of unilateral
modifications of an arbitration agreement, so that it has an opportunity to invoke
the unmodified arbitration procedures if it chooses.6
It is unnecessary in this case to decide whether an arbitration agreement is
always illusory if a party is given the power to modify the agreement as to accrued
claims, or whether advance notice of unilateral modifications is sufficient to avoid a
finding that the agreement is unenforceable. In this case, Altria’s dispute
resolution agreement fails under either standard: it plainly allows Altria to make
unilateral, material modifications to the agreement which apply to accrued-but-
unasserted claims; but the agreement also provides that those amendments become
effective without any advance notice to employees. Thus, under either of the
approaches discussed above, Altria’s modification power renders its promise to
6 See, e.g., Henry & Sons Constr. Co., Inc. v. Campos, 510 S.W.3d 689, 693–95
(Tex. App. 2016); Jaworski v. Ernst & Young U.S. LLP, 119 A.3d 939, 947–48 (N.J. Super.
Ct. App. Div. 2015); Pierce v. Kellogg, Brown & Root, Inc., 245 F. Supp.2d 1212, 1215 (E.D.
Okla. 2003)
10
arbitrate illusory, and the dispute resolution agreement therefore fails for lack of
consideration.
Altria makes two additional arguments in defense of the agreement. First, it
argues that concerns over its power to unilaterally modify the dispute resolution
agreement are “purely hypothetical,” because Altria has not in fact exercised its
right to modify the dispute resolution program since it was adopted in 2012. We
determine whether an agreement is supported by consideration as of the time it was
executed, however. Turner v. Sch. Dist. of Clayton, 318 S.W.3d 660, 670 (Mo. 2010)
(consideration “‘must be measured at the time the parties enter into their contract’”;
citation omitted). Whether or not Altria ultimately exercised its authority to modify
the agreement is irrelevant.
Altria also argues that its right to unilaterally modify the dispute resolution
agreement is “checked by the duty of good faith and fair dealing.” Although the
duty of good faith and fair dealing may in some circumstances be invoked to uphold
an agreement against a claim that it is illusory, the duty of good faith and fair
dealing “has nothing to do with the enforcement of terms actually negotiated and
cannot block [the] use of terms that actually appear in the contract.” Morrow v.
Hallmark Cards, Inc., 273 S.W.3d 15, 31 n.1 (Mo. App. W.D. 2008) (Ahuja, J.,
concurring) (citation omitted). “Thus, any implied duty of good faith and fair
dealing could not ‘trump’ [Altria’s] right to discontinue” or amend the program
under the agreement’s express terms. Id.7 The duty of good faith and fair dealing
could not be invoked to deny Altria its clear contractual right to modify the terms of
7 As the California Court of Appeal explained in Peleg: “[i]f . . . a modification
provision expressly addresses whether contract changes apply to claims that have accrued
or are known to the employer, the covenant [of good faith and fair dealing] cannot create
implied terms that contradict the express language.” 140 Cal. Rptr.3d at 68; accord, e.g.,
Moua v. Optum Servs., Inc., 320 F. Supp. 3d 1109, 1114 (C.D. Cal. 2018); Cummings-Reed v.
United Health Group, 2:15-CV-02359-JAM-AC, 2016 WL 1734873, at *3 (E.D. Cal. May 2,
2016); Totten v. Kellogg Brown & Root, LLC, 152 F. Supp.3d 1243, 1253 (C.D. Cal. 2016).
11
the dispute resolution agreement with respect to accrued-but-unasserted claims,
unilaterally and without advance notice.8
Conclusion
The dispute resolution agreement fails for lack of consideration because
Altria’s promise to arbitrate is illusory in light of its ability to unilaterally and
materially modify the agreement. We affirm the circuit court’s order denying
Altria’s motion to compel arbitration.
___________________________________
Alok Ahuja, Judge
All concur.
8 In its reply brief, Altria also argues that the modification provision could be
severed, and the remainder of the dispute resolution agreement enforced. Because this
argument was not raised until Altria’s reply brief, at which point Patrick had no
opportunity to respond, it was not properly presented and we do not address it. See, e.g.,
State ex rel. Lavender Farms, LLC v. Ashcroft, 558 S.W.3d 88, 94–95 (Mo. App. W.D. 2018)
(“Issues not raised by appellants in their opening brief cannot be raised for the first time in
the reply brief, and are not properly preserved.”); Blankenship v. Div. of Emp’t Sec., 327
S.W.3d 579, 582 n.4 (Mo. App. S.D. 2010) (same).
12