United States Court of Appeals
For the First Circuit
No. 08-1920
PIUS AWUAH, NILTON DOS SANTOS, GERALDO CORREIA, BENECIRA
CAVALCANTE, DENISSE PINEDA, JAI PREM, ALDIVAR BRANDAO, PHILLIP
BEITZ, RICHARD BARRIENTOS, MARIAN LEWIS, STANLEY STEWART,
and all others similarly situated,
Plaintiffs, Appellees,
v.
COVERALL NORTH AMERICA, INC.,
Defendant, Appellant.
APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS
[Hon. William G. Young, U.S. District Judge]
Before
Boudin, Stahl, and Howard,
Circuit Judges.
Norman M. Leon with whom Michael D. Vhay, John F. Dienelt,and
DLA Piper U.S. LLP were on brief for appellant.
Hillary Schwab with whom Shannon Liss-Riordan, Harold Lichten,
and Pyle, Rome, Lichten, Ehrenberg, & Liss-Riordan, P.C. were on
brief for appellees.
January 23, 2009
BOUDIN, Circuit Judge. The question before us is whether
a dispute over the validity of an arbitration agreement should be
decided by a court or by an arbitrator. Appellant is Coverall
North America, Inc., itself the subsidiary of still larger
enterprises. Coverall contracts to provide commercial janitorial
cleaning services to building owners or operators throughout the
United States. It "franchises" other companies or individuals to
do the actual cleaning of the premises and has more than 5,000 such
franchises in place in the United States.
The franchise agreements promise to supply the franchisee
with equipment, training, a quality control program, and billing
and collection services, as well as a set amount of initial
cleaning business per month for buildings whose owners or operators
have contracted with Coverall. In exchange, Coverall receives from
the franchisee up-front fees in the range of $12,000 to $21,500,
and additional payment for each cleaning job a franchisee performs.
Disputes have arisen between Coverall and a number of its
franchisees over whether Coverall made misrepresentations, kept its
contractual promises, wrongly classified franchisees as independent
contractors, and over other aspects of the relationship. On
February 15, 2007, a dozen or so franchisees filed a class action
against Coverall in federal district court in Massachusetts,
alleging fraud, misrepresentation, breach of contract, lost
benefits, improper deductions of earnings, and violations of
-2-
minimum wage, overtime, and consumer protection laws. It appears
from the record that the plaintiffs in many cases are recent
immigrants and persons with limited education.
Among the nearly dozen named plaintiffs, three had
franchise agreements containing arbitration clauses--Pius Awuah,
Denisse Pineda, and Richard Barrientos, who are the appellees in
this court. Apparently Coverall only recently introduced such
provisions into its standard franchise contract. For two of the
three appellees, the franchise agreement states that if required
mediation processes are not successful,
all controversies, disputes or claims between
Coverall, its officers, directors, agents
and/or employees (in their respective
capacities) and Franchisee . . . arising out
of or related to the relationship of the
parties, this Agreement, any related agreement
between the parties, and/or any specification,
standard or operating procedure of Coverall,
including those set forth in the Coverall
Policy and Procedure Manual . . . shall be
submitted promptly for arbitration.
The third contract has a similar provision but also
states that parties agree to submit to arbitration disputes about
the validity of the franchise agreement or related agreements.
However, the agreements signed by all three appellees also provide
that "unless otherwise provided or the parties agree otherwise,
arbitration shall be in accordance with the then current Rules of
the American Arbitration Association." Rule 7(a) of those rules
provides that "[t]he arbitrator shall have the power to rule on his
-3-
or her own jurisdiction, including any objections with respect to
the existence, scope or validity of the arbitration agreement."
Citing these provisions, Coverall filed motions to stay
the district court proceedings as to these three franchisees
pending arbitration. The three franchisees responded that the
arbitration agreements were unconscionable, citing various
provisions of the agreements which they said made arbitration
costly or unfair.1 Coverall responded in turn that, by the terms
of Rule 7(a), a challenge to the validity of the arbitration
provision was itself a matter for the arbitrator to determine.
In a decision dated July 1, 2008, the district court held
that the franchise agreements did not clearly and unmistakably
reflect such an intention, and the district judge referred
plaintiffs' claims of unconscionability to a magistrate judge.
Awuah v. Coverall N. Am., Inc., 563 F. Supp. 2d 312 (D. Mass.
2008). Coverall then appealed to this court, which stayed
proceedings before the magistrate judge pending this appeal.
Coverall's interlocutory appeal to this court is pursuant
to the Federal Arbitration Act ("FAA"), 9 U.S.C. § 16(a)(1)(A)
1
These included the agreement's cost-sharing provisions,
prohibition of punitive and exemplary damages, bar on class action
arbitration, "no-modification clause," a requirement that the
losing party pay the prevailing party's attorney costs, a
prohibition on a claimant using the results of another arbitration
proceeding in his own proceeding, and a provision allowing Coverall
alone to initiate suit in court in certain circumstances. See
Articles 21(A)(11), 22.
-4-
(2000), which entitles a party to appeal a refusal to stay court
proceedings pending arbitration. Fit Tech, Inc. v. Bally Total
Fitness Holding Corp., 374 F.3d 1, 5 (1st Cir. 2004).2 Although
the district court has not yet definitively rejected arbitration on
the merits of the three appellees' claims, it has rejected
arbitration on the issue--which Coverall claims to be committed to
the arbitrator--as to whether the arbitration clause itself is so
unconscionable that an interlocutory appeal is permitted. Madol v.
Dan Nelson Automotive Group, 372 F.3d 997, 998-99 (8th Cir. 2004).
The FAA provides that where "the making of the agreement
for arbitration or the failure to comply therewith is not in
issue," arbitration should be ordered. 9 U.S.C. § 4. Based on
this language, the Supreme Court has determined that whether an
issue is subject to arbitration under an agreement containing an
arbitration clause is itself presumptively a matter for the court
to decide before ordering arbitration. First Options v. Kaplan,
514 U.S. 938, 943-44 (1995). However, this general rule can be
qualified by agreement of the parties.
Thus, where the parties have themselves "clearly and
unmistakably agreed" that the arbitrator should decide whether an
issue is arbitrable, the Supreme Court has held that this issue is
2
The franchise agreements provide that they are subject to the
FAA but are otherwise governed by the substantive law of the state
in which the franchisee is located: here, the three appellees are
respectively residents of Massachusetts (Awuah), New Jersey
(Pineda), and Pennsylvania (Barrientos).
-5-
to be decided by the arbitrator. E.g., Howsam v. Dean Witter
Reynolds, Inc., 537 U.S. 79, 83 (2002). Additionally, a challenge
to the validity of the contract itself is subject to arbitration
and that allocation of authority to the arbitrator will also be
respected by the court. Buckeye Check Cashing v. Cardegna, 546
U.S. 440, 443-45 (2006).
Yet where the parties merely agree that the validity of
the contract should be subject to arbitration, this does not commit
to the arbitrator a dispute about whether the arbitration clause is
valid. Id. at 445-46; Prima Paint Corp. v. Flood & Conklin Mfg.
Co., 388 U.S. 395, 404 (1967). Unfortunately, the Supreme Court
has not said definitively whether the arbitrator gets to decide the
latter question where, as here, arbitration rules incorporated in
the contract say that the arbitrator should decide whether the
arbitration clause is valid.
How the Court would decide such a case is not entirely
clear. On the one hand, one might think that Howsam's principle of
party autonomy might extend to such a case. On the other, Buckeye
did not cite Howsam and conceivably the Court might regard the
validity of the arbitration clause as a special case in which
challenges should be decided by the judge, either as a matter of
-6-
policy or because of statutory language.3 If the matter were
completely open in this circuit, we are not certain of the outcome.
However, this court has said expressly that the validity
of an arbitration clause is itself a matter for the arbitrator
where the agreement so provides. In Apollo Computer v. Berg, 886
F.2d 469 (1st Cir. 1989), the parties had consented to
International Chamber of Commerce rules, which stipulate that
challenges to the "validity of the arbitration agreement" shall be
decided by an arbitrator. Apollo said:
These provisions clearly and unmistakably
allow the arbitrator to determine her own
jurisdiction when, as here, there exists a
prima facie agreement to arbitrate whose
continued existence and validity is being
questioned. The arbitrator should decide
whether a valid arbitration agreement exists.
. . .
Id. at 473-74.
Apollo accords with the views of at least one other
circuit, see Terminix Int'l Co. LP v. Palmer Ranch Ltd., 432 F.3d
1327, 1332-33 (11th Cir. 2005), and has been taken at face value by
3
In a number of cases, including ones where AAA rules were
cross-referenced in the contract, courts have examined arbitration
clauses for unconscionability, but without any indication that
anyone argued that the issue should have gone to arbitration based
on the cross-reference. See Davis v. O'Melveny & Myers, 485 F.3d
1066 (9th Cir. 2007), cert. dismissed, 128 S.Ct. 1117 (2008);
Nagrampa v. Mailcoups, Inc., 469 F.3d 1257 (9th Cir. 2006); Gemini
Ernst & Young v. Nackel, 346 F.3d 360, 365 (2d Cir. 2003);
Alexander v. Anthony Int'l, L.P., 341 F.3d 256 (3d Cir. 2003);
Burden v. Check Into Cash of Kentucky, LLC, 267 F.3d 483 (6th Cir.
2001), cert. denied, 535 U.S. 970 (2002).
-7-
a district court within our own circuit. Morris v. Regis Corp.,
No. 08-68-P-H, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 56612, at *3 (D. Me., July 25,
2008). Morris held that district court should adjudicate the
validity of the arbitration clause only because the contract at
issue contained ambiguous language with respect to whether a court
or arbitrator should decide this gateway dispute. Morris, 2008
U.S. Dist. LEXIS 56612, at *6, *9-10.
Admittedly, the precise controversy in Apollo involved
the question whether one party had authority to bind the other to
arbitrate rather than (as here) a question of unconscionability.
Still, the language quoted above, although perhaps broader than
necessary to resolve the controversy, did constitute the rationale
for the decision. Given that the Supreme Court has not clearly
spoken, the interests of predictability are served by respecting
our own prior language unless either the Supreme Court or an en
banc panel say otherwise. United States v. Holloway, 499 F.3d 114,
118 (1st Cir. 2007).
The district court did not disagree with Apollo's
premise--that the parties can contract for the arbitrator to decide
challenges to his own authority--but the court held that the
parties in this case had not clearly and unmistakably committed to
the arbitrator the question whether the arbitration clause itself
was valid. This would be a hard position to defend if one looked
only to the language of Rule 7(a), since it appears explicitly to
-8-
affirm the arbitrator's authority to decide challenges to the
"validity of the arbitration agreement."
The district court's answer was that allowing the
arbitrator to decide the validity of the arbitration clause would
entail his striking the clause if it were invalid; yet the
arbitration clause provides that "the arbitrator . . . shall not
alter or otherwise reform the terms of this agreement" and other
language to the same effect. By contrast, the agreements have a
severability clause allowing other provisions to survive if "a
court of competent jurisdiction" invalidates a provision.
With respect, this is too thin a basis for concluding
that the agreements' language "evinces an intent to allow questions
of arbitrability to be decided by a court." Awuah, 563 F. Supp. 2d
at 315. Rule 7(a) says plainly that the arbitrator may "rule on
his or her own jurisdiction" including any objection to the
"existence, scope or validity of the arbitration agreement." This
is about as "clear and unmistakable" as language can get, meeting
the standard we have followed. E.g., Rosenberg v. Merrill Lynch
Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Inc., 170 F.3d 1, 20-21 (1st Cir. 1999);
Skirchak v. Dynamic Research Corp., 508 F.3d 49, 60-61 (1st Cir.
2007).
Of course, a larger question, or perhaps several, lie
behind this controversy. It is doubtful that many people read the
small print in form contracts, let alone the small print in
-9-
arbitration rules that are cross-referenced by such contracts,
however explicit the cross-reference. While one might expect more
in a commercial setting, Coverall franchisees are (it is alleged)
often far from sophisticated business men and women. In all events
whether "knowledge" is the real issue may be doubtful.
Franchise agreements are often contracts of adhesion
offered to those with little bargaining power; probably few would
go unsigned even if Rule 7(a) were printed in bold type on the
front page.4 Further, courts have no general power to relieve
parties of bad bargains except in extreme cases, i.e., where the
contract is unconscionable. The question here is simply who should
decide the unconscionability issue, and the arbitration clause said
in effect that this was for the arbitrator.
What is the most potent concern is an argument embedded,
although not stressed, in appellees' brief, namely, that
arbitration in this case may itself be an illusory remedy. In
principle, having the arbitrator decide questions of validity may
be fine if the parties so agreed; but if the terms for getting an
arbitrator to decide the issue are impossibly burdensome, that
outcome would indeed raise public policy concerns. If arbitration
4
Although pertinent on certain issues, the fact that an
agreement is a contract of adhesion or includes documents by cross-
references does not alone make the document invalid or nullify the
cross reference. E.g., Am. Bankers Mortgage Corp. v. Fed. Home
Loan Mortgage Corp., 75 F.3d 1401 (9th Cir. 1996); Level Export
Corp. v. Wolz, Aiken & Co., 305 N.Y. 82, 87 (1953); Farnsworth, §
4.28 n.33; Williston on Contracts, § 49:22 (4th ed. 2008).
-10-
prevents plaintiffs from vindicating their rights, it is no longer
a "valid alternative to traditional litigation." Kristian v.
Comcast Corp., 446 F.3d 25, 37 (1st Cir. 2006)
In this instance, appellees' allegations do raise claims
that the arbitral forum is illusory. In particular, they assert
that the amounts likely to be recovered by each of the individual
franchisees may be modest and that the costs of arbitration itself-
-independent of counsel fees, which can be contingent--would be
overwhelming. Of course, court litigation can also be expensive,
but at least one does not need to pay the judge. Appellees
asserted in the district court that franchisees
could be liable for substantial administrative
fees payable up front to the American
Arbitration Association, half of all the
arbitration fees to the neutral arbitrator
(who, at a reduced hourly rate of $300.00 per
hour, would still cost $2,400 per day for both
hearings and writing) and in addition would
have to pay the whole fee for an additional
arbitrator.
They also submitted the report of a franchise law
attorney, which states that he has been involved in arbitrations
that have cost $100,000 and $150,000 (for one arbitrator) and
$300,000 and $400,000 (for a three-person arbitration panel). This
concern about fees is the most prominent but not necessarily the
only basis for appellees' claim that in practical effect they have
no real opportunity to get issues, including unconscionability,
resolved in arbitration.
-11-
In Green Tree Fin. Corp. v. Randolph, the Supreme Court
observed: "It may well be that the existence of large arbitration
costs could preclude a litigant . . . from effectively vindicating
her federal statutory rights in the arbitral forum." 531 U.S. 79,
90 (2000). Several circuits have agreed that where a plaintiff
asserts that excessive arbitration costs deprive the plaintiff of
an arbitral forum, a threshold issue is presented for consideration
by the court. See, e.g., Faber v. Menard, Inc., 367 F.3d 1048,
1052-55 (8th Cir. 2004); Musnick v. King Motor Co., 325 F.3d 1255,
1259 (11th Cir. 2003).
Yet, despite the failure of Coverall's brief to respond
to these contentions, how burdensome arbitration would be is
uncertain. Given the franchise fees, the individuals may have
substantial but not excessively large claims--the complaint
specifies amounts of $4,740, $8,500 and $46,064, respectively, but
says these are bare minimums. And the American Arbitration
Association rules have provisions for expedited treatment and
lesser procedures in cases where the amount in controversy is
$75,000 or less. Whether access to the arbitrator is really a
colorable defense is not clear on this record.
Our concern here is not with unconscionability--
essentially a fairness issue, Farnsworth, supra, § 4.28, at 584-
88,--but more narrowly with whether the arbitration regime here is
structured so as to prevent a litigant from having access to the
-12-
arbitrator to resolve claims, including unconscionability defenses.
The standard for such a showing of illusoriness would also be high-
-all formal dispute resolution involves costs and inconvenience.
But if the remedy is truly illusory, a court should not order
arbitration at all but decide the entire dispute itself.
Accordingly, although our view of the district court's
initial role is narrower, we agree that the appellees are entitled
to a ruling by that court as to whether the arbitration remedy in
this case is illusory. Our current stay will terminate when the
mandate issues in the case. Subject to the district court's
wishes, we see no reason why the magistrate judge cannot proceed
with the inquiry, refocused in accordance with this decision.
The district court's refusal to order arbitration at this
time is affirmed on the grounds set forth above, and the matter is
remanded to the district court for proceedings consistent with this
decision.
It is so ordered.
-13-