Charlotte Bess v. DirecTV, INC.

CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 18, 2008
Docket5-05-0394 Rel
StatusPublished

This text of Charlotte Bess v. DirecTV, INC. (Charlotte Bess v. DirecTV, INC.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Charlotte Bess v. DirecTV, INC., (Ill. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

NO. 5-05-0394 N O T IC E

Decision filed 03/18/08. The text of IN THE this dec ision m ay b e changed or

corrected prior to the filing of a APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS P e t i ti o n for Re hea ring or the

disposition of the same. FIFTH DISTRICT ________________________________________________________________________

CHARLOTTE BESS, ) Appeal from the ) Circuit Court of Plaintiff-Appellee, ) St. Clair County. ) v. ) No. 99-L-55A ) DIRECTV, INC., ) Honorable ) Robert P. LeChien, Defendant-Appellant. ) Judge, presiding. ________________________________________________________________________

JUSTICE DONOVAN delivered the opinion of the court:

The defendant, DirecTV, Inc. (DirecTV), appeals from an order of the circuit court

of St. Clair County denying its motion to stay proceedings and to compel arbitration.

DirecTV argues that the circuit court erred in finding that the arbitration agreement was

procedurally and substantively unconscionable and, therefore, unenforceable. Initially, this

court issued an opinion in this case affirming the circuit court's judgment. Bess v. DirecTV,

Inc., No. 5-05-0394 (July 10, 2007). After considering the merits of DirecTV's petition for

rehearing, we now reverse.

BACKGROUND

DirecTV provides television programming services via satellite to consumers

throughout the nation. To obtain these services, a potential DirecTV subscriber calls

DirecTV and orders one or more of DirecTV's programming packages. DirecTV then

activates the subscriber's service and mails the subscriber a copy of a contract, called

"Customer Agreement" (Customer Agreement), along with the initial billing statement. The

Customer Agreement sets forth the parties' rights and obligations and explains the terms and

1 conditions under which DirecTV provides its service.

On November 28, 1999, Charlotte Bess contracted with DirecTV for satellite

television service, and DirecTV activated the requested service. The record is silent on

where or how Bess acquired the equipment necessary to receive DirecTV service and

whether or not she incurred any costs to acquire the equipment or have it installed.

Thereafter, DirecTV mailed a copy of the October 1999 Customer Agreement and the first

billing statement to Bess. The Customer Agreement provides that DirecTV will send the

customer a billing statement once every 30 days, that the customer will pay each monthly bill

in full, and that should DirecTV not receive the customer's payment before issuing her next

statement, DirecTV may charge her an administrative late fee of up to $5. The administrative

late fee is the subject of Bess's complaint.

The Customer Agreement specifies that if the customer does not accept the terms of

the Customer Agreement, she should notify DirecTV immediately and DirecTV will cancel

her DirecTV service. A customer who does not notify DirecTV of any objections to the

Customer Agreement and who continues to receive DirecTV service is deemed to have

accepted the terms of the Customer Agreement.

The Customer Agreement contains informal and formal dispute-resolution clauses.

Under the informal dispute-resolution clause, the complaining party must first notify the

other of a claim at least 60 days before starting any formal proceeding, so that the parties can

attempt an informal resolution of the claim. The formal dispute-resolution clause (the

arbitration provision) provides, in pertinent part:

"Formal Resolution. Except as provided in Section 8(d), if we cannot resolve

a Claim informally, any Claim either of us asserts will be resolved only by binding

arbitration. The arbitration will be conducted under the Commercial Arbitration

Rules of the American Arbitration Association that are in effect at the time the

2 arbitration is initiated (referred to as the 'AAA Rules') and under the rules set forth in

this Agreement. If there is a conflict between the AAA Rules and the rules set forth

in this Agreement, the rules set forth in this Agreement will govern.

ARBITRATION MEANS THAT YOU WAIVE YOUR RIGHT TO A JURY

TRIAL. If you initiate the arbitration, you agree to pay a fee of $125 or, if less and

you tell us in writing, the amount that you would pay to initiate a lawsuit against us

in the appropriate court of law in your state. We agree to pay any additional fee or

deposit required by the American Arbitration Association in excess of your filing fee.

We also agree to pay the costs of the arbitration proceeding up to a maximum of one-

half day (four hours) of hearings. Other fees, such as attorney's fees, expenses of

travel to the arbitration[,] and the costs of a proceeding that goes beyond one-half

day[,] will be paid in accordance with the AAA Rules. The arbitration will be held

at a location within one hundred miles of your residence unless you and we both agree

to another location."

The October 1999 Customer Agreement further states that it could be replaced by

subsequent, updated agreements and that the customer would accept the terms of any

subsequent agreements in the same manner that she agreed to the terms of the initial

Customer Agreement–by continuing to accept DirecTV service.

According to the record in this case, Bess did not cancel her agreement for service

upon receipt of the October 1999 Customer Agreement. The October 1999 Customer

Agreement was replaced by the September 2001 Customer Agreement. The September 2001

version contains the same late-fee clause and the same arbitration provision as the October

1999 agreement. Although the September 2001 version also contained a "deactivation fee"

provision, which stated that if the customer cancelled the service or if DirecTV deactivated

the service because of the customer's failure to pay or some other breach on the customer's

3 part, DirecTV may charge up to $15, the 2001 Customer Agreement again provided that the

customer would only be bound by these terms if the customer continues to receive service

from DirecTV after reading it. Bess did not cancel her DirecTV service after DirecTV

mailed her a copy of the September 2001 Customer Agreement. She remained a DirecTV

customer at the time of this appeal.

On November 22, 2000, Bess filed a first amended complaint alleging that DirecTV's

$5 administrative late fee violates Illinois law. The gist of Bess's complaint is that DirecTV's

true cost for a late-paying customer is far below $5. Bess alleged that DirecTV's practice

constituted unjust enrichment and violated both Illinois common law concerning liquidated

damages and the Illinois Consumer Fraud and Deceptive Business Practices Act (815 ILCS

505/1 et seq. (West 2000)).

By letter dated December 4, 2000, DirecTV notified Bess that it intended to avail

itself of the parties' contractual dispute-resolution clause. On December 7, 2000, DirecTV

filed a motion to stay the action in the circuit court and to compel arbitration. On March 27,

2003, the circuit court denied DirecTV's motion, concluding that the arbitration agreement

was unconscionable and unenforceable because it did not provide for class arbitration.

DirecTV appealed. In an opinion issued on August 24, 2004, this court reversed the circuit

court's denial of DirecTV's motion to stay the proceedings and to compel arbitration, and it

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