Frazier v. W. Union Co.
This text of 377 F. Supp. 3d 1248 (Frazier v. W. Union Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
KRISTEN L. MIX, United States District Judge
This matter is before the Court on Defendants' Motion to Stay Proceeding Pending Arbitration Pursuant to Section 3 of the Federal Arbitration Act [# 33]1 (the "Motion").2 Thereafter, Defendants filed a Factual Supplement [# 48], Plaintiffs filed a Response [# 52] in opposition to the Motion [# 33], and Defendants filed a Reply [# 56]. The Court has reviewed the relevant briefs, the entire case file, and the applicable law, and is sufficiently advised in the premises. For the reasons set forth below, the Motion [# 33] is GRANTED .
I. Summary of the Case
Plaintiffs initiated this putative class action against The Western Union Company ("Western Union"), Western Union Financial Services, Inc. ("WUFSI"), Western Union's Chief Executive Officer Hikmet Ersek ("Ersek"), and various other unnamed Doe Defendants (collectively, "Defendants"). Am. Compl. [# 27] at 4. Plaintiffs assert claims under the Racketeer *1254Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act ("RICO"), the Colorado Organized Crime Control Act, and their respective state consumer protection laws.3 Id. at 46-72. WUFSI, a subsidiary of Western Union, operates a "Money Transfer System" through which consumers send money to other individuals in the United States and around the world. Id. at 16. Each of the named Plaintiffs alleges that she was defrauded by an unnamed third-party fraudster who convinced her to send a fraudulent money transfer order. Id. at 5-6.
Money transfer orders sent through WUFSI are subject to a set of contractual terms and conditions ("Terms and Conditions") located on a pre-printed Send Money Form. Motion [# 33] at 10, 12-13. The Terms and Conditions in place at the time of each of the named Plaintiffs' alleged money transfers included arbitration clauses, requiring the parties to arbitrate any disputes individually, rather than on a class-wide basis (the "Arbitration Clauses"). Id. at 10-11. Defendants maintain that the Terms and Conditions are included in both the Send Money Form customers fill out to send money and on the receipts given to customers after sending money transfer orders. Id. at 12-13. Defendants also assert that before a customer can send money using a Send Money Form, WUFSI's standard business practices require the customer to sign the form, agreeing to the accompanying terms and conditions. Id. at 13. Once the information on the Send Money Form is verified by a Western Union clerk on location, the clerk then prints a receipt for the customer. Id. at 14. Like the Send Money Form, Defendants assert that WUFSI's standard business practices require the customer to sign the receipt. Id.
At the relevant times of Plaintiffs' alleged fraudulently-induced money transfer orders, two separate Arbitration Clauses appeared in Defendants' Terms and Conditions. Id. at 11-12; Response [# 52] at 10. One Arbitration Clause appeared in Send Money Form Terms and Conditions in 2005, and the other Arbitration Clause appeared in Send Money Form Terms and Conditions in 2016 and 2017. Motion [# 33] at 11-12; Response [# 52] at 10.
Defendants seek a stay of this case while arbitration proceedings are held. Motion [# 33] at 7. At issue in the instant motion is: (1) whether Plaintiffs are bound by the Arbitration Clauses in dispute, (2) whether Defendants Ersek, Western Union, and WUFSI respectively are bound by the Arbitration Clauses in dispute, (3) whether the two individual Arbitration Clauses in question are enforceable, and (4) whether Plaintiffs' RICO claims fall within the scope of the Arbitration Clauses.
II. Standard of Review
Issues of arbitrability are governed by the Federal Arbitration Act ("FAA"). Belnap v. Iasis Healthcare ,
Under the FAA, when parties agree to settle a controversy by arbitration, courts must enforce that agreement "save upon grounds as exist at law or in equity for the revocation of any contract."
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KRISTEN L. MIX, United States District Judge
This matter is before the Court on Defendants' Motion to Stay Proceeding Pending Arbitration Pursuant to Section 3 of the Federal Arbitration Act [# 33]1 (the "Motion").2 Thereafter, Defendants filed a Factual Supplement [# 48], Plaintiffs filed a Response [# 52] in opposition to the Motion [# 33], and Defendants filed a Reply [# 56]. The Court has reviewed the relevant briefs, the entire case file, and the applicable law, and is sufficiently advised in the premises. For the reasons set forth below, the Motion [# 33] is GRANTED .
I. Summary of the Case
Plaintiffs initiated this putative class action against The Western Union Company ("Western Union"), Western Union Financial Services, Inc. ("WUFSI"), Western Union's Chief Executive Officer Hikmet Ersek ("Ersek"), and various other unnamed Doe Defendants (collectively, "Defendants"). Am. Compl. [# 27] at 4. Plaintiffs assert claims under the Racketeer *1254Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act ("RICO"), the Colorado Organized Crime Control Act, and their respective state consumer protection laws.3 Id. at 46-72. WUFSI, a subsidiary of Western Union, operates a "Money Transfer System" through which consumers send money to other individuals in the United States and around the world. Id. at 16. Each of the named Plaintiffs alleges that she was defrauded by an unnamed third-party fraudster who convinced her to send a fraudulent money transfer order. Id. at 5-6.
Money transfer orders sent through WUFSI are subject to a set of contractual terms and conditions ("Terms and Conditions") located on a pre-printed Send Money Form. Motion [# 33] at 10, 12-13. The Terms and Conditions in place at the time of each of the named Plaintiffs' alleged money transfers included arbitration clauses, requiring the parties to arbitrate any disputes individually, rather than on a class-wide basis (the "Arbitration Clauses"). Id. at 10-11. Defendants maintain that the Terms and Conditions are included in both the Send Money Form customers fill out to send money and on the receipts given to customers after sending money transfer orders. Id. at 12-13. Defendants also assert that before a customer can send money using a Send Money Form, WUFSI's standard business practices require the customer to sign the form, agreeing to the accompanying terms and conditions. Id. at 13. Once the information on the Send Money Form is verified by a Western Union clerk on location, the clerk then prints a receipt for the customer. Id. at 14. Like the Send Money Form, Defendants assert that WUFSI's standard business practices require the customer to sign the receipt. Id.
At the relevant times of Plaintiffs' alleged fraudulently-induced money transfer orders, two separate Arbitration Clauses appeared in Defendants' Terms and Conditions. Id. at 11-12; Response [# 52] at 10. One Arbitration Clause appeared in Send Money Form Terms and Conditions in 2005, and the other Arbitration Clause appeared in Send Money Form Terms and Conditions in 2016 and 2017. Motion [# 33] at 11-12; Response [# 52] at 10.
Defendants seek a stay of this case while arbitration proceedings are held. Motion [# 33] at 7. At issue in the instant motion is: (1) whether Plaintiffs are bound by the Arbitration Clauses in dispute, (2) whether Defendants Ersek, Western Union, and WUFSI respectively are bound by the Arbitration Clauses in dispute, (3) whether the two individual Arbitration Clauses in question are enforceable, and (4) whether Plaintiffs' RICO claims fall within the scope of the Arbitration Clauses.
II. Standard of Review
Issues of arbitrability are governed by the Federal Arbitration Act ("FAA"). Belnap v. Iasis Healthcare ,
Under the FAA, when parties agree to settle a controversy by arbitration, courts must enforce that agreement "save upon grounds as exist at law or in equity for the revocation of any contract."
Just as parties can agree to arbitrate the merits of a dispute, they can agree to arbitrate arbitrability, such as the validity and scope of an arbitration provision. Rent-A- Center, W., Inc. ,
"[A]lthough the presence of an arbitration clause generally creates a presumption in favor of arbitration, this presumption disappears when the parties dispute the existence of a valid arbitration agreement." Bellman v. i3Carbon, LLC ,
Stays are generally disfavored in this District. See Wason Ranch Corp. v. Hecla Mining Co ., No. 07-cv-00267-EWN-MEH,
*1256McWilliams v. Logicon Inc. ,
III. Analysis
The analysis begins by examining whether enforceable Arbitration Clauses exist between the parties. The Court first determines whether each Plaintiff is bound by an existing Arbitration Clause. Next, the Court resolves whether Defendant WUFSI is bound by an Arbitration Clause, and whether Defendants Western Union and Ersek may enforce arbitration through equitable estoppel.
After determining whether Arbitration Clauses exist, the Court then examines whether the existing Arbitration Clauses are enforceable and whether Plaintiffs' disputes fall within their scope. Regarding enforceability, the Court examines the enforceability of an Arbitration Clause which names an arbitrator who is no longer available for consumer disputes. Additionally, the Court determines whether a separate Arbitration Clause is unconscionable. Finally, regarding the scope of Plaintiffs' disputes, the Court examines whether Plaintiffs' RICO claims fall within the scope of the Arbitration Clauses under the FAA.
A. Whether the Parties are Bound by the Arbitration Clauses
The Court starts by determining which parties are bound by the Arbitration Clauses. Defendants argue that an enforceable Arbitration Clause exists from each alleged fraudulent transaction asserted by each named Plaintiff. Motion [# 33] at 18. In support of this argument, Defendants argue that each named Plaintiff assented to the Terms and Conditions in order to send her money transfers as required by WUFSI's standard business practices. Id. at 18-19. Additionally, Defendants argue that WUFSI is bound by the relevant Arbitration Clauses, and that both Arbitration Clauses apply to non-signatory Defendants Western Union and Ersek through the doctrine of equitable estoppel. Id. at 28-34.
Plaintiffs, by contrast, deny that Plaintiffs Kazmiera Frazier ("Frazier") and Koaleshia Simon ("Simon") ever agreed to Defendants' Terms and Conditions, which contain the Arbitration Clauses. Response [# 52] at 26-32. Plaintiffs argue that WUFSI is not bound by the Term and Conditions, and therefore it cannot compel arbitration pursuant to the Arbitration Clause therein. Id. at 32-33. Further, Plaintiffs argue that the nonsignatory Defendants Western Union and Ersek also cannot enforce arbitration. Id. at 33-37.
At the outset, the Court notes Plaintiffs' position regarding who among Defendants is bound by the Terms and Conditions, and thus the Arbitration Clauses. It appears that Plaintiffs assert that none of the named Defendants are parties or signatories to the Terms and Conditions. Plaintiffs argue that WUFSI cannot be bound by the Terms and Conditions and Arbitration Clauses as a nonsignatory. Id. at 32. Further, Plaintiffs argue that as nonsignatories to the Terms and Conditions, Defendants Western Union and Ersek are also not bound by the Arbitration Clauses. Id. at 33. It appears Plaintiffs argue that there is no Defendant who is bound by the Terms and Conditions giving rise to their substantive claims. Id. at 32-37. If that is *1257the case, Plaintiffs' case seeks to hold Defendants accountable for a scheme to defraud customers through money order transactions, while they also argue that Defendants are not bound by the very agreements used in those transactions. See Am. Compl. [# 27] at 22-36; Response [# 52] at 32-37. Plaintiffs' contradictory argument defies logic, and the Court addresses this novel position in examining which Defendants can enforce arbitration in the analysis below.
Disputes are subject to arbitration when a valid and enforceable arbitration agreement exists, and when the dispute falls within the scope of those identified in the arbitration agreement. See
In ruling on a motion to stay pending arbitration, a federal court may consider "only issues relating to the making and performance of the agreement to arbitrate." Prima Paint Corp. v. Flood & Conklin Mfg. Co. ,
The party seeking arbitration must present sufficient evidence demonstrating the existence of an arbitration agreement. Bellman ,
In order to meet their initial burden of demonstrating the existence of enforceable arbitration agreements here, Defendants rely on: (1) the signed Terms and Conditions *1258containing the Arbitration Clauses produced by certain Plaintiffs, (2) deposition testimony of certain Plaintiffs admitting that they signed the Terms and Conditions when conducting their transactions, and (3) WUFSI's standard business practices and procedures in sending money orders, with respect to Plaintiffs who have not produced signed Terms and Conditions and who testified that they do not recall signing arbitration agreements during their respective transactions. Reply [# 56] at 8; Motion [# 33] at 18-19; see also Factual Suppl. [# 48] at 3-6. To further establish the practices and procedure associated with WUFSI money order transactions, Defendants submitted the Declarations of Edgardo Torres ("Torres")5 and Lisa Sherman ("Sherman").6 Reply [# 56] at 8; Motion [# 33] at 18-19; Torres Decl. [# 33-1] at 1-5; Sherman Decl. [# 33-2] at 1-12.
Additionally, the Court considers whether Defendants Western Union, Ersek, and WUFSI are bound by the Arbitration Clauses, allowing them to enforce arbitration. Defendants argue that despite being a nonsignatory to the Terms and Conditions, WUFSI is still bound by the Arbitration Clauses. Motion [# 33] at 28; Reply [# 56] at 25. Similarly, Defendants argue that Defendants Western Union and Ersek can enforce arbitration without being signatories to the Terms and Conditions through the doctrine of equitable estoppel. Motion [# 33] at 32; Reply [# 56] at 25. The Court address these arguments in turn.
1. Whether Plaintiffs Laubler, Riggs and Seward are Bound by theArbitration Clauses
It is undisputed that Plaintiffs Rhonda Laubler ("Laubler"), Teresa Riggs ("Riggs"), and Anita Seward ("Seward") either produced signed Terms and Conditions from their alleged fraudulent transactions or testified that they signed agreements prior to sending their money orders. Factual Suppl. [# 48] at 3-4. Plaintiffs Laubler, Riggs, and Seward's relevant transactions took place throughout 2016 and 2017.
Defendants assert that the copies of signed receipts and affirmative testimony regarding signed receipts are sufficient to establish the existence of an agreement to arbitrate. Id. at 19; Factual Suppl. [# 48] at 3-6. The Court agrees. See Bellman ,
*1259Plaintiffs do not dispute the existence of agreements for Plaintiffs Laubler, Riggs, and Seward because these three Plaintiffs have produced copies of signed Terms and Conditions from their transactions or testified to signing receipts. Response [# 56] at 27; Factual Suppl. [# 48] at 3-5. Therefore, Plaintiffs do not raise a genuine issue of material fact. Bellman ,
2. Whether Plaintiffs Frazier and Simon are Bound by the Arbitration Clauses
Unlike Plaintiffs Laubler, Riggs, and Seward, Plaintiffs Frazier and Simon did not produce any evidence or testimony of signed Terms and Conditions. Factual Suppl. [# 48] at 4-6. Plaintiff Simon's disputed transaction occurred in 2016, purportedly making her subject to the NAM Arbitration Clause included in the Terms and Conditions from 2016 through 2017. Response [# 52] at 10. Plaintiff Frazier's disputed transaction occurred in 2005, purportedly making her subject to an older version of the Terms and Conditions which listed the National Arbitration Foundation ("NAF") (the "NAF Arbitration Clause") as the arbitrator.
Evidence of an organization's routine practice "may be admitted to prove that on a particular occasion the...organization acted in accordance with the...routine practice." Hancock ,
Defendants argue that despite the lack of physical evidence and testimony, they have demonstrated the existence of arbitration agreements with respect to Plaintiffs Frazier and Simon due to evidence of WUFSI's standard business practices and procedures. Motion [# 33] at 18-19; Reply [# 56] at 7-12. In support of this argument, Defendants rely on the declaration and testimony of Mr. Torres to establish the standard business practices followed by Western Union and WUFSI in operating their Money Transfer System. Motion [# 33] at 18-19; Reply [# 56] at 10. Further, Defendants argue that separate from WUFSI's standard business practices, Plaintiffs Frazier and Simon were both on notice of the Terms and Conditions containing the Arbitration Clauses and accepted them through the course of their conduct alone. Reply [# 56] at 12. Finally, Defendants argue that signatures are not required to establish an enforceable arbitration agreement.
*1260Plaintiffs dispute that Plaintiffs Frazier and Simon ever entered into the Terms and Conditions with Defendants. Response [# 52] at 26. They note that Defendants admit that they do not possess signed Terms and Conditions, on either Send Money Forms or receipts, for Plaintiffs Frazier and Simon. Id. at 27. Further, Plaintiffs argue that since Plaintiffs Simon and Frazier did not produce signed Terms and Conditions in discovery and do not recall signing an agreement as a part of their relevant transactions, no evidence of any agreement to arbitrate exists. Id. Plaintiffs argue that Defendants improperly rely on habit evidence to demonstrate that Plaintiff Simon signed her Send Money Forms or receipts because there is no direct evidence that she "reflexively" signed Send Money Forms or receipts. Id. at 28. Finally, Plaintiffs argue that Defendants have failed to establish the existence of an Arbitration Clause through WUFSI and Western Union's standard business practices because the declarations of Mr. Torres and other Western Union employees cannot establish that these practices are followed at every location and in every transaction sending a money order. Id. at 29-30.
Here, the Declarations of Mr. Torres and Ms. Sherman support their personal knowledge of the standard practices followed in WUFSI transactions when customers agree to the Terms and Conditions. Motion [# 33] at 18-20; Reply [# 56] at 7-12; Torres Decl. [# 33-1] at 1-5; Sherman Decl. [# 33-2] at 1-12. Plaintiffs' arguments that Mr. Torres does not have personal knowledge of the specific transactions in question and the habits of independent location clerks and agent locations are not material to the Court's inquiry here. Hancock ,
The fact that Plaintiffs Frazier and Simon do not specifically recall whether they signed receipts or Send Money Forms is also not material to this inquiry. Response [# 52] at 27. A signature is not required to establish the existence of an enforceable arbitration agreement. See E-21 Eng'g, Inc. v. Steve Stock & Assoc., Inc. ,
Thus, the Court finds that Defendants have met their initial burden of presenting sufficient evidence that there was notice of and assent to the Terms and Conditions containing Arbitration Clauses for Plaintiffs Frazier and Simon.
3. Whether Defendant WUFSI is Bound by the Arbitration Clauses
WUFSI is Western Union's subsidiary in charge of the global Money Transfer System. Am. Compl . [# 27] at 5. Defendants contend that WUFSI is bound by the Arbitration Clauses discussed above. Motion [# 33] at 28. The Arbitration Clause in place in 2005 contained a provision naming the NAF as the arbitrator in the NAF Arbitration Clause. Sherman Decl. [# 33-2] at 3. Defendants contend that WUFSI is a party to the NAF Arbitration Clause, making it bound to the provisions of the Arbitration Clause. Motion [# 33] at 28-31. In opposition, Plaintiffs rely on Tennille v. Western Union Co. , in which the Court held that WUFSI was not entitled to a stay of proceedings to enforce arbitration. Nos. 09-cv-938-JLK, 10cv-765-JLK,
While the Court has considered the decision in Tennille , the Court finds that material differences exist between the circumstances in Tennille and the situation here. With respect to Tennille's first line of reasoning, Defendants assert that WUFSI is bound by the NAF Arbitration Clause, and ask that the Court distinguish Tennille for the purposes of the instant Motion. [# 33] at 28. Given Plaintiffs' argument (addressed below) that nonsignatory Defendants Western Union and Ersek cannot be bound by the Terms and Conditions or Arbitration Clauses, Plaintiffs essentially assert that there is no Defendant or Western Union-linked entity that could be bound by the Terms and Conditions or Arbitration Clauses. Id. Following this line of reasoning would ultimately mean that Western Union and WUFSI created Terms and Conditions containing Arbitration Clauses that were applicable to their customers, but not to any of the money transferring entities. Motion [# 33] at 30. That result would be, of course, implausible.
Plaintiffs here acknowledge that WUFSI operates Western Union's Money Transfer System. Am. Compl. [# 27] at 5. Unlike Tennille , there is no ambiguity regarding whether WUFSI is a party bound by the Terms and Conditions on the Send Money Forms used to initiate transactions in WUFSI's Money Transfer System.
*1262
Moving to Tennille's second line of reasoning that there is no factual or legal distinction between Western Union and WUFSI that would permit WUFSI to enforce the Arbitration Clause two years into litigation after Western Union submitted substantive defenses, the present circumstances are again inapplicable to Tennille's holding. First, the case here has been in litigation for less than one year, and no Defendants have submitted any substantive defenses at this stage of the litigation. Am. Compl. [# 27] at 1, 73. Second, any further factual or legal distinction between Western Union and WUFSI does not bear on the Court's analysis. Here, Plaintiffs' claims all stem from the same conduct alleged against all named Defendants, which makes any legal distinction between these entities immaterial so long as some Western Union entity is covered by the Terms and Conditions. Am. Compl. [# 27] at 8-41; See Meister v. Stout ,
Finally, principles of contract interpretation also guide the Court's decision. In determining the meaning of a contract, courts "seek to give effect to all provisions so that none will be rendered meaningless." Mapes v. City Council of City of Walsenburg ,
4. Whether Defendants Western Union and Ersek are Bound by the Arbitration Clauses
Plaintiffs contend that Defendants Western Union and Ersek cannot enforce arbitration because they are not parties to the agreements containing the Arbitration Clauses. Response [# 52] at 32-37. Defendants argue that although they are non-signatories to both the NAF and NAM Arbitration Clauses, Defendants Western Union and Ersek can enforce arbitration through equitable estoppel. Id. at 31-34; Reply [# 56] at 25-28.
Colorado law governs whether Defendants Western Union and Ersek can enforce arbitration. See Belnap ,
Defendants argue that this scenario is applicable in this case, thus allowing nonsignatories Defendants Western Union and Ersek to enforce arbitration. Motion [# 33] at 33-34; Reply [# 56] at 25-28. In support of this argument, Defendants assert that each of Plaintiffs' claims apply equally to Defendants Western Union and Ersek. Motion [# 33] at 33-34. Further, Defendants argue that Plaintiffs' claims are intertwined with the Terms and Conditions, because Plaintiffs' claims arise out of money transfers governed by the Terms and Conditions. Reply [# 56] at 27.
Plaintiffs argue that this scenario is inapplicable here, because there is no need for an arbitrator to reference the Terms and Conditions in adjudicating Plaintiffs' claims. Response [# 52] at 36. Therefore, Plaintiffs assert that their claims are not intertwined with the duties and obligations of the Terms and Conditions.
The Court finds that the nonsignatory Defendants may enforce the Terms and Conditions and the Arbitration Clauses. First, Plaintiffs' claims against the signatory and nonsignatory Defendants Western Union and Ersek are interdependent. Meister ,
Second, the Court finds that Plaintiffs' claims are intertwined with the duties and obligations arising from the Terms and Conditions. "As the main document[s] governing the parties' relationship, the arbitrator will have to reference the [agreements'] terms, requirements, and duties in adjudicating Plaintiffs' claims." Santich v. VCG Holding Corp. , No. 17-cv-00631-RM-MEH,
Plaintiffs dispute that the duties and obligations set forth in the Terms and Conditions are necessary to resolve their claims, pointing to the fact that the Arbitration Clause and the Terms and Conditions are not mentioned at all in the Amended Complaint [# 27]. Response [# 52] at 36. Plaintiffs argue thatLenox MacLaren Surgical Corp. v. Medtronic, Inc. is more persuasive in this scenario.
*1264The Court finds the situation here distinct from Medtronic . The arbitrator in this case would need to consider the Terms and Conditions in resolving Plaintiffs' claims. Pollard ,
Thus, the Court finds that Plaintiffs' claims asserted against the signatory Defendant WUFSI are interdependent with those claims asserted against the nonsignatory Defendants Western Union and Ersek and are intertwined with the Terms and Conditions. As such, the Court finds that Defendants Western Union and Ersek are bound by the Arbitration Clauses, and may enforce arbitration against Plaintiffs pursuant to the Arbitration Clauses.
B. Whether the Existing Arbitration Clauses are Enforceable and the Disputes Fall Within Their Scope
Defendants have established the existence of contractual Terms and Conditions including the Arbitration Clauses, satisfying the first requirement to enforce arbitration. See
Importantly, the Court notes at the outset that challenges to the contract as a whole are for the arbitrator to decide. Prima Paint Corp. ,
1. Enforceability of the Arbitration Clauses
Plaintiffs raise separate arguments disputing the enforceability of the NAF and NAM Arbitration Clauses. Response [# 52] at 10-26. Regarding the NAF Arbitration Clause,7 Plaintiffs argue that the *1265designation of an unavailable arbitrator renders the agreement unenforceable. Id. at 11. With respect to the NAM Arbitration Clause,8 Plaintiffs argue that the agreement is unenforceable because it precludes the effective vindication of Plaintiffs' RICO claims and is unconscionable, and because the individual NAM Rules cannot be severed from the agreement. Id. at 15-25.
a. Whether the NAF Arbitration Clause is Enforceable
Plaintiffs argue that if Plaintiff Frazier is bound by the NAF Arbitration Clause, she would then be subject to an arbitrator which is no longer allowed to arbitrate consumer disputes. Motion [# 33] at 22-23; Response [# 52] at 11. Plaintiff Frazier's dispute arises from a transaction in 2005. Response [# 52] at 10. The Terms and Conditions included on Send Money Forms used in 2005 contained provisions naming the NAF as the forum to administer any arbitration arising from a dispute. Motion [# 33] at 11; Response [# 52] at 11. The following language is included in the 2005 NAF Arbitration Clause:
Any dispute or claim arising from or relating to this transaction, including disputes regarding this paragraph, shall be settled by binding arbitration administered by the National Arbitration Forum ("NAF") under its Code of Procedure in effect when the dispute is filed, and shall be arbitrated in the most populous city in the state where the transaction was sent. Each party shall bear its own attorneys', experts' and witness fees. Neither party shall have the right to participate as a member of any class of claimants pertaining to any claim. Third parties' claims shall not be joined in any arbitration between the parties. Information may be obtained and disputes may be filed at a NAF office, www.arbitration-forum.com, or at P.O. Box 50191, Minneapolis, MN 55405. This paragraph is made pursuant to a transaction involving interstate commerce and shall be governed by the Federal Arbitration Act,9 U.S.C. § 1 - 16. EXCEPT AS EXPRESSLY PROVIDED IN THIS PARAGRAPH, THE PARTIES WAIVE ALL RIGHTS TO A COURT OR JURY TRIAL TO RESOLVE AGREEMENT DISPUTES.
Motion [# 33] at 11. It is undisputed that NAF, however, no longer conducts consumer arbitrations. Motion [# 33] at 22; Response [# 52] at 11. NAF has not been accepting new consumer cases for arbitration since July 2009, when it settled a suit brought by Minnesota's Attorney General. See Green v. U.S. Cash Advance Ill., LLC ,
Defendants argue that the FAA and Colorado contract law both support upholding the enforceability of the NAF Agreement despite the unavailability of NAF. Motion [# 33] at 22. Defendants assert that Section 5 of the FAA explicitly contemplates a situation where a named arbitrator is unavailable. Id. at 23. Further, Defendants argue that while the Tenth Circuit has not addressed the issue directly, a majority of federal circuit courts have upheld arbitration agreements even when NAF is not available. Id. at 25. Given the FAA's "liberal policy favoring arbitration agreements," the Court agrees. Epic Sys. Corp. ,
*1266Federal circuits are split on this issue. Although, the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals has apparently not yet ruled on this specific issue, the Second, Third, Fifth, Sixth, Seventh, Eighth, Ninth, and Eleventh Circuits have all issued opinions on the topic. See Robinson v. EOR-ARK, LLC ,
Five federal circuit courts, the Third, Sixth, Seventh, Eighth, and Ninth Circuits, have upheld arbitration agreements despite their naming of an unavailable arbitrator. See Robinson ,
Conversely, the Second and Fifth Circuits have found circumstances where NAF is integral to the arbitration agreement, invalidating the agreements. See Moss v. First Premier Bank ,
Although there is no applicable guidance from the Tenth Circuit on this specific issue, this District has upheld arbitration agreements where the named arbitrator is not available. See, e.g. , McGuire, Cornwell & Blakey v. Grider ,
In evaluating the specific language of the NAF Arbitration Clause applicable here, the Court finds the language is most *1267similar to the arbitration provision in Khan v. Dell Inc. ,
The language in the NAF Arbitration Clause here states that any dispute "shall be settled by binding arbitration administered by the National Arbitration Forum ("NAF") under its Code of Procedure...." Motion [# 33] at 11. Here, as in Khan , it is unclear whether the language "settled by" modifies "binding arbitration," NAF, or both.
Even if the "integral" test does not control, the text of the FAA supports arbitration in this situation. The Seventh Circuit in Green rejected application of the "integral" test, finding no link to such a test in the text or background of the FAA.
b. Whether the NAM Arbitration Clause is Enforceable
Plaintiffs also challenge the enforceability of the NAM Arbitration Clause. Response [# 52] at 15. Plaintiffs assert that the NAM Arbitration Clause is unenforceable because it is unconscionable. Id. at 20-25.
In Colorado, for a contract to be unconscionable, it must be both substantively and procedurally unconscionable. Vernon v. Qwest Commc'ns Int'l, Inc. ,
Arbitrability disputes are for the arbitrator unless the party contesting arbitration specifically challenges the delegation clause included in the parties' agreement. Rent-A- Center, W., Inc. ,
Here, most of Plaintiffs' arguments are directed at the NAM Arbitration Clause and Terms and Conditions in their entirety, not the delegation clause. Sherman Decl. [# 33-2] at 8. Plaintiffs argue, for example, that the individual Plaintiffs "did not have an opportunity to read or become familiar with the relevant terms of the agreement before signing it." Response [# 52] at 22. However, nothing in Plaintiffs' argument specifically challenges Plaintiffs' ability to read and understand the delegation clause. Id. at 21-25. The Supreme Court has rejected attempts to determine the validity of a delegation clause only on the basis of the clause's inclusion in an invalid agreement. Rent-A-Center, W., Inc. ,
Substantively, Plaintiffs' arguments relating to the fourth and fifth elements concern whether Plaintiffs were stripped of their substantive rights to pursue statutory RICO claims. Response [# 52] at 22. RICO dictates that prevailing parties "shall recover" the costs of the lawsuit and reasonable attorneys' fees. See
Additionally, these arguments suffer a similar flaw as Plaintiffs' procedural unconscionability arguments because they challenge a provision of the NAM Arbitration Clause other than the delegation clause. When a delegation clause is present in an arbitration agreement, the party opposing arbitration must specifically dispute the validity of the delegation clause. Rent-A-Center, W., Inc. ,
2. Whether Plaintiffs' RICO Claims Fall Outside the Scope of the Arbitration Clause and the FAA
While the FAA favors a liberal policy favoring arbitration, the final clause *1270of Section 2 of the statute contains a "savings clause." Nesbitt v. FCNH, Inc. ,
Plaintiffs argue that the NAM Arbitration Clause fails to provide an effective forum for resolving Plaintiffs' RICO claims because: (1) the NAM Arbitration Clause strips Plaintiffs of their right to attorneys' fees and costs as prevailing parties under RICO; (2) the NAM Arbitration Clause exposes Plaintiffs to the possibility of paying Defendants' attorneys' fees; and (3) the NAM Arbitration Clause limits Plaintiffs' discovery in a way that effectively precludes Plaintiffs from asserting their RICO claims. Response [# 52] at 15-16.
The effective vindication exception prevents a party from waiving its right to pursue statutory remedies, and covers arbitration agreements "forbidding the assertion of certain statutory rights." Italian Colors Rest. ,
a. Attorneys' Fees
The Court addresses Plaintiffs' two arguments regarding attorneys' fees together. As stated above, Plaintiffs argue that the NAM Arbitration Clause deprives Plaintiffs of their automatic right to attorneys' fees as a prevailing party. Id. at 16. The NAM Arbitration Clause requires arbitration to be conducted under the NAM Rules, which state that the arbitrator "may" award the total costs of arbitration or legal representation to one party, or apportion costs as the arbitrator deems appropriate. Response [# 52] at 16; Levitt Decl. [# 52-2] at 20. Because RICO10 mandates *1271that prevailing parties "shall recover" costs and reasonable attorneys' fees, Plaintiffs argue that the discretion left to the arbitrator to award attorneys' fees and costs denies Plaintiffs their guaranteed right of recovery of attorneys' fees and costs. Response [# 52] at 16. Further, Plaintiffs argue that the arbitrator discretion in the NAM Rules would also improperly expose Plaintiffs to the risk of paying Defendants' attorneys' fees. Id. at 18.
Defendants argue that the NAM Arbitration Clause does not preclude Plaintiffs' right to pursue statutory RICO claims. Reply [# 56] at 14. In support of this argument, Defendants assert that the NAM Rules, while granting discretion to the arbitrator in awarding fees, do not mandate that the arbitrator "disregard applicable law in rendering any decisions." Id. at 15. Defendants also argue that similar arguments regarding discretionary fee awards by the arbitrator have been rejected in the Tenth Circuit and by the Supreme Court. Id. at 15-16. The Court agrees.
Here, nothing in the NAM Arbitration Clause requires Plaintiffs to incur their own costs and attorneys' fees if they prevail, nor does it require Plaintiffs to pay Defendants' attorneys' fees if they lose. Motion [# 33-2] at 8. Additionally, while the NAM Arbitration Clause requires Plaintiffs to bear some arbitration cost, that cost is expressly limited to $ 125. Id. Here, Plaintiffs' concern that the arbitrator will ignore Plaintiffs' rights to attorneys' fees and costs under the appropriate RICO statute is speculative. Randolph ,
Plaintiffs point to three cases in support of their position. Response [# 52] at 16-18. Plaintiffs' authority, however, involves situations in which the plaintiffs faced arbitration agreements requiring them to pay attorneys' fees and costs. See Nesbitt v. FCNH, Inc. ,
b. Discovery Costs
Turning to discovery costs, Plaintiffs assert that the provision of the NAM Arbitration Clause providing that "the *1272costs of discovery must be commensurate with the amount of the claim" precludes effective vindication of Plaintiffs' RICO claims. Response [# 52] at 19. Plaintiffs argue that the broad and technical nature of RICO claims, and the burden of establishing a pattern of racketeering activity, warrant extensive discovery.
Defendants assert that the Supreme Court rejected a similar argument in Italian Colors Restaurant , and other federal courts have applied that same reasoning specifically to RICO claims.
IV. Conclusion
Based on the foregoing, IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that the Motion [# 33] is GRANTED . Accordingly,
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the Clerk of Court shall administratively close this case in order to allow the parties to participate in arbitration proceedings. See D.C.COLO.LCivR 41.2 ("...[A] magistrate judge exercising consent jurisdiction may order the clerk to close a civil action administratively subject to reopening for good cause.").
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that, no later than twenty days after the completion of the arbitration proceedings, the parties shall file a Status Report in which they advise the Court whether the parties believe the case should be reopened for good cause or whether the case should be dismissed.
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
377 F. Supp. 3d 1248, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frazier-v-w-union-co-cod-2019.