Archive for January, 2025

Modern Perfection, LLC v. Bank of America: Fourth Circuit Says Arbitrator gets to Decide which of Two Contracts’ Conflicting Dispute Resolution Provisions Applies

January 27th, 2025 Application to Stay Litigation, Arbitrability, Arbitrability | Clear and Unmistakable Rule, Arbitrability | Existence of Arbitration Agreement, Arbitration Agreement Invalid, Arbitration Agreements, Arbitration Law, Arbitration Practice and Procedure, Authority of Arbitrators, Challenging Arbitration Agreements, Clear and Unmistakable Rule, Delegation Provision, Existence of Arbitration Agreement, FAA Chapter 1, FAA Section 2, Federal Arbitration Act Enforcement Litigation Procedure, Federal Arbitration Act Section 3, Federal Arbitration Act Section 4, Federal Subject Matter Jurisdiction, Motion to Compel Arbitration, Practice and Procedure, Richard D. Faulkner, Section 2, Section 3 Stay of Litigation, Section 4, Stay of Litigation, Stay of Litigation Pending Arbitration, United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit, United States Supreme Court Comments Off on Modern Perfection, LLC v. Bank of America: Fourth Circuit Says Arbitrator gets to Decide which of Two Contracts’ Conflicting Dispute Resolution Provisions Applies

Introduction: Delegation Provisions and Modern Perfection

Delegation Provisions | Arbitrability ChallengeDelegation provisions clearly and unmistakably assign arbitrability determinations to arbitrators, which means they provide for arbitrators to decide arbitrability-related disputes.

Coinbase v. Suski, 602 U.S. 143 (2024) set forth the allocation of power between courts and arbitrators for four “orders” of arbitrability-related disputes:

  1. A “first order” dispute is “[a] contest over the merits of the dispute[,]” the determination of which “depends on the applicable law and relevant facts.” 602 U.S. at 148 (quotation omitted).
  2. A “second order dispute” concerns “whether [the parties] agreed to arbitrate the merits” of the first order dispute. 602 U.S. at 148 (quotation omitted).
  3. A “third order dispute” concerns “who should have the primary power to decide” a second order dispute.” 602 U.S. at 149.
  4. A “fourth order” dispute is one where there are “multiple agreements that conflict as to the third-order question of who decides arbitrability.” 602 U.S. at 149.

Coinbase held that fourth-order disputes are for the courts, which are to decide them based on “traditional contract principles.” 602 U.S. at 149.

In a recent U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit decision, Modern Perfection, LLC v. Bank of America, No. 23-1965, slip op. (4th Cir. Jan. 13, 2025), the Court was faced with what appeared to be a “fourth-order” dispute as defined by Suski. The question was who gets to decide arbitrability questions when one contract contained a broad arbitration agreement and a delegation provision and the other a clause that expressly contemplated judicial resolution of disputes.

The problem was that Suski was not decided until briefing in both the district court and the Fourth Circuit was complete, and the arbitration challengers’ argument centered on the scope of the delegation provisions, not on whether the contracts contemplating judicial resolution of disputes superseded the delegation provisions.

The Suski fourth-order dispute issue was first raised in a Fed. R. App. P. 28(j) letter the challenger submitted once Suski was decided.  Because the argument had not been raised in the parties’ appellate briefs, the Court would not hear it, and ruled that, under the terms of the delegation provisions, the arbitrator gets to decide whether the dispute was arbitrable.

Background

Over a five-year period a bank issued to each of six plaintiffs two Continue Reading »

Transfer of Venue under 28 U.S.C. Section 1404(a) in an Arbitration Conducted Virtually: An Arbitration Award is Made at the Arbitral Seat, Which is Determined by the Parties’ Agreement

January 9th, 2025 1404(a) Transfer of Venue, Application to Confirm, Application to Vacate, Arbitral Seat, Arbitration Law, Arbitration Practice and Procedure, Arbitration Situs, Awards, Confirmation of Awards, Consent to Confirmation, FAA Chapter 1, FAA Section 9, Federal Arbitration Act Enforcement Litigation Procedure, Federal Arbitration Act Section 9, Federal Courts, Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, Federal Subject Matter Jurisdiction, Petition or Application to Confirm Award, Petition to Vacate Award, Section 9, United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, Venue 2 Comments »

1404(a) transfer of venue; virtual hearings Questions about venue transfer under 28 U.S.C. Section 1404(a) of Section 9 or 10 petitions to confirm or vacate arbitration awards may require determination of where the award was made.

Particularly in today’s world of virtual hearings, determining where an arbitration award is made can raise questions. In Citizens Bank v. Magleby, 24 Civ. 4827 (AKH), slip op. at 4 (S.D.N.Y. Jan. 6, 2025), the Court, following existing precedent, held that an award is made at the location where the parties agree the arbitration will take place, even if the arbitration hearings are held in another place or virtually. That rule may not be perfect but it simplifies resolution of what otherwise could be a vexing question.

Background

In Citizen’s Bank, the question arose on a 28 U.S.C. § 1404(a) motion to transfer a petition to confirm an arbitration award from the Southern District of New York to Las Vegas, Nevada. The Continue Reading »

Unlawful Limitations Period Provision Renders Arbitration Agreement Unenforceable Says South Carolina Supreme Court

January 2nd, 2025 Contract Defenses, Enforcing Arbitration Agreements, FAA Chapter 1, FAA Section 2, FAA Section 4, Federal Arbitration Act Enforcement Litigation Procedure, Federal Arbitration Act Section 2, Federal Arbitration Act Section 4, Petition to Compel Arbitration, Policy, Practice and Procedure, Pre-Award Federal Arbitration Act Litigation, Public Policy, Section 2, Section 4, Severability, South Carolina Supreme Court, State Courts Comments Off on Unlawful Limitations Period Provision Renders Arbitration Agreement Unenforceable Says South Carolina Supreme Court

Severability of Limitations Provision: Introduction

Limitations

One defense to a motion to compel arbitration is that the arbitration agreement on which the movant relies is, as a matter of arbitration-neutral state law, void or unenforceable on public policy grounds. (See, e.g., here.) But if only one term or provision of an arbitration agreement is unenforceable on public policy grounds, can that offending provision simply be removed from the contract and the rest of the arbitration agreement enforced?

In Huskins v. Mungo Homes, LLC, No. 28245, slip op. (S.C. Sup. Ct. December 11, 2024), the South Carolina Supreme Court said the answer depends principally on the intent of the parties. And as respects the adhesive, “take-it-or-leave-it” home sale contract before it, the Court said the answer was no.

By statute South Carolina prohibits and deems void contractual provisions that purport to shorten the statute of limitations. S.C. Code Ann. § 15-3-140 (2005).  In Mungo Homes, the defendant sold the plaintiff a new home, the contract of sale for which contained an arbitration agreement that said: “Each and every demand for arbitration shall be made within ninety (90) days after the claim, dispute or other matter in question has arisen, except that any claim, dispute or matter in question not asserted within said time periods shall be deemed waived and forever barred.” Slip op. at 2 (quotation omitted). The parties agreed that provision violated Section 15-3-140.

The question before South Carolina’s highest court was whether the provision could be severed from the contract, leaving intact the rest of the arbitration agreement, and the contract containing it (the “container contract”), or whether that unlawful provision rendered invalid and unenforceable the entire arbitration agreement. In Huskins the Court held that the limitations period provision could not be severed and the arbitration agreement was accordingly unenforceable on public policy grounds. The container contract was not affected by the Court’s decision. Slip op. at 6.

Discussion

Severability of Limitations Provision: Party Intent and Relevance of not Including a Severability Clause in the Agreement

The Court said “[t]he only question we are left with is whether we should sever the illegal term and let the remainder of the arbitration agreement stand.” Slip op. at 3. The touchstone for answering that question was party intent: “whether an agreement can be modified so its remaining provisions survive [generally] depends upon what the parties intended.” Slip op. at 2.

The Court observed that the parties did not include in their contract a severability provision and the contract otherwise did not suggest the parties intended the arbitration agreement to survive if any part of it, including the limitations provision, was deemed void. Slip op. at 2.

The Court explained that the absence of a severability clause, in and of itself, may be grounds for not severing an unenforceable clause from a contract. For courts are not supposed to “rewrite contracts” but (subject to certain exceptions) enforce them according to their terms. Slip op. at 2.

But the Court decided not to rest its decision solely on the parties’ decision not to include a severability clause in their contract. The Court explained that, in the absence of a severability clause, Courts are reluctant to impose severability on the parties. Slip op. at 2-3. Yet “devotion to that principle[,]” said the Court, “can work a cost to other interests. It can exact a needless forfeiture or cause unjust enrichment, tossing out the essence of a bargained for exchange over a trivial technicality.” Slip op. at 3 (citation omitted).

Severability of the Limitations Provision: Common Law, South Carolina Law, and the Restatement (Second) of Contracts

The Court briefly discussed pertinent English common law, and U.S. and South Carolina precedent on the severability issue, explaining how courts have “stricken illegal parts from contracts and upheld the legal parts, as long as the central purpose of the parties’ agreement did not depend on the illegal part.” Slip op at 3. South Carolina, said the Court, “followed this main current and interpreted contracts as severable if consistent with the parties’ intent.” Slip op. at 3 (citations omitted).

The Restatement (Second) of Contracts, said the Court, “takes the further view that if only part of a contract term is unenforceable on the grounds of public policy, a court may enforce the rest of the term as long as 1) ‘the performance as to which the agreement is unenforceable is not an essential part of the agreed exchange’ and 2) the party seeking to enforce the term ‘obtained it in good faith and in accordance with reasonable standards of fair dealing.’” Slip op. at 3-4 (quoting Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 184). Restatement (Second) Section 184’s comments, in turn, “emphasize that ‘a court will not aid a party who has taken advantage of his dominant bargaining power to extract from the other party a promise that is clearly so broad as to offend public policy by redrafting the agreement so as to make a part of the promise enforceable.’” Slip op. at 4 (quoting Restatement (Second) § 184, comment b).

No Question of Fact that the Parties did not Intend to Permit Severability of the Limitations Provision

The Court determined that, although party intent is often a question of fact, there were three reasons why there was no such question concerning party intent not to allow severability:

  1. The parties did not agree to a severability clause;
  2. The contract’s merger clause states that the “contract ‘embodies the entire agreement’ and that it can only ‘be amended or modified’ by a writing executed by both the Huskins and Mungo[;]” and
  3. Mungo conceded that the contract was an adhesion contract.

Slip op. at 4.

The Court found that the contract was offered on a “‘take it or leave it’” basis, drafted by Mungo, deemed nonnegotiable, and not editable by the Huskins. Slip op. at 4. “This forceful proof,” said the Court, “of Mungo’s intent that the contract could not be tinkered with convinces us we should not rewrite it now.” Slip op. at 4.

The Court further concluded that the illegal provision in the arbitration agreement was material because it would be outcome determinative of many disputes. Slip op. at 4. The Court viewed the provision not as a “mere ‘ancillary logistical concern’ of the arbitration agreement” but  “a brash push to accomplish through arbitration something our statutory law forbids.” Slip op. at 4 (citation omitted). Were the Court to to “lift[] out the clause, the legal statute limitations period (which in most cases allows claims to be filed within three years of their reasonable discovery) would drop in.” Slip op. at 4 (parenthetical material in original). That “would rewrite arbitration agreement to expand the statute of limitations by several orders of magnitude.” Slip op. at 4.

Arbitration, said the Court, is designed “to provide an alternative way to resolve disputes in a fair an efficient manner[,]” but “Mungo designed its arbitration provision not to streamline the resolution of disputes but to reduce their number” by greatly reducing the limitation period for bring those disputes. Slip op. at 4. The Court “conclud[ed] Mungo’s manipulative skirting of South Carolina public policy goes to the core of the arbitration agreement and weighs heavily against severance.” Slip op. at 4-5 (citations omitted)

The Court ruled that it would not save the arbitration agreement by severing the offending limitations provision, finding that because this was an “adhesion contract” it was “highly doubtful that the parties truly intended for severance to apply.” Slip op. at 5 (citation omitted). The contract was a consumer home-purchase agreement, triggering the “public policy concerns that [Damico v. Lennar Carolinas, LLC, 437 S.C. 596, 619-20 (2022)] eloquently addressed.” Slip op. at 5.

Permitting Severance would Provide a Perverse Incentive for Dominant Parties to Include in Adhesion Contracts Illegal Contract Provisions

“We have[,]” said the Court, been steadfast in protecting home buyers from unscrupulous and overreaching terms, and applying severance here would erode that laudable public policy.” Slip op. at 5 (citation omitted). Mungo wanted an “adhesion contract so its terms could not be varied and would stick[,]” and, now, “Mungo was stuck with its choice.” Slip op. at 5. Finding otherwise would ensure there was “no downside to throwing in blatantly illegal terms, betting they will go unchallenged or, at worst, that courts will throw them out and enforce the rest.” Slip op. at 5 (citations omitted).

The Court thus did not sever the offending contract provision and held that the arbitration agreement was therefore unenforceable. Slip op. at 6. It further found that the container contract contract was not affected by the Court’s ruling. Slip op. at 6.

Contacting the Author

If you have any questions about this article, arbitration, arbitration-law, arbitration-related litigation, then please contact Philip J. Loree Jr., at (516) 941-6094 or PJL1@LoreeLawFirm.com.

Philip J. Loree Jr. is principal of the Loree Law Firm, a New York attorney who focuses his practice on arbitration and associated litigation. A former BigLaw partner, he has nearly 35 years of experience representing a wide variety of corporate, other entity, and individual clients in matters arising under the Federal Arbitration Act, as well as in insurance- or reinsurance-related, and other, matters.

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