Introduction
From time-to-time, arbitration providers may decline to administer an arbitration. What happens then according to Federal Arbitration Act “FAA”) Section 3 and Section 4? Must the parties arbitrate before an alternative provider or can a party insist on litigating the dispute in court?
If FAA Section 3 and Section 4, as applied to the parties’ agreement and the facts, authorize an order compelling arbitration and staying litigation, arbitration will (or at least should) ordinarily proceed. But as the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit’s decision in Merritt Island Woodwerx, LLC v. Space Coast Credit Union, No. 24-10019, slip op. (11th Cir. May 21, 2025) shows, if arbitration cannot be compelled, and litigation stayed—and the agreement can be legitimately construed as not to require further arbitration—then one or more parties can insist on Court resolution of their dispute, including, in an appropriate case, by jury trial.
That’s a big “if,” and an equally big “and,” but if all conditions are satisfied, then an arbitration opponent may have a solid basis for seeking judicial resolution of its dispute. That is ordinarily a big win, and one that is not otherwise easy to come by.
Understanding Merritt Island Woodwerx—and cases of like ilk—can help you identify opportunities to argue that a provider’s decision to proceed no further means arbitration proceed no further. Successfully taking advantage of those opportunities is the key, but if you do not spot them at the outset, then you may lose them.
If you’re an arbitration proponent, then understanding Merritt Island Woodwerx—and how to avoid or mitigate its consequences—is equally important. The stakes are big: loss of arbitration rights a arbitration proponent had or should have can be an expensive and unwelcome proposition.
Background: What Transpired in Merritt Island Woodwerx?
The dispute was between a credit union (the “Arbitration Proponent”) Continue Reading »