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National Labor Relations Board Decision
Challenges Legality of Class Action Waivers
January 11, 2012
Summary
Last week, the National Labor Relations Board
(NLRB) ruled that an arbitration agreement signed as a
condition of employment, which prohibited the filing of joint,
class, or collective actions in arbitration or in court,
violated the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA), and thus was
unenforceable. This decision casts substantial uncertainty on
the viability of class action waivers in arbitration
agreements between employers and employees.
Discussion
In
D.R. Horton, Inc. and Michael Cuda, 357 NLRB No. 184 (Jan.
3, 2012), a construction superintendent attempted to
initiate a nationwide class arbitration on behalf of similarly
situated superintendents, alleging that his employer was
misclassifying its superintendents as exempt from overtime
under the Fair Labor Standards Act. The employer sought
to avoid the arbitration because the arbitration agreement
between the parties barred collective claims. In
response, the employee filed a claim with the NLRB alleging
that the arbitration agreement violated his rights under the
NLRA, which protects employees’ rights to engage in concerted
action for mutual aid and protection. An administrative
law judge agreed with the employer and dismissed the claim.
However, the NLRB reversed the dismissal, holding that the
mandatory waiver of any class actions violated the National
Labor Relations Act.
The key determination underlying the NLRB’s
holding was that employees’ ability to engage in collective
and class actions qualifies as “concerted activity” under
Section 7 of the NLRA. It was important in this case that the
arbitration agreement did not simply bar class arbitration,
but went so far as to prohibit class actions of any sort, in
any forum. It is also important to note that even employees of
non-unionized employers enjoy the protections of Section 7 of
the NLRA.
By defining class actions as concerted
activity, the NLRB was able to distinguish this case from
recent federal case law that seems to compel the opposite
result (and which was cited in the original decision to
dismiss the complaint). Specifically, the NLRB went to great
lengths to distinguish the United States Supreme Court’s
recent decision in AT&T Mobility v. Concepcion, 131
S.Ct. 1740 (2011), in which the Court ruled that a California
law barring class-action waivers in arbitration agreements
conflicted with the Federal Arbitration Act.
(See
related E-Update here.) In D.R. Horton, the
NLRB declared that its ruling did not conflict with the
Concepcion decision for several independent reasons.
For example, the NLRB reasoned that a requirement that
employees’ work-related claims must be resolved through
arbitration solely on an individual basis amounts to a
requirement that employees forgo a right guaranteed by the
NLRA, which protects employees’ rights to “engage in…
concerted activities for the purpose of collective bargaining
or other mutual aid or protection….” The NLRB also
opined that an arbitration agreement that violates employees’
rights under the NLRA is against public policy and therefore,
unenforceable. In addition, the Board swept aside the
argument that the Federal Arbitration Act permitted class
waivers in arbitration agreements, by observing that the
Norris-LaGuardia Act, which is the federal law that renders
unenforceable any private agreement prohibiting someone from
lawfully assisting in a lawsuit arising out of a labor
dispute, was passed seven years after the Federal
Arbitration Act.
What This Means
This decision is an unexpected and serious
complication in the law regarding the enforceability of class
action waivers in arbitration agreements. After
Concepcion, employers felt empowered to include class
action waivers in arbitration agreements. It is now an
open question whether class action waivers can be enforced,
and employers considering whether to implement an arbitration
program including a class action waiver must do so very
carefully. Several important issues still must be
resolved either through judicial review of the D.R. Horton
decision itself, or through continued development of these
issues in other cases. Among other things, it will be
important for a federal court to consider the conflict of laws
issues addressed by the NLRB, and for a court to consider
whether the potential violation of the National Labor
Relations Act identified in this decision can be addressed by
a court in response to an attempt to compel an individual
arbitration, as opposed to in an unfair labor practice
proceeding brought before the NLRB. Until these and
other open issues are resolved, employers should proceed with
caution in either seeking to enforce existing class
arbitration limitations, or implementing a program involving
arbitration agreements containing class action waivers.
This E-Update was
authored by Fred Plevin and
Matthew Jedreski. For
more information or questions, please contact Mr. Plevin, Mr. Jedreski or any Paul, Plevin attorney at (619) 237-5200.
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Information
Authors
Fred Plevin
email
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Matthew Jedreski
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Reference
D.R. Horton, Inc. and Michael
Cuda, 357 NLRB No. 184 (Jan. 3, 2012)
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