Arbitration Nation: Data from Four Providers

A. Chandrasekher, David M. Horton
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引用次数: 11

Abstract

Forced arbitration has long been controversial. In the 1980s, the Supreme Court expanded the Federal Arbitration Act (FAA), sparking debate about whether private dispute resolution is an elegant alternative to litigation or a rigged system that favors repeat-playing corporations. Recently, these issues have resurfaced, as the Court has decided a rash of cases mandating that lower courts enforce class arbitration waivers in almost all circumstances. Critics argue that abolishing the class action insulates companies from wrongdoing, but businesses have predicted that pro se plaintiffs will flood the arbitral forum with their own low-value claims. The Obama administration responded to the Court’s FAA jurisprudence by regulating arbitration clauses in the employment, financial services, and healthcare fields. However, after the balance of power shifted in 2017, Republicans have repealed many of these rules. Despite this policymaking frenzy, we know little about what happens inside the confidential world of arbitration. This Article sharpens our understanding of this pervasive and polarizing institution by reporting the results of an empirical study of 40,775 cases filed in four major arbitration providers between 2010 and 2016. It highlights three main points. First, a wave of reforms has made arbitration surprisingly affordable for consumers, employees, and medical patients. Indeed, in leading arbitration providers such as the American Arbitration Association, JAMS, and the Kaiser Office of the Independent Administrator, a majority of plaintiffs pay no arbitration fees. Second, enterprising plaintiffs’ lawyers — not pro se litigants — have taken advantage of arbitration’s open doors. In fact, some attorneys have filed class action-style cases, bringing dozens or even hundreds of related arbitrations against the same company. Third, although arbitration does indeed favor repeat playing businesses, that is just half of the repeat player story. Repeat playing plaintiff’s law firms also fare well. In fact, in a variety of settings, no variable affects win rates as dramatically as whether a plaintiff hires attorneys with arbitration experience. The Article then uses these findings to propose reform. For decades, state lawmakers have tried to protect substantive rights by exempting claims from arbitration. Yet because the FAA prohibits state law from discriminating against arbitration, these efforts have failed. Accordingly, this Article urges policymakers to reverse course and create incentives for plaintiffs’ lawyers to arbitrate. Specifically, jurisdictions should create an “arbitration multiplier”: a bounty for winning a case in arbitration. By encouraging skilled plaintiffs’ lawyers to capitalize on arbitration’s accessibility, this approach would counteract the corporate repeat player advantage. In addition, because the multiplier actually encourages arbitration, it would not be preempted.
仲裁国家:来自四个提供商的数据
强制仲裁一直备受争议。上世纪80年代,美国最高法院扩大了《联邦仲裁法》(Federal Arbitration Act,简称FAA)的适用范围,引发了一场辩论,即私人纠纷解决是诉讼之外的一种优雅选择,还是一种有利于重复竞争的公司的操纵系统。最近,这些问题又重新浮出水面,因为最高法院判决了一系列案件,要求下级法院在几乎所有情况下执行集体仲裁豁免。批评人士认为,取消集体诉讼可以使公司免受不法行为的影响,但企业预测,主张自己利益的原告将向仲裁法庭提出低价值的索赔。奥巴马政府通过规范就业、金融服务和医疗保健领域的仲裁条款来回应最高法院的FAA判例。然而,在2017年权力平衡发生变化后,共和党人废除了其中许多规则。尽管政策制定如此疯狂,但我们对仲裁这个保密的世界里发生的事情知之甚少。本文通过报告2010年至2016年期间在四大仲裁机构提交的40,775个案例的实证研究结果,加深了我们对这一普遍存在且两极分化的制度的理解。它突出了三个要点。首先,一波改革浪潮使得仲裁对消费者、雇员和医疗病人来说都出乎意料地负担得起。事实上,在美国仲裁协会(American arbitration Association)、JAMS和凯撒独立行政官办公室(Kaiser Office of the Independent Administrator)等主要仲裁机构中,大多数原告不支付仲裁费用。其次,有进取心的原告律师——而非支持诉讼的当事人——利用了仲裁的开放之门。事实上,一些律师已经提起了集体诉讼式的案件,对同一家公司提起了数十甚至数百起相关仲裁。第三,尽管仲裁确实有利于重复玩家业务,但这只是重复玩家故事的一半。原告的律师事务所也表现不错。事实上,在各种情况下,没有任何变量比原告是否聘请具有仲裁经验的律师更能显著影响胜诉率。然后,本文利用这些发现提出改革建议。几十年来,州议员一直试图通过免除仲裁要求来保护实质性权利。然而,由于联邦航空局禁止州法律歧视仲裁,这些努力都失败了。因此,本文敦促政策制定者改变方向,为原告律师进行仲裁创造激励。具体来说,司法管辖区应该设立“仲裁乘数”:即在仲裁中胜诉的赏金。通过鼓励熟练的原告律师利用仲裁的可及性,这种方法将抵消公司的重复玩家优势。此外,由于乘数实际上鼓励了仲裁,因此仲裁不会被先发制人。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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