A New Strategy for Regulating Arbitration

IF 2 2区 社会学 Q1 LAW
Sarath Sanga
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Confidential arbitration is a standard precondition to employment. But confidential arbitration prevents a State from ensuring or even knowing whether employees’ economic, civil, and due process rights are respected. Further, employers regularly require employees to waive rights to class proceedings (thereby foreclosing small claims) and to arbitrate under the laws of another jurisdiction (thereby evading mandatory state law). In response, States have tried to regulate arbitration provisions, arbitral awards, and arbitral processes. But these efforts have all failed because the Supreme Court says they are preempted by the Federal Arbitration Act. In this Article, I argue that States can and should adopt a new strategy: Deter parties from forming such contracts in the first place. The Article proceeds in three parts. First, I explain the problem. Over the last fifty years, the Supreme Court systematically immunized arbitration provisions against every plausible contract defense. Yet the Supreme Court continues to insist that, just as the Federal Arbitration Act requires, arbitration agreements are still subject to “generally applicable contract defenses, such as fraud, duress, or unconscionability.” This is false. Second, I present the first large-scale evidence on the pervasiveness of arbitration. The Supreme Court’s arbitration precedents have effect only to the extent private parties agree to arbitrate their disputes. To study this, I use machine-learning protocols to parse millions of filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission and create a database of nearly 800,000 contracts formed by public companies. These contracts include employment agreements, credit agreements, joint ventures, purchases, and others. Employment contracts are by far the most likely to include a mandatory arbitration provision. Finally, I argue that, because the Supreme Court has all but stripped States of their power to enforce contracts, States should adopt policies that deter formation of objectionable contracts. For example, States cannot prohibit forced arbitration of sexual harassment claims. They can, however, prohibit sexual harassment as a subject matter for employment contracts; they can also enforce this with civil penalties and whistleblower rewards. Similarly, States cannot stop an employer from arbitrating under the laws of another jurisdiction, thereby evading mandatory limits on noncompete agreements. But States can declare noncompetes illegal, levy civil fines on employers that form them, and again offer employees whistleblower rewards to report violations. These approaches work because they create a cause of action for a third party - the State - who is not subject to the arbitration agreement. And unlike past efforts, these laws would not be preempted because they do not “derive their meaning from the fact that an agreement to arbitrate is at issue.”
规范仲裁的新策略
保密仲裁是聘用的标准先决条件。但是,保密仲裁使国家无法确保或甚至无法知道雇员的经济、民事和正当程序权利是否得到尊重。此外,雇主经常要求雇员放弃集体诉讼的权利(从而取消小额索赔),并根据另一个司法管辖区的法律进行仲裁(从而逃避强制性的州法律)。作为回应,各国试图规范仲裁条款、仲裁裁决和仲裁程序。但是这些努力都失败了,因为最高法院说他们被联邦仲裁法先发制人。在本文中,我认为各国可以而且应该采取一种新的战略:首先阻止当事人签订这种合同。本文分为三个部分。首先,我解释这个问题。在过去的五十年里,最高法院系统地使仲裁条款免受任何可能的合同抗辩。然而,最高法院继续坚持,正如《联邦仲裁法》所要求的那样,仲裁协议仍然受制于“普遍适用的合同抗辩,如欺诈、胁迫或不合理”。这是错误的。其次,我提出了关于仲裁普遍性的第一个大规模证据。最高法院的仲裁判例只有在私人当事人同意仲裁其纠纷的情况下才有效力。为了研究这个问题,我使用机器学习协议来分析向证券交易委员会提交的数百万份文件,并创建了一个由上市公司形成的近80万份合同的数据库。这些合同包括雇佣协议、信用协议、合资企业、采购等。到目前为止,雇佣合同最有可能包含强制性仲裁条款。最后,我认为,由于最高法院几乎剥夺了各州执行合同的权力,各州应该采取政策,阻止形成令人反感的合同。例如,国家不能禁止对性骚扰索赔进行强制仲裁。但是,他们可以禁止将性骚扰作为雇佣合同的主题;他们还可以通过民事处罚和举报人奖励来执行这一规定。同样,国家不能阻止雇主根据另一个司法管辖区的法律进行仲裁,从而逃避对竞业禁止协议的强制性限制。但各州可以宣布竞业禁止为非法行为,对制定竞业禁止的雇主征收民事罚款,并再次向举报违规行为的员工提供奖励。这些办法之所以有效,是因为它们为不受仲裁协议约束的第三方- -国家- -创造了诉因。与过去的努力不同,这些法律不会被优先考虑,因为它们的意义并非“源自仲裁协议存在争议这一事实”。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.60
自引率
10.50%
发文量
0
期刊介绍: The Northwestern University Law Review is a student-operated journal that publishes four issues of high-quality, general legal scholarship each year. Student editors make the editorial and organizational decisions and select articles submitted by professors, judges, and practitioners, as well as student pieces.
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