CONTACT:
Stuart Rossman, Steve Tripoli, or
Jon Sheldon at 617-542-8010
Consumer and Media Alert: The Small Print
That’s Devastating Major Consumer Rights
Most Consumers Never Even Notice “Mandatory Arbitration Clauses,”
Now Being Slipped Into Everything from Bills to Contracts
NCLC Seeks More Protections, Crafts Model State Law
- Interviewee List
BOSTON – It may be in tiny print among the ads stuffed into your credit-card
bill. Or a few lines buried in a multi-page health insurance agreement, home-repair
contract or college loan. The language is often dense legal-ese, but make no
mistake: It translates into a giant trap door for consumers.
Welcome to the astonishingly unfair and undemocratic world of mandatory arbitration
clauses. All that small print and buried verbiage boils down to this: that by
simply continuing to use your credit card or health plan, for instance, you’ve
suddenly agreed to resolve all disputes arising with that company - even very
serious ones - through binding arbitration.
This passive consumer “agreement” to arbitration is a rather shocking
way to obtain what passes for “informed consent” to a truly momentous
waiver of rights. And it’s only the start of the problem.
So beginning today, and in light of recent nationwide developments on this
issue (details below), NCLC is calling on consumers and the news media to focus
far more attention on the consequences of these clauses, which are spreading
like wildfire across America.
A look at how businesses are using mandatory arbitration clauses says more
about why they’re so disturbing. The kind of passive “notice”
that locks consumers into arbitration increasingly ties them to a system that
thoroughly stacks the deck when serious disputes arise. Companies alone select
the arbitration service – often one dependent on them for repeat business.
Those same companies often write the arbitration rules, and unsurprisingly those
rules often demand complete secrecy about the proceeding and its outcome
while limiting what evidence consumers can present. Consumers usually pay more
for arbitration proceedings than they would for a public court proceeding. If
they lose there’s no appeal -- that means even legal errors in
an arbitrator’s decision are frequently beyond remedy.
And if they refuse to participate in this rigged game these clauses often dictate
they’ll automatically lose the dispute with no further recourse.
National Consumer Law Center advocates believe these clauses are the single
biggest threat to consumer rights in recent years, a de-facto rewrite of the
Constitution that undermines a broad range of consumer protections painstakingly
built into law. No other consumer issue hits so many Americans where they live
every day.
The reality of mandatory arbitration is slowly dawning on consumers. From a
major Supreme Court decision just last month to a new California law, and across
legislative to judicial arenas nationwide, the battle over these noxious clauses
is being joined.
How This Spreading Wildfire Burns Consumers
Even a cursory investigation shows that these clauses are popping up not only
in the agreements mentioned above but also in mortgages and other loans, phone
bills, home construction and repair contracts, stock brokerage agreements, pest-control
contracts, bank depositors’ agreements, college loans, mobile home purchases,
employment agreements and many more.
Arbitration isn’t necessarily a bad thing if both parties agree to it
after a dispute arises. It’s mandatory, pre-dispute arbitration clauses
that are the problem. Not only are they often hard to find in agreements, they’re
even harder to notice because so many routine transactions contain so much boilerplate
language. And consumers aren’t on the lookout for a back-door attack on
their rights in a dispute during a seemingly innocuous transaction prior to
any dispute. The clauses just aren’t relevant to them then.
One example: An NCLC staff member recently -- and after the fact -- discovered
such a clause in the “sign-in” papers of his elderly, desperately-ill
father, who was being sent from a hospital to a rehabilitation center in Florida.
What fair-minded person believes any family member would take issue at such
a moment – or choose to go shopping for another facility than the one
the hospital chose? The family member who’d traveled from afar to accompany
the sick man says she never even noticed the clause when signing him in. She
may well not have recognized its significance if she had.
To make things even more interesting the sick man’s medication regimen
was somehow mixed up for the first week at the rehab center. Luckily no serious
harm was done, but if there had been serious harm the rehab center would have
already all-but-dictated the process for settling damage claims -- against itself.
That’s a little like letting one side set the rules for the World Series,
except the sportsmanship’s missing.
The business community loudly proclaims that these clauses are merely a private-sector
alternative to the courts, a way of streamlining and speeding up the judicial
process while controlling costs.
But one party to a public court proceeding doesn’t get to pick the judge,
write the rules, limit the evidence and demand that testimony and outcomes never
come to light. Unlike many arbitrators, judges aren’t dependent on one
side for future business. And the costs of arbitration proceedings for plaintiffs
at least -- according to a report by the consumer group Public Citizen -- are
“almost always higher than the cost of instituting a lawsuit.” It
can cost a consumer several thousand dollars just to have a complaint heard
– a situation that remains true today despite industry claims that arbitration
fees have fallen. Public Citizen says such costs “have a deterrent effect,
often preventing a claimant from even filing a case……high arbitration
costs can be used to bludgeon an adversary.”
The business community loudly complains about the supposed perils of class-action
lawsuits – which many arbitration clauses specifically ban and which business
is hotly trying to curb in Washington right now. In fact crowding out class
actions is a main underlying reason for the rise of mandatory arbitration. But
that smokescreen obscures a compelling counter-argument: Class-action suits
are the only reasonable way to pursue many consumer ripoffs,
especially small and medium-size ones. When arbitration fees can quickly exceed
the amount of individual consumer claims, or when many are ripped off for small
amounts, that makes those claims impossible to prosecute individually. And that
leaves companies with a perverse incentive to rack up tens of thousands of small
improper charges or other illegal fees – a crime wave of mini-heists and
a major reason class-action protections exist in the first place.
There’s clearly a place for class-action cases involving larger-size
ripoffs or wrongdoing as well. Businesses that do great individual harm to large
numbers of consumers love to impose the burden of fighting on thousands of people
separately – it usually limits the numbers who actually do so and thus
the company’s overall exposure. And individuals are more easily whipsawed
by aggressive lawyers, high costs and lowball payoff offers. Class-action suits
can better make “the punishment fit the crime” – one of the
most effective ways of deterring further egregious corporate behavior.
The Human Toll
There’s been some public exposure of this issue, and please note that
the lawyers and others on our intereviewee list below offer fresh examples of
those affected by these clauses. But here are just a few samples of the impact
of this deck-stacking and forfeiture of rights in the real world:
-- After last month’s Supreme Court decision in the Green Tree Financial
Corp. vs. Bazzle case, a decision involving mandatory arbitration and class-action
rights that left both sides with something to complain about, The Financial
Times of London described the growth of arbitration clauses this way:
“The past two or three decades have brought a silent revolution in
American law: While lawsuit reform has languished in the legislatures, it
has proceeded by stealth in the realm of arbitration..... Should those who
give up their right to sue also give up their right to sue in groups? Should
arbitration preclude the class action - that great democratic leveler that
allows small claimants to take on big corporations?”
And the Times article had this to say of the Supreme Court’s decision:
“The majority said the arbitrator himself should decide (this question),
placing substantial new powers in the hands of this already omnipotent individual
and dashing the hopes of the business community that class action arbitrations
would be outlawed altogether.
“Legal experts say the court's decision is likely to provoke another
round of lawsuits. Companies will start writing arbitration agreements
that forbid class actions and consumers will be forced to sign them. Courts
will then have to decide whether this second generation of arbitration agreements,
sanitized of class actions, are so unfair as to be unenforceable. (italics
provided)
“Yet, still,” the article continued, “no one has noticed.
Americans have not realized how arbitration threatens to transform their experience
as consumers and employees. They are not playing a democratic role in shaping
that experience.
“That is a shame: nothing has yet come of all the effort expended
on tort reform in Congress. Some of that wasted effort should be diverted
to the cause of arbitration. Real reform starts here. And it has already begun.”
Some examples of arbitration clauses’ real-world impact:
-- Fromthe Dallas Morning News: “Mr.
Wheeler and many of his 160 subdivision neighbors began noticing problems with
their new homes about five years ago: cracked walls, broken windows, front doors
that wouldn’t shut and buckling hardwood floors……..(But) Mr.
Wheeler’s only legal remedy is to complain to a private arbitrator belonging
to an association chosen by the developer. That would cost him a $3,000 advance
fee, and he wouldn’t be allowed to appeal a loss. So he has given up.”
-- The Portland Oregonian reported on a local arbitration
service head who refused to let consumer attorneys sit as arbitrators on private
arbitration cases. But he then offered an arbitration case against a car dealer
to an attorney who had defended car dealers. The service head told the Oregonian
he was unaware of that attorney’s past ties……
..….but an in-depth San Francisco Chronicle investigation found such problems
to be hardly uncommon. The Chronicle’s series, based on numerous actual
cases, found that “individuals forced into arbitration may pay prohibitive
fees, enjoy few protections against bias and receive legally dubious judgments
that cannot be appealed……The result, critics say, is a second-class
justice system in which obscure clauses buried deep in bank statements, phone
bills and job applications deprive millions of people of their legal rights.”
(This series may have played a role in the passage of California’s new
law governing mandatory arbitration clauses.)
-- Syndicated radio commentator Jim Hightower recently told
of his own experience receiving notice of a new arbitration provision in his
credit card agreement from Fleet Bank. Hightower reports that ”Fleet's
Notice practically shouted that if I filed any kind of claim against it for
fraud, false advertising, invasion of privacy, or whatever it could deny me
‘the right to litigate that claim in court or have a jury trial on that
claim.’ Instead, I'd have to go to an arbitration firm of Fleet's choosing,
and ‘The arbitrator's decision will be final,’ even though ‘rights
that you would have had if you went to court may ... not be available in arbitration’
and ‘the fees charged by the administration may be higher than the fees
charged by a court.’
-- Virginia consumer attorney Tom Domonoske (contact number
below) tells National Consumer Law Center of a case where students of what turned
out to be a sham computer-training school (the school took their money then
closed its doors without doing the training) are having their claims against
student loan provider Sallie Mae stifled by arbitration. The students are seeking
relief from their Sallie Mae loans under a federal law that says their contract
with the school also applies to their school-loan holder. But the law may never
come into play here. “When we try to talk about that with (Sallie Mae’s)
lawyer,” Domonoske says, “their lawyer says, ‘Well, we’re
in arbitration, and we don’t think the arbitrator will apply the law.’
” Notice how the law’s validity isn’t discussed here; just
the fact that an arbitrator either can’t or won’t apply it in this
case.
Heads I Win, Tails You Lose
As if gross conflicts of interest, high costs, insulation from class actions
and the right to hide wrongdoing from public scrutiny aren’t enough, mandatory
arbitration clauses often contain another significant double-standard: exempting
business and business alone from the “mandatory” part. That means
that while consumers may be barred from suing a business over a disagreement,
the same business can sue the same consumer in court over the very same case!
And this so-called “one-way” arbitration clause is the most common
type!
Another glaring example of double standards in mandatory arbitration is the
case of the auto dealers’ lobby. The dealers, claiming they were locked
into an inferior bargaining position with the big auto makers they have to buy
cars from, successfully petitioned Congress for relief from the mandatory arbitration
the car makers required in any disputes with the dealers. But dealers won’t
give the consumers who buy cars from them a similar break -- you can find mandatory
arbitration clauses in loads of car purchase agreements, and just try bargaining
those clauses out of these standard-form contracts!
Businesses also effectively limit consumers to arbitration while keeping their
own options open by:
-- requiring that all disputes be arbitrated except the very disputes the
business is likely to initiate – like a mortgage foreclosure.
-- requiring that any dispute above a certain price limit – say, $10,000
-- be arbitrated. That rules out most all class-action suits by consumers
while allowing the business to pursue individual consumers.
Other problems:
-- The secrecy imposed in many arbitration agreements is one of their worst
features. Secrecy rules ensure that no one else finds out about proceedings
against a company, and especially about outcomes that expose corporate wrongdoing
– a huge departure from the transparency of the public court system.
Enforced secrecy about arbitration proceedings means that only business can
track past decisions and whether individual arbitrators they may use again
have ruled in their favor. Secrecy means rulings that may penalize corporate
wrongdoing set no legal precedents, as they might in a court of law. And that
means there’s less deterrence of future bad conduct. According to Public
Citizen all this secrecy also means that “public discussion of the fairness
of the ruling is discouraged, even if the case raises policy issues of wide
concern.”
-- The “take it or leave it” nature of these clauses. Sure, companies
will claim you don’t have to do business with them if you don’t
like the clause – assuming you’ve seen and understand it. But
are there really other options when the use of arbitration clauses is so widespread?
Often the answer is no. And do you really want the decision our staff member’s
family faced, to go shopping for a rehab facility different from the one recommended
in the midst of a medical crisis? Or to switch credit-card or phone-service
providers you may have had for years just because someone decided to slip
a rule-change into your latest bill? Or even to travel to a second store or
auto dealer once you’ve spent an afternoon selecting a new big-ticket
purchase? How realistic is that?
-- Clauses requiring that any arbitration take place in a given location,
often the company’s headquarters state. Would you travel from Atlanta
or Los Angeles to Minnesota to dispute a $500 claim? Or even a claim for a
few times that price?
Fixing the Damage
Any effort to fight this back-door ravaging of consumer rights must enhance
consumers’ ability to either challenge arbitration clauses or keep consumer
issues entirely out of arbitration. Consumers get a better deal and bad behavior
is more effectively deterred when they and their attorneys can sue rather than
arbitrate – the strength of that remedy is what gave rise to these noxious
clauses in the first place.
National Consumer Law Center advocates believe the most durable fix for consumers
will involve changing federal law, and that’s where much of our energy
will be focused. But present realities dictate that other venues take precedence
for the moment.
California recently passed, and Governor Davis signed, a strongly pro-consumer
law governing arbitration clauses. Right now there’s state-level action
on mandatory arbitration in North Carolina, Wisconsin, New Mexico, Oregon, and
several others states as well. It is by no means uniformly consumer-friendly;
versions of the Revised Uniform Arbitration Act (RUAA) circulating in some places
would actually worsen existing protections. One of NCLC’s immediate tasks
is to craft sound RUAA alternatives, and to that end NCLC will soon
release a model state law that can be a template for state-level action.
It should be available to advocates and consumer groups next week.
NCLC’s model state law would:
-- Limit conflicts of interest involving arbitrators
-- Prohibit many secrecy provisions governing the scope, magnitude and details
of arbitration awards
-- Allow consumers with small claims to seek relief collectively
-- Require clear, up-front disclosure of potential arbitration costs and protect
indigent consumers from excessive costs and fees
-- Preserve the right to judicial review in many cases involving insurance
contracts, a particularly troubling area when exclusively governed by mandatory
arbitration
Shining the spotlight on these abuses is also tremendously important. NCLC
advocates are hoping members of the news media will use the list of interviewees
below to increase their understanding of this issue and the many ways it harms
those being herded into these grossly unfair deals.
***
Consumers, Consumer Attorneys & a Former Arbitrator
Who’ve Agreed to be Interviewed:
To the news media: It’s often hard to get consumers
to speak publicly about their experiences with mandatory arbitration clauses
– many are upset by what happened and still struggling with serious economic
and other hardships resulting from their exposure to these clauses.
A list follows of consumers who’ve agreed to be interviewed, attorneys
from several states who’ve agreed to talk about their cases, plus a law
school professor and former arbitrator who can talk about her serious concerns
with mandatory arbitration. These are only those who quickly stepped forward
to speak; we may also be able to provide interviewees closer to where you’re
working but be aware this may take time.
For an overview of this problem and proposed solutions nationally call the
NCLC representatives listed at the start of this alert. Human stories and specific
issues covered by those below are listed near their names.
POTENTIAL INTERVIEWEES:
-- Herbert Barnard of Florence, Alabama, 256-766-2625
-- Robert and Joan Porter of Sterrett, Alabama, 205-672-9848
-- Margo Rebar of Birmingham, Alabama, 205-970-6500
These individuals are clients of Attorney Thomas Campbell in Birmingham,
Alabama, 205-278-6650. Mr. Campbell has handled a number of arbitration
cases involving pest-control and other contracts and says “a big shock”
for his clients has been the extremely high fees involved in the arbitration
process. These fees had a strong impact on his clients’ ability and willingness
to pursue these cases even though the damage many of them suffered was substantial.
-- Attorney James Moriarty, Houston, Texas – 713-528-0700 Mr. Moriarty is a consumer attorney with extensive experience in mandatory
arbitration cases. He can discuss details of his cases plus the impact of arbitration
clauses on his clients and the broader society.
-- Former arbitrator Celeste Hammond, a professor at John Marshall
Law School in Chicago, 312-987-2366
Professor Hammond is a former arbitrator who became disillusioned by what she
saw as serious flaws in the process, flaws that harm consumers and make arbitration
exceptionally one-sided in favor of business.
-- Attorney Dan Hedges of Mountain State Justice legal services, Charleston,
West Virginia, 304-344-5564
West Virginia has had an interesting experience with mandatory arbitration clauses
-- judges there will no longer enforce them because they’ve been deemed
unconscionable, and thus they’re no longer a factor in consumer cases.
Mr. Hedges has handled many cases revolving around mandatory arbitration in
West Virginia. He says that prior to this major consumer victory he usually
attacked the bias of arbitration panels and the excessive costs of arbitration
proceedings.
-- Sam and Lula Baldwin, Montgomery, Alabama – see number
just below
Mr. and Mrs. Baldwin are fighting their ensnarement in a series of predatory
loans, complicated by a mandatory arbitration clause that’s severely hindering
their attempts to fight back. They can be reached through their attorney,
Lance Gould of
Beasley, Allen, Crow, Methvin, Portis & Miles in Montgomery, at 800-898-2034.
Mr. Gould also has other clients who may be willing to speak with the news media,
and Attorney Thomas Methvin of the firm is available to discuss the range of
arbitration cases the firm has handled and their impact on clients.
-- Paul Bland — Trial Lawyers for Public Justice, Washington
202-797-8600
Mr. Bland is very active in legal efforts to fight mandatory arbitration and
is highly knowledgeable about the conflicts of interest inherent in these clauses,
the lack of judicial review over the process, the impact of secrecy provisions
on the public interest and the impact on consumers of arbitration’s high
dollar costs.
(It should be noted that TLPJ is NOT dedicated to representing trial lawyers’
interests but primarily represents the public interest. Visit their website
at www.tlpj.org)
-- Virginia attorneys Tom Domonoske 540-442-8616 and Dale Pittman 804-861-6000
These attorneys have handled numerous arbitration cases, including a group of
more than 125 cases involving the student loan agency Sallie Mae and its obligations
toward students taken in by, among others, a sham computer-training school.
There are questions of whether Sallie Mae is avoiding legal issues involving
its loans to those students by using mandatory arbitration clauses in the students’
loan agreements as a shield.
-- Kate Gordon – Trial Lawyers for Public Justice, Oakland CA
510-622-8150
Ms. Gordon compiles and regularly updates a list of legal cases nationwide involving
mandatory arbitration. She can discuss the rulings in these cases and how they’ve
harmed or occasionally helped consumers.