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All articles tagged '"arbitration agreement"'

238 articles found

Law Review Article | Alternative Dispute Resolution

By Beth Graham - October 5, 2010
Will Pryor has once again written an annual survey of alternative dispute resolution (ADR) law in Texas for the SMU Law Review. This is the third year ADR was included in Law Review’s Annual Survey of Texas Law issue and also the third time Pryor has provided his expertise and insight. In “Alternative Dispute Resolution,” 63 SMU Law Review 275 (2010), Pryors’s article largely concerns developments in Texas arbitration law. He notes the shake-up c

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Tyler Court of Appeals Holds Routine Employment Practice Insufficient to Prove Arbitration Agreement Exists

By Beth Graham - September 23, 2010
The Twelfth District Court of Appeals of Texas has held that evidence of a routine employment practice was insufficient to prove an arbitration agreement existed. In In re Astro Air, L.P., No. 12-10-00108-CV (Tex. App. – Tyler September 15, 2010), Sharron Hall was hired by Astro Air, L.P. in December 2005 and remained an employee of Astro until she suffered an on the job injury in July 2007. Hall sued Astro, alleging that her injury was result of

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Fifth Circuit Rules Arbitrability Question is for Arbitrator to Decide Where Parties Clearly Intended So

By Beth Graham - September 9, 2010
The Fifth Circuit has held that the question of arbitrability is for an arbitrator to decide where an arbitration agreement exists between the parties and they clearly intended for the issue to be arbitrated based on the wording of the arbitration provision. In Allen v. Regions Bank, No. 09-60705, (5th Cir., August 11, 2010), plaintiffs (the Allens) obtained a home equity loan from First American National Bank in October 1999. The bank withheld f

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Wall Street Reform Signed Into Law: Arbitration Provisions

By Victoria VanBuren - July 29, 2010
As readers may already know, last week, President Barack Obama signed into law the Restoring American Financial Stability Act of 2010 (a.k.a. the “Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act”). The act, among other things, would give the SEC the power to ban or limit mandatory arbitration in certain agreements. House Versions: H.R. 4173 and Status; Senate Versions: S.3217 and Status. The final version is here. Following are some pro

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Commentary on In re Merrill Lynch & Co | Texas Supreme Court Case

By Victoria VanBuren - July 22, 2010
By William G. Whitehill In In re Merrill Lynch & Co., Inc. and Merrill, Lynch, Pierce, Fenner; Smith Incorporated, __ S.W.3d __ (June 25, 2010 slip op.), the Texas Supreme Court conditionally granted mandamus relief in favor of Merrill Lynch, staying litigation against it by a non-signatory company when that company’s sister company that was a signatory to an arbitration agreement was also asserting identical claims that were potentiall

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Rent-A-Center, West Inc. v. Jackson | Blawgosphere Roundup on Arbitration Unconscionability Decision

By Victoria VanBuren - July 12, 2010
On June 21, 2010, the U.S. Supreme Court decided Rent-A-Center, West v. Jackson. The question presented was: Is the district court required in all cases to determine claims that an arbitration agreement subject to the Federal Arbitration Act (”FAA”) is unconscionable, even when the parties to the contract have clearly and unmistakably assigned this “gateway” issue to the arbitrator for decision? We thought you would like to read some interesting

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National Labor Relations Board Issues Guidelines for Employers’ Arbitration Policies

By Victoria VanBuren - July 8, 2010
On June 16, 2010, the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) issued a Guideline Memorandum addressing the legal framework to use in employer’s mandatory arbitration policies. The Guideline Memorandum includes the following principles: (1) The concerted filing of a class action lawsuit or arbitral claim seeking to enforce employment statutes is protected by Section 7 of the Act, and if an employer threatens, disciplines or discharges an emplo

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GUEST-POST | Rent-a-Center, West, Inc. v. Jackson and the Ongoing Assault on Party Autonomy

By Victoria VanBuren - June 23, 2010
By James M. Gaitis With the issuance of the United States Supreme Court’s decision in Rent-a-Center, West, Inc. v. Jackson, the foundational principle of party autonomy in arbitration has suffered yet another blow. In essence, and as was fairly and pejoratively described in what may well be Justice Stevens’ last opinion (dissenting, as it was), the majority’s “breezy” and “fantastic” decision in Rent-a-Center, West decrees that that even when a s

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New York’s Court of Appeals Establishes Ability-to-Pay Hearing Before Enforcing Fee-Splitting Provision in Employment Arbitration Agreement

By Victoria VanBuren - June 10, 2010
The Court of Appeals of New York [the highest court in the State of New York] held that an employee challenging the enforceability of a fee-splitting provision in a pre-dispute arbitration agreement is entitled to a factual hearing to establish that her inability to pay arbitration costs precluded her from vindicating her statutory rights. In Brady v. Williams Capital Group, L.P., 2010 N.Y. LEXIS 49 (N.Y., Mar. 25, 2010) Lorraine Brady was employ

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U.S. Supreme Court Agrees to Hear Class Arbitration Waiver Case: AT&T v. Concepcion

By Victoria VanBuren - May 24, 2010
Today, the U.S. Supreme court granted certiorari to AT&T Mobility v. Concepcion, No. 09-893. The Ninth Circuit opinion is available here. The question presented is: Whether the Federal Arbitration Act preempts States from conditioning the enforcement of an arbitration agreement on the availability of particular procedures–here, class-wide arbitration–when those procedures are not necessary to ensure that the parties to the arbitra

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Disputing is published by Karl Bayer, a dispute resolution expert based in Austin, Texas. Articles published on Disputing aim to provide original insight and commentary around issues related to arbitration, mediation and the alternative dispute resolution industry.

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