• Home
  • RSS Feeds
  • Blog Archives
Subscribe to Disputing
Book an ADR Service
Call Karl Bayer
Karl Bayer's Disputing Blog - Mediator, Arbitrator, Court Master & Technical Advisor
About Karl  |  Book an ADR Service  |  Contact Karl   (214) 891-4505

Menu 
  • home
  • Mediation
  • Arbitration
  • Court Neutrals
  • Online Dispute Resolution
  • Technology
    • Intellectual Property
    • Privacy and Cybersecurity
    • E-discovery
  • Court Decisions
    • Texas Supreme Court
    • Fifth Circuit
    • Third Court of Appeals
    • U.S. Supreme Court
  • More
    • Legislation
      • Texas
      • United States
    • Healthcare
    • Guest Posts
      • John DeGroote
      • John C. Fleming
      • Rick Freeman
      • Professor Peter Friedman
      • Honorable W. Royal Furgeson, Jr.
      • James M. Gaitis
      • Laura A. Kaster
      • Professor John Lande
      • Philip J. Loree, Jr.
      • Michael McIlwrath
      • F. Peter Phillips
      • Professor Alan Scott Rau
      • Professor Thomas J. Stipanowich
      • Professor S.I. Strong
      • Richard Webb
      • Glen M. Wilkerson
    • International arbitration
    • Regulation
    • Sports and Entertainment


All articles tagged '"Supreme Court"'

379 articles found

Texas Supreme Court: Nonsignatories Wrongful Death Beneficiaries Must Arbitrate

By Victoria VanBuren - February 13, 2009
Today, the Texas Supreme Court handed down In re: Labatt Food Service, L.P., __ S.W.3d _ Texas (2009) (Cause No. 07-0419). The opinion resolves the issue of whether nonsignatories to an arbitration agreement should be compelled to arbitrate claims when the decedent’s claims would have to be arbitrated. On a related note, S.B. 222 is currently being considered by the Texas Legislature. The bill deals, in part, with the extension of the Texas

Continue reading...

Class Action Arbitration Waiver Found Unenforceable

By Victoria VanBuren - February 12, 2009
On January 30th, 2009, the Second Circuit refused to enforce an arbitration clause contained in American Express Co. merchants’ agreement. In Re: American Express Merchants’ Litigation, No. 06-1871 (2d Cir. 2009). The clause would prevent merchants who accept the card from bringing class-action antitrust claims against American Express. Like the Texas Supreme Court in In re Poly-America, L.P., the Second Circuit cited section 2 of the

Continue reading...

Unconscionable Arbitration Agreement: A First for Texas

By Victoria VanBuren - February 2, 2009
In a surprising decision (that almost went unnoticed because of the Holidays and warm Texas weather) arbitration provisions in an employment agreement were found unconscionable by the Texas Supreme Court. In re Poly-America, L.P., 262 S.W.3d 337 (Tex. 2008) involves a retaliatory-discharge claim under the Texas Worker’s Compensation Act (the “Act”) . Justice Brister filed a dissenting opinion. The facts of the case are as follows. In

Continue reading...

We Shall Not Waiver

By Karl Bayer - November 5, 2008
Perry Homes has once again been applied to describe what constitutes an arbitration waiver, except this time no waiver was found. As we have mentioned before in While We Were Out, a post from May, waiver is hard to come by in a Texas Supreme Court opinion. Perry Homes could have moved us into a parallel universe in which claiming waiver of arbitration is a winning argument. But those who criticized the opinion knew we would be making no such move

Continue reading...

Supreme Court Reverts to Previous Stance on Waiver

By Rob Hargrove - May 21, 2008
Well, it took a couple weeks, but the Texas Supreme Court has reverted to its pre-Perry Homes stance on the circumstances in which a party may or may not waive its right to compel arbitration. On Friday, while we were otherwise indisposed and unable to blog, the Texas Supreme Court found that a party’s decision to remove a case to federal court (and then agree to a remand back to state court) did not “substantially invoke the judicial

Continue reading...

While We Were Out: Texas Supreme Court Decides Perry Homes, et al. v. Cull

By Rob Hargrove - May 5, 2008
I picked the wrong week to go on vacation. While I was on an airplane coming back from France, the Texas Supreme Court issued its long-awaited opinion in the Perry Homes Case. The Texas legal blogosphere has already been all over it, and the Supreme Court of Texas Blog has posted a nice recap of the commentary. At the risk of coming to the party late, we’ll still offer some comments on Friday’s opinion. Robert and Jane Cull bought a h

Continue reading...

Glen Wilkerson on Hall Street v. Mattel

By Glen Wilkerson - April 19, 2008
Karl and I just got the following email from sometime contributor

Continue reading...

Nineteen Texas Supreme Court Opinions Today

By Rob Hargrove - March 28, 2008
Today, the Texas Supreme Court handed down nineteen (19) opinions. None of them, however, has anything to do with arbitration. One of them, though, resolved an issue which has divided the courts of appeals and with which we had to grapple not too long ago. Since we have not been blogging much lately (we’ve been working a lot), we thought we’d mention it. As of today, Rule 202 no longer allows the pre-lawsuit deposition of a physician

Continue reading...

U.S. Supreme Court Issues Arbitrability Opinion

By Rob Hargrove - February 20, 2008
Today was a busy day at the U.S. Supreme Court; five opinions were handed down. Others have commented about them all. One of the opinions, however, discusses Federal Arbitration Act (“FAA”) preemption of state administrative proceedings and as such is something we need to mention. The case, Preston vs. Ferrer (link is to .pdf file), involves a dispute between noted television jurist Judge Alex and an attorney who may or may not have b

Continue reading...

Fifth Circuit Rejects Amway’s Arbitration Policy

By Rob Hargrove - February 13, 2008
About a week ago, the Fifth Circuit handed down an opinion in an Amway distributorship dispute (link is to .pdf file) which rejects, after a decade of arbitration and arbitrability litigation, a claim by Amway that certain disputes had to be arbitrated. As followers of this area are aware, a Fifth Circuit opinion rejecting arbitrability is noteworthy in and of itself. Amway, of course, is a company that sells products through distributors who in

Continue reading...

« First‹ Previous282930313233343536Next ›Last »

Legal Research

Legal Research

Connect with Disputing

Visit Us On LinkedinCheck Our Feed

About Disputing

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.

To learn more about Karl and his team, or to schedule a mediation or arbitration with Karl’s live scheduling calendar, visit www.karlbayer.com.

Recent Posts

We're Back!!!!
Feb 24, 2025
JAMS Welcomes Karl Bayer to its Panel of Neutrals
JAMS Welcomes Karl Bayer to its Panel of Neutrals
May 28, 2024
Class Action Waivers in Arbitration Agreements: The Twenty-First Century Arbitration Battleground and Implications for the EU Countries
Nov 27, 2023

Featured Posts

Tips on Taking Good Remote Depositions From a Veteran Court Reporter

Online Mediation May Allow Restorative Justice to Continue During COVID-19

Remote Arbitration Best Practices: Witness Examination

Search

Legal Research

Legal Research


© 2025, Karl Bayer. All rights reserved. Privacy Policy