*46 Opinion
I. Introduction
This original writ proceeding presents a question of first impression: whether a California court can, as authorized by state law, order classwide arbitration in a case that falls under the Federal Arbitration Act (the act). (9 U.S.C.A. § 1 et seq.) Stated differently, the issue is whether the act preempts California decisional authority authorizing classwide arbitration. The United States Supreme Court has never reached the question whether the act precludes classwide arbitration under state law. We conclude application of the California classwide arbitration rule is not preempted by the act. Accordingly, we deny the writ petition.
II. Background
Two named plaintiffs, Elizabeth Farquhar, and Laurie Winett, brought this class action, against Blue Cross of California and Wellpoint Health Networks, Inc. (collectively, Blue Cross). They alleged Blue Cross had “engaged in a widespread practice of selling and administering health plans which violate laws concerning preexisting condition exclusions, waiting period exclusions, waivered condition exclusions, and temporary exclusions.” Blue Cross answered the complaint alleging, in part, that plaintiffs were required by contract to resolve their claims through binding arbitration.
The arbitration provision in Blue Cross’s “Personal Prudent Buyer Classic and Basic Hospital Plan for Families and Individuals” stated: “Any dispute between you and Blue Cross of California and/or its affiliates must be resolved by binding arbitration, if the amount in dispute exceeds the jurisdictional limit of the Small Claims Court. Any such dispute will be resolved not by law or resort to court process, except as California law provides for judicial review of arbitration proceedings. Under this coverage, both you and Blue Cross of California and its affiliates are giving up the right to have any dispute decided in a court of law before a jury.” A more extensive arbitration clause was included in Blue Cross’s “Prudent Buyer Plan Service Agreement and Combined Evidence of Coverage and Disclosure Form.” It stated: “Part VII Binding Arbitration [f] A. Any dispute or claim, of whatever nature, arising out of, in connection with, or in relation to this Agreement or breach thereof, or in relation to care or delivery of care, including any claim based on contract, tort or statute, must be resolved by arbitration if the amount sought exceeds the jurisdictional limit of the small claims court. flQ B. Any *47 disputes regarding a'claim for damages within the jurisdictional limits of the small claims court will be resolved in such court. [^Q C. The arbitration is begun by the Member making written demand on Blue Cross. The arbitration will be conducted by the American Arbitration Association according to its commercial rules of arbitration. The arbitration shall be held in the state of California. flO D. The Member and Blue Cross agree to be bound by the arbitration provision and acknowledge that they are giving up their right to a trial by court or jury. flQ E. The arbitration findings will be final and binding except to the extent that California or Federal law provide for the judicial review of arbitration proceeding.”
Blue Cross filed a petition in the trial court to compel arbitration of the individual plaintiffs’ claims and to stay the litigation. It argued in part that the act preempted California law as to classwide arbitration. Plaintiffs opposed the petition. They did not dispute that their arbitration agreements were contained in contracts evidencing a transaction involving commerce and therefore within the purview of the act. They argued, however, that California’s procedural law concerning the conduct of arbitration was not preempted by the act. The respondent court granted Blue Cross’s petition to compel arbitration and to stay judicial proceedings as to the individual plaintiffs, but denied its motion to stay the litigation as a whole. The trial court ordered in part: “The Motion to Stay Judicial Proceedings is denied as to the class claims alleged in the Complaint. Discovery shall continue as to the class claims for purposes of a possible class certification motion and, ... if a class is certified, the class claims will be referred to class-wide arbitration . . . .” The trial court also concluded that “[t]he arbitration provision in issue is one of adhesion, drafted by [Blue Cross].”
Blue Cross then filed the present petition for a writ of mandate, prohibition, or other appropriate relief. Blue Cross contends the act preempts California law allowing for classwide arbitration, therefore the respondent court erred in denying the motion to stay the judicial action as a whole. We issued an order to show cause why the relief prayed for in the petition should not be granted. Blue Cross has not raised any issue in its petition specifically concerning the respondent court’s limited discovery order or its finding the arbitration provision was one of adhesion. We do not address those issues because they have not been raised. The sole question before us is whether the act prohibits classwide arbitration in this case.
III. Discussion
A. Ripeness
The parties have not raised any question as to this writ proceeding being premature and we do not conclude that it is. Blue Cross’s position is
*48
that binding arbitration of individual claims was mandated by contract and the act precludes arbitration of class claims under state law; therefore the respondent court should have stayed the
entire
litigation. Plaintiffs do not claim they are entitled to litigate the class claims in a court action. They assert only that they may arbitrate those claims. To allow discovery to proceed as to the existence of a class if classwide arbitration is not allowed would waste judicial resources and burden the parties with unnecessary expense of time and money. In addition, to defer a decision on this issue would result in “lingering uncertainty in the law.”
(Pacific Legal Foundation
v.
California Coastal Com.
(1982)
B. The Federal Arbitration Act
The parties agree that the underlying health insurance contracts evidence transactions involving commerce and therefore the arbitration provisions fall within the purview of the act. The act was enacted in 1925 (43 Stat. 883) and codified in 1947. (61 Stat. 669.) It provides in section 2 that a written arbitration provision in a contract “evidencing a transaction involving commerce . . . shall be valid, irrevocable, and enforceable, save upon such grounds as exist at law or in equity for the revocation of any contract.” (9 U.S.C.A. § 2, italics added.) Section 4 of the act provides for a petition to compel arbitration in “any United States district court” and for the issuance of an order “directing the parties to proceed to arbitration in accordance with the terms of the agreement.” (9 U.S.C.A. § 4, italics added.)
The purpose of the act “was to reverse the longstanding judicial hostility to arbitration agreements that had existed at English common law and had been adopted by American courts.” (Domke on Commercial Arbitration (rev. ed. 1997) ch. 4, Statutory Arbitration Law, § 4.04, p. 6, fn. omitted;
Allied-Bruce Terminix Cos.
v.
Dobson
(1995)
The United States Supreme Court has described the congressional purpose in adopting the act as follows: “American courts initially followed English
*50
practice, perhaps just 1 “standing] . . . upon the antiquity of the rule” ’ prohibiting arbitration clause enforcement, rather than ‘ “upon its excellence or reason.” ’ [Citation.] Regardless, when Congress passed the Arbitration Act in 1925, it was ‘motivated, first and foremost, by a . . . desire’ to change this antiarbitration rule. [Citation.] It intended courts to ‘enforce [arbitration] agreements into which parties had entered,’ [citation], and to ‘place such agreements “upon the same footing as other contracts,” ’ [citation].”
(Allied-Bruce Terminix Cos.
v.
Dobson, supra,
513 U.S. at pp. 270-271 [
C. The Act’s Preemption of State Law
The act is predicated on Congress’s authority to enact substantive rules under the commerce laws.
(Allied-Bruce Terminix Cos.
v.
Dobson, supra,
However, the scope of federal preemption under the act is not complete. The United States Supreme Court has held: “The [act] contains no express pre-emptive provision, nor does it reflect a congressional intent to occupy the entire field of arbitration. [Citation.]”
(Volt Info. Sciences
v.
Leland Stanford Jr. U.
(1989)
The United States Supreme Court has further delineated the preemptive scope of the act in a series of decisions. As noted above, section 2 of the act places arbitration agreements on an equal footing with contracts generally.
(Allied-Bruce Terminix Cos.
v.
Dobson, supra,
513 U.S. at pp. 270-271 [115 S.Ct. at pp. 837-838];
Doctor’s Associates, Inc.
v.
Casarotto, supra,
517 U.S. at pp. 684-685 [116 S.Ct. at pp. 1654-1655].) In view of that purpose, the Supreme Court has held: “Thus, generally applicable contract defenses, such as fraud, duress or unconscionability, may be applied to invalidate arbitration agreements without contravening § 2. [Citations.]”
(Doctor’s Associates, Inc.
v.
Casarotto, supra,
D. California Decisional Authority Authorizes Classwide Arbitration
Under California decisional authority, classwide arbitration is permissible. (Kea
ting
v.
Superior Court
(1982)
The California Supreme Court then turned to the question whether consolidation of the arbitration proceedings should be allowed. The court cited federal authority for consolidation of arbitration proceedings by reliance on rule 42(a) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure (28 U.S.C.). It concluded that by analogy, rule 23 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, the class action provision, would provide a basis for ordering classwide arbitrations in federal court.
3
The California Supreme Court further noted that other state courts had allowed consolidation of arbitration proceedings even in the absence of statutory authority. Further, in California, consolidated arbitration was authorized by section 1281.3 of the Code of Civil Procedure. The court observed that Code of Civil Procedure section 1281.3 authorized consolidated arbitration even when the arbitration agreements involved provide for different procedures or methods of selecting arbitrators; the statute provides for court resolution of any such conflicts.
(Keating
v.
Superior Court, supra,
The California Supreme Court concluded that “a court is not without authority” to order classwide arbitration.
(Keating
v.
Superior Court, supra,
The California Supreme Court remanded
Keating
to the trial court for a determination “as to whether the interests of justice require that the order to arbitrate be conditioned upon Southland’s acceptance of classwide arbitration.” (
Although Keating involved arbitration agreements within the purview of the act, the defendant did not contend, nor did the California Supreme Court decide, whether classwide arbitration was preempted by federal law. (See Southland Corp. v. Keating, supra, 465 U.S. at pp. 8-9 [104 S.Ct. at pp. 857-858].) Upon review of Keating, the United States Supreme Court noted that the question whether classwide arbitration was contrary to the act was neither raised nor decided in the California Supreme Court. Hence, the United States Supreme Court held, it was without jurisdiction to resolve the question as a matter of federal law. (Id. at p. 9 [104 S.Ct. at pp. 857-858].)
Following the United States Supreme Court’s decision in
Keating,
the California Court of Appeal applied this state’s Supreme Court’s decision in
Keating
in a case within the ambit of the act. In
Lewis
v.
Prudential-Bache Securities, Inc.
(1986)
*56
Also subsequent to our Supreme Court’s decision in
Keating,
the Court of Appeal in
Garden Grove Community Church
v.
Pittsburgh-Des Moines Steel Co.
(1983)
E. Lower Federal Court Decisions
In construing and applying the act, we are bound to follow opinions of the United States Supreme Court. (U.S. Const., art. VI, cl. 2;
Rohr Aircraft Corp.
v.
County of San Diego
(1959)
Blue Cross argues we should adopt a United States Court of Appeals decision which barred classwide arbitration in the federal district courts absent an express agreement to arbitrate class claims. The United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit has held “that absent a
*57
provision in the parties’ arbitration agreement providing for class treatment of disputes, a
[United
States]
district court
has no authority
[under federal
law] to certify classwide arbitration.”
(Champ
v. Siegel
Trading Co., Inc.
(7th Cir. 1995)
In
Champ
it was argued that federal class action rules applied to an arbitration subject to the act. Rule 23 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure authorized class actions. Rule 81(a)(3) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure provided that the civil rules applied to proceeding under the act “only to the extent that matters of procedure are not provided for in those statutes.” Hence, it was contended that classwide arbitration could be ordered. The Seventh Circuit panel rejected that argument as follows: “First of all, Rule 81(a)(3) says that the Federal Rules fill in only those procedural gaps left open by the [act.] But as explained above, section 4 of [the act] requires that we enforce an arbitration agreement according to its terms. Such terms conceivably could consist of consolidated or even class arbitration. The parties here did not include in their agreement an express term providing for
*58
class arbitration. Thus, one could say that through the proper application of 9 U.S.C. § 4 the [act] has already provided the type of procedure to be followed in this case, namely, non-class-action arbitration. [Citations.] [^ But more to the point, we still could not accept the interveners’ assertions because by its language Rule 81(a)(3) only applies to
judicial
proceedings under the [act.] [Citations.] . . . [N]othing in the language of Rule 81(a)(3) purports to apply the Federal Rules of Procedure to the actual proceedings on the merits before the arbitrators, which are normally regulated by the American Arbitration Association’s Commercial Arbitration Rules. [Citation.] As the Fourth Circuit has explained it: ‘[a]n arbitration hearing is not a court of law. When contracting parties stipulate that disputes will be submitted to arbitration, they relinquish the right to certain procedural niceties which are normally associated with a formal trial.’
Burton v. Bush,
In contrast to
Champ,
the United States Court of Appeals, First Circuit has held a district court
does
have the power to order
consolidated
arbitration where the agreement is silent as to consolidation, but
state law
specifically provides for such procedure. In
New England Energy Inc.
v.
Keystone Shipping Co.
(1st Cir. 1988)
The New England Energy case further reasoned that the relevant United States Supreme Court decisions directed the preemptive effect of the act at preventing the diversion of cases from arbitration. The court stated: “More particularly, nothing in the recent series of Supreme Court decisions indicates that a state law whose purpose is to promote the expeditious resolution of cases by means of the arbitral process is at odds with the policy behind the Federal Arbitration Act. In each of the cases emphasized by the appellee, the justices were faced with competing laws that would have placed claims in the courts instead of in arbitration. Two of those cases involved state law. In Southland, the California Supreme Court held that a state franchise investment statute invalidated the parties’ agreement to arbitrate certain claims. Similarly, in Perry, the California Supreme Court had upheld a state labor law requirement that litigants be provided a judicial forum for resolving wage disputes, despite the existence of a private agreement to arbitrate such disputes. In holding the state laws to be preempted in Southland and Perry, the Supreme Court observed that ‘[w]e see nothing in the Act indicating that the broad principle of enforceability is subject to any additional limitations under state law.’ [Citations.] [^0 The Massachusetts arbitration consolidation provision, as appellants seek to enforce it, does not in any way limit ‘the broad principle of enforceability’ of private agreements to arbitrate. There is no attempt here to divert a case from arbitration to court. Massachusetts seeks only to make more efficient the process of arbitrating. Although the Supreme Court has held that agreements to arbitrate must be enforced ‘even if the result is “piecemeal” litigation,’ [citation], the Court also has recognized the Act’s endorsement of ‘speedy and efficient decisionmaking,’ [citation]. We fail to see why a state should be prevented from enhancing the efficiency of the arbitral process, so long as the state procedure does not directly conflict with a contractual provision.” (New England Energy Inc. v. Keystone Shipping Co., supra, 855 F.2d at pp. 6-7, original italics.) 6
We decline to apply the Seventh Circuit decision in Champs to this case. As discussed below, we conclude section 4 of the act does not preclude *60 application of the California classwide arbitration rule. Further, we believe the First Circuit New England Energy decision is both analogous to our facts and better reasoned. We conclude that when the arbitration agreement between the parties is silent as to classwide arbitration and state law specifically authorizes it in appropriate cases, an order compelling classwide arbitration neither contradicts the contractual terms nor contravenes the policy behind the act.
F. Section 4 of the Act Does Not Preclude Application of the California
Classwide Arbitration Rule
As discussed above, the reasoning of the federal circuit court decisions on classwide and consolidated arbitrations turns on section 4 of the act. Significantly, the United States Supreme Court has repeatedly indicated that sections 3 and 4 of the act
do not apply in state courts.
In
Southland Corp.
v.
Keating, supra,
Moreover, in
Rosenthal
v.
Great Western Fin. Securities Corp.
(1996)
The United States Supreme Court’s decision in
Volt Info. Sciences
v.
Leland Stanford Jr. U., supra,
489 U.S. at pages 470 and 476 [109 S.Ct. at pages 1251 and 1254], indirectly supports our resolution of the present case. At issue in
Volt
was California Code of Civil' Procedure section 1281.2, subdivision (c), which allows a court to stay arbitration pending resolution of related litigation. The contract at issue in
Volt
contained a choice of law provision which stated, “ ‘[T]he Contract shall be governed by the law of the place where the Project is located.’ ” (
We conclude that section 4 does not bar state courts from ordering classwide arbitration. Therefore, it does not operate to preclude classwide *63 arbitration under California decisional authority. Further, the California rule allowing classwide arbitration, like the statute at issue in Rosenthal, can further rather than defeat the act’s goal of enforcing agreements to arbitrate. Therefore, California’s rule permitting classwide arbitration is not preempted by section 4.
Blue Cross contends it is federal substantive law, which this court is bound to follow, that no classwide arbitration can be compelled unless the parties have expressly agreed to such procedure. We disagree. First, as discussed above, we conclude section 4 of the act does not apply in state courts to bar in all cases classwide arbitration. Second, even if it did apply, the United States Supreme Court has never held that the language of section 4 of the act providing for the issuance of a district court order “directing the parties to proceed to arbitration in accordance with the terms of the agreement” (9 U.S.C. § 4, italics added), means that no classwide arbitration can occur unless the parties have expressly so provided. The legislative history of the act and the decisions of the United States Supreme Court make clear that the act’s preemptive scope is limited. Its purpose was to abolish antiarbitration laws and to make agreements to arbitrate specifically enforceable. Consistent with that purpose, we believe the language “in accordance with the terms of the agreement” (9 U.S.C. § 4) means in accordance with the agreement to arbitrate. Third, under federal law, as articulated in Champ and the cases on which the Seventh Circuit relied, there is no authority for classwide arbitration. Under those circumstances, the Champ court refused *64 to read such authority into the parties’ arbitration agreement. Here, on the other hand, state law authorizes classwide arbitration. In the absence of an express agreement not to proceed to arbitration on a classwide basis, ordering the parties to arbitrate class claims as authorized by state law does not conflict with their contractual arrangement.
Blue Cross also contends that an order compelling classwide arbitration in this case would interfere with the parties’ intentions; it asserts it bargained for individual arbitration conducted according to the rules of the American Arbitration Association (AAA), not this “hybrid” classwide arbitration requiring judicial intervention. This argument is premature. The only issue before this court is whether the
Keating
rule is preempted by the act. No order has been entered certifying a class. No order has been entered requiring classwide arbitration. (E.g.,
Gainey
v.
Occidental Land Research
(1986)
G. Conclusion
Congress’s purpose in enacting the act was simple—to abolish archaic law under which courts refused to enforce arbitration agreements, and to make voluntary agreements to arbitrate disputes specifically enforceable. To that end, the act created federal substantive law requiring that arbitration agreements be enforced. That federal substantive law applies in both state and federal courts. However, Congress did not intend to occupy the entire field of arbitration. Rather, the act preempts state law only to the extent it stands as an obstacle to the enforcement of contractual agreements to arbitrate. As explained in
Southland Corp.
v.
Keating, supra,
IV. Disposition
The petition for a writ of mandate, prohibition, or other appropriate relief is denied. Plaintiffs, Elizabeth Farquhar and Laurie Winett, shall recover their costs incurred in connection with these extraordinary writ proceedings from defendants, Blue Cross of California and Wellpoint Health Networks, Inc.
Armstrong, J., and Godoy Perez, J., concurred.
Petitioners’ application for review by the Supreme Court was denied January 13, 1999.
Notes
Two identical bills made their way through the 68th Congress, Senate Bill No. 1005 and House Bill No. 646. During congressional debate, Senator Thomas J. Walsh of Montana, a member of the Senate Committee on the Judiciary, stated that “the bill [Senate Bill No. 1005] provides for the abolition of the rule that agreements for arbitration will not be specifically enforced.” (Remarks of Sen. Walsh, 66 Cong. Rec. 984 (1924).) Congressman George S. Graham of Pennsylvania, the Chairman of the House Committee on the Judiciary, elaborated on the purpose of the legislation: “This bill [House Bill No. 646] simply provides for one thing, and that is to give an opportunity to enforce an agreement in commercial contracts and admiralty contracts—an agreement to arbitrate, when voluntarily placed in the document by the parties to it. It does not involve any new principle of law except to provide a simple method by which the parties may be brought before the court in order to give enforcement to that which they have already agreed to. It does not affect any contract that has not the agreement in it to arbitrate, and only gives the opportunity ... of asking the parties to come in and carry through, in good faith, what they have agreed to do. It does nothing more than that. It creates no new legislation, grants no new rights, except a remedy to enforce an agreement in commercial contracts and in admiralty contracts.” (Remarks of Congressman Graham, 65 Cong. Rec. 1931 (1924).) As similarly stated by Congressman Graham on another occasion, “The result of [House Bill No. 646] is that if you and I agree in the contract to arbitrate we must arbitrate and can not shirk it afterwards.” (Remarks of Congressman Graham, 66 Cong. Rec. 3004 (1925).)
We adopt the term “classwide” arbitration as used by the California Supreme Court in Keating, rather than the equally descriptive phrases “class arbitration” or “class action arbitration.”
Notably, the cases cited in
Keating
that relied on the federal rules in ordering consolidated arbitration were later disapproved or called into doubt in
Government of United Kingdom
v.
Boeing Co.
(2d Cir. 1993)
The respondent court has not yet certified the class or even finally determined whether plaintiff’s claims may proceed on a classwide basis. Any discussion on our part as to whether plaintiffs’ claims should actually proceed on a classwide basis would be premature. The only issue before us is whether the respondent court could order discovery on the class certification issue. Blue Cross contends the act preempts any possibility of classwide certification and possible arbitration of plaintiffs’ claims in such a forum.
The Pennsylvania Superior Court agreed with
Keating
in
Dickler
v.
Shearson Lehman Hutton
(1991)
Notably, Blue Cross conceded at oral argument that consolidated arbitration as authorized by Code of Civil Procedure section 1281.3 would be allowed in a case within the purview of
*60
the act. (See
Garden Grove Community Church
v.
Pittsburgh-Des Moines Steel Co., supra,
Section 4 of the act provides in part: “If the making of the arbitration agreement or the failure, neglect, or refusal to perform the same be in issue, the court shall proceed summarily to the trial thereof. . . . Where such an issue is raised, the party alleged to be in default may, except in cases of admiralty, on or before the return day of the notice of application, demand a jury trial of such issue, and upon such demand the court shall make an order referring the issue or issues to a jury in the manner provided by the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, or may specially call a jury for that purpose.”
Plaintiffs have belatedly asserted, at oral argument and in a letter brief, that a choice of law provision in the underlying health insuring contracts constituted an express agreement to apply California’s arbitration rules, therefore, under
Volt,
the act has no preemptive effect. Blue Cross’s “Prudent Buyer Plan Service Agreement and Combined Evidence of Coverage and Disclosure Form” contained the following choice of law provision: “Part V General Provisions [f] . . . F. Governing Law: . . . This Agreement shall be construed and enforced in accordance with the laws of the State of California.” The choice of law provision and its purported effect was not raised in the trial court. (Nor was it raised in the return to the present writ petition.) This court will not consider arguments raised for the first time in a writ
*63
petition. (Cf., e.g.,
People
v.
Rodrigues
(1994)
