Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge ROBERTS.
Statutory claims may be subject to agreements to arbitrate, so long as the agreement does not require the claimant to forgo substantive rights afforded under the statute.
See, e.g., Gilmer v. Interstate/Johnson Lane Corp.,
In this case an employee sued his employer for racial discrimination under the District of Columbia Human Rights Act, D.C.Code §§ 2-1401
et seq.
(“DCHRA”), and the employer sought to compel arbitration pursuant to an arbitration clause in the employment agreement. The arbitration clause was unenforceable as written because it precluded an award of punitive damages, which are available under the D.C. statute. The existence of an express severability clause in the agreement, the fact that the agreement is otherwise valid and enforceable, and a “healthy regard for the federal policy favoring arbitration,”
Gilmer,
I.
From April 1996 to February 2001, Timothy R. Booker worked for Robert Half International, Inc. (“RHI”). Before starting his job at RHI, Booker signed an employment agreement containing the arbitration clause at the heart of this dispute. The clause states in relevant part:
Any dispute or claim arising out of or relating to Employee’s employment or any provision of this Agreement ... shall be submitted to arbitration pursuant to the commercial arbitration rules of the American Arbitration Association. This Agreement shall be governed by the United States Arbitration Act.... The parties agree that punitive damages may not be awarded in an arbitration proceeding required by this Agreement.
Employment Agreement ¶ 18. The agreement also contained a severability clause, providing that “[t]he provisions of this Agreement are severable. If any provision is found by any court of competent jurisdiction to be unreasonable and invalid, that determination shall not affect the enforceability of other provisions.” Id. ¶ 13.
On April 24, 2001, Booker filed suit against RHI in District of Columbia Superior Court, alleging racial discrimination and wrongful constructive discharge in violation of the DCHRA. RHI responded *80 with a letter requesting that Booker submit his claim to arbitration as required by the employment agreement. In subsequent negotiations with Booker’s counsel over the structure of arbitral proceedings, RHI’s attorney stipulated that arbitration would not bar an award of punitive damages, indicated that RHI would agree to “reasonable discovery,” and suggested that the parties follow the American Arbitration Association (“AAA”) employment arbitration rules because they provide “greater detail” on available discovery tools than the commercial rules specified in the agreement. May 16, 2001 Letter of Anita Barondes to R. Scott Oswald at 1; May 23, 2001 Letter of Anita Barondes to R. Scott Oswald at 1. When Booker nonetheless insisted on pursuing his claim in court, RHI removed the case to federal district court on the basis of diversity jurisdiction and moved to dismiss the complaint and compel arbitration pursuant to the Federal Arbitration Act (“FAA”). 9 U.S.C. §§ 1 et seq.
Over the opposition of Booker and ami-cus curiae the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, the district court granted RHI’s motion. The court analyzed the enforceability of the arbitration clause under the standards set forth in our decision in
Cole v. Burns International Security Services,
Booker argued for a different result in his case, asserting that his agreement with RHI did not provide for sufficient discovery, and noting that it plainly did not afford all the relief that would be available in court. The district court concluded that the AAA commercial arbitration rules specified in the arbitration agreement did provide for “more than minimal discovery,” Mem. Op. at 13-15, but agreed with Booker that the bar on punitive damages was unenforceable. Id. at 16-17. It nevertheless declined Booker’s invitation to strike down the arbitration clause in its entirety. Looking instead to the agreement’s severability clause, District of Columbia contract law, and the federal policy favoring enforcement of agreements to arbitrate, the court concluded that the remainder of the arbitration clause was enforceable despite the invalid punitive damages provision. Accordingly, the district court severed the punitive damages bar and compelled arbitration. Id. at 19-25. Booker appeals.
II.
Recent Supreme Court decisions concerning the arbitrability of statutory claims make clear how we are to assess the assertion that arbitration should not be compelled because the terms of an arbitration agreement interfere with the effective vindication of statutory claims. The claimant in
Green Tree Financial Corp.-Alabama v. Randolph,
More recently, in
PacifiCare Health Sys., Inc. v. Book,
We take from these recent cases two basic propositions: first, that the party resisting arbitration on the ground that the terms of an arbitration agreement interfere with the effective vindication of statutory rights bears the burden of showing the likelihood of such interference, and second, that this burden cannot be carried by “mere speculation” about how an arbitrator “might” interpret or apply the agreement. We consider Booker’s claims against this background.
A. Booker first renews his contention that the arbitration clause is unenforceable, quite apart from the punitive damages issue, because it does not provide for “more than minimal discovery.”
See Cole,
Booker contrasts this provision with the corresponding discovery provision in the AAA employment arbitration rules, which we considered satisfactory in
Cole. See
Booker also objects that the commercial rules leave the decision to hold an arbitration management conference up to the arbitrator, while the employment rules require such a conference; that the commercial rules do not require that the arbitrator hearing his claim be experienced in employment law, while the employment rules do; and that the commercial rules lack a counterpart to the provision in the employment rules which specifies that the “parties shall bear the same burdens of proof and burdens of producing evidence as would apply if [the claim] had been brought in court.” AAA, National Rules for the Resolution of Employment Disputes (effective Jan. 1, 2001), Rule 22. Given the critical role shifting burdens play in adjudicating employment discrimination claims,
see, e.g., McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green,
Although the AAA employment rules specify the discovery mechanisms available in somewhat greater detail than do the commercial rules, both sets of rules leave the decision about which discovery tools to use, and in what manner, to the discretion of the arbitrator. Booker is concerned that he will not have “a fair opportunity to present [his] claims,”
Gilmer,
B. The parties do not dispute that the arbitration agreement’s bar on punitive damages is unenforceable as applied to Booker’s claim under the DCHRA.
See, e.g., Hadnot v. Bay, Ltd.,
Booker’s argument incorrectly assumes that the waiver and severability clauses are incompatible.
See 1010 Potomac
Assocs.
v. Grocery Mfrs. of Am., Inc.,
We reject for similar reasons Booker’s argument that severance over his opposition was improper because District of Columbia law requires mutual assent for any modification of a contract. Because Booker and RHI both signed the contract with the severability clause, there is mutual assent to severance according to the terms of that clause. This is entirely consistent with District of Columbia law, which allows courts to sever provisions in violation of public policy, while enforcing the remainder of the agreement.
See EDM & Assocs., Inc. v. GEM Cellular,
Under the FAA, arbitration “is a matter of consent, not coercion.”
Volt Info. Scis., Inc. v. Bd. of Trs. of Leland Stanford Jr. Univ.,
C. Booker next argues that enforcing the remainder of the arbitration clause contravenes the federal policy interest in ensuring the effective vindication of statutory rights. He contends that responding to illegal provisions in arbitration agreements by judicially pruning them out leaves employers with every incentive to “overreach” when drafting such agreements. If judges merely sever illegal provisions and compel arbitration, employers would be no worse off for trying to include illegal provisions than if they had followed the law in drafting their agreements in the first place. On the other hand, because not every claimant will challenge the illegal provisions, some employees will go to the arbitral table without all their statutory rights.
We have never addressed this issue, but Booker’s argument — bolstered by support from the EEOC — has helped" persuade some circuits to strike arbitration clauses in their entirety, rather than simply sever offending provisions.
See Perez v. Globe Airport Sec. Servs., Inc.,
The differing results may well reflect not so much a split among the circuits as variety among different arbitration agreements. Decisions striking an arbitration clause entirely often involved agreements without a severability clause,
see, e.g., Perez,
A critical consideration in assessing severability is giving effect to the intent of the contracting parties.
See, e.g., Frankenmuth Mut. Ins. Co. v. Escambia County,
We agree with the district court that severing the punitive damages bar and enforcing the arbitration clause was proper here. Not only does the agreement contain a severability clause, bdt Booker identifies only one discrete illegal provision in the agreement. We have rejected his argument that the agreement does not allow adequate discovery, and Booker himself acknowledges that “the severance of one provision may be based on sound case law” and that “the District Court’s decision to sever the punitive damages provision may be sound.” Reply Br. of Appellant, at 4, 14. This one unenforceable provision does not infect the arbitration clause as a whole. The district court did not unravel “a highly integrated” complex of interlocking illegal provisions,
Graham Oil,
The
Graham Oil
decision, on which Booker relies, struck the entire arbitration agreement after noting that “the offensive provisions clearly represent an attempt ... to achieve through arbitration what Congress has expressly forbidden.”
By invoking the severability clause to remove a discrete remedial provision, the district court honored the intent of the parties reflected in the employment agreement, which included not only the punitive damages bar but the explicit severability clause as well. In doing so, the court was also faithful to the federal policy which
*86
“requires that we rigorously enforce agreements to arbitrate.”
Mitsubishi Motors,
Affirmed.
