Lead Opinion
Craig Penn worked as a server at Ryan’s Family Steak Houses (Ryan’s) in Fort Wayne, Indiana, from 1996 until 1998. After he was fired, he filed this suit under the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) alleging that he had been subjected to a hostile work environment at Ryan’s and that he was fired in retaliation for his complaints about the harassment. In the district court, Ryan’s filed a motion seeking to stay the case and compel arbitration, alleging that Penn was bound by an arbitration agreement he signed when he applied for his job at Ryan’s. The district court found that the arbitration agreement Penn signed would create an arbitration panel that was biased in favor of Ryan’s. In addition, the court found that Penn had not made a knowing and voluntary waiver of his right to a judicial forum for his dispute, an omission the court found fatal to the company’s effort to enforce the agreement. For these reasons, the district court denied the motion Ryan’s had filed. Ryan’s brought an interlocutory appeal of that order pursuant to 9 U.S.C. § 16(a)(1)(A) & (B). We agree with the district court that the arbitration contract Penn signed is unenforceable, although we reach that conclusion for different reasons.
I
At the outset, it is important to make one thing clear: Penn never signed an arbitration agreement, pre-employment or otherwise, with Ryan’s. We thus do not have before us the conventional case in which the question is whether a particular dispute falls within the scope of an arbitration agreement or whether an alleged agreement between an employer and its employee to arbitrate various disputes is unenforceable for some reason. The document relating to arbitration that Penn signed was quite a different animal. Before Penn ever arrived on the scene, Ryan’s had entered into a contract with a company called Employment Dispute Services, Inc. (EDS) to have EDS provide an arbitration forum for all employment-related disputes between Ryan’s and its employees. When Penn applied for a job at Ryan’s, Ryan’s required him to execute a contract with EDS. That contract in turn expressed Penn’s agreement to use EDS’s services to arbitrate any employment-related claims he might have against Ryan’s. The document went on to state explicitly that it was a contract with EDS, not with Ryan’s, although it added that Ryan’s was a third-party beneficiary of the contract. EDS’s sole business is apparently the provision of arbitration services for employment disputes according to this model: EDS contracts with employers to provide an arbitration forum for any claims the company’s employees bring against it, and the companies that contract with EDS then require their employees to enter into separate contracts with EDS.
The arbitration agreement that Penn signed is largely devoid of specifics about the obligations it imposes on EDS. The contract goes on for two pages detailing the types of claims Penn is required to arbitrate. The only mention of any EDS responsibility, however, is a brief phrase saying that Penn is agreeing to the contract “[i]n consideration of the agreement by EDS to provide an arbitration forum.”
The Rules set out limited procedures for discovery, allowing each side unlimited document requests, but only one deposition in the absence of extraordinary circumstances. The Rules provide that the arbitrators must apply the substantive law that would have applied to the employee’s claim in a court of competent jurisdiction and that the decision of the panel will be final and binding. The panel of arbitrators is given discretion to set the time and place of the hearing. Finally, the Rules charge the chief executive officer of EDS with interpreting the Rules and deciding “any issue which may arise relating to them,” and give EDS the power unilaterally to amend or modify the Rules.
In the district court, Penn argued that the EDS arbitration system is inherently biased against employees. Relying on cases such as Hooters of America, Inc. v. Phillips,
EDS also has ample opportunity to tilt the scales. As noted above, the contract Penn signed with EDS provides no details about the forum that will be provided.
In response to Penn’s objections, Ryan’s introduced an affidavit from the Chairman and co-owner of EDS, James P. LaCoste, which addressed many of Penn’s concerns. First, LaCoste averred that the EDS process for selecting arbitrators incorporated “numerous safeguards” to “ensure fairness and neutrality of the panel.”' The lists of potential arbitrators are generated solely by EDS, LaCoste noted, and employers have “absolutely no input” into the selection of potential arbitrators. In addition, both the management arbitrator and the employee arbitrator are “neutral” in the sense that they are not employed by, and do not have any ties to, the employer involved in the dispute. The third arbitrator, according to LaCoste, is a “neutral, respected attorney.” LaCoste stressed that EDS is “neither controlled, managed nor influenced by Ryan’s Family Steak Houses.” Finally, in response to Penn’s concern about being forced to arbitrate far from home, LaCoste stated that “[t]he physical location of the adjudication hearings is the city and/or county in which the employee was employed.”
After considering the EDS contract, the Rules, and LaCoste’s affidavit, the district court concluded that the EDS system was inherently biased against employees and therefore refused to compel Penn to arbitrate his ADA claim. The district court accepted Penn’s contention that EDS had very strong financial incentives to tilt its scales towards employers, and against this backdrop, the court found that the system allowed EDS entirely too much discretion. The court was particularly troubled by the fact that EDS, which the court saw as essentially an alter-ego for the employer, had complete control over the lists of potential arbitrators. The court was also concerned that the restrictive discovery
II
Arbitration has become a common tool in resolving employment disputes in recent years, and employers are increasingly requiring employees to sign contracts obligating them to arbitrate disputes as a condition of employment. The Supreme Court’s recent decision in Circuit City Stores, Inc. v. Adams,
The Supreme Court has repeatedly counseled that the FAA leaves no room for judicial hostility to arbitration proceedings and that courts should not presume, absent concrete proof to the contrary, that arbitration systems will be unfair or biased. See, e.g., Green Tree Financial Corp. v. Randolph,
While the Supreme Court has stressed in recent years that federal policy under the FAA favors the enforcement of valid arbitration agreements, see, e.g., Circuit City,
The existence of a valid Indiana contract depends on mutuality of obligation. “[T]here can be no contract unless both parties are bound.” Rogier v. American Testing & Eng’g Corp.,
As we have already observed, this case differs from the typical case in which an employer and employee agree to arbitrate their disputes because of the complicated three-party approach by which Ryan’s sought to bind Penn to arbitration. Although Penn obviously was motivated to sign the arbitration agreement because Ryan’s otherwise would not have considered him for employment, the contract that Penn signed underscores that it is between Penn and EDS and that Ryan’s is not a party to the contract. (We add for the sake of completeness that if the Penn-EDS contract is not valid, then the claim Ryan’s has to third-party beneficiary status also falls by the wayside.) The first question is therefore whether the Penn EDS contract contains mutual promises and commitments by each party to the other.
We conclude that it does not; to the contrary, the arbitration agreement between EDS and Penn contains only an unascertainable, illusory promise on the part of EDS. The agreement is clear enough as to what Penn is promising: he agrees that he will bring any employment-related dispute that he has with Ryan’s in the EDS arbitration forum and not in state or federal court. The agreement restates this proposition several times in various ways, and goes into some detail as to the types of disputes that are covered by the agreement and the duration of Penn’s obligation. In marked contrast to the specificity of Penn’s obligation is the language describing the consideration EDS is obligated to provide Penn in return: EDS commits itself only “to provide an arbitration forum, Rules and Procedures, and a hearing and decision based on any claim or dispute” that the employee might raise. Nothing in the contract provides any details about the nature of the forum that EDS will provide or sets standards with which EDS must comply; EDS could fulfill its promise by providing Penn and Ryan’s with a coin toss. Although Penn was given the EDS Rules along with the contract he signed, and we will assume that the Rules form part of the contract, adding the Rules to the mix does nothing to make EDS’s commitment more concrete, because the Rules specifically give EDS the sole, unilateral discretion to modify or amend
This is not the end of our inquiry. Indiana law does not require that both promises of obligation be contained in the contract at issue. It is also permissible to incorporate such contract terms by reference in a separate contemporaneous document. Goeke v. Merchants Nat’l Bank & Trust Co. of Indianapolis,
The last place we can look for some mutuality of obligation is in the employment application Penn submitted to Ryan’s. Mutuality can be imposed not only through a detriment to the promisor but also through a benefit to the promisee. Paint Shuttle, Inc. v. Continental Cas. Co.,
We have several problems with such an approach. First, despite a careful search, we find no support in Indiana law for the proposition that a benefit received from a third party, as opposed to a benefit received from the other contracting party in a contemporaneous document, can be sufficient to create mutuality. Even in the surety and guaranty context, the Indiana courts have always found the promises constituting consideration in contemporaneous agreements involving the promisor and promisee, not third parties. See, e.g., Goeke,
For these reasons, we hold that the arbitration agreement between Penn and EDS is not enforceable. Given this holding, we need not decide whether this circuit should adopt the. Ninth Circuit’s “knowing and voluntary waiver” standard for evaluating the enforceability of arbitration agreements in the employment context, although we question the continued validity of such an approach in light of the Circuit City decision. See
Concurrence Opinion
concurring.
I completely agree with the careful and thoughtful analysis of the foregoing opinion and the result reached, and only write separately to note a few practical considerations to put this in perspective. It was an unfair situation from its inception.
Penn was being hired as a waiter in a chain restaurant, not as a corporate executive. His employment was only to be “at will.” Likely a substantial share of his income would be from tips. The agreement, the rules, the relationships between the parties, and the ramifications of the arbitration arrangement have now reached this court to sort out. Above his signature this agreement states that Penn signed it “knowingly and voluntarily.” We doubt it could have been “knowingly” in view of its complexities, or even “voluntarily.” Had he questioned its meaning and its complexities, it is doubtful Penn would have been hired. However, the agreement provided that Penn had the right to consult an attorney, but even if Penn could have afforded an attorney, the appearance of any attorney on the scene would doubtless have foreclosed any job opportunity. In Ryan’s eyes, Penn would look like a troublemaker. If he wanted the waiter’s job, he would be trapped in an unfair situation until a court could unravel it.
