DARLENE GIBBS; STEPHANIE EDWARDS; LULA WILLIAMS; PATRICK INSCHO; LAWRENCE MWETHUKU, on behalf of themselves and all individuals similarly situated, Plaintiffs - Appellees, v. HAYNES INVESTMENTS, LLC; L. STEPHEN HAYNES; SOVEREIGN BUSINESS SOLUTIONS, LLC, Defendants – Appellants, and VICTORY PARK CAPITAL ADVISORS, LLC; VICTORY PARK MANAGEMENT, LLC; SCOTT ZEMNICK; JEFFREY SCHNEIDER; THOMAS WELCH, Defendants.
No. 19-1434
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
July 21, 2020
PUBLISHED. NATIVE AMERICAN FINANCIAL SERVICES ASSOCIATION, Amicus Supporting Appellants, AMERICAN ASSOCIATION FOR JUSTICE, Amicus Supporting Appellees.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia, at Richmond. M. Hannah Lauck, District Judge. (3:18-cv-00048-MHL)
Submitted: May 29, 2020 Decided: July 21,
Before GREGORY, Chief Judge, MOTZ, and AGEE, Circuit Judges.
David N. Anthony, Timothy St. George, TROUTMAN SANDERS LLP, Richmond, Virginia; Richard L. Scheff, David F. Herman, ARMSTRONG TEASDALE, LLP, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, for Appellants. Kristi C. Kelly, Andrew J. Guzzo, KELLY GUZZO, PLC, Fairfax, Virginia; Matthew W.H. Wessler, GUPTA WESSLER PLLC, Washington, D.C.; Leonard A. Bennett, Craig C. Marchiando, Elizabeth W. Hanes, CONSUMER LITIGATION ASSOCIATES, P.C., Newport News, Virginia; Anna C. Haac, TYCKO & ZAVAREEI LLP, Washington, D.C., for Appellees. Patrick O. Daugherty, Frances B. Morris, VAN NESS FELDMAN LLP, Washington, D.C., for Amicus Curiae. Bruce Stern, Jeffrey R. White, AMERICAN ASSOCIATION FOR JUSTICE, Washington, D.C., for Amicus Curiae.
AGEE, Circuit Judge:
This appeal considеrs the enforceability of arbitration agreements included within the terms of payday loans issued by two online lenders. After a group of borrowers filed suit against the entities and others (collectively, the “Haynes Defendants”) that invested in these lenders, challenging the legality of the loans issued, the Haynes Defendants filed a motion to compel arbitration. The district court denied the motion on the basis that the arbitration agreements operated as prospective waivers. The Haynes Defendants now appeal. For the reasons set forth below, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
I.
The plaintiffs are Virginia consumers who borrowed money between 2013 and 2016 from one of two online lenders owned by a sovereign Native American tribe.1 The first lender, Plain Green, LLC, is owned and operated by the Chippewa Cree Tribe of the Rocky Boy’s Reservation in Montana. The second, Great Plains Lending, LLC, is owned and operated by the Otoe-Missouria Tribe of Oklahoma.2 Although Virginia usury law generally prohibits interest rates in excess of twelve percent,
In order to obtain the loans, each borrower electronically signed a contract that contained (1) the terms governing the loan (the “loan agreement”) as well as (2) an agreement to arbitrate any disputes (the “arbitration agreement”). Both agreements contained choice-of-law provisions requiring the application of tribal law. For example, a choicе-of-law provision in Gibbs’s 2016 Plain Green loan agreement stipulated that “[t]his Agreement and the Agreement to Arbitrate are governed by Tribal Law.” J.A. 341. Further, the arbitration agreement included provisions stating the agreement “shall be governed by Tribal Law” and the “arbitrator shall apply Tribal Law.” J.A. 343. Similarly, Mwethuku’s older 2013 Plain Green loan provided that both the loan and arbitration agreements “are governed by ... the laws of the Chippewa Cree Tribe,” and that the arbitrator “will apply the laws of the Chippewa Cree Tribe[.]” J.A. 384.
Likewise, all three 2015 and 2016 Great Plains loan agreements indicated the lender could choose to voluntarily use federal laws as guidance, but that the agreements
After receiving the loans from the two online lenders, the borrowers brought a putative class action complaint alleging, among other claims, that the lenders’ loans were unlawful under Virginia’s usury laws and that the Haynes Defendants’ receipt of “income derived ... through collection of unlawful debt” and reinvestment of such income to further the lending scheme violated the
As relevant to the motion to compel arbitration, the district court relied upon two Fourth Circuit cases—Hayes v. Delbert Services Corporation, 811 F.3d 666, 671 (4th Cir. 2016), and Dillon v. BMO Harris Bank, N.A., 856 F.3d 330, 332 (4th Cir. 2017)—both of which considered similar tribal loan and arbitration agreements with choice-of-law clauses providing for the nearly exclusive application of tribal law, to the exclusion of state and federal law. As in those cases, the district court here found that because the choice-of-law provisions in the arbitration agreements “sought to prospectively exclude the application of federal law”—including the assertion of any federal statutory claims by the borrowers—the agreements “[ran] afoul of the prospective waiver doctrine[.]” J.A. 461. And because, the court concluded, “arbitration agreements that operate as a prospective waiver of a party’s right to pursue statutory remedies are not enforceable because they are in violation of public policy,” J.A. 454 (internal quotation marks omitted), the arbitration agreements at issue were likewise unenforceable.
The Haynes Defendants timely appealed, arguing that: (1) the district court ignored the arbitration agreements’ delegation provisions requiring an arbitrator to resolve all threshold issues of arbitrability, including whether the choice-of-law clauses amounted to a prospective waiver; and (2) even if the court was correct to consider the effect of the provisions, they did not operate as a prospective waiver. We address each issue in turn, mindful of the “strong federal policy in favor of enforcing arbitration agreements[.]” Dean Witter Reynolds, Inc. v. Byrd, 470 U.S. 213, 217 (1985).
II.
We turn first to the delegation clauses. Each of the arbitration agreements contained a delegation clause stipulating that the parties would arbitrate “any issue concerning the validity, enforceability, or
A.
The question of who decides arbitrability—the court or the arbitrator—is one we review de novo. Of course, parties to an arbitration agreement can “agree to arbitrate gateway questions of arbitrability, such as whether the parties have agreed to arbitrate or whether their agreement covers a рarticular controversy.” Rent-A-Center, W., Inc. v. Jackson, 561 U.S. 63, 68–69 (2010) (internal quotation marks omitted). Thus, when an agreement “clearly and unmistakably” delegates the threshold issue of arbitrability to the arbitrator, a court must enforce that delegation clause and send that question to arbitration. Id. at 67 (internal citation omitted). However, if the claimant specifically attacks the validity of the delegation clause itself, a court may consider that clause’s enforceability. Minnieland Private Day Sch., Inc. v. Applied Underwriters Captive Risk Assurance Co., Inc., 867 F.3d 449, 455 (4th Cir. 2017).
In Rent-A-Center, the Supreme Court held that when a litigant specifically challenges the enforceability of an arbitration agreement with a delegation clause, the challenge must be submitted to the arbitrator unless the plaintiff has lodged a specific objection to the delegation clause (which a court may consider). There, the plaintiff had signed as a condition of his employment an arbitration agreement that contained a broad delegation clause requiring arbitration of any issue “relating to the interpretation, applicability, enforceability or formation of this Agreement including, but not limited to any claim that all or any part of this Agreement is void or voidable.” Rent-A-Center, 561 U.S. at 66 (internal quotation marks omitted). After the plaintiff filed an employment lawsuit, his employer sought to compel arbitration. The plaintiff opposed the motion on the grounds that the arbitration agreement was “clearly unenforceable” because certain aspects of the agreement, such as arbitration fee splitting, were “unconscionable” under state law. Id. (internal quotation marks omitted).
But the Suprеme Court—observing that a delegation clause “is simply an additional, antecedent agreement the party seeking arbitration asks the federal court to enforce,” id. at 70—concluded that the plaintiff could not lodge such a challenge to the enforceability of the arbitration agreement as a whole because of the presence of the delegation clause. Rather, only if he had “challenge[d] the validity under [
Importantly, however, the Court observed that challenges to the overall arbitration agreement could also be specifically directed at the delegation provision. As the Supreme Court explained, had the plaintiff “challenged the delegation provision by arguing
In sum, in assessing the enforceability of an arbitration agreement containing a delegation provision, “we first must decide whether [the plaintiff] lodged a challenge against the delegation provision .... Second, if we conclude that [he or she] specifically challenged the enforceability of the delegation provision, we then must decide whether the delegation provision is unenforceable ‘upon such grounds as exist at law or in equity.’” Minnieland, 867 F.3d at 455 (quoting
B.
With this legal framework in mind, we now consider whether the borrowers have lodged a sufficient challenge to the delegation provisions and, if so, whether the district court properly considered the challenge. The Haynes Defendants argue that the delegation provisions are valid and enforceable, which, in turn, should have compelled the district court to let the arbitrator resolve all threshold issues of arbitrability. We disagree with this argument for the simple reason thаt the borrowers challenged those clauses with “sufficient force and specificity,” Hayes, 811 F.3d at 671 n.1, to warrant the district court’s threshold review as to whether they were enforceable. Specifically, in their opposition to the motion to compel arbitration, the borrowers argued that the “delegation clause[s] [are] unenforceable for the same reason as the underlying arbitration agreement—the ... wholesale waiver of the application of federal and state law[.]” J.A. 404. And as Rent-A-Center observed, such a challenge is all that is required to dispute the viability of the delegation provisions. 561 U.S. at 72–73; see also MacDonald, 883 F.3d at 227.
In turn, because this challenge to the delegation provisions necessarily encompassed and included arguments that related to the validity of the arbitration agreements as a whоle—specifically, whether the choice-of-law provisions amounted to a prospective waiver—the district court did not err by considering the challenge to the delegation clauses in the context of the challenge to the entirety of the agreements.3 This is because “[i]n specifically challenging a delegation clause, a party may rely on the same arguments that it employs to contest the enforceability of other arbitration provisions.” MacDonald, 883 F.3d at 226–27; see also Gingras v. Think Finance, Inc., 922 F.3d 112, 126 (2d Cir. 2019) (recognizing the presence of a delegation clause but concluding that the plaintiff’s “specific attack on the delegation provision is sufficient to make the [broader] issue of arbitrability one for a federal court”); Dillon, 856 F.3d at 335 (declining to “defer consideration of the prospective waiver doctrine until after the arbitrator construe[d] the choice of law provision” because “that provision effects an unambiguous and categorical waiver of federal statutory rights”); Hayes, 811 F.3d at 671 n.1 (concluding the borrowers in that case had “challenged the validity of that delegation with sufficient force and specificity to occasion [the Court’s] review”); Smith v. W. Sky Fin., LLC, 168 F. Supp. 3d 778, 786 (E.D. Pa. 2016) (noting that “enforcing the delegation provision would place an arbitrator in the impossible position of deciding the enforceability of the agreement without authority to apply any applicable federal or state law”).4 In sum, given that the borrowers specifically challenged the delegation provisions, the question of their enforceability was one for the courts—rather than the arbitrator—to decide.
III.
A.
We turn to the question of whether the choice-of-law provisions
Consistent with contract principles, the Supreme Court has recognized that arbitration agreements that operate “as a prospective waiver of a party’s right to pursue statutory remedies” are not enforceable because they are in violation of public policy. Mitsubishi Motors Corp. v. Soler Chrysler-Plymouth, Inc., 473 U.S. 614, 637 n.19 (1985). Arbitration must permit a party to effectively vindicate statutory claims so that “the statute will continue to serve both its remedial and deterrent function.” Gilmer v. Interstate/Johnson Lane Corp., 500 U.S. 20, 28 (1991). Therefore, “so long as the prospective litigant effectively may vindicate its statutory cause of action in the arbitral forum,” courts should enforce the parties’ contract under the FAA. Mitsubishi, 473 U.S. at 637. But where an arbitration agreement prevents a litigant from vindicating federal substantive statutory rights, courts will not enforce the agreement. Id.; see also Am. Express, 570 U.S. at 236 (observing courts will invalidate any contract—arbitration or otherwise—that аttempts to foreclose “the assertion of certain statutory rights” because such a contract would jeopardize a party’s “right to pursue statutory remedies”).
Of course, a “foreign choice of law provision, of itself, will not trigger application of the prospective waiver doctrine.” Dillon, 856 F.3d at 334. “Instead, a court first must examine whether, as a matter of law, the choice-of-forum and choice-of-law clauses operate in tandem as a prospective waiver of a party’s right to pursue statutory remedies.” Id. (internal quotation marks omitted). “When there is uncertainty whether the foreign choice of law would preclude otherwise applicable federal substantive statutory remedies, the arbitrator should determine in the first instance whether the choiсe of law provision would deprive a party of those remedies.” Id. (citing Vimar Seguros y Reaseguros, S.A. v. M/V Sky Reefer, 515 U.S. 528, 540–41 (1995); Aggarao v. MOL Ship Mgmt. Co., 675 F.3d 355, 371-73 (4th Cir. 2012)). In those instances, the prospective waiver issue would not become ripe for final determination until the federal court was asked to enforce the arbitrator’s decision.
However, where there is no uncertainty about the effect of these choice-of-law provisions, the court may properly conclude the delegation provision—and thus the arbitration agreement—is unenforceable. And that is exactly the result we reached in both Hayes and Dillon, where we concluded that the choice-of-law provisions providing for the application of tribal law to the exclusion of federal statutory law amounted to an “unambiguous and
B.
We see no material distinction between the case at hand and the precedent set forth in Hayes and Dillon: because the choice-of-law provisions contained in both the Plain Green and Great Plains arbitration agreements operate as prospective waivers, the delegation clauses (and therefore the arbitration agreements) are unenforceable.
In Hayes, the arbitration agreement required the arbitrator to “apply the lаws of the [Tribe] and the terms of this Agreement” to any claims. 811 F.3d at 675 (internal quotation marks omitted). Another section of that arbitration agreement “confirm[ed] that, no matter where the arbitration occurs, the arbitrator will not apply ‘any law other than the law of the [Tribe] to this Agreement.’” Id. Further, the arbitration agreement was paired with loan terms stating that the loans were “subject solely to the exclusive laws and jurisdiction of the [Tribe]” and that “no other state or federal law or regulation [would] apply to this Loan Agreement.” Id. at 669 (emphasis omitted). Upon reviewing these provisions, the Hayes Court concluded that “[i]nstead of selecting the law of a certain jurisdiction to govern the agreement, as is normally done with a choice of law clause, [the] arbitration agreement use[d] its ‘choice of law’ provision to waive all of a potential claimant’s federal rights.” Id. at 675. Of course, Hayes noted, although parties to an arbitration agreement are permitted to waive certain rights, any such waiver “may not flatly and categorically renounce the authority of the federal statutes to which it is and must remain subject.” Id. But because the arbitration agreement at issue took “this plainly forbidden step, [the Court held] it invalid and unenforceable” as a violation of public policy. Id.
Similarly, the agreements at issue in Dillon—which were also made pursuant to a Great Plains loan—contained choice-of-law provisions “requir[ing] the application of Otoe-Missouria tribal law and disclaim[ing] the application of state or federal law.” 856 F.3d at 332. For example, the loan agreement there provided it was “subject solely to the exclusive laws and jurisdiction of the Otoe-Missouria Tribe of Indians” and that “no other state or federal law or regulation shall apply[.]” Id. (internal quotation marks omitted). Likewise, the Dillon arbitration agreement provided that it was to be governed by tribal law, that “any dispute will be resolved by arbitration in accordance with the law of the Otoe-Missouria Tribe of Indians,” and that any arbitrator was to “apply the laws of the Otoe-Missouria Tribe of Indians.” Id. at 332 (internal quotation marks omitted). Dillon thus concluded that the agreements were “not distinguishable in substance from the related provisions ... that [were] held unenforceable in Hayes” and that “[j]ust as we did in Hayes, we interpret these terms in the arbitration agreement as an unambiguous attempt to apply tribal law to the exclusion of federal and state law.” Id. at 335–36.5
Unlike in Hayes and Dillon, the Plain Green and Great Plains arbitration agreements
Other clauses within both the Plain Green and Great Plains arbitration agreements
However, given that the language of the agreements does not explicitly forbid the application of federal law, the Haynes Defendants argue that the borrowers have failed to show that they cannot vindicate their fedеral statutory rights through arbitration applying tribal law because tribal law will “often expressly incorporate or require compliance with federal law.” Opening Br. at 29. But we find this argument unavailing. As the borrowers correctly point out, the relevant tribal codes would not permit them to effectively vindicate the federal protections and remedies they seek—that is, the borrowers could not assert a RICO claim seeking treble damages against the entities and individuals who comprise the Haynes Defendants.
First, although § 5.1 of the Otoe-Missouria Tribal Consumer Financial Services Ordinance provides that lenders “shall . . . comply with . . . all other Tribal and federal laws as applicable,” the federal law that governs the claims at issue in this case—namely,
Second, a borrower’s ability to assert a federal statutory claim under tribal law against an individual or entity (such as the Haynes Defendants) related to a lender remains even more elusive: although the Ordinance governs “licensed lenders” and mandates their compliance with tribal and applicable federal law, it says nothing about other non-tribal entities or individuals associated with the lenders who may have violated RICO. In fact, it explicitly exempts a range of entities and persons from its licensing requirements—and
Third, even if the borrowers could assert a RICO claim against the Haynes Defendants under tribal law, the rest of the Ordinance fails to clarify how any consumer could meaningfully pursue any claims under it. Although the Ordinance contains a consumer complaint procedure, it does not provide for or establish any private right of action for violations of any provisions, let alone any federal laws.
Similarly, the Chippewa Code contains a single “civil remedies” provision limiting a defendant’s liability to “actual damages” for “intentional[]” violations.
In sum, because the language of both sets of arbitration agreements provides that tribal law shall preempt the application of any contrary law, and the effect of such provisions is to thereby make unavailable to the borrowers the effective vindication of federal statutory protections and remedies, the arbitration agreements at issue amount to a prospective waiver.9 Consequently, the “entire arbitration agreement is unenforceable.” Dillon, 856 F.3d at 335–37; see also Hayes, 811 F.3d at 669–71, 675 (concluding that a tribal arbitration contract is unenforceable under the FAA where it “names a tribal forum and then purports to disavow the authority of all state or federal law”).10
IV.
For the reasons set forth above, we affirm the judgment of the district court. We dispense with oral argument because the facts and legal contentions are adequately presented in the materials before this Court and argument would not aid the decisional process.
AFFIRMED*
* This opinion is published without oral argument pursuant to this Court’s Standing Order 20-01.
