delivered the opinion of the court:
This сause of action arises from an order of the circuit court granting third-party defendant’s, Gateway Chevrolet, Inc. (Gateway), motion to stay litigation pending arbitration based on an arbitration agreement signed by Gateway and third-party plaintiff, Pauline Johnson (Pauline). Pauline contends that arbitration could not be ordered because her contract with Gateway, along with the accompanying arbitration agreement, was void due to Gateway’s viоlation of section 2B of the Consumer Fraud and Deceptive Business Practices Act (hereinafter referred to as the Consumer Fraud Act or Act) (815 ILCS 505/2B (West 2002)). She further alleges that the arbitration agreement was invalid due to a lack of consideration and that Gateway improperly failed to request arbitration
BACKGROUND
On October 17, 2001, Pauline and her husband, Robert Johnson, purchased a 2002 Chevrolet Cavalier from Gateway. According to an affidavit signed by Pauline, a Gateway employee went to her home with her husband and persuaded her to sign a retail installment contract for the purchase of the vehicle. Pauline and Robert also signed an arbitration agreement, which provided in pertinent part:
“IMPORTANT ARBITRATION DISCLOSURES
The following Arbitration Clause significantly affects your rights in any dispute with Us. Please read these disclosures and the Arbitration Clause carefully before you sign this Agreement.
1. Either Yоu or Us may unilaterally choose to have any dispute between you and Us decided by arbitration and not in court.
2. If a dispute is arbitrated, both You and Us will give up the right to a trial by the court or a trial by jury.
3. If a dispute is arbitrated, You will give up Your right to participate as a class representative and/or a class member on any class claim you may have against us.
4. In arbitration, the information which can be obtained through discovery by you from Us and/or by Us from You is generally more limited than the information which can be obtained through discovery in a lawsuit.
5. Other rights that [Y]ou and/or Us would have had in court may not be available in arbitration.
6. Even if [the] dispute is arbitrated, Your vehicle may still be repossessed if [Y]ou do not honor Your lease and both [Ylou and Us may seek provisional remedies from court [sic].
Any claim or dispute whether in contract, tort, fraud, breach of warranty or otherwise (including the interpretation and scopе of this clause and the arbitrarility [sic] of any issue). Between You and Us or our employees, agents, successors or assigns, which arise out of or relate to this Agreement or any resulting transaction or relationship (including any such relationship with any third parties who do not sign this Agreement) shall at Your or Our election (or the election of any such third party). Be resolved by a neutral binding arbitration and not by a court action [sic].”
The day after purchasing the vehicle, Robert attempted to return it to Gateway, but Gateway employees refused to take the vehicle back. Pauline asserted that she also attempted to return the vehicle two days after signing the contract, but was told she could not do so. The Johnsons thereafter defaulted on their finance payments and the vehicle was repossessed. The assignee of the contract, plaintiff, General Motors Acceptance Corporation, filed a complaint against the Johnsons seeking damages for breach of contract. Pauline then obtained leave from the court to file a third-party complaint against Gateway. The third-party complaint alleged that Gateway failed to give Pauline notice of her right of rescission and refused to cancel the contract and accept return of the vehicle all in violation of section 2B of the Consumer Fraud Act. 815 ILCS 505/2B (West 2002).
On August 28, 2003, Gateway filed a motion to stay all trial court proceedings pending arbitration pursuant to the arbitration agreement. Pauline opposed the motion, contending that it would be fundamentally unfair to allow Gateway to benefit
ANALYSIS
Pauline appeals the trial court order granting the stay, primarily contending that a contract dispute alleging the invalidity of the contract itself cannot be subject to an arbitration clause which was part of the allegedly invalid contract. Therefore, the question of whether the contract was enforceable or “existed” must first be decided by a trial court and cannot be subject to arbitration. Pauline also very briefly asserts that the arbitration clause was invalid because it was obtained without consideration and that Gateway never actually initiated a request for arbitration. For the following reasons, we disagree and affirm the judgment of the circuit сourt.
Section 2B of the Consumer Fraud Act provides:
“§ 2B. Where a sale of merchandise involving $25 or more is made or contracted to be made whether under a single contract or under multiple contracts, to a consumer by a seller who is physically present at the consumer’s residence, that consumer may avoid the contract or transaction by notifying the seller within 3 full business days following that day on which the contract was signed or the sale was made and by returning to the person, in its original conditiоn, any merchandise delivered to the consumer under the contract or sale. At the time the transaction is made or the contract signed, the person shall furnish the consumer with a fully completed receipt or contract pertaining to the transaction, in substantially the same language as that principally used in the oral presentation to the consumer, containing a ‘Notice of Cancellation’ informing the consumer that he may cancel the transaction at any time within 3 days ***.
*** -pkg 3 day period provided for in this Section does not commence until the consumer is furnished a ‘Notice of Cancellation’, and the address at which such notice to the seller can be given. If those conditions are met, the seller must return to the consumer the full amount of any payment made or consideration given under the contract or for the merchandise.” 815 ILCS 505/2B (West 2002).
Section 10a of the Act further authorizes рrivate causes of action for deceptive business practices proscribed under the Act. 815 ILCS 505/ 10a (West 1992) (amendments to section 10a made under Public Act 87—1140 (Pub. Act 87—1140, eff. January 1, 1993) and Public Act 89—144 (Pub. Act 89—144, eff. January 1, 1996) were declared unconstitutional in Allen v. Woodfield Chevrolet, Inc.,
Pauline appears to specifically set forth two contentions regarding the Act. The first contention asserts that, because Pauline was never notified of her right to cancel the contract, that right is still available to her and her cancellation of the contract pursuant to that right would render the contract and accompanying arbitration agreement void. Her second contention is that Gateway violated section 2B of the Act by failing to give her notice of
In general support of both contentions, Pauline relies on Barter Exchange, Inc. of Chicago v. Barter Exchange, Inc.,
In Jensen, the plaintiff sought to rescind a franchise agreement with the defendant on the grounds that the agreement violated the Franchise Disclosure Act of 1987 (815 ILCS 705/5 (West 2002)) because the defendant franchisor was not registered with the Attorney General’s office at the time of sale. Jensen,
In its decision, the supreme court concluded that registration, i.е., compliance with the statute, was not, in fact, a condition precedent to an enforceable franchise agreement. The Franchise Disclosure Act provides that in the case of a violation of the statute, the available remedies are rescission and damages; the Act does not provide that agreements entered into in violation of the Act are invalid and unenforceable, i.e., that they are void or never existеd. Jensen,
Finally, the Jensen court also noted that Illinois public policy favors arbitration as a means of resolving disputes. Jensen,
Similarly, as discussed in Jensen with respect to the Franchise Disclosure Act, the legislature did not specify that a contract entered in violation of the Consumer Fraud Act is invalid, unenforceable or void. Instead, the statute provides that the contract may be avoided or cancelled by the consumer and damages may be sought, thus allowing the consumer to choose to retain the benefit of her bargain despite the existence of her right to cancel. This option to ignore a violation and nevertheless enforce a noncompliant contract negates the conclusion that the contract would be automatically unenforceable if it violated the Act. As stated in Jensen, such an option would not he available to the consumer were the contract void or unenforceable. See Jensen,
This conclusion is consistent with the fact that the statute itself allows for the service of collateral notice of the right to cancel, evеn where such notice has been omitted from the body of the contract. See 815 ILCS 505/2B (West 2002) (the three-day cancellation period does not commence until the consumer is furnished with notice of her right to cancel). This would indicate that the mandate under the statute for the inclusion of notice in the agreement is not designed as a condition precedent, in which event the contract would be rendered void by the mere failure to include it in its body.
Likewise, the three-day time limit provides further support for the conclusion that a contract entered into in violation of the Act without the notice provision will still remain in effect where the consumer does not exercise her right to cancel once notice is given. Again, we follow the conclusion in Jensen that placing such a time limit on a consumer’s right to rescind would be “absurd” were a consumer prevented from rescinding an agreement that violates the Act and is therefore “unenforceable.” See Jensen,
Moreover, contrary to Pauline’s apparent contention, the mere existence of the right to cancel under section 2B in and of itself does not indicate that the exercise of that right would render the contract void or unenforceable. Section 2B allows a consumer to “avoid” or “cancel” а contract within three days of its signing under certain circumstances. 815 ILCS 505/2B (West 2002). Where no notice of this right to “cancellation” has been provided, the three days does not begin to toll until such notice is given. 815 ILCS 505/2B (West 2002). There is no indication that the Act prevents a contract from taking effect until after passage of the three-day period or until after notification. The Act does not provide for the withholding of payment until the cancellation period hаs passed, nor does it affect taking possession of the merchandise. In fact, section 2B specifies that upon canceling the contract under the section, the consumer must return all merchandise delivered pursuant to the contract or sale. But see Parsky Funeral Home, Inc. v. Shapiro,
Pauline also briefly contends that she was given no consideration for the arbitration agreement and therefore it is void. We agree with Gateway that Pauline
Citing Vassilkovska v. Woodfield Nissan, Inc.,
In Vassilkovska, this court found an arbitration agreement to be invalid because it was based on the vendor’s “illusory promise to arbitrate.” Vassilkovska,
This was not the case here where both parties signed an arbitration agreement stating that either party could unilaterally elect to have any dispute arbitrated and that such an election would forfeit both parties’ right to a trial by judge or jury and would equally limit the discovery to which each party was entitled. As previously stated, the parties’ obligations need not he identical. Nevertheless, the only difference we can discern bеtween the parties’ obligations here is that in electing arbitration, Pauline would forfeit her right to join a class action lawsuit against Gateway. We find this difference insignificant and see no other indication that Gateway’s promise was illusory or without consideration as that evidenced by the agreement in Vassilkovska. Accordingly, even if we were to consider Pauline’s waived argument in this regard, we would find that proper consideration was given by way of the parties’ mutual commitment to the unilateral election of arbitration.
Finally, Pauline generally asserts, without any citation to case law or the identification of a specific legal violation, that Gateway never “presented to the Trial Court a request for arbitration or any other evidence that it had initiated proceedings with the American Arbitration Association.” Pauline has again waived this issue as she fails to provide any cohesive legal argument in this regard, nor does she provide any citation to case law. See 210 Ill. 2d R. 341(e)(7); see also People v. Barlow,
Accordingly, the judgment of the circuit court granting the motion to stay litigation pending arbitration is affirmed.
Affirmed.
CAHILL, EJ., and McBRIDE, J. concur.
