Plaintiffs-Appellees Timothy Pratt and William Burrell are two of the named plaintiffs in this putative class action lawsuit against Defendants-Appellants Cellular Sales of New York, LLC (“Cellular Sales”) and its parent company Cellular Sales of Knoxville, Inc. (“Cellular Sales of Knoxville”). In their suit brought under state and federal labor laws, Plaintiffs allege that, during 2010 and 2011, they were unlawfully denied various forms of com
For the reasons stated below, the judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
BACKGROUND
Cellular Sales is in the business of selling Verizon Wireless cellular service plans and merchandise. Plaintiffs-Appellees Timothy Pratt and William Burrell both began their relationship with Cellular Sales in 2010. At that time, Cellular Sales required Plaintiffs to form a corporate entity (such as a limited liability company) and sign a “Non-Exclusive Independent Sales Agreement” (“Sales Agreement”) in order to be sales representatives. Joint App. 231, 241.
The Sales Agreements went on to state that Cellular Sales would not withhold taxes on the commissions Plaintiffs earned and that Plaintiffs were not entitled to “any compensation, benefits, vacation or vacation pay, sick leave, participation in a retirement program, health insurance, disability insurance, unemployment benefits or other benefits from [Cellular Sales].” Joint App. 234. Each Sales Agreement included a dispute resolution mechanism that required the parties to submit “a dispute aris[ing] under th[e] Agreement ... to mediation.” Joint App. 235. Should mediation fail to resolve the dispute, the parties retained “the right to pursue any appropriate legal actions against the other Party in a court of competent jurisdiction.” Joint App. 235-36.
In 2011, Cellular Sales offered Plaintiffs-Appellees full-time employment. On or about January 1, 2012, both Pratt and Burrell signed Compensation Agreements with Cellular Sales that, in contrast with the prior Sales Agreements, contained an arbitration clause. This provision states, in relevant part: “All claims, disputes, or controversies arising out of, or in relation to this document or Employee’s employment with [Cellular Sales] shall be decided by arbitration.... ” Joint App. 219. The first paragraph of the Compensation Agreement provides for an at-will employ
Plaintiffs-Appellees have temporally confined their claims to events that transpired prior to January 1, 2012. They allege that before the execution of the Compensation Agreements, Cellular Sales misclassified them as independent contractors when they were actually employees (within the meaning of various labor laws) because Cellular Sales controlled their work performance. As a result, Plaintiffs-Appellees were allegedly deprived of, among other things, overtime compensation and minimum wage. Plaintiffs-Appel-lees seek compensation owed under the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938 (“FLSA”), 29 U.S.C. § 201 et seq., New York common law, and various provisions of New York’s Labor Law, N.Y. Lab. Law §§ 190 et seq., 650 et seq. McKinney).
DISCUSSION
Defendants-Appellants Cellular Sales and Cellular Sales of Knoxville, Inc. argue that the denial of their motion to compel arbitration “conflicts with longstanding federal precedent under which all doubts as to the intent of the parties and the scope of an arbitration clause must be resolved generously in favor of arbitration.”
“In deciding whether a dispute is arbitrable, we must answer two questions: (1) whether the parties agreed to arbitrate, and, if so, (2) whether the scope of that agreement encompasses the claims at issue.” Bank Julius Baer & Co. v. Waxfield Ltd.,
When considering whether claims fall within the scope of an arbitration clause, therefore, we analyze the factual allegations made in the plaintiffs complaint. Smith/Enron,
Based on the contract’s plain language, the Newbanks court determined that “th[e] arbitration requirement only applies to causes of action accruing from the execution of the [Compensation [a]greements and onward.” Id. at 855. The Fourth Circuit grounded its analysis in the compensation agreements’ first paragraph, which “informed the signer that he or she had become an at-will employee of Cellular Sales.” Id. The court went on to support its conclusion by noting that the plaintiffs had limited their claims to the time period prior to when they signed the compensation agreements and that, during that period, the plaintiffs “did not have any formal or contractual relationship with Cellular Sales at all.” Id. Although acknowledging that the compensation agreements did not reference the prior sales agreement, the eourt nevertheless deemed the sales agreement the “only relevant document” that existed during the time period to which the plaintiffs had confined their claims. Id.
Unlike the Fourth Circuit, we are not persuaded that this case begins and ends with the plain language of the Compensation Agreements. The first paragraph of the Compensation Agreement states in full:
Cellular Sales (“Company”) is in the business of retail sales of Verizon Wireless services and related equipment and accessories (“Products”). Company has employed you (“Employee”) to sell the Products. Employee’s employment with Company is, and shall remain at all times, “at-will,” and Company may terminate Employee’s employment at any time for any reason or for no reason, and Employee may terminate employment at any time for any reason or for no reason.
Joint App. 218 (emphases omitted). Neither this paragraph nor any other provision of the contract states that the employer-employee relationship commenced with the execution of the Compensation Agreement or otherwise uses language stating that the employment relationship replaced a prior contractual arrangement. The use of the phrase “has employed you” does not indicate specifically when the employment relationship commenced. Although contractual language referring to the payment of commissions “beginning on the third month after commencement of employment” and an example concerning January sales commissions might suggest an understanding that the contractual employment relationship began in January 2012, Joint App. 219, they are not determinative of the start date for Plaintiffs-Appéllees’ employment. Instead, it is only through parol evidence that we know that the employer-
Defendants-Appellants contend that the arbitration clause here is susceptible of an interpretation that covers the dispute at issue here because Pratt and Burrell allege that they were Cellular Sales employees prior to signing the Compensation Agreements.
Defendants-Appellants are correct that this Court has held that broad arbitration provisions that contain no express temporal limitation can apply to claims that arose prior to the execution of the arbitration agreement. For example, in Coenen v. R.W. Pressprich & Co.,
Based on the parties’ conduct prior to executing the Compensation Agreements, the presumption of arbitrability is overcome because we find positive assurance that the arbitration clause’s scope — at least insofar as it concerns the promise to arbitrate matters arising out of, or in relation to Employee’s employment — is temporally limited. We reach this conclusion, in large part, based on the fact that when the Compensation Agreements were signed, the parties’ contractual positions changed in a way that impacted arbitrability. In the Sales Agreements, Defendants-Appellants agreed with the Sales Companies that Pratt and Burrell were not employees of Cellular Sales. However, about a year and a half later, Defendants-Appellants agreed to employ Pratt and Burrell.
Our conclusion is confirmed by our examination of the allegations in the complaint. To assess whether these allegations touch matters covered by the arbitration agreement, Defendants-Appellants would have us look at the complaint’s allegation that Pratt and Burrell were in fact Defendants-Appellants’ statutory employees prior to executing the Compensation Agreements. ' That argument, although superficially appealing, is wrong. The complaint’s factual allegations include the manner in which Pratt and Burrell worked for Defendants-Appellants and how Defendants-Appellants exercised control over that work. These factual allegations do not touch matters covered by the arbitration clause because they do not evince the parties’ intent to enter into an employment relationship. Instead, the more salient factual allegation for assessing the arbitration agreement’s scope is how Defendants-Appellants labeled Pratt and Burrell as non-employees.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The facts are drawn from the district court’s memorandum, supplemented as necessary by the record. The facts provided relate only to Pratt and Burrell because Defendants Cellular Sales and its parent company have appealed the district court’s denial of the motion to compel arbitration only as to those Plaintiffs.
. For convenience, we cite to the contracts Burrell signed. The contracts Pratt signed contain contractual provisions that are identical to the provisions cited in this opinion. See Joint App. 225-28 (Sales Agreement); Joint App. 211 — 17 (Compensation Agreement).
. This Court reviews de novo the district court's decision to deny a motion to compel arbitration. Motorola Credit Corp. v. Uzan,
. We have jurisdiction over this interlocutory appeal pursuant to 9 U.S.C. § 16(a)(1)(C).
.We do not analyze the portion of the arbitration agreement that references “disputes ... arising out of, or in relation to this document,” Joint App. 219, because Defendants-Appellants have not argued that Plaintiffs-Appellees’ claims arose out of the Compensation Agreements.
. Plaintiffs-Appellees contend that a recent Second Circuit decision, Lloyd v. J.P. Morgan Chase & Co., 791 F.3d 265, 269-70 (2d Cir.2015), undermines prior cases in which this Court has required positive assurance to rebut the presumption of arbitrability. The Lloyd Court labeled the presumption of arbi-trability "soft,” and, in Plaintiffs-Appellees' view, discarded the requirement for positive assurance to rebut the presumption of arbitra-bility. Id. at 270. We find Plaintiffs-Appel-lees' argument unpersuasive for two reasons. First, since "one panel of this Court [typically] cannot overrule a prior decision of another panel,” Gelman v. Ashcroft,
. The Federal Arbitration Act provides: "A written provision in any ... contract evidencing a transaction involving commerce to settle by arbitration a controversy thereafter arising out of such contract or transaction, or the refusal to perform the whole or any part thereof, or an agreement in writing to submit to arbitration an existing controversy arising out of such a contract, transaction, or refusal, 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. § 2.
."When deciding whether the parties agreed to arbitrate a certain matter ..., courts generally ... apply ordinary state-law principles that govern the formation of contracts.” First Options of Chicago, Inc. v. Kaplan,
.Defendants-Appellants also submit that, Pratt and Burrell have not proffered forceful, evidence that supports a finding of non-arbi-trability. Their argument is rooted in a line of Supreme Court cases that relate to arbitration clauses in collective bargaining agree- - ments. See United Steel Workers Local 4—5025 v. E.I. DuPont de Nemours & Co.,
. In the alternative, Plaintiffs-Appellees submit that we can affirm based on the alleged unconscionability of certain aspects of the arbitration agreement. Our resolution of the arbitrability issue in Plaintiffs-Appellees’ favor makes it unnecessary for us to evaluate the merits of their unconscionability arguments in the first instance.
. Defendants-Appellants also cite Artigo v. Blue Fish Commodities,
. As late as December 28, 2011, an office manager at Cellular Sales explained how to fill out the employment application correctly, clarifying that recipients of her e-mail were not employees: "Everyone please make sure you answer the Y/N questions correctly on the Employment Application. You are not currently an employee of Cellular Sales — you are CONTRACTED with Cellular Sales; you are an employee of your own company (LLC or Corp).” Joint App. 257 (emphasis added).
