In this contract dispute, we decide whether our holding in
In re
Prudential— which held that a contractual waiver of a jury trial is enforceable — creates a presumption against waiver that places the burden on the party seeking enforcement to prove that the opposing party knowingly and voluntarily agreed to waive its constitutional right to a jury trial.
See In re Prudential Ins. Co. of Am.,
Bank of America and Mikey’s Houses executed a real estate contract and a two-page Bank of America Mortgage Addendum, which contains a jury-waiver provision. The addendum comprises twenty numbered and separately-spaced paragraphs, five of which contain bolded introductory phrases that appear to be hand-underlined. Both parties signed the contract and afterwards separately executed the addendum. One paragraph in the addendum states:
13. Waiver of Trial by Jury. Seller and buyer knowingly and conclusively waive all rights to trial by jury, in any action or proceeding relating to this Contract.
(emphasis in original). Mikey’s Houses then sued Bank of America over the execution of the real estate contract, claiming breach of contract, breach of warranty, misrepresentation, fraud, negligence, and violations of the Deceptive Trade Practices Act. When Mikey’s Houses made a jury demand, Bank of America moved to enforce the jury waiver. The trial court agreed that the waiver should be enforced and issued an enforcement order. Mikey’s Houses then filed an interlocutory appeal pursuant to section 51.014 of the Civil Practices and Remedies Code, seeking to reverse the trial court’s enforcement order. The court of appeals reversed, holding that Bank of America did not meet its burden of producing prima facie evidence that the representatives of Mikey’s Houses knowingly and voluntarily waived their constitutional right to a jury trial.
The court of appeals imposed this burden on Bank of America by inferring a presumption against contractual jury waiver from our holding in
Prudential,
where we cited to
Brady v. United States,
As a general matter, the court of appeals misinterprets our decision in
Prudential
as imposing a presumption against contractual jury waivers. In
Prudential,
we held that contractual jury waivers do not violate public policy and are enforceable.
First, a presumption against contractual jury waivers wholly ignores the burden-shifting rule articulated in
General Electric,
where we held that “a conspicuous provision is prima facie evidence of a knowing and voluntary waiver and shifts the burden to the opposing party to rebut it.”
Id.
We have always presumed that “a party who signs a contract knows its contents.”
In re Bank One, N.A.,
*345 In this case, the addendum is only two pages long, and each of the twenty provisions are set apart by one line and numbered individually. Five of the twenty provisions included bolded introductory captions similar to the waiver provision in Prudential, and the “Waiver of Trial By Jury” caption is one of the five. Furthermore, the introductory caption is hand-underlined, as is the word “waiver” and the words “trial by jury” within the provision. This bolded, underlined, and captioned waiver provision is no less conspicuous than those contractual waivers that we upheld in both Prudential and General Electnc, and therefore serves as prima facie evidence that the representatives of Mikey’s Houses knowingly and voluntarily waived their constitutional right to trial by jury.
“The general rule is that in the absence of a showing of fraud or imposition, a party’s failure to read an instrument before signing it is not a ground for avoiding it.”
Estes v. Republic Nat’l Bank of Dallas,
Here, representatives from Mikey’s Houses neither contended nor produced any evidence that there was any fraud or imposition connected with the execution of the waiver provision. In fact, the court of appeals recognizes:
[The Mikey’s Houses representative] agreed that she had an opportunity to review the addendum and could have
reviewed it line for line if she had chosen to. She stated that Bank of America did not rush her into signing it and agreed that she probably could have retained counsel to review it if she had wished.
As for the extent of the allegation that would be necessary to shift the burden to Bank of America to prove knowledge and voluntariness, an allegation could be sufficient to shift the burden if there is fraud alleged in the execution of the waiver provision itself.
See Prudential,
We also note the similarity between arbitration clauses and jury-waiver provisions to clarify that a presumption against contractual jury waivers is antithetical to
Prudential’s
jurisprudence with regard to private dispute resolution agreements. In
Prudential,
we agreed with the United States Supreme Court that “arbitration and forum-selection clauses should be enforced, even if they are part of an agreement alleged to have been fraudulently induced, as long as the specific clauses were' not themselves the product of fraud or coercion.”
We hold that
Prudential
does not impose a presumption against jury waivers that places the burden on Bank of America to prove that the waiver was executed knowingly and voluntarily. Therefore, we conditionally grant the petition for writ of mandamus and direct the court of appeals to vacate and withdraw the opinion and judgment of May 3, 2007, and to reinstate the trial court order enforcing the parties’ jury waiver. Tex.R.App. P. 52.8(c);
see also Prudential,
