Lead Opinion
At issue today is a question at the intersection of arbitration and class action jurisprudence, a question that has been expressly left open by the Supreme Court and which comes to this Circuit as a matter of first impression. The parties agree that their disputes will be settled in arbitration, but disagree as to whether that arbitration can proceed on a class basis. Further, they disagree about who -- a court or an arbitrator -- should decide whether the arbitration can proceed on a class basis. We must decide as a matter of first impression whether the availability of a class is a "question of arbitrability" that presumptively goes to a court. If we hold that it is -- and we do so today -- we must then decide whether the terms of the parties' agreement evince a clear and unmistakable intent to overcome that presumption.
Cynthia Kobel and Shalanda Houston sought to compel arbitration on a class basis with JPay, Inc., a Miami-based company that provides fee-for-service amenities in prisons in more than thirty states. JPay asked a district court to put a stop to the class proceeding and to force Kobel and Houston to arbitrate only their own claims. The district court granted summary judgment in JPay's favor, holding that the availability of class arbitration was a "question of arbitrability," which meant that it was presumptively for the court to decide; that nothing in the terms of this agreement rebutted that presumption; and finally that class arbitration was not available under the terms of the agreement. Thus, a court, not an arbitrator, would resolve, and the district court did resolve, whether the arbitration could proceed on a class basis.
After careful review, we are satisfied that the district court correctly determined that the availability of class arbitration is a "question of arbitrability," presumptively *927for the court to decide, because it is the kind of gateway question that determines the type of dispute that will be arbitrated. Courts cannot assume that parties would want these kinds of questions to be arbitrated unless an agreement evinces a clear and unmistakable intent to send them to arbitration. However, we also conclude that the language these parties used in their contract expressed their clear intent to overcome the default presumption and to arbitrate gateway questions of arbitrability, including the availability of class arbitration.
Accordingly, we vacate the grant of summary judgment to JPay, reverse the denial of Kobel and Houston's motion to compel arbitration, and remand for proceedings consistent with this opinion. See Parnell v. CashCall, Inc.,
I.
JPay's services allow friends and family of inmates around the country to purchase various goods and services on inmates' behalf. These include video chats, music downloads, and, most relevant here, money transfers to inmates' accounts. Cynthia Kobel and Shalanda Houston each used JPay services to send electronic money transfers to inmates. Like all JPay users, they agreed to JPay's Terms of Service, including to the following language, which requires that any dispute that might arise between the company and its users be resolved through arbitration:
In the event of any dispute, claim or controversy among the parties arising out of or relating to this Agreement that involves a claim by the User for less than $10,000, exclusive of interest, arbitration fees and costs, shall be resolved by and through arbitration administered by the American Arbitration Association ("AAA") under its Arbitration Rules for the Resolution of Consumer Related Disputes. Any other dispute, claim or controversy among the parties arising out of or relating to this Agreement shall be resolved by and through arbitration administered by the AAA under its Commercial Arbitration Rules. The ability to arbitrate the dispute, claim or controversy shall likewise be determined in the arbitration. The arbitration proceeding shall be conducted in as expedited a manner as is then permitted by the rules of the American Arbitration Association. Both the foregoing Agreement of the parties to arbitrate any and all such disputes, claims and controversies, and the results, determinations, findings, judgments and/or awards rendered through any such arbitration shall be final and binding on the parties and may be specifically enforced by legal proceedings in any court of competent jurisdiction.
(emphasis added).
On October 16, 2015, Kobel and Houston filed a Demand for Arbitration against JPay with the AAA. They alleged contractual violations and violation of a Florida consumer protection statute. They said that JPay charged "exorbitant transfer fees" for money-transfers, and used these fees to fund kickbacks to corrections departments. Further, they alleged that JPay dissuaded users from sending money through paper money orders -- a free alternative to JPay transfers -- by intentionally making the money order process slow and complicated and by deceptively marketing money orders as unreliable. Kobel and Houston sought to represent a class consisting of "[a]ll natural persons who paid a fee to JPay for electronic money-transfer *928services and who agreed to arbitrate their claims with [JPay]."
JPay responded by filing a complaint in Florida state court (the Eleventh Judicial Circuit in Miami-Dade County) seeking declaratory relief specifying the parties' rights and duties under the arbitration provision, seeking to stay class arbitration, and seeking to compel bilateral arbitration of the underlying claims. Kobel and Houston removed the case to federal court in the Southern District of Florida, invoking diversity jurisdiction under the Class Action Fairness Act of 2005, Pub. L. No. 109-2,
The district court denied the motion to compel arbitration, finding that the availability of class arbitration was a substantive "question of arbitrability," presumptively for the court to decide, and that the Terms of Service did not clearly and unmistakably evince an intent to overcome this presumption and to send the question to arbitration. Kobel and Houston appealed that determination to this Court, but we dismissed the interlocutory appeal for lack of jurisdiction. JPay, Inc. v. Kobel, No. 16-12917-EE (11th Cir. Jan. 23, 2017). The district court then granted JPay's motion for summary judgment. It determined that class arbitration was not available under the parties' agreement because the agreement was silent on the availability of class arbitration and the availability of class arbitration could not be implied from the agreement.
Kobel and Houston timely appealed to this Court.
II.
"We review de novo both the district court's denial of a motion to compel arbitration and the district court's interpretation of an arbitration clause." Jones v. Waffle House, Inc.,
Arbitration is a matter of contract and of consent. "[A]rbitrators derive their authority to resolve disputes only because the parties have agreed in advance to submit such grievances to arbitration." AT&T Techs., Inc. v. Commc'ns Workers of Am.,
When, despite our best interpretive efforts, a contract is ambiguous or silent on the parties' intent to arbitrate a particular question, we work from a set of default presumptions, laid out by the Supreme Court, which help us determine what the contracting parties intended. See, e.g., Howsam v. Dean Witter Reynolds, Inc.,
Notably, this presumption is reversed, however, when the contract presents ambiguity on the assignment of a "question of arbitrability" -- when it is unclear "whether a party has agreed that arbitrators should decide arbitrability."
*930AT&T Techs.,
To summarize, then, when faced with "silence or ambiguity about the question whether a particular merits-related dispute is arbitrable," we presume that an arbitrator will decide the merits-related dispute. First Options,
We start, then with our first question: whether the availability of class arbitration is a question of arbitrability, presumptively for the courts to decide. Because we answer the question affirmatively and hold that this question is presumptively for the courts and not the arbitrator, we must answer the second question in this case: whether the words the parties used in their agreement "clearly and unmistakably provide" that the parties intended to overcome the default presumption and delegate the question to arbitration. Howsam,
A.
A question of arbitrability is one of a narrow range of "potentially dispositive gateway question[s]," specifically one that "contracting parties would likely have expected a court to ... decide[ ]." Howsam
As we see it, questions of arbitrability are better understood as substantive questions, rather than as "procedural" issues "which grow out of the dispute and bear on its final disposition." Howsam,
We have no binding precedent on whether the availability of class arbitration is a fundamental question of arbitrability for the courts. Fifteen years ago, a Supreme Court plurality held that it was not a question of arbitrability for the courts to decide, in Green Tree Financial Corp. v. Bazzle,
The availability of class arbitration is a "potentially dispositive gateway question." Howsam,
Functionally, too, this is a gateway question. Many, if not most, putative class proceedings, are for relatively small-dollar claims. If claimants must act on an individual basis, the cost of arbitrating any single claim would certainly outweigh their expected recovery. No single bilateral arbitration would be rational. Only by joining together as a class do they make arbitration efficient. Essentially, the plaintiffs pool their resources, paying one filing fee, and paying one team of attorneys to argue on behalf of the whole class. Each plaintiff still stands to recover only a small dollar amount, but they won't have to spend as much to prosecute their claim. In many cases, they won't end up paying anything because the parties will reach a settlement whereby the defendant pays attorney's fees. This increases liability for defendants like JPay because many consumer plaintiffs who would never have dreamed of taking the time to pursue claims on their own will be perfectly happy to collect their share of the recovery earned in class proceedings conducted on their behalf but without their knowledge. Class proceedings will thus remove the economic barrier blocking the "gateway" to arbitration for many plaintiffs.
Identifying class availability as a potentially dispositive gateway question does not conclude our analysis, though, because "the phrase 'question of arbitrability' has a far more limited scope." Howsam,
The availability of class arbitration fits squarely in the second category because it relates to "whether an arbitration clause in a concededly binding contract applies to a particular type of controversy." Howsam,
The Supreme Court's analysis in Stolt-Nielsen, and Sutter supports our conclusion. Thus, for example, in Sutter, the Supreme Court observed that " Stolt-Nielsen flagged that [class availability] might be a question of arbitrability." Sutter,
Neither Stolt-Nielsen nor Concepcion considered whether class arbitration is the same "type" of controversy as bilateral arbitration, but, because the Court has been so clear that these distinctions are highly significant, we find these cases relevant to our consideration of that question. If class proceedings are available, the arbitration is fundamentally changed. Thus, we cannot read consent to arbitration and silence on the class availability question as necessarily implying consent to an arbitrator's deciding whether a very different "type" of proceeding is available. As a result, class availability is a question of arbitrability.
Our view is confirmed because the availability of class arbitration does not present a "procedural" question of the sort that is presumptively for the arbitrator to decide. See Howsam,
The availability of class arbitration is dissimilar from those questions that courts have identified as "procedural" in this context. In an older case, the Supreme Court was faced with the questions whether an arbitration clause between an employer and a union survived the employer's merger with another corporation, and whether a court or arbitrator should make determinations about prerequisites to arbitration. John Wiley & Sons, Inc. v. Livingston,
The availability of class arbitration is not the same kind of question. Whether class proceedings are available does not depend on how one views the "basic issue" -- the merits of the case -- but is a separate matter of contract interpretation. Here, a court could review JPay's Terms of Service for intent to arbitrate on a class basis without considering JPay's business practices in the least. Nor is class availability the kind of obviously "procedural" prerequisite that derives from the terms of the contract. See, e.g., Howsam,
Our conclusion that the availability of class arbitration is a fundamental question of arbitrability that should presumptively be decided by a court is consistent with the views of four circuits that have considered the same question since Stolt-Nielsen. The first such case was Reed Elsevier, Inc. v. Crockett,
Other circuits followed, beginning with the Third Circuit in Opalinski v.Robert Half International, Inc.,
We do the same today. We hold that the availability of class arbitration is a question of arbitrability, presumptively for a court to decide, because it is a gateway question that determines what type of proceeding will determine the parties' rights and obligations. The differences between class and bilateral arbitration are substantial, *936and have been repeatedly emphasized by the Supreme Court. In light of these differences, we think it likely that contracting parties would expect a court to decide whether they will arbitrate bilaterally or on a class basis. We leave the question of class availability presumptively with the court because we do not want to force parties to arbitrate so serious a question in the absence of a clear and unmistakable indication that they wanted to do so.
We note in passing that although we hold the question of class arbitration availability is properly categorized as a question of arbitrability, the question in this case would be headed for arbitration either way. This is so because we find that JPay and its users expressly delegated questions of arbitrability, and we therefore instruct the district court to compel arbitration on class availability. If, instead, we had held that class arbitration availability was a "procedural" question presumptively for the arbitrator, we would still instruct the district court to compel arbitration on class availability.
B.
Having concluded that the availability of class arbitration is a question of arbitrability, we presume that it is a question for courts to decide, and we turn to the language in the parties' agreement to determine whether anything in it clearly and unmistakably evinces a shared intent to overcome that presumption. The Supreme Court has made clear that "parties can agree to arbitrate 'gateway' questions of 'arbitrability' " because "arbitration is a matter of contract." Rent-A-Ctr., W., Inc. v. Jackson,
1.
We find a clear and unmistakable intent to delegate questions of arbitrability to the arbitrator throughout the arbitration provision in JPay's Terms of Service. First, it references AAA rules three times. It states that any and all disputes, claims, or controversies will be resolved "by and through arbitration administered by the [AAA]" either "under its Arbitration Rules for the Resolution of Consumer Related Disputes" or "under its Commercial Arbitration Rules," and later that "[t]he arbitration proceeding shall be conducted in as expedited a manner as is then permitted by the rules of the [AAA]." Under controlling Circuit precedent, this alone serves as a clear and unmistakable delegation of questions of arbitrability to an arbitrator, a conclusion confirmed by the agreement's subsequent reference to "the rules of the [AAA]" in general terms. Second, and quite independently, the parties expressly agreed that "[t]he ability to arbitrate the dispute, claim or controversy shall likewise be determined in the arbitration." Finally, the agreement is written in unmistakably broad terms, as the parties agreed "to arbitrate any and all such disputes, claims and controversies." (emphasis added). Either of the first two of these statements would amount to a clear and unmistakable delegation of questions of arbitrability to the arbitrator. Together, and with the addition of the third, their expression of intent *937is unequivocal. We address each in turn.
We begin with our case precedent -- Terminix International Co. v. PalmerRanch Ltd. Partnership,
More recently, in U.S. Nutraceuticals, we clarified the scope of Terminix's holding, and put it in the more familiar terms of questions of arbitrability. In U.S.Nutraceuticals, the parties' agreement did not reference any particular AAA rules, but contained an agreement to arbitrate "under the auspices and rules of the [AAA]." Id. at 1309-10. Unlike in Terminix, this language referenced and incorporated AAA rules in general, not any specific set of AAA rules.
By expressly incorporating two sets of AAA rules, JPay's Terms of Service clearly *938and unmistakably give the arbitrator power to rule on his own jurisdiction, thus delegating questions of arbitrability to the arbitrator. JPay's Terms of Service mention two sets of AAA rules, the Arbitration Rules for the Resolution of Consumer Related Disputes and the Commercial Arbitration Rules. Each uses the same language as the AAA rules that were incorporated in Terminix, providing that "[t]he arbitrator shall have the power to rule on his or her own jurisdiction, including any objections with respect to the existence, scope, or validity of the arbitration agreement." Am. Arbitration Ass'n, Consumer Arbitration Rules R-14(a) (2016), https://www.adr.org/sites/default/ files/Consumer%20Rules.pdf; Am. Arbitration Ass'n, Commercial Arbitration Rules and Mediation Procedures R-7(a) (2013), https://www.adr.org/sites/default/ files/CommercialRules_Web.pdf; see also Terminix,
Terminix does not require that a particular question of arbitrability be addressed in the incorporated AAA rules. JPay notes, accurately, that neither set of rules incorporated into their Terms of Service either mentions class arbitration or expressly incorporates the AAA Supplementary Rules on Class Arbitration, which do, of course, discuss class arbitration.
Spirit Airlines reinforces our decision. It addressed delegation of the precise question of arbitrability that concerns us today. In Spirit Airlines, as here, the parties disagreed as to whether class arbitration was available. See Spirit Airlines,
The long and short of it is that our case precedent compels that we read the JPay agreement as clearly and unmistakably evincing an intent to delegate questions of arbitrability.
Moreover, and altogether independent of incorporating the AAA rules, the language these parties employed in this agreement evinces the clearest possible intent to delegate questions of arbitrability to the arbitrator. The Terms of Service provide that "[t]he ability to arbitrate the dispute, claim or controversy shall likewise be determined in the arbitration" and later refer to "the foregoing Agreement of the parties to arbitrate any and all such disputes" (emphasis added). Even if we were to assume that the incorporation of AAA Rules failed, in some way, to delegate questions of arbitrability -- and our case law has plainly rejected that view -- we would still find that this language sufficed to do so. Unlike incorporating AAA Rules, which are separate documents that parties to the agreement might not have read, this delegation clause has an express meaning that would be obvious and comprehensible to any careful reader of the agreement. At the absolute least, its significance would have been obvious to the JPay attorneys who drafted the Terms of Service.
In fact, in the past, we have found that comparable language expressed a clear and unmistakable intent to delegate questions of arbitrability in general. E.g., Jones v. Waffle House, Inc.,
The Second Circuit reached the same conclusion in Wells Fargo v.Sappington,
We add that the breadth of the delegation achieved by the language found in this agreement is as extensive as possible. Even if, after reviewing the express delegation clause, we were somehow still not sure whether the agreement to delegate "[t]he ability to arbitrate the dispute, claim or controversy" truly expressed an intent to delegate any and all such disputes, claims, or controversies, our uncertainty would be settled by the concluding sentence of the agreement's arbitration provision, which references "the foregoing Agreement of the parties to arbitrate any and all such disputes, claims and controversies." This phrase cannot refer to anything but the disputes previously mentioned in the arbitration clause, including disputes about arbitrability. The language cries out with express intent and emphasizes that a broad reading of the foregoing express delegation clause is warranted and is, in fact, what the parties intended when they contracted. In the past we have held that the delegation of "any" gateway questions entails the delegation of "all" such questions, Waffle House,
2.
Throughout its argument, JPay points to and relies on three cases drawn from outside our Circuit: Reed Elsevier, Inc. v. Crockett,
*941Catamaran,
In the second place, those cases are factually different in at least one critical way. The parties to those agreements used different language from the words JPay used. Notably, none of those cases included an express delegation of questions of arbitrability. The Third, Sixth, and Eighth Circuits were reviewing contracts that accomplished delegation only by incorporation of the AAA rules. Catamaran,
Finally, as we see it, each of these cases conflates the "who decides" question with the "clause construction" question of class availability by analyzing the former question with reasoning developed in the context of the latter. The questions are conceptually related, but require a distinct analysis. By default, a court presumptively decides whether the parties consented to class arbitration. As we have explained, at this stage, in considering whether JPay, specifically rebutted the application of the default rule, we are asking who decides in this instance. We are not investigating whether JPay consented to class arbitration. That is for the arbitrator to decide. In Stolt-Nielsen and Concepcion the Court made only merits determinations of whether class arbitration was available. These cases raised important concerns about why we should not force parties to class arbitration without a contractual basis to do so, but considering these concerns at the higher-order "who decides" stage conflates that stage with the merits.
*942The concerns raised in Stolt-Nielsen do not apply, as a doctrinal matter, to the "who decides" question of contractual intent to delegate. We alluded to this confusion in Spirit Airlines . Spirit Airlines,
The content of the concerns raised in Stolt-Nielsen reaffirms our view. Textual analysis of the agreement to determine the parties' intent does not implicate the fact that class arbitration is less efficient, less confidential, and higher-stakes. See Stolt-Nielsen,
Against our conclusion that the class availability question must go to an arbitrator, JPay argues that the particular question of class availability ought to be treated differently from questions of arbitrability in general -- that "consent to arbitrate class arbitrability cannot be presumed 'by simply agreeing to submit' disputes over 'arbitrability' to an arbitrator." (quoting Stolt-Nielsen,
For starters, JPay's preferred rule is foreclosed by Spirit Airlines, which rejected just this argument, and by Terminix, which gave no indication that questions of arbitrability are treated as anything but a unitary category. In SpiritAirlines, the defendant argued "that we should demand a higher showing for questions of class arbitrability than for other questions of arbitrability," but we rejected this, "find[ing] no basis for that higher burden *943in Supreme Court precedent." Spirit Airlines,
Moreover, a consistent body of case law has spoken of questions of arbitrability as a unitary category. There is no reason to consider whether any particular question of arbitrability is specifically delegated because the questions are typically delegated or preserved as a group. The Supreme Court has looked for delegation of arbitrability in general, rather than for an intent to delegate precise questions of arbitrability. E.g., Rent-A-Ctr., W., Inc. v. Jackson,
Indeed, if we were to follow the logic of JPay's argument -- and our case precedent forbids us from travelling down that road -- and require something more than a general delegation of questions of arbitrability in order to delegate the question of class availability, contract-drafting would be made needlessly, if not impossibly, complex. If questions of arbitrability are not delegated as a group by default, we would need to distinguish which questions of arbitrability require special additional indicia of delegation, and which, if any, would be delegated through language delegating questions of arbitrability only in general. JPay might respond that class availability raises unique concerns, but we anticipate that other important considerations could be raised about any number of fundamental gateway questions of arbitrability. We agree that these are important questions, but their importance is accounted for by the default rule that they presumptively stay in the courts in the absence of a clear and unmistakable delegation. If, after finding a general delegation of questions of arbitrability, we were to require additional specific indicia of the delegation of particular questions of arbitrability, contracting parties hoping to delegate as much as possible would be burdened with explicitly listing and delegating as many questions of arbitrability as they could think of. Even then, if an unforeseen question of arbitrability later arose, parties who had hoped to arbitrate all questions of arbitrability might be forced into court against their *944will if a court, perhaps applying the canon of expressio unius est exclusio alterius , reasoned that the explicit delegation of other questions implied that this new question was reserved for the court. We avoid any complications and unpleasant results by treating questions of arbitrability as a group unless an agreement gives us a reason to do otherwise. Finally, we reiterate that our aim in this analysis is only to give meaning to the parties' expressed will by applying the words they used, and remind future parties that they are free to draft using language as specifically or generally as they want.
III.
To return to basics as we conclude, arbitration is a matter of contract and of consent. See Am. Express Co. v. Italian Colors Rest.,
The district court lacked the power to decide whether or not the parties would arbitrate on a class basis. Although JPay says otherwise today, it agreed when drafting its Terms of Service that an arbitrator would decide this question. The district court should have sent the dispute to arbitration and should not have passed on whether or not class proceedings were available. We, therefore, VACATE the district court's order granting JPay's Cross Motion for Summary Judgment, REVERSE the order denying Kobel and Houston's Motion to Compel Arbitration, and REMAND with instructions that the Demand be referred to arbitration.
VACATED in part, REVERSED in part, and REMANDED
In relevant part, and subject to certain exceptions,
Because we are confident that the availability of class arbitration falls in the second category identified in Howsam, we need not decide the more difficult question whether it falls in this first one. The Third Circuit has said that class availability does relate to "whether the parties are bound by a given arbitration clause" because the inclusion or exclusion of absent class members concerns "whose claims an arbitrator may decide." Opalinski v. Robert Half Int'l, Inc.,
The AAA maintains over fifty different sets of rules that it designates as "active," and which might be employed in a given arbitration proceeding. See Active Rules, Am. Arbitration Ass'n (2018), https://www.adr.org/active-rules.
The supplementary rules, for their part, purport to reverse-incorporate themselves into all other AAA rules by stating that they "shall apply to any dispute arising out of an agreement that provides for arbitration pursuant to any of the rules of the [AAA]." Am. Arbitration Ass'n, Supplementary Rules for Class Arbitrations at 1(a) (2010), https://www.adr.org/sites/default/ files/Supplementary%20Rules%20for%20Class%20Arbitrations.pdf. JPay suggests we follow those courts that have refused to credit the "daisy-chain of cross-references" required for the supplemental rules to apply when a contract mentions only a set of AAA rules that neither refer to class proceedings nor incorporate the supplementary rules. E.g., Chesapeake Appalachia,LLC v. Scout Petrol., LLC,
The Eighth Circuit did have a Terminix-equivalent precedent but read it as applying only to bilateral arbitration. See Catamaran,
Concurrence in Part
I agree wholeheartedly with the majority holding that the availability of class arbitration is a question of arbitrability, presumptively for a court to decide, and that courts cannot assume that parties would want these kinds of questions to be arbitrated unless an agreement evinces a clear and unmistakable intent to send them to arbitration. I also agree with the majority's finding that the arbitration agreement in this case expressly and by incorporation of specific rules of the American Arbitration Association (the "AAA") delegated issues of arbitrability to the arbitrator. But I disagree with the majority's conclusion that the language these parties used in their contract expressed a clear intent to permit the arbitrator to decide the question of the availability of class arbitration.
I believe that a general delegation to arbitrate issues of arbitrability is not enough and that without a specific reference to class arbitration the court should presume that the parties did not intend to delegate to an arbitrator an issue of such great consequence.
The arbitration agreement in this case makes no express reference to class arbitration or any other procedure for combining or consolidating multiple claims. It does contain a general delegation of the power to decide matters of arbitrability: "The ability to arbitrate the dispute, claim or controversy shall likewise be determined *945in the arbitration." And it refers to two specific rules of the AAA-the Arbitration Rules for the Resolution of Consumer Related Disputes and the Commercial Arbitration Rules-each of which includes a general delegation of the power to decide issues of arbitrability: "The arbitrator shall have the power to rule on his or her own jurisdiction, including any objections with respect to the existence, scope, or validity of the arbitration agreement or to the arbitrability of any claim or counterclaim."
Neither the express delegation clause nor the AAA rules make any reference to class arbitration. In the absence of a reference to class claims it should be presumed that the delegation of the power to determine arbitrability is limited to the arbitrability of bilateral claims and controversies arising out of the contractual relationship between the parties.
In Terminix , this Court construed an arbitration agreement that said, "the arbitration shall be conducted in accordance with the Commercial Arbitration Rules then in force of the [AAA]." Terminix Int'l Co., LP v. Palmer Ranch Ltd. P'ship ,
A similar case from this Court likewise involved a dispute between two parties to an arbitration agreement, which provided that almost any dispute that arose between them under their commercial agreement would be arbitrated "under the rules of the [AAA]." U.S. Nutraceuticals, LLC v. Cyanotech Corp. ,
In Spirit Airlines , this Court addressed for the first time the issue of the authority of an arbitrator to decide whether an arbitration agreement permitted class arbitration, finding that the arbitration agreement in that case did confer such authority upon the arbitrator. Spirit Airlines, Inc. v. Maizes ,
In contrast, the arbitration agreement in this case refers to two very specific rules of the AAA that will govern the parties' disputes: the "Arbitration Rules for the Resolution of Consumer Related Disputes" and "Commercial Arbitration Rules." Significantly, absent in either of these two sets of rules is any reference to the Supplementary Rules for Class Arbitrations. There is one general reference to the rules of the AAA in JPay's arbitration agreement, but its context is quite unlike the all-inclusive language in Spirit Airlines .
*946JPay's arbitration agreement says, "The arbitration proceedings shall be conducted in as expedited a manner as is then permitted by the rules of the [AAA]." Any suggestion that this general reference was intended to adopt by reference the Supplemental Rules for Class Arbitration would be absurd-class arbitration could hardly be considered expeditious. The lack of a general reference to the rules of the AAA that could be reasonably construed to reference class arbitration makes JPay's arbitration agreement factually distinguishable from the agreement in Spirit Airlines .
I conclude that none of the Eleventh Circuit cases cited by the majority are controlling here. In Spirit Airlines the Court relied on a specific reference to class arbitration in the AAA Supplemental Rules for Class Arbitrations. Without such specificity, a court should presume that a general delegation of the power to decide questions of arbitrability does not include the power to construe an arbitration agreement to permit class arbitration.
My conclusions are driven by the immense differences between adjudication of bilateral disputes and the conduct of class action proceedings. Other courts, including the Supreme Court of the United States, have enumerated some of these significant differences, including the duration, complexity, inefficiency, and expense of class proceedings, vastly increased potential liability, lack of confidentiality, and limited scope of judicial review.
The majority relies heavily on these considerations in deciding that the availability of class arbitration is a question of arbitrability for a court to decide. But it refuses to consider them when deciding whether the parties in this case intended to let the arbitrator decide if their agreement permits him or her make that call. That is puzzling because that inquiry is an inquiry into the parties' intent and ordinarily a court considers consequences in determining what the parties intended. I believe the court should consider the consequences in deciding whether the parties' general delegation of the authority to decide arbitrability was intended to include the important issue of the arbitrability of class claims. The consequences of transforming a bilateral arbitration into a fundamentally different type of proceeding supports the proposition that the arbitrator's power to do so should not be inferred from a general delegation to decide issues of arbitrability. The principles of Howsam should likewise apply here. See Howsam v. Dean Witter Reynolds, Inc. ,
*947I find some support for my views in several other circuit court decisions. See, e.g. , Catamaran Corp. v. Towncrest Pharmacy ,
I would also note that in Oxford Health the arbitration agreement incorporated the rules of the AAA, and nevertheless at least two of the Justices felt that was not sufficient to authorize the arbitrator to decide whether to conduct class arbitration. See Oxford Health Plans LLC v. Sutter ,
I would affirm the district court's decision that the arbitration agreement in this case does not permit the arbitrator to decide whether the agreement permits class arbitration.
Another factor a court might want to consider in deciding whether the parties intended to let the arbitrator make the call is the stake the arbitrator has in the outcome. Arbitration is no longer a cottage industry; it is big business. Deborah Rothman, Trends in Arbitrator Compensation , Dispute Resolution Magazine, Spring 2017, at 8 (noting rates for arbitrators may exceed $1,000 an hour), available at https://www.americanbar.org/content/dam/aba/publications/dispute_resolution_magazine/spring2017/3_rothman_trends_in_arbitrator.authcheckdam.pdf. Arbitrators charge substantial fees and vigorously compete for business. Transforming a simple bilateral dispute into a class action, which may require months or years of full-time work, might tax an arbitrator's impartiality.
The majority also holds that the significance of the delegation clause, "[a]t the absolute least ... would have been obvious to the JPay attorneys who drafted the Terms of Service." Ante at 939. I disagree. The implication here is that the majority would hold ambiguity against the drafters. It's true that many states have adopted the rule of construing ambiguous terms in a contract against the drafter. But our context demands "clear and unmistakable" language, Howsam ,
