Opinion
Defendant Check ’N Go of California, Inc., appeals from an order denying its motion to compel arbitration of a wage and hour case filed by plaintiff Lisa Murphy. The main issues are whether the class action waiver in the arbitration agreement is unconscionable, a question we review with the benefit of the recent decision in
Gentry v. Superior Court
(2007)
I. BACKGROUND
Plaintiff worked for defendant, a payday lending company, for eight years ending in 2005; for the last seven of those eight years she held the position of “salaried retail manager.” She sued defendant in February 2006, alleging that defendant misclassified its salaried retail managers as exempt employees under state labor laws. The suit asserts causes of action on behalf of the class of salaried retail managers for violation of Business and Professions Code section 17200 et seq., and failure to pay or provide overtime compensation, *142 accurate itemized wage statements, adequate meal and rest periods, and wages upon termination, during the four years prior to the filing of the complaint.
Plaintiff signed defendant’s “Dispute Resolution Agreement” (the agreement) in June 2004. In her declaration in opposition to the motion to compel arbitration, plaintiff states that the agreement came to her office “as part of our regular mailings from the company. All employees had to sign the agreement and return the signature pages to the corporate offices.” She states that no one explained the agreement to her, or told her that she had the option to revise or opt out of the agreement. “I understood,” she says, “that I had to sign the[] agreement[] as part of my job working for the company.”
The agreement covers all claims arising from or relating to plaintiff’s employment, other than claims she would file with governmental agencies that enforce employment insurance or discrimination laws. Covered claims include “any assertion by you or us that this Agreement is substantively or procedurally unconscionable,” and “any preexisting or present claim that you or we actually assert or could assert against each other.” The agreement provides four exclusive means, which need not be used in any particular order, for resolution of disputes: an “open door policy”; an “employee relations committee”; mediation; and arbitration.
The arbitration option, described in section 3.5 et seq. of the agreement, is mandatory if elected by either party. “Consequently,” explains section 3.5.1 in bold print, “if the claimant or the person or entity against whom a Covered Claim is asserted elects to arbitrate the claim, then neither you nor we may file or maintain a lawsuit in a court and neither you nor we may join or participate in a class action or a representative action, act as a private attorney general or a representative of others, or otherwise consolidate the Covered Claim with the claims of others.” Section 3.5.2 provides for arbitration by the American Arbitration Association unless the employee elects to use a similar national arbitration firm, and states in bold print that “you and we agree that an arbitration firm may not arbitrate a Covered Claim as a class action or a representative action and may not otherwise consolidate the Covered Claim with the claims of others.” Section 3.5.4 states that the agreement is governed by the Federal Arbitration Act. Section 3.5.5 provides for severance of any part of the agreement found to be unenforceable, and for enforcement of the other provisions that are not invalidated.
Certain aspects of the agreement are set forth on a cover page in bold print under the heading “Notice,” including the broad coverage of employment-related disputes, the provision for mandatory arbitration, and the class action waiver. The first two sentences of the notice state: “Before signing this *143 Dispute Resolution Agreement, you should carefully review the entire agreement and, if you want, consult with an independent attorney. By signing this agreement and by commencing or continuing an at-will employment relationship, you and we agree to exclusively use this dispute resolution program to resolve all employment-related disputes covered by the program.”
In support of the motion to compel arbitration, defendant submitted the declaration of a corporate officer stating that defendant is an Ohio corporation licensed to do business in California, and attaching a copy of defendant’s 2004 Dispute Resolution Agreement with the signature page plaintiff executed.
Plaintiff opposed the motion on unconscionability grounds. In addition to her declaration, plaintiff lodged declarations of her counsel and two other attorneys experienced in wage and hour cases attesting to the difficulty of prosecuting such cases individually, rather than as class actions. The attorneys stated that, given the relatively small sums of money involved in individual cases, it is difficult for plaintiffs to find counsel willing to take them, despite the availability of statutory attorneys’ fees. The attorneys further opined that class actions were the only effective way to redress wage and hour violations. They each stated: “The blunt reality is that employers want to limit class actions because they do not want to reform business practices that reduce profits—regardless of the legality of the practices. . . . [I]f the employer can limit attacks on its global classification decision to the odd lawsuit or arbitration here and there, it will have no incentive to tmly examine whether its practices comply with the law and make changes if they do not. As a matter of simple economics, a few individual settlements or even lost trials or arbitrations will be more than made up exponentially by the savings from the decision to (mis)classify employees as exempt and pay them a fixed salary for 45, 50, 55 and or more hours per week. The employees who have no idea their rights are being violated or who can’t find attorneys to take on their relatively small individual cases will continue to be exploited by working unpaid overtime hours . . . .”
In its order denying the motion to compel arbitration, the court determined that (1) it had the power to rule on the unconscionability issues; (2) the parties’ agreement, defined in the order as the “2004 arbitration agreement,” was a contract of adhesion; (3) the agreement’s class action waiver was substantively unconscionable under
Discover Bank
v.
Superior Court
(2005)
*144 II. DISCUSSION
A. Scope of Review
Unconscionability findings are reviewed de novo if they are based on declarations that raise “no meaningful factual disputes.”
(Higgins
v.
Superior Court
(2006)
B. Court’s Jurisdiction
Defendant maintains that an arbitrator appointed under the parties’ agreement, rather than the court, should have decided the unconscionability issues that plaintiff raises. “[T]he question of arbitrability is for judicial determination ‘[u]nless the parties clearly and unmistakably provide otherwise.’ ”
(Dream Theater, Inc. v. Dream Theater
(2004)
While the language of the agreement could not be clearer, plaintiff’s alleged assent to this provision was vitiated by the fact that it was set forth in a contract of adhesion, i.e., a standardized contract drafted by the stronger party and presented to the weaker party on a take-it-or-leave-it basis
(24 Hour Fitness, Inc.
v.
Superior Court
(1998)
“Generally speaking, there are two judicially imposed limitations on the enforcement of adhesion contracts or provisions thereof. The first is that such a contract or provision which does not fall within the reasonable expectations of the weaker or ‘adhering’ party will not be enforced against him. [Citations.] The second—a principle of equity applicable to all contracts generally—is that a contract or provision, even if consistent with the reasonable expectations of the parties, will be denied enforcement if, considered in its context, it is unduly oppressive or ‘unconscionable. ’ ”
(Graham v. Scissor-Tail, Inc.
(1981)
Both limitations on enforceability are present here. As
First Options, supra,
We therefore agree with the court below that, in this contract of adhesion, the provision for arbitrator determinations of unconscionability is unenforceable. Under the circumstances of this case, the judge is the proper gatekeeper to determine unconscionability.
Defendant cites
Dream Theater, supra,
Defendant argues for the first time on appeal that an arbitrator must determine the unconscionability issues because those arguments are directed against the agreement as a whole, not just the arbitration provisions. “Under the [Federal Arbitration Act], a court may not consider a claim that an arbitration provision is unenforceable if it is a subterfuge for a challenge that the entire agreement (in which the arbitration clause is only a part) is unconscionable. That contention must be presented to the arbitrator.”
(Higgins, supra,
Even if this argument were not waived by the failure to raise it below, we would conclude that it lacks merit. Plaintiff’s claim of procedural unconscionability applies to the entire agreement, and not just the arbitration provisions, because the contract as a whole is one of adhesion. However, the claims of substantive unconscionability are all directed at the arbitration provisions. Plaintiff maintains that the agreement is substantively unconscionable insofar as it requires (1) arbitrator determinations of unconscionability, (2) arbitration of individual cases in lieu of class action suits, and (3) arbitration of preexisting disputes. Plaintiff has not objected to the agreement’s “open door policy,” “employee relations committee,” and mediation provisions, and cannot be deemed to be challenging the agreement as a whole. Moreover, the court’s rulings were limited, by the terms of its order, to the “2004 arbitration agreement.” (Italics added.)
Accordingly, the trial court properly concluded that it had the power to determine the unconscionability issues plaintiff raises.
*147 C. Class Action Waiver
The trial court applied
Discover Bank, supra,
“[Although adhesive contracts are generally enforced [citation], class action waivers found in such contracts may also be substantively unconscionable inasmuch as they may operate effectively as exculpatory contract clauses that are contrary to public policy. As stated in Civil Code section 1668: ‘All contracts which have for their object, directly or indirectly, to exempt anyone from responsibility for his own fraud, or willful injury to the person or property of another, or violation of law, whether willful or negligent, are against the policy of the law.’ (Italics added.)
“Class action and arbitration waivers are not, in the abstract, exculpatory clauses. But because . . . damages in consumer cases are often small and because ‘ “[a] company which wrongfully exacts a dollar from each of millions of customers will reap a handsome profit” ’ [citation], ‘ “the class action is often the only effective way to halt and redress such exploitation.” ’ [Citation.] Moreover, such class action or arbitration waivers are indisputably one-sided. ‘Although styled as a mutual prohibition on representative or class actions, it is difficult to envision the circumstances under which the provision might negatively impact Discover [Bank], because credit card companies typically do not sue their customers in class action lawsuits.’ [Citation.] Such one-sided, exculpatory contracts in a contract of adhesion, at least to the extent they operate to insulate a party from liability that otherwise would be imposed under California law, are generally unconscionable.” (Discover Bank, supra, 36 Cal.4th at pp. 160-161.)
The court “[did] not hold that all class action waivers are necessarily unconscionable. But when the waiver is found in a consumer contract of adhesion in a setting in which disputes between the contracting parties predictably involve small amounts of damages, and when it is alleged that the party with the superior bargaining power has carried out a scheme to deliberately cheat large numbers of consumers out of individually small sums of money, then, at least to the extent the obligation at issue is governed by California law, the waiver becomes in practice the exemption of the party ‘from responsibility for [its] own fraud, or willful injury to the person or *148 property of another.’ (Civ. Code, § 1668.) Under these circumstances, such waivers are unconscionable under California law and should not be enforced.” (Discover Bank, supra, 36 Cal.4th at pp. 162-163.)
The class action waiver in the case at bench is also “patently one-sided”
(Ingle v. Circuit City Stores, Inc.
(9th Cir. 2003)
The trial court’s determination and the foregoing analysis are bolstered by the decision in
Gentry, supra,
D. Severance
Defendant argues that the court erred by refusing to enforce the entire arbitration agreement, rather than severing the clauses it found to be unconscionable. Civil Code section 1670.5, subdivision (a) provides that “[i]f the court as a matter of law finds the contract or any clause of the contract to have been unconscionable at the time it was made the court may refuse to enforce the contract, or it may enforce the remainder of the contract without the unconscionable clause, or it may so limit the application of any unconscionable clause as to avoid any unconscionable result.” The court has discretion under this statute to refuse to enforce an entire agreement if the agreement is “permeated” by unconscionability.
(Armendariz, supra,
Here, as we have explained, at least two aspects of the arbitration agreement are unconscionable: (1) the provision for arbitrator determinations of unconscionability issues; and (2) the class action waiver. “[G]iven the multiple unlawful provisions, the trial court did not abuse its discretion in concluding that the arbitration agreement is permeated by an unlawful purpose”
(Armendariz, supra,
Gentry
does not dictate a contrary result. While the court “believe[d] that severance is particularly appropriate in the case of class arbitration waivers”
(Gentry, supra,
*150 III. CONCLUSION
The order denying the motion to compel arbitration is affirmed.
Stein, J., and Margulies, J., concurred.
On November 9, 2007, the opinion was modified to read as printed above.
Notes
Defendant asks us to take judicial notice of six “non-class action wage and hour” complaints filed in San Francisco or Los Angeles Superior Court in 2006. These complaints are offered to prove that plaintiffs declarations of counsel “are irrelevant and should have no bearing on this matter because individual wage and hour claims, including complaints for claims similar to those in this action, are indeed regularly brought.” “Reviewing courts generally do not take judicial notice of evidence not presented to the trial court.”
(Vans Companies, Inc. v. Seabest Foods, Inc.
(1996)
In view of these conclusions, we need not decide whether the provision for arbitration of preexisting claims was also unconscionable.
