MEMORANDUM
Plaintiff Jenna Raglani filed this action against her former employer, defendant Ripken Professional Baseball (“RPB”), under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and Maryland state law. Raglani alleges that she was discriminated against and terminated because of her gender. RPB has filed a motion to dismiss or to stay and compel arbitration, based on an arbitration agreement with Raglani. For the reasons set forth below, the motion will be denied.
BACKGROUND
In July 2006, Raglani began working for RPB as an Account Representative. (Complaint ¶ 10). Raglani was successful in her position and was promoted to Assistant General Manager of Ticket Sales in October 2010. (Id. ¶ 11). In 2011, Raglani entered into a romantic relationship with a subordinate employee. (Id. ¶ 18). She alleges that this was not unusual, and that several other RPB employees had engaged in sexual relationships with subordinates, despite an official policy against such conduct. (See id. ¶¶ 13-18). After conducting an investigation, RPB terminated Raglani on July 6, 2011, citing her relationship and RPB’s apparent determination that she had instructed others to lie about the relationship. (Id. ¶¶ 27-32). Raglani alleges that she was treated differently from her male colleagues who engaged in similar behavior with subordinates. (Id. ¶45). She filed a claim with the EEOC a few months after her termination and received a right to sue letter on October 1, 2012. (Id. ¶ 4). Raglani subsequently filed this action alleging unlawful gender discrimination, negligence, wrongful discharge, and breach of contract.
When Raglani joined RPB, she signed a Problem Support Policy (“PSP”) Acknowledgement and Agreement, which stated it was “a valid and binding legal obligation ... in consideration of [her] hiring for employment or [her] continued employment. ...” (Def.’s Mot, Ex. A.1, ECF No. 4-3). The PSP stated it was a “procedure” to be used by “[a]nyone who feels they have a problem that requires management’s attention.... ” (Def.’s Mot., Ex. A.2 (“PSP”), ECF No.'4-4, at 1). A section of the PSP entitled “Policy Application” explains that the PSP “applies to all applicants and all team members of [RPB]” and that the “policy is meant to deal, with nearly all problems encountered by team members except where there is another specific process in place to resolve problems (i.e., unemployment claims and benefit plan disputes).” (PSP at 4). That section also states that “[a]ll steps in the process will be enforced except where prohibited by State law” and that “this policy do[es] not necessarily create any entitlement to progressive discipline or termination only for cause. The employment relationship is ‘At Will’ ...” (Id.).
If an employee “team member” is not satisfied that their “problem” has been resolved at two lower levels of procedures (that include steps for seeking assistance
If the problem involves a legally protected right such as protection against age, race, or sex discrimination and is not resolved internally ... it may be appealed to Level III. Level III involves an impartial external third party and has mediation as the first step. If the problem cannot be mediated satisfactorily by both parties, the final resolution will be at the binding arbitration step.
(PSP at 2-3). The agreement then calls for mediation, stating:
Mediation is a non-binding step in which the problem is presented to a neutral third party. If a team member cannot resolve their problem internally ... they must file a formal request for mediation with Human Resources. Mediation is a mandatory step before arbitration. Human Resources will provide a list of qualified Mediators from which the team member may select one....
(PSP at 3). The “binding arbitration” provision in the PSP then states, in its entirety:
If the problem cannot be resolved at the mediation step, the final step in the PSP is binding arbitration. Human Resources will provide a list of qualified Arbitrators, upon a formal request to move to this step. A date will be set by the Arbitrator and both parties must appear on this date. The rules of the arbitration will be subject to the Federal Arbitration Act and agreed to by both parties. An exchange of information (“discovery”) occurs' according to requests by the Arbitrator. Discovery may be conducted with all three parties of Ripken Baseball at Level II: the immediate Supervisor, the Direct Report to the COO and the COO. Ripken Baseball will assume responsibility for the costs of the Arbitrator. If the team member decides to have their attorney present, the cost of that attorney will be the responsibility of the team member. After the meeting, the Arbitrator will submit a decision in writing and this decision shall be final.
(PSP at 3). Under a section entitled “Roles and Responsibilities^]” the PSP states that “[t]eam members must present their problems timely and utilize the Problem Resolution Procedure when needed.” (Id.). The PSP states that “Human Resources is a neutral facilitator of the process” and that “Supervisors, Direct Reports to the COO, and the COO” must maintain an open door communication policy, “abide by the timeframes” in the PSP, and “investigate[ ] fully” all “problems.” (PSP at 3-4).
The PSP contains no language suggesting that RPB has any responsibility to follow similar procedures — or to enter into binding arbitration' — for any dispute it might initiate against an employee. The PSP applies only to “problems” that an employee may have with management, not vice-versa. (PSP at 1, 4). All of the steps in the PSP are phrased as affirmative steps an employee must take to have their problem resolved, including, for example, “submitting] a Problem Support Form ... to Human Resources.” (PSP at 2). A copy of that form is attached to the PSP and instructs only the “team member” to “fill out this form and forward to Human Resources to begin the process.” (PSP at 5). The form contains a space for only the “team member” to sign a “resolution agreement.” (Id.)
Raglani alleges that she sought to “appeal” RPB’s termination decision, as provided for in the PSP, but was rebuffed and told the decision would stand as “final.” (Complaint ¶ 33). She does not allege she formally filed a problem support request form or otherwise invoked the PSP by its terms. RPB now seeks to compel arbitra
ANALYSIS
I. Standard of Review
Under the Federal Arbitration Act (“FAA”), 9 U.S.C. § 4, “[a] party aggrieved by the alleged failure, neglect, or refusal of another to arbitrate under a written agreement for arbitration may petition ... for an order directing that such arbitration proceed in the manner provided for in such agreement.” PC Const Co. v. City of Salisbury,
(1) the existence of a dispute between the parties, (2) a written agreement that includes an arbitration provision which purports to cover the dispute, (3) the relationship of the transaction, which is evidenced by the agreement, to interstate or foreign commerce, and (4) the failure, neglect[,] or refusal of the defendant to arbitrate the dispute.
Id. (quoting Adkins v. Labor Ready, Inc.,
Before dismissing a suit or compelling arbitration, however, the court must determine whether the arbitration agreement that is claimed' to govern the dispute between the parties is valid and enforceable. See Noohi v. Toll Bros., Inc.,
II. Enforceability of the PSP’s Arbitration Provision
Applying these principles to the arbitration agreement RPB seeks to enforce
A. Consideration
Arbitration agreements, like all contracts, “ordinarily require consideration.” Cheek v. United Healthcare of Mid-Atlantic, Inc.,
As in Noohi, the arbitration agreement here, standing on its own, “unambiguously” lacks mutuality of consideration. There, the Fourth Circuit agreed with the district court that the agreement was “quite simply one-sided and onerous” because it mandated that the plaintiffs (who were seeking to avoid arbitration):
(1) submit all disputes against [the defendants] to binding arbitration, (2) notify Defendants of each claim before they initiate arbitration proceedings, (3) give Defendants a reasonable opportunity to cure the default, and (4) waive the right to proceed in a court of law.... Conversely, Defendants do not make any promises to Plaintiffs in this provision. The clause does not state ... “the parties” and thus does not impose any obligations on the Defendants. It only refers to [the plaintiffs] and their obligations.
Unlike here, in Noohi, the agreement lacking consideration actually stated that “any and all disputes” would be subject to arbitration, but the Fourth Circuit noted that because, as here, “all the subject and verb pairings relate to the [plaintiffs’] obligations,” the provision listed procedures only the plaintiff must follow prior to arbitration, and all the examples of claims that might be arbitrated were. likely to have been brought by the plaintiffs, the provision contained no consideration in the form of a promise by the defendants to arbitrate claims they might have wanted to bring. Id. at 610-11. Similarly, in Cheek, the arbitration agreement — winch was defective because it permitted the employer, but not the employee, to modify it at any time — at least stated it applied to “all employment related disputes” and that “any party” could initiate arbitration.
Here, the PSP’s arbitration provision does not even contain the pretense that RPB must submit any dispute to arbitration or that claims it might seek to bring against an employee could not be immediately brought in a court of law. The PSP is entirely one-directional, binding employees to dispute resolution procedures, including, on its own, the arbitration provision, but silent on RPB’s obligations to do anything other than “facilitate” this process in the event an employee submits a “problem” to management. It is unambiguously “one-sided and onerous.” Under Maryland law, the PSP’s arbitration provision is invalid for want of consideration and cannot be enforced.
B. Access to a Neutral Forum
Furthermore, even if the PSP’s arbitration provision did purport to apply to both, parties equally, it is defective in failing to provide a neutral forum to resolve disputes and, thus, is unenforceable under Fourth Circuit law. In general, the “defense of unconscionability may not be applied in a manner that targets the existence of an agreement to arbitrate as the basis for invalidating the agreement.” Muriithi v. Shuttle Exp., Inc.,
Here, Raglani does not argue that the PSP’s arbitration agreement is unenforceable because it purports to require her to arbitrate her Title VII claim. Rather, Raglani points to several provisions in the agreement that, the court agrees, undermine her access to a neutral forum to vindicate her rights. First, and most egregiously, the PSP’s arbitration provision states that RPB will have exclusive control over the list of arbitrators that may be utilized. (PSP at 3). It has now long been established in this circuit that an employer may not “providfe] itself with the exclusive right to select the list of potential arbitrators from which the ultimate decisionmaker will be selected.” Murray,
[The employer] is free to devise lists of partial arbitrators who have existing relationships, financial or familial, with [the employer] and its management.... Further, nothing in the rules restricts [the employer] from punishing arbitrators who rule against the company by removing them from the list. Given the unrestricted control that [the employer] has over the panel, the selection of an impartial decision maker would be a surprising result.
Id. (bracketed text in original).
RPB points’ out that the heading under which the arbitration provision falls in the PSP, although not the provision itself, states that it “involves an impartial external third party.” (PSP at 3). This may be true (though arguably irrelevant given that the arbitration provision itself is silent on the character and selection of the list of “qualified [arbitrators”), but simply promising to provide a list of impartial arbitrators, without providing a mechanism by which the selection of an impartial arbitrator will actually be ensured, is insufficient. See Murray,
Under the PSP, it appears that the only contemplated selection mechanism for an impartial arbitrator, if one can even be inferred,' is that RPB will provide a list and the employee will “select one.” (See PSP at 4). This is insufficient because an employee’s choice is entirely circumscribed by the list RPB provides. In Hooters, the Circuit noted that a senior vice-president from the American Arbitration Association (AAA), in assessing the defendant’s heavily
Second, and relatedly, the PSP’s arbitration provision does not provide sufficient rules by which arbitration will be conducted. While the agreement’s suggestion that “[t]he rules of arbitration will be subject to the [FAA]” (which Raglani points out does not provide for any rules), combined with the PSP’s few sentences about discovery, may have been sufficiently enforceable if the rest of the agreement were valid, the lack of any neutral arbitrator selection mechanism, combined with this vagueness, casts serious doubt that the agreement would guarantee a fair process by which to arbitrate Raglani’s claims. See Murray,
CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated above, RPB’s motion to dismiss or stay and compel arbitration will be denied.
A separate Order follows.
ORDER
For the reasons stated in the accompanying Memorandum, it is hereby ORDERED that:
1. Défendant Ripken Professional Baseball’s Motion to Dismiss (ECF No. 4) is Denied;
2. The Clerk shall send copies of this Order and the accompanying Memorandum to counsel of record; and
3. Counsel will be contacted to schedule further proceedings.
Notes
. Raglani brought Noohi to the court’s attention in a Notice of Supplemental Authority because it was decided after briefing on RPB’s motion to dismiss had concluded. Neither side has asked for the opportunity to submit supplemental briefing on the issues addressed in Noohi, but the court must take the opinion into account when assessing RPB's motion.
. Raglani also argues that RPB breached or repudiated the arbitration agreement, and is disingenuous in attempting to enforce it now, because, after she was terminated, Raglani sought to avail herself of the PSP, which includes the arbitration agreement, and was told by her managers that RPB would not permit her to do so. (See Complaint ¶ 33; Pl.'s Opp., ECF No. 5, at 16-17). Because the court finds the arbitration agreement unenforceable as a whole, it will decline to decide whether RPB breached or waived the agreement.
. Whether arbitration provisions that deny one party a neutral, fair forum are ''unconscionable” under state law, see Murray,
. RPB argues that Murray is not controlling here because the Fourth Circuit also took issue with a provision of the agreement there that prevented an arbitrator’s decision, even if it were impartial, from potentially having a binding effect on the defendant. While that was a second defect in that agreement, the Circuit’s analysis largely focuses on the defendant's exclusive control of the list of arbitrators, just as the arbitration agreement provides for here.
. RPB argues, in the alternative, that even if the provided forum is insufficient for Raglani to arbitrate her Title VII claim, that claim should be stayed while she arbitrates her state law claims. Although Raglani suggests that different standards govern the adequacy of forums for arbitrating federal statutory claims, as opposed to other types of claims, circuit law does' not appear -to make such a distinction. The arbitration clause here lacks both adequate consideration and a guarantee of an adequate forum to arbitrate any of Raglani’s claims, and will not be enforced. ■
