Appellants J & K Administrative" Management Services, Inc. and Kimberly N. Meyers appeal the district court’s order to compel collective arbitration of Neffertiti Robinson’s complaint for unpaid overtime wages. Because the district court correctly applied Pedcor Management Co. Inc. Welfare Benefit Plan v. Nations Personnel of Texas, Inc.,
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
J & K Administrative Management Services, Inc. entered into an arbitration agreement with each of its employees. The agreement required arbitration of “claims for wages or other compensation,” “claims for a .violation of any other federal, state or governmental law, statu[t]e, regulation or ordinance,” and “claims challenging the validity or enforceability of this Agreement (in whole or in part) or challenging the applicability of the Agreement to a particular dispute or claim.”
On January 23, 2014, Neffertiti Robinson, a former employee of J & K, sent a letter and arbitration complaint to J ■& K’s counsel detailing claims for unpaid overtime wages under the Fair Labor Standards Act. After J & K failed to respond, Robinson filed a complaint for arbitration on behalf of herself and other similarly situated employees with JAMS, a private alternative dispute resolution coordinator. JAMS sent a notice of intention to initiate arbitration to J & K, which the company
Upon J. & K’s failure to respond to the notice of initiation of arbitration, Robinson filed a complaint and motion to compel arbitration of her claims, appoint JAMS, as the arbitrator, and allow the arbitrator to determine whether collective arbitration was permitted by the agreement. The district court held, according to Pedcor Management, that the question of whether class arbitration is permissible should be decided by the arbitrator, and the agreement confirms that such questions should be deferred to arbitration. It also noted that it did not have to decide whether the agreement authorized collective arbitration, because the arbitrator can and should answer that question. Therefore, the district 'court ordered the parties to arbitrate the claims under the agreement and dismissed the action with prejudice. J & K now appeals.
DISCUSSION
An order to compel arbitration is reviewed de novo. Covington v. Aban Offshore Ltd.,
1.
Before turning to the merits of this appeal, it is necessary to examine the parties’ competing interpretations of the relevant law. -We therefore begin with J & K’s contention that Pedcor Management has since been abrogated and should not be applied to Robinson’s action to compel arbitration.
A.
Preliminary issues in arbitration cases include gateway disputes, which typically require judicial determination, and procedural questions, which are to be reviewed by the arbitrator. Green Tree Fin. Corp. v. Bazzle,
The same is true for the threshold question of whether class or collective arbitra
We later adopted Green Tree’s reasoning. See Pedcor Mgmt,
B.
J & K contends in two related arguments that Stolt-Nielsen S.A. v. Animal-Feeds International, Corp.,
In Stolt-Nielsen the Supreme Court clarified that Green Tree “did not yield a majority decision on any of the three questions,” including the question of “which decision maker (court or arbitrator) should decide whether the contracts in question were ‘silent’ on the issue of class arbitration.” Id. at 678-79,
Stolt-Nielsen does not overrule prior Supreme Court and Fifth Circuit decisions requiring questions of arbitrability, including the availability of class mechanisms, to be deferred to arbitration by agreement. Therefore, we continue to be bound by Pedcor Management under the rule of orderliness. See, e.g., Jacobs v. Nat’l Drug Intelligence Ctr.,
J & K nevertheless argues, citing Hoskins v. Bekins Van Lines,
Having disposed of these preliminary arguments, we now review the district court’s application of Pedcor Management to the facts of this case.
II.
Section (g) of the arbitration agreement subjects “claims challenging the validity or enforceability of this Agreement (in whole or in part) or challenging the applicability of the Agreement to a particular dispute or claim” to arbitration. J & K contends that section (g) does not allow deferral because it is silent as to class arbitration. J & K further contends that the panel may not read section (g) as deferring the arbitrability question because the agreement applies only between the company and Robinson and may not be read to include arbitration of Harris, Turner, Stanton, and Knight’s non-party claims. These arguments, however, are a misguided attempt to bootstrap a preliminary proceeding into judicial review of an arbitration award that does not
Contract language similar to section (g) has been found to authorize deferral of arbitrability issues. In Green Tree, the plurality held that language submitting “[a]ll disputes, claims or controversies arising from or relating to this contract” to arbitration,
Section (g) is materially similar to this contract language. It requires that “claims challenging the validity or enforceability of’ the agreement must be arbitrated. Therefore, we conclude that section (g) is unambiguous evidence of the parties intention to submit arbitrability disputes to arbitration and that arbitration was properly compelled.
III.
J & K also asks that we • appoint an independent arbitrator to hear Robinson’s claims. The district court, however, already appointed JAMS as the arbitral forum when it granted -Robinson’s motion to compel, which -included a request to “appoint JAMS as the arbitrator.” Since neither party argues that the district court erred in appointing JAMS as the arbitral forum, any challenges to the appointment have been waived on appeal. Arbitration of Robinson’s claims, including whether class procedures are permissible, should proceed as ordered with JAMS as the arbitral forum.
CONCLUSION
The judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Another panel of this court recognized this issue but resolved the case without revisiting Pedcor Management. See Reed v. Fla. Metro. Univ., Inc.,
