MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
Bеfore this Court is a motion to compel arbitration and dismiss, or, in the alternative, to stay Plaintiff Denise Safranek’s complaint, filed by Defendant Copart, Inc. For the reasons stated below, the portion of the arbitration provision at issue that prohibits the awarding of attorney’s fees to a successful Title VII plaintiff is severed from the rest of the agreement and rendered unenforceable. The remainder of the arbitration provision is enforceable. The parties are ordered to arbitrate Plaintiffs Title VII claim. This case is DISMISSED.
Standard of Review
When deciding a motion to dismiss, the court must assume all facts alleged in the complaint to be true, construe the allegations liberally and view the allegations in the light most favorable to the plaintiff.
Wilson v. Formigoni,
Plaintiff Denise Safranek (“Plaintiff’) is a former employee of Defendant Copart, Inc. (“Defendant”), a company that provides automobile towing and salvage to major automobile insurers in the United States.
Plaintiff began her employment with Defendant on December 6, 1996. After she hаd been employed for about two years, she was presented with an employee handbook and a form titled “Receipt of this Employee Handbook.” Plaintiff was required to sign and return the receipt, which laid out various details regarding employment. Relevant to this case, the receipt required Plaintiff to agree “that any dispute or controversy arising out of, relating to, or concerning any interpretation, construction, performance, or breach of the terms of [her] employment” would be settled by arbitration. It also required Plaintiff to agree to cede any claims to attorney’s fees and expenses, regardless of the subject matter or outcome of the arbitration.
After Plaintiff signed the receipt, her troubles began. Her complaint alleges, inter alia, that her manager requested to see and photograph her breasts and that he tried to fondlе them. He caused Plaintiff to be paid less than a lower-ranked employee with whom he was having a sexual relationship. He reprimanded Plaintiff for removing derogatory sexual graffiti about her and other female employees from a restroom. And after Plaintiff rebuffed his sexual advances, he threatened to terminate her. On February 13, 2004, he placed her on suspension, pending her termination. On February 18, 2004, Plaintiff was terminated.
Plaintiff contends that her firing, and other adverse actions taken by Defendant against her, were motivated by her sex and constitute sex discrimination, in violation of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, as amended, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e, et. seq. and the Civil Rights Act of 1991, 42 U.S.C. § 1981a. She filed charges with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission and filed this complaint within ninety days of receiving a Notice of Right to Sue from the EEOC:
Plaintiff filed her one-count complaint, based on claims of sex discrimination, in this Court on February 18, 2005. Defendant filed its motion to compel arbitration and dismiss, or, in the alternative, to stay Plaintiffs complaint, on April 18, 2005. This motion has been fully briefed.
Discussion
Defendant requests that this Court compel arbitration. Defendant contends that federal jurisdiction is improper because Plaintiff, by agreeing to be bound by the terms of the employee handbook, agreed to arbitrate claims such as the one she currently brings before this Court.
Plaintiffs first response to Defendant’s motion is that the arbitration provision is invalid because it requires her “to make many promises without any promise in return” from Defendant. Plaintiffs argument is without merit. The fact that an employer has agreed to be bound by the outcome of the arbitration is enough, in the Seventh Circuit, to defeat allegations that the agreement in question is invalid due to a lack of consideration.
See Michalski v. Circuit City Stores, Inc.,
Plaintiff next argues that the agreement is unenforceable because it is unclear whether Title VII claims can ever be arbitrated. Again, Plaintiff is incorrect. Federal statutory claims may be appropriate for arbitration as long as the litigant can effectively vindicate her statutory cause of action in the arbitral forum, such that the statute will continue to serve its remedial and deterrent purposes.
See, e.g., Gilmer v. Interstate/Johnson Lane Corp.,
In line with the reasoning in
Gilmer,
only those agreements that do not undermine the statutory scheme are enforceable: this conclusion is not surprising, given that “[b]y agreeing to arbitrate a statutory claim, a party does not forego the substantive rights afforded by the statute; it only submits to their resolution in an arbitral, rather than judicial, forum.”
Mitsubishi Motors Corp. v. Soler Chrysler-Plymouth, Inc.,
The Seventh Circuit has determined that it is possible for a litigant to vindicate his Title VII cause of action in an arbitral forum. See
Koveleskie v. SBC Capital Markets, Inc.,
Plaintiffs final contention is that the agreement is unenforceable because she is required, by its plain text, to bear her own costs with respect to attorney’s fees. The arbitration provision in this case provides that “each of us shall separately pay our counsel fees and expenses.”
It is the task of this Court, (just as it was the task of the courts in Gilmer), to determine whether that denial in the arbi-tral forum is such that Plaintiff is kept from effectively vindicating her rights under Titlе VII, such that the remedial and deterrent purposes of the statute are not served.
The grant of attorney’s fees is one of the remedies available under Title VII.
See
42 USC § 2000e-5(k);
see also Dunning v. Simmons Airlines, Inc.,
Title VII was not passed аs a means of eradicating only the most startling civil rights violations. Indeed, the attorney’s fees provision in Title VII indicates the importance of stamping out all types of
The question of whether an arbitration agreement can be enforced-when it specifically prohibits the award of attorney’s fees in a Title VII case-is an open question in the Seventh Circuit, as Defendant correctly notes. In light of the history and goals of statute, this Court determines that the provision prohibiting the grant of attorney’s fees conflicts with Title VII. With such a bar in place, a plaintiff cannot effectively vindicate her rights in an arbitral fоrum: the preemptive denial of attorney’s fees keeps the statute from serving its remedial and deterrent purposes.
See McCaskill v. SCI Management Corp., SCI,
There is a collection of stray statements in Seventh Circuit case law-most of them dicta-that can be read to indicate that a plaintiff can be required to waive any substantive civil rights as a condition of employment. In
Metro East Ctr. for Conditioning and Health v. Qwest Communications, Int'l., Inc.,
In
Metro East,
the Seventh Circuit panel observed that “[o]ne aspect of personal liberty is the entitlement to exchange statutory rights for something valued more highly. Instead of offering a benefit only to a person who is required to arbitrate or litigate, a fee shifting statute may provide a benefit more widely to the extent that it changes the terms of the trade..294
It is certainly true that in an efficient marketplace, competition will assure that savings are passed along to the public in the form of lower prices. It is also true, however, that not all markets are efficient. In an inefficient market, savings realized by not requiring the payment of the fees of a prevailing plaintiff might not inure to the benefit of the public (through lower prices) оr the employee (through higher wages). Congress has determined that payment of attorney’s fees is an important element in the vindication of public and private rights in Title VII cases. While there may be circumstances in which this element could be “traded” for comparable benefits derived from the use of an arbitral process in which fees are not available, we should not be too quick to assume comparability on the basis of a hypothetical bargain.
The examples of waiver in
Metro East
can be distinguished from a waiver that would ocсur in this case. For the most part, they deal with situations where the courts determine that the waiver of the right is knowing and voluntary; such a standard is not in place when reviewing arbitration agreements.
1
In criminal situations, defendants have the added procedural protection of Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 11. With respect to
Evans v. Jeff D.,
Moreover, to the extent that the panels in
Metro East
and
Carbajal
suggest that the prospective waiver of statutory rights is valid, there аre suggestions of a different approach in other opinions. For example, some courts have indicated that the prospective waiver of statutory rights raises public policy concerns. In
Mitsubishi Motors Corp. v. Soler Chrysler-Plymouth,
In the Title VII context, the idea that employers can require employees to sign mandatory arbitration agreements ceding attorney’s fees as a condition of employment-and that this is possible because the employees are getting the benеfit of employment in exchange-is analytically flawed. Any employer who requires employees to waive their rights to attorney’s fees gains an economic advantage over employers who do not make such a demand. Consequently, other employers will be driven (by economic considerations) to make such demands, resulting in the evisceration of that feature of employment law that Congress has deemed to be importаnt.
Defendant argues that even if the bar to attorney’s fees conflicts with Title VII, it is the arbitrator rather than a court who should make that determination. In support, Defendant cites
Carbajal,
The Carbajal court also notes that the arbitrator determines the validity of ancillary provisions. In support, it cites
Pacifi-Care Health Systems, Inc. v. Book,
Moreover, the Supreme Court in
Green Tree Financial Alabama v. Randolph,
Requiring parties to arbitrate the issue of the enforceability of an agreement denying attorney’s fees undеr Title VII, in light of an absence of any agreement to arbitrate the issue, is particularly problematic given the legislative history and legislative aims of the federal statute. Title VII’s attorney’s fees provision is valuable not only because it permits the grant of the actual fees, but also because it promotes the understanding among the legal community that those fees, barring some rare exceptions, will be available to plaintiffs who prevail in their Title VII claims. Forcing employees to arbitrate the issue of attorney’s fees chips away at the sense of financial security that Congress sought to provide attorneys who represented meritorious Title VII plaintiffs. That, in turn, effectively keeps plaintiffs from vindicating their rights under the federal statute and does not serve the remedial and deterrent purposes of the statute.
Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, the portion of the arbitration provision at issue that prohibits the awarding of attorney’s fees to а successful Title VII plaintiff is severed from the rest of the agreement and rendered unenforceable. The remainder of the arbitration provision is enforceable. The parties are ordered to arbitrate Plaintiffs Title VII claim. This case is DISMISSED.
Notes
.
See Penn
v.
Ryan's Family Steak Houses, Inc.,
. The
Metro East
panel, in comparison, does not find the temporal distinction "necessarily dispositive.”
. Defendant also cites two cases from other circuits to support the proposition that an arbitrator should determine whether Plaintiff is entitled to attorney's fees.
See Musnick v. King Motor Co.,
.The parties do not contend that any other specific language in the arbitration agreement supports the proposition that the parties intended for the arbitrator to be able to grant attorney’s feеs or the proposition that the arbitrator was to determine the enforceability of the attorney's fees provision.
. Any claim that Plaintiff raises regarding the cost-splitting provision of the clause is without merit, given that she has not satisfied the
Randolph
requirement of showing that the costs would be prohibitive.
See Randolph,
