Plaintiff Anne Scheurer filed this sexual harassment and retaliation suit under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 against defendant Fromm Family Foods. During discovery;, Fromm learned that Scheurer’s contract with the staffing agency that em
The question is whether employer Fromm, which did not have a written arbitration agreement with Scheurer, can enforce against her the arbitration clause in her agreement with the staffing agency. This question is governed by state law, in this case, Wisconsin law. See Arthur Andersen LLP v. Carlisle,
I. Factual-and Procedural Background
In August 2013, in Beaver Dam, Wisconsin, plaintiff Anne Scheurer applied to work at Richelieu Foods, which outsourced its staffing needs to Remedy Intelligent Staffing, a temporary staffing agency. The application form she signed with Remedy for placement with Richelieu contained an arbitration agreement.
About a year after she first applied, Remedy placed Scheurer with Fromm Family Foods. Scheurer alleges that while working at Fromm, her supervisor sexually harassed her. The present appeal does not require us to consider the merits of her claims; we assume for present purposes that her allegations are true. Briefly, she alleges that her supervisor took advantage of his access to her personnel file to obtain her personal telephone number and repeatedly harassed her in unwelcome ways, including sexually explicit comments to her in front of other employees. Scheurer alleges that she complained to Fromm management and that the supervisor had a history of sexual harassment and discrimination against women in the workplace. She also alleges that Fromm took no serious action to address the sexual harassment and instead fired her.
Richard Best, the chief operating officer of Fromm, submitted an affidavit that actually tends to support Scheurer’s claim. He testified that Fromm immediately investigated the harassment complaint and took unspecified action against’ the supervisor. So far, so good for Fromm. But Best also said that Fromm tried to arrange a work situation that would have separated Scheurer from the supervisor, but that when that proved “impossible,” Fromm asked Remedy to assign Scheurer to another client. That action seems to amount to Fromm terminating Scheurer’s employment with it, assuming she can show joint employment. From the sequence of complaint, unspecified discipline of the supervi
Scheurer filed this lawsuit against Fromm—but not Remedy—under Title VII for sexual harassment and retaliation. 42 U.S.C. §§ 2000e-2(a)(l) & 2000e-3(a). Seheurer’s mandatory disclosures in the federal discovery process included her application to Remedy, which included the arbitration agreement. Fromm argued that arbitration should be compelled under the contract law principle of equitable estoppel and because Fromm was a third-party beneficiary of the agreement.
The district court denied Fromm’s motion. Scheurer v. Fromm Family Foods, LLC,
II. Analysis
The question on appeal is whether Fromm can enforce the arbitration agreement between Remedy and Scheurer to compel arbitration of her claims against Fromm. That question is at bottom a question of contract law.
The standard of review for a district court’s ruling on a motion to compel arbitration turns on the procedural posture of that ruling. We have said on occasion that we review de novo a district court’s ruling on a motion to compel arbitration, but that we review any findings of fact for clear error. E.g., Druco Restaurants, Inc. v. Steak N Shake Enterprises, Inc.,
The Federal Arbitration Act actually provides for jury trials on the question of arbitrability if there is a factual dispute as to whether “an agreement for arbitration was made.” 9 U.S.C. § 4. A court reviewing such a jury finding must uphold the finding if it is supported by a reasonable basis in the record. See, e.g., Gorlikowski v. Tolbert,
The Federal Arbitration Act requires federal and state courts to place written arbitration agreements, on the same footing as other contracts. 9 U.S.C. § 2; Kindred Nursing Centers, Ltd. v. Clark, 581 U.S. —, —,
At bottom, however, arbitration is contractual. A party “cannot be required to submit to arbitration any dispute which he has not agreed so to submit.” United Steelworkers of America v. Warrior & Gulf Navigation Co.,
In Arthur Andersen, the Supreme Court directly addressed which law governs who may enforce an arbitration agreement. The Court explained that “traditional principles of state law” govern whether a contract, including an arbitration agreement, is enforceable by or , against a non-party. Arthur Andersen,
In the district court, Fromm argued that Scheurer should be compelled to arbitrate against Fromm based on contract principles of equitable estoppel and as a third-party beneficiary of Scheurer’s contract with Remedy. On appeal, Fromm continues to argue that equitable estoppel should compel arbitration. It has dropped its third-party beneficiary argument. It has also raised for the first time on appeal a new argument on an agency theory; We affirm the district court’s denial of the motion to compel arbitration. Equitable estoppel is not available because there is no evidence that Fromm relied on the arbitration agreement between Remedy and Scheurer. The other two theories have been waived, one in the district court and the other on appeal.
Pursuant to Arthur Andersen, we first address the doctrine of equitable es-toppel under Wisconsin contract law. Substantive federal arbitration law does not “alter background principles of state contract law regarding the scope of agreements (including the question of who is bound by them).” Arthur Andersen,
Under Wisconsin law, equitable es-toppel requires: “(1) action or non-action; (2) on the part of one against whom estop-pel is asserted; (3) which induces reasonable reliance thereon by the other; either in action or non-action; (4) which is to the relying party’s detriment.” Pagan v. Integrity Solution Services, Inc.,
Fromm cannot establish reliance here. As the district court found, there is no evidence “that Fromm relied on (or even knew of) the fact that Scheurer had signed an agreement with an arbitration provision when it accepted her assignment from Remedy.” Scheurer,
To avoid the district court’s reasoning, Fromm relies primarily on our decision in Hughes Masonry Co. v. Greater Clark
In Hughes Masonry, decided long before Arthur Andersen, we found that the plaintiff had signed a construction contract that required arbitration. Plaintiff sued a defendant who was not a party to the contract itself but whose obligations were spelled out in the contract. The claim was a tort claim, but proof would require the plaintiff to rely on the terms of the contract. We reasoned that the plaintiff could not assert a claim that relied upon the contract while avoiding the same contract’s arbitration clause. The plaintiff seeking to avoid arbitration “cannot rely on the contract when it works to its advantage, and repudiate it when it works to ... its ... disadvantage.”
Fromm finds somewhat stronger support from Ragone, but the facts differ from this case in a critical way. In Ragone, an employee hired through a separate company sued for sex discrimination. She sued both the company with which she signed a contract, AVI, and also ESPN, the company for whom she worked directly.
Fromm urges us to adopt this theory and then to extend it to cases in which the employee asserts no claim against the company with which she has an arbitration agreement. We are not persuaded to adopt this extended version of the Ragone approach. It was clear in Ragone—it was the major thrust of the appeal—that Ragone would be required to arbitrate her claim against the staffing agency. Once a court knows a dispute is going to be arbitrated, the reasons for requiring claims against affiliated parties to be arbitrated become more powerful. Cf. Webb v. Frawley,
In addition, we must remember that Arthur Andersen directs us to apply the state law of estoppel, and we see no basis in Wisconsin law for applying estoppel under these circumstances, where Fromm did not even know of the arbitration agreement and the staffing agency is not a party to the dispute, which is not a contract dispute at all. See Crawford Prof’l Drugs, Inc. v. CVS Caremark Corp.,
For the first time on appeal, Fromm argues that the doctrine of agency-should compel arbitration. “The well-established rule in this Circuit is that a plaintiff waives the right to argue an issue on appeal if she fails to raise the issue before a lower court.” Robyns v. Reliance Standard Life Ins. Co.,
The decision of the district court denying Fromm’s motion to compel arbitration is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The key sentence said, with grammar mistake included: “In the event there is any dispute between Employer and I relating to or arising out of relating to my employment or the termination of my employment, which Employer and I are unable to resolve informally through direct discussion, regardless of the kind or type of dispute, Employer and I agree to submit all such claims or disputes to be resolved by final and binding arbitration in accordance with the National Rules for the Resolution of Employment Disputes of the American Arbitration Association within the state of employment.” Supp. App. 35. The arbitration clause identified Title VII claims in the list of types of claims that would be covered.
. In some situations, arbitrability may depend on equitable doctrines such as waiver and estoppel, which may require a court to resolve issues such as prejudice and reliance, See, e.g., Ernst & Young LLP v. Baker O’Neal Holdings, Inc.,
. The district court correctly cited Arthur Andersen and followed its holding by applying Wisconsin state contract law to Fromm’s motion to compel arbitration. Scheurer,
. Wisconsin law of agency requires “an agreement of two parties, embodying three factual elements: (1) the manifestation of the principal that the agent is to act for him; (2) the agent’s acceptance of the undertaking; and (3) the understanding of the parties that the principal is to control the undertaking.” Norton v. American Home Mortgage Servicing, Inc., No. 11-C-842,
