We address on interlocutory appeal whether the district court erred when it denied Menard, Inc.’s (Menards) motion to compel arbitration. We reverse and remand with directions to compel arbitration.
I.
Faber was hired by Menards in 1981 and was promoted to manager of a store in Iowa in 1996. During the 2000 annual review of his employment contract with Menards, Faber protested some provisions in his 2000 contract that were altered from the 1999 contract, but Menards refused to adjust them. Faber claims that he signed the 2000 contract only after Menards told him he would otherwise be replaced with a younger and lower salaried individual.
*1051 Although Faber did not protest at the time the difference in the arbitration clauses of the 1999 and 2000 contracts, he now argues that the changes in the fee-splitting arrangement found in the 2000 agreement make it unconscionable. Both the 1999 and 2000 agreements require that all specified statutory and non-statutory claims be submitted to binding arbitration before the American Arbitration Association (AAA), but they include different arbitration cost allocations. The 1999 agreement states that “the prevailing party will be entitled to recover the reasonable attorneys’ fees and costs incurred by such party in the course of prosecuting or defending the lawsuit or arbitration proceeding brought under the terms of this Agreement.” App. at 21. In contrast, the 2000 agreement states that “Each party shall pay their own AAA fees, one half of the arbitrators fees and their own attorneys’ fees.” App. at 46. The 2000 agreement also contains a severability clause, which states that if a provision is found to be unenforceable or invalid, “the validity, legality, and enforceability of the remaining provisions contained in this Agreement will not in any way be affected or impaired thereby.” Id.
Faber was replaced as store manager on May 15, 2001, and was told he could accept a demotion to assistant store manager at a different store. Faber refused the demotion and resigned from his job on June 5, 2001. When he returned to the store as a patron in July, management told him to leave because he was trespassing. Faber filed complaints with the Iowa Civil Rights Commission and the EEOC and received right to sue letters. He then filed a complaint in federal court on April 14, 2003, alleging age discrimination and retaliation in violation of the ADEA, 29 U.S.C. §§ 621-634, and the Iowa Civil Rights Act, Iowa Code § 216. Menards did not answer, but instead moved to compel arbitration.
The district court denied the motion to compel arbitration, finding the fee-splitting provision in the arbitration clause to be procedurally and substantively unconscionable. It refused to sever the provision, however, finding that it was central to the purpose of the arbitration clause. The district court then certified the following questions for interlocutory appeal under 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b):
(1) Do provisions of an arbitration clause in a contract between an employee and an employer that require the employee to bear his or her own costs and attorney fees in arbitration and half the costs of the arbitrator necessarily or potentially render the arbitration clause unconscionable under Iowa law?
(2) If so, do the costs and fees of arbitration imposed upon the plaintiff here render this arbitration clause unconscionable?
(3) If the challenged provisions of the arbitration clause are unconscionable, do they require extirpation of the arbitration clause as a whole or can the arbitration clause be partially enforced to the extent of its “conscionable” provisions?
II.
We review de novo a determination concerning the arbitrability of a dispute based on contract interpretation.
Lyster v. Ryan’s Family Steak Houses, Inc.,
There is a strong federal policy favoring arbitration. The Federal Arbitration Act (FAA), 9 U.S.C. §§ 1-14, preempts all state laws that reflect a policy disfavoring arbitration and which are designed specifically to limit arbitration. The Supreme Court has established that an arbitral forum is, as a general matter, adequate to preserve statutory rights and adjudicate statutory claims.
Green Tree Fin. Corp. v. Randolph,
We have made clear that when reviewing an arbitration clause, we ask only (1) whether there is a valid arbitration agreement and (2) whether the particular dispute falls within the terms of that agreement.
1
Bailey v. Ameriquest Mortgage Co.,
We leave issues that fall outside this scope of review to the arbitrator to decide in the first instance. For example, the arbitrator is to first determine “the extent of [its] procedural and remedial authority” as limited by contract.
Bailey,
Whether an arbitration agreement is valid is a matter of state contract law.
See Lyster,
*1053
Under Iowa law, the burden of proof that a particular provision or contract is unconscionable rests on the party claiming it is unconscionable.
In re Estate of Ascherl,
There is assent, clear notice, and no unfair surprise here because Faber signed the agreement, which we presume that he read before signing. There was unquestionably a disparity in bargaining power, as Menards is a large national company and Faber did not have the ability to negotiate and change particular terms in the form contract. Mere inequality in bargaining power does not make the contract automatically unconscionable, however,
see Home Federal,
Faber argues that the fee-splitting provision is one that no rational person would agree to it and that its un-conscionability invalidates the whole arbitration agreement. We disagree, and we agree with the majority of circuits that a fee-shifting provision by itself does not make an arbitration agreement unenforceable.
See Gannon,
A fee-splitting arrangement may be unconscionable if information specific to the circumstances indicates that fees are cost-prohibitive and preclude the vindication of statutory rights in an arbitral forum.
See Green Tree,
Faber failed to meet his burden of proof that the arbitrators’ fees make the agreement unconscionable due to their prohibitive cost. The amount of the arbitrator’s fees is not well-defined in the contract, and Faber has not provided the evidence necessary to estimate the length of the arbitration and the corresponding amount of arbitrators’ fees (e.g. sophistication of the issues, average daily or hourly arbitrator costs in the region). He has also failed to provide evidence of his particular financial situation. Rather, Faber merely argues that the requirement that he pay half of the arbitrators’ fees is unconscionable because it is a cost he would not pay in litigation and therefore discourages him from bringing his claims. Without the specific evidence, however, this hypothetical discouragement is purely speculative.
See Green Tree,
If the district court does find on remand that to require Faber to pay half of arbitrators’ fees would prevent access to the arbitral forum and preclude him from vindicating his rights, it should sever that clause and then enter an order compelling arbitration. Iowa law permits unconscionable provisions to be severed from the remainder of a contract.
C & J Fertilizer,
We analyze separately the unconscionability of the attorneys’ fees provision because attorneys’ fees are not unique to arbitration and the recovery of attorneys’ fees is usually contingent on a statutory remedy linked to specific statutory rights. We have established that, as a general matter, issues of remedy are for the arbitrator in the first instance.
Bailey,
Faber argues that the attorneys’ fees provision unconscionably deprives him of his statutory right to receive attorneys’ fees and costs if he prevails under the ADEA. We conclude that this provision, by merely requiring the parties to pay their own attorneys’ fees, is not so substantively unfair and “inimical to the public good” that it is unconscionable under Iowa law.
See Home Federal,
The district court concluded that any recovery for Faber in arbitration would necessarily constitute a “Pyrrhic victory.” Without any specific numerical evidence of likely arbitration costs or Faber’s financial situation, the district court assumed that arbitration fees combined with attorneys’ fees would equal or exceed recovery and that the agreement language constituted a waiver of any attorneys’ fees adjustment under the ADEA. Instead of applying the test of unconseionability as set forth by the courts of Iowa, the district court focused on its conclusion that Faber could not be made whole in arbitration. In doing so, it went beyond the permissible scope of review of arbitration agreements, interpreting the language of the agreement not just to determine its unconscionability, but to invalidate it on public policy grounds. Its conclusion ignores our precedent requiring that procedural, remedial and public policy issues are for the arbitrator to decide in the first instance, subject to being reviewed on appeal.
See, e.g., Larry’s United Super,
The order is reversed, and the case is remanded with directions that the district court determine whether the requirement that Faber pay the arbitrators’ fees in the circumstances, unconscionably prevents his access to the arbitral forum. If found to be unconscionable, the offending clause should be severed and arbitration compelled.
Notes
. Faber’s claim clearly falls within the scope of the arbitration agreement, which specifically states that claims arising under the Age Discrimination in Employment Act and all causes of action arising under state laws must be arbitrated. D. Ct. Opinion of June 17, 2003, at 14.
