Zephyr Haven Health & Rehab Center, Inc., and the other named appellants (all appellants are collectively referred to as
I. Factual and Procedural Background
Hardin was admitted to the Owners’ nursing facility on November 9, 2010. Two days later, she signed admissions documents, including an arbitration agreement. The arbitration agreement was conspicuously labeled and specified that its execution was not a precondition to receiving care at the nursing facility. It further specified that in any arbitration proceeding, the nursing facility would pay the first $500 of arbitration fees and costs and that all additional expenses would be split with the nursing facility responsible for 60% and Hardin responsible for 40%. The agreement provided that the parties would be responsible for their own attorney’s fees.
One year later Hardin sued the Owners, alleging a variety of claims arising out of the care she received at the nursing facility. The Owners responded with a motion to dismiss the complaint and to compel arbitration. At a hearing on the motion, the Owners submitted the arbitration agreement into evidence and argued that the agreement required arbitration of Hardin’s claims. Hardin responded that although there was no dispute that she signed the agreement, it would be impossible for her to perform under the agreement because she could not afford to pay 40 percent of the arbitration expenses. She provided to the trial court several invoices from unrelated arbitration proceedings. Although the invoices do not appear to have been admitted into evidence, Hardin argued that they were examples of the fees and costs that could be incurred in arbitration. Hardin also presented testimony from her stepson, who served as her caretaker, regarding her strained finances. No other evidence was presented.
Argument at the hearing largely addressed the doctrines of impossibility of performance and unconscionability. Although Hardin asserted that the issue was one of impossibility, the Owners maintained the matter should be analyzed instead under the doctrine of unconsciona-bility. After the hearing, the trial court issued an order denying the motion to compel arbitration. The order found both that it was “financially impossible” for Hardin to participate in arbitration and that if Hardin “were forced to pay 40 percent of arbitration costs, based on her income and her expenses, the amount would be unconscionable.”
In this appeal, the Owners challenge the sufficiency of the evidence presented to the trial court and the court’s findings that the arbitration agreement was unconscionable and impossible for Hardin to perform.
II. Unconscionability
To succeed in claiming that a contractual provision is unconscionable, a party must demonstrate both procedural and substantive unconscionability. Orkin Exterminating Co. v. Petsch,
In the context of unconscionability, the issue of the financial cost of arbitration is generally considered substantive, rather than procedural. See Stewart Agency, Inc. v. Robinson,
III. Impossibility of Performance
Impossibility of performance “is a defense to nonperformance and refers to situations where the purpose for which the contract was made has become impossible to perform.” Spring Lake NC, LLC v. Figueroa,
Even where performance actually becomes impossible after execution of the agreement, the doctrine cannot be invoked as a defense if “knowledge of the facts making performance impossible” was available at the inception of the agreement to the party claiming impossibility. Id. (citing Shore Inv. Co. v. Hotel Trinidad,
After reviewing the evidence submitted to the trial court and the applicable law, we cannot uphold the trial court’s decision to deny the motion to compel arbitration on the basis of financial impossibility. First, Hardin failed to establish that performance was impossible. Hardin’s stepson testified that her monthly income was approximately $3000 but that the monthly cost of her care exceeded that amount. However, he added that although paying the costs of arbitration would create a financial hardship, Hardin could receive care in a nursing home through “taxpayer dollars” rather than out-of-pocket spending. While it is understandable that Hardin may consider this option less desirable than private care, its existence undermines her effort to establish financial impossibility.
Second, the evidence indicated that Hardin’s costs for care were significantly reduced at the time of the hearing as compared to what she had been paying when she was in the nursing facility. Thus, she did not establish an adverse change in circumstances from the time she entered into the agreement to the time the issue was presented to the trial court. Consequently, to the extent the trial court determined the agreement is unenforceable due to financial impossibility, we reverse.
IV. The Green Tree Prohibitive Cost Defense
Below and on appeal, the parties have also addressed a third defense which has been developing since’ the United States Supreme Court’s opinion in Green Tree Financial Corp.-Alabama v. Randolph,
But the Court also acknowledged that large arbitration costs can preclude litigants from vindicating their rights through arbitration. Id. To that end, the Court held that where “a party seeks to invalidate an arbitration agreement on the ground that arbitration would be prohibitively expensive, that party bears the burden of showing the likelihood of incurring such costs.” Id. at 92. The Court specifically declined to address, however, “[h]ow detailed the showing of prohibitive expense must be.” Id.
Federal and state courts around the country have struggled in applying this burden. See, e.g., Morrison v. Circuit City Stores, Inc.,
We are persuaded that this approach is correct. As the Bradford opinion observed, this analysis is consistent with Green Tree, requiring the litigant to make “some showing of individualized prohibitive expense ... to invalidate an arbitration agreement on the ground that fee splitting would be prohibitively expensive.” Bradford,
Here, Hardin has not met her burden under Green Tree. First, she has not presented evidence of the likely cost of arbitrating her claim. The invoices Hardin referred to were for unknown claims and do not establish what she could expect to incur if forced to arbitrate this matter. Second, even if Hardin’s evidence had addressed the cost of arbitrating this specific claim, she did not attempt to compare that cost with what she would pay in litigation. She is correct that fees would be required to pay an arbitrator (or, under the agreement, more than one arbitrator if the parties could not agree on one arbitrator) while no fees would be paid to a judge. But she presented no evidence, and therefore failed to carry her burden, to show that her likely expenses in arbitration would exceed her likely expenses in litigation.
Finally, we note that it is not clear from the record that Hardin would be required to pay anything at all if the matter pro
Hardin’s attorney did not respond directly to the contention that the law firm was representing Hardin under a contingency fee arrangement, maintaining that the fee agreement was protected by the attorney-client privilege. But the attorney stated that if the case proceeded to arbitration, the firm would not represent Hardin and Hardin would have to bear the costs of arbitration.
To the extent Hardin has maintained that the costs of arbitrating her claim were prohibitively expensive, it was her burden to prove “the likelihood of incurring such costs.” Green Tree,
V. Conclusion
Because the trial court’s findings are unsupported by the record, it erred in denying the motion to arbitrate. Accordingly, the trial court’s order is reversed, and we remand with directions that an order be entered compelling arbitration.
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
. We note that the parties have not addressed in the trial court or in their briefs the possible effect of a severability provision contained in the arbitration agreement.
. In so concluding, we have not overlooked the potential impact of the Supreme Court’s recent opinion in American Express Co. v. Italian Colors Restaurant, - U.S. -,
. This argument assumes that no other law firm would represent Hardin and advance the necessary expenses. No evidence was offered in support of this argument.
