Showing posts with label appellate decisions. Show all posts
Showing posts with label appellate decisions. Show all posts

Friday, February 27, 2026

Circuit Court of Appeals Gives Plaintiffs a Tactical Way Out of Pre-Dispute Arbitration Clauses

In Bruce v. Adams & Reese, LLP, the 6th Circuit Court of Appeals held that a pre-dispute arbitration clause was invalid for an entire case because just one claim in the case involved sexual harassment based on a broad interpretation of the Ending Forced Arbitration of Sexual Assault and Sexual Harassment Act of 2021 ("EFAA"). Specifically, EFAA 402(a) provides that "at the election of the person alleging conduct constituting a sexual harassment dispute or sexual assault dispute . . . no predispute arbitration agreement . . . shall be valid or enforceable with respect to a case which is filed under Federal, Tribal, or State law and relates to the sexual assault dispute or the sexual harassment dispute." At issue in this case was the definition of the term "case," and the Circuit Court defined that term as "encompassing a plaintiff's entire suit." Specifically, the Appellate Court held that "where a plaintiff brings multiple claims in a single suit against a party with whom she has an otherwise-valid arbitration agreement, and one of those claims alleges a 'sexual assault dispute' or a 'sexual harassment dispute,' the EFAA renders the arbitration agreement unenforceable with respect to each of the claims that comprise her case." As a result, a Plaintiff seeking to tactically avoid arbitration can plead a sexual harassment claim as well as their core claims to avoid the suit. However, an entity seeking to compel arbitration can counter, by not arguing that the other claims must still be arbitrated, but by arguing that the sexual harassment claim was not alleged under the applicable pleading standard in the first instance and nothing must be arbitrated. Nonetheless, the Appellate Court left "for another day the question of whether the Yost standard (federal pleading standard), the Diaz-Roa standard (Bell v. Hood’s jurisdictional standard), or some other standard represents the correct interpretation of the EFAA" when determining if the sexual harassment claim was properly alleged. There is going to be a lot of litigation coming on this issue because companies are not going to want to give up their pre-dispute arbitration clauses because creative Plaintiff's counsel have tactically negated arbitration obligations by loosely alleging a weak sexual harassment claim. 

Arbitration clauses are no longer bulletproof.

If your company relies on pre-dispute arbitration agreements, or you are challenging one, contact Lieb at Law, P.C. to assess your exposure and strategy now.