Supreme Court Poised To Decide Whether To Grant Certiorari In Major Arbitration Case (In re American Express

Keywords: antitrust, Arbitration, AT&T Mobility LLC v. Concepcion, In re American Express Merchants Litigation, Second Circuit, Supreme Court

When the Supreme Court convenes for its private conference today, the Justices will consider whether to grant certiorari in a case presenting one of the most significant questions regarding the meaning of the Court's ruling in AT&T Mobility v. Concepcion that remains unresolved in the lower courts.

Following the Concepcion decision, opponents of arbitration tried to convince lower courts to limit Concepcion's holding that arbitration clauses could not be invalidated on the ground that they required individual arbitration and prohibited class proceedings. The overwhelming majority of those arguments were rejected by district courts and courts of appeals, as explained in this article.

But a two-judge panel of the Second Circuit earlier this year endorsed the bizarre assertion that Concepcion applies differently depending on whether the claim to be arbitrated arises under state or federal law. In In re American Express Merchants' Litigation, the panel held that agreements to arbitrate disputes on an individual basis need not be enforced when a plaintiff provides evidence that the costs of vindicating a federal claim make it "economically irrational" to pursue such a claim without the class-action procedure. Amazingly, the court found that the affidavit of the plaintiffs' own economic expert provided sufficient "evidence" to invalidate the arbitration clauses. In other words, arbitration clauses that could be enforced with respect to a state claim might be unenforceable if the same plaintiff brought a virtually identical claim under federal law.

As noted in an earlier blog post, American Express filed a petition for a writ of certiorari seeking review of the Second Circuit's ruling (American Express Co. v. Italian Colors Restaurant, No. 12-133) and Mayer Brown authored an amicus brief supporting the petition on behalf of the Chamber of Commerce, Business Roundtable, American Bankers Association, and National Association of Manufacturers.

The amicus brief explains the dire consequences of allowing the Second Circuit's decision to stand: "Virtually any class-action complaint can be framed to include at least one federal claim. And plaintiffs' lawyers can readily retain an expert to assert that the costs of proving a plaintiff's claim would outweigh the potential recovery—thereby providing the factual...

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