JAMES S. GWIN, District Judge.
Plaintiff Ladon Bruster moves for reconsideration of this Court's May 23, 2016 opinion compelling arbitration and dismissing the case.
Plaintiff Bruster worked as driver for Defendant Uber Technologies from July 2014 until November 2015. When signing up to drive with Uber, Plaintiff accepted Uber's Technology Services Agreement. The Agreement had arbitration and delegation provisions. Uber drivers like Plaintiff could opt out of the arbitration and delegation provisions by sending an email to Uber within 30 days of signing the Agreement.
On November 25, 2015, Uber deactivated Plaintiff's account. On December 21, 2015, Plaintiff brought unpaid overtime claims against Uber in this Court.
On May 23, 2016, this Court granted Defendants' motion to dismiss and compel arbitration. This Court held that the delegation clause was valid and enforceable. The delegation clause called giving the arbitrator, not this Court, the authority to decide threshold questions of arbitrability.
On June 17, 2016, Plaintiff Bruster moved this Court to reconsider its May 23, 2016 opinion.
The Federal Rules of Civil Procedure do not describe motions to reconsider. The Sixth Circuit, however, has held that a motion to vacate and reconsider may be treated under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 59(e) as a motion to alter or amend a judgment.
A court may grant a motion to amend or alter a judgment "to correct a clear error of law; account for newly discovered evidence or an intervening change in the controlling law; or otherwise prevent manifest injustice."
Plaintiff offers several arguments for reconsidering this Court's prior decision. All are either old arguments that this Court already considered or new arguments that could have been raised in opposition to the motion to compel arbitration, but were not. Moreover, even if the Court were to reconsider its previous decision, Plaintiff's arguments lose.
Plaintiff made these arguments in his opposition to Defendants' motion to compel arbitration, and this Court rejected them. This Court found that under Rent-A-Center, the Uber Agreement's arbitration provisions—including the delegation clause—were severable from the remainder of the Agreement.
Applying California law leads to the same result: that the delegation provision is valid because it is not procedurally unconscionable. As the Maryland District Court found in assessing a similar Uber agreement in Varon v. Uber,
At bottom, Plaintiff could have easily opted out of the challenged arbitration provisions. Plaintiff does not show that those provisions are procedurally unconscionable under either Ohio or California law.
Next, Plaintiff argues that the Seventh Circuit's decision in Lewis v. Epic Systems Corp.,
Lewis was published after this Court's opinion, and therefore could not have been "discovered and offered" in opposition to Defendants' motion to compel arbitration. However, the idea underlying Lewis, that arbitration clauses that limit employees' rights under the National Labor Relations Act are invalid and unenforceable, could have, with due diligence, been offered in opposition to arbitration.
Lewis is not a novel legal theory.
Even if this Court were to consider Plaintiff's arguments from Lewis, it would not change the outcome of this Court's May 23, 2016 opinion.
Defendants correctly note that Seventh Circuit case law is not binding on this Court. Furthermore, this Court finds that the Ninth Circuit case Johnmohammadi v. Bloomingdale's, Inc.,
Lewis analyzed and invalidated a mandatory arbitration provision. In Johnmohammadi, the Ninth Circuit held that an arbitration provision with an opt-out clause did not violate the NLRA. In this case, the Uber agreement allowed drivers like Plaintiff to opt-out of the arbitration provisions within thirty days of signing up to drive with Uber.
For the reasons above, this Court
IT IS SO ORDERED.