WILSON, Circuit Judge:
This dispute arose when Michael Dasher and other checking account customers sued RBC Bank for allegedly charging excessive overdraft fees in breach of their account agreement.
RBC previously appealed the district court's denial of its motion to compel arbitration. At that time, the relationship between
On remand, and while the RBC Agreement still governed the parties' relationship, RBC filed a renewed motion to compel arbitration. Dasher requested an opportunity to conduct discovery, and the request was granted. In 2012, while discovery was ongoing and before the district court ruled on RBC's renewed motion, PNC Financial Services Group, Inc. (PNC) acquired RBC, giving PNC possession of Dasher's account. In advance of its acquisition, PNC issued an account agreement to govern the relationship with Dasher (PNC Agreement), which Dasher accepted. Unlike the RBC Agreement, the PNC Agreement did not contain an arbitration clause—in fact, it did not mention arbitration at all.
Subsequently, at oral argument before the district court on RBC's renewed motion to compel arbitration, the parties disputed whether the RBC Agreement or the PNC Agreement controlled. RBC argued that the RBC Agreement controlled and that the arbitration provision in that agreement was enforceable in light of Concepcion. Dasher argued that the PNC Agreement entirely superseded the RBC Agreement, and therefore the district court should look only to the PNC Agreement to determine whether the parties agreed to arbitrate. Given the absence of an agreement to arbitrate in the PNC Agreement, this would require the court to deny RBC's motion without reaching the question of enforceability. The district court agreed with Dasher, concluding that the 2012 PNC Agreement entirely superseded the 2008 RBC Agreement. Finding no evidence that the parties agreed to arbitrate their disputes in the PNC Agreement, the district court denied RBC's motion. RBC timely appealed.
On appeal, RBC argues that the district court made five reversible errors: (1) the Federal Arbitration Act (FAA), 9 U.S.C. § 1 et seq., creates a presumption in favor of arbitrability that the district court failed to apply; (2) contrary to the district court's holding, the PNC Agreement's silence on arbitration cannot invalidate the RBC Agreement's arbitration provision; (3) the district court improperly ignored the termination clause in the RBC Agreement; (4) the district court improperly applied the PNC Agreement retroactively to disputes that arose while the RBC Agreement was still in effect; and (5) the district court relied upon provisions in the RBC Agreement to support its analysis,
"We review the denial of [a] motion to compel arbitration de novo." Musnick v. King Motor Co. of Fort Lauderdale, 325 F.3d 1255, 1257 (11th Cir.2003). Applying this standard, we review each of RBC's claims in turn.
RBC argues that arbitration was required in this case because the FAA creates "a presumption of arbitrability in the sense that an order to arbitrate ... should not be denied unless it may be said with positive assurance that the arbitration clause is not susceptible of an interpretation that covers the asserted dispute." AT & T Techs., Inc. v. Commc'ns Workers of Am., 475 U.S. 643, 650, 106 S.Ct. 1415, 1419, 89 L.Ed.2d 648 (1986) (internal quotation marks omitted). Stated differently, the FAA "establishes that, as a matter of federal law, any doubts concerning the scope of arbitrable issues should be resolved in favor of arbitration." Moses H. Cone Mem'l Hosp. v. Mercury Constr. Corp., 460 U.S. 1, 24-25, 103 S.Ct. 927, 941, 74 L.Ed.2d 765 (1983); see also Kidd v. Equitable Life Assurance Soc'y of U.S., 32 F.3d 516, 519 (11th Cir.1994) (same). Further, the presumption applies when an "arbitration agreement is ambiguous about whether it covers the dispute at hand." Granite Rock Co. v. Int'l Bhd. of Teamsters, 561 U.S. 287, ___, 130 S.Ct. 2847, 2858, 177 L.Ed.2d 567 (2010). RBC contends that arbitrability is in doubt, that there is a reasonable interpretation of the agreements that would require arbitration, and that the district court therefore erred under the FAA by refusing to resolve doubts and interpret the agreements in favor of arbitration.
Had the district court based its opinion on a narrow interpretation of the RBC Agreement's arbitration clause, or had it resolved some ambiguity in that clause against arbitration, RBC's claim might have merit. Given the breadth of the RBC Agreement's arbitration provision, however, there is no ambiguity "about whether it covers the dispute at hand." Id. at ___, 130 S.Ct. at 2858. If the arbitration provision is valid, it covers this dispute. Here, however, the parties do not dispute the "scope of arbitrable issues," Cone, 460 U.S. at 24, 103 S.Ct. at 941, because neither the scope nor the interpretation of the RBC Agreement's arbitration clause is at issue.
Instead, RBC and Dasher disagree about whether the RBC Agreement has been superseded such that it does not apply to any disputes, regardless of the breadth of its scope or how it is interpreted. The FAA's presumption is inapplicable in this situation, as courts are to apply "the presumption of arbitrability only where a validly formed and enforceable arbitration agreement is ambiguous about whether it covers the dispute at hand." Granite Rock, 561 U.S. at ___, 130 S.Ct. at 2858 (emphasis added). Granite Rock thus precludes application of the FAA's
Even without applying the FAA's presumption, RBC contends that the parties have a validly formed, enforceable arbitration agreement. In assessing the validity of this claim, we must be mindful of the Supreme Court's instruction that "arbitration is simply a matter of contract." First Options of Chi., Inc. v. Kaplan, 514 U.S. 938, 943, 115 S.Ct. 1920, 1924, 131 L.Ed.2d 985 (1995). Accordingly, when determining whether an arbitration agreement exists, "courts generally ... should apply ordinary state-law principles that govern the formation of contracts." Id. at 944, 115 S.Ct. at 1924; Caley v. Gulfstream Aerospace Corp., 428 F.3d 1359, 1368 (11th Cir.2005) ("[I]n determining whether a binding agreement arose between the parties, courts apply the contract law of the particular state that governs the formation of contracts."). These principles dictate that courts look for evidence that the parties "objectively revealed an intent to submit the [dispute] to arbitration." First Options, 514 U.S. at 944, 115 S.Ct. at 1924. Thus, to resolve this case we apply North Carolina contract law and look for objective evidence that the parties agreed to arbitrate.
This matter is complicated by the fact that the parties dispute which agreement controls, with Dasher arguing that the PNC Agreement replaced the RBC Agreement and RBC contending that the RBC Agreement remains effective. This, too, is resolved by applying state contract law without the FAA's presumption of arbitrability. See Applied Energetics, 645 F.3d at 526.
Id. (citation and internal quotation marks omitted). Burgess clearly establishes that the RBC Agreement is superseded if "the parties expressed their clear and definite intent to execute [the PNC Agreement] to supersede the [RBC Agreement]," and if they did, "the [PNC] contract supersedes the [RBC] contract." Id. (internal quotation marks omitted).
Here, the parties expressed their "clear and definite intent" that the PNC Agreement would supersede the RBC Agreement. The RBC Agreement's assignment clause states:
(Emphasis added.) When PNC acquired RBC, it is undisputed that PNC became a "successor[] and assign[ee]," essentially stepping into RBC's shoes and inheriting all of RBC's rights under the RBC Agreement. See 12 U.S.C. § 215a(e).
One of the rights PNC acquired from RBC under the RBC Agreement was the right to change "any part or parts of the Agreement" at any time pursuant to the RBC Agreement's amendment clause. Further, if RBC—or its successor PNC— exercised this right and issued a new agreement, the amendment clause stipulated that "the most current version of the Agreement supersedes all prior versions and will at all times govern." (Emphasis added.)
PNC exercised its assigned right to change "any part or parts of the [RBC] Agreement" by issuing the entirely new PNC Agreement. According to terms drafted by RBC in the RBC Agreement, by issuing a new agreement, the parties "supersede[d] all prior versions" of the account agreement. Thus, PNC "expressed [its] clear and definite intent to execute a new contract to supersede" the RBC Agreement. Burgess, 588 S.E.2d at 578 (internal quotation marks omitted).
Having determined that the PNC Agreement superseded the RBC Agreement, "we must consider whether the [PNC Agreement] alone is sufficient to bind the parties to arbitration." Burgess, 588 S.E.2d at 577. Our analysis turns on whether there is sufficient evidence to show "an agreement to arbitrate disputes between the parties." Id. at 578 (internal quotation marks omitted). Quite clearly, there is not. Indeed, the PNC Agreement is entirely silent on arbitration, providing even less evidence of an agreement to arbitrate than was present in Burgess, where the parties at least mentioned arbitration. Id. (finding insufficient evidence of an agreement to arbitrate and noting that while the subsequent agreement mentioned an arbitration addendum, that addendum was never attached or signed); see also Emmanuel Afr. Methodist Episcopal Church v. Reynolds Constr. Co., 718 S.E.2d 201, 203 (N.C.Ct.App.2011) (stating that, in order to form an arbitration agreement, the parties must "specify ... the scope and terms of their agreement"); D.P. Solutions, Inc. v. Xplore-Tech Servs. Private Ltd., 211 N.C. App. 632, 710 S.E.2d 297, 300 (2011) ("Arbitration is simply a matter of contract.... [T]o determine whether the parties agreed to submit a particular dispute or claim to arbitration, we must look at the language in the agreement." (internal citation and quotation marks omitted)). It appears, then, that the district court properly denied RBC's motion. See Granite Rock, 561 U.S. at ___, 130 S.Ct. at 2856 ("[A] court may order arbitration of a particular dispute only where the court is satisfied that the parties agreed to arbitrate that dispute." (emphasis omitted)); Doe v. Princess Cruise Lines, Ltd., 657 F.3d 1204, 1214 (11th Cir.2011) ("[P]arties will not be required to arbitrate when they have not agreed to do so." (internal quotation marks omitted)).
RBC resists this straightforward application of the terms of the parties' agreements, which would ordinarily end the inquiry, by arguing that even if the RBC Agreement is superseded, its arbitration clause is not. This is so, RBC contends, because arbitration clauses can only be waived by clear and explicit language and
The obvious response is that this case does not involve waiver of an arbitration provision at all; rather, it involves superseding the entire agreement containing an arbitration provision and replacing that provision with silence. These are two very different situations: waiver situations involve a still-valid underlying prior agreement, while the situation here involves an entirely invalid underlying prior agreement. In the waiver context, the agreements may create ambiguity with regard to arbitration, but here, it is clear that all provisions in the prior agreement are eliminated under state law, including the arbitration provision, and nothing in the new agreement establishes the right to compel arbitration anew.
At this point, RBC reaches its last line of defense. RBC claims that even when parties supersede—rather than waive—a prior agreement containing an arbitration clause by forming a new agreement that is silent on arbitration, the prior agreement's arbitration clause remains binding. In these situations, RBC contends that the arbitration clause can only be superseded if it is specifically eliminated by the superseding agreement. In other words, RBC claims that silence in a subsequent agreement is per se insufficient to eliminate an earlier agreement's arbitration provision. This leads to the implausible conclusion that when parties indicate a clear intent to supersede a prior agreement, that superseding language applies to every term in the prior agreement except for arbitration provisions.
RBC claims to find support for its proposition in cases decided by our sister circuits. In Bank Julius Baer & Co. v. Waxfield Ltd., the parties signed an agreement requiring arbitration then entered into a new agreement that superseded all prior agreements and contained a merger clause stating that the new agreement constituted the entire agreement between the parties. 424 F.3d 278, 282 (2d Cir.2005). Notwithstanding claims that the arbitration clause was superseded, the Second Circuit held that "the Arbitration Clause ... remain[s] in effect" because the subsequent agreement "does not even mention arbitration." Id. at 284, 285. The same sequence of events occurred in Patten Securities Corp. v. Diamond Greyhound & Genetics, Inc., and the Third Circuit compelled arbitration in part because "any reference to arbitration" was "[c]onspicuously absent from the" subsequent agreement. 819 F.2d 400, 407 (3d Cir.1987), abrogated on other grounds by Gulfstream Aerospace Corp. v. Mayacamas Corp., 485 U.S. 271, 287, 108 S.Ct. 1133, 1142, 99 L.Ed.2d 296 (1988).
Several district court decisions appear, at first glance, to support RBC's contention as well. For example, in Sher v. Goldman Sachs, the subsequent agreement was silent on arbitration and expressly stated that it superseded the prior agreement, which contained a broad arbitration clause. No. CCB-11-2796, 2012 WL 1377066, at *1-2 (D.Md. Apr. 19, 2012). The court held that "a subsequent agreement without reference to arbitration does not overcome the presumption of arbitration
Despite this language, which certainly appears to support RBC's contention, closer examination reveals a critical distinction: in each case cited by RBC, the prior agreement remained effective to some extent for various reasons, whereas here, the prior agreement is entirely superseded. Consequently, whether or not the opinions cited by RBC explicitly recognized the point, those cases essentially involved attempted waivers of the earlier agreement's arbitration provision, notwithstanding superseding language.
Patten Securities is the most readily distinguishable of the cases cited by RBC. In that case, nothing suggested that the subsequent agreement was meant to supersede the prior agreement. Instead, one party attempted to argue that a non-exclusive forum selection clause in a subsequent underwriting agreement implicitly superseded a prior agreement's arbitration provision. 819 F.2d at 405. The court analyzed the forum selection clause as a potential waiver, id. at 406-07 (discussing "whether a forum selection clause is a waiver" (emphasis added)), and accordingly applied the FAA's presumption to its analysis, id. at 407 (citing Cone, 460 U.S. at 24-25, 103 S.Ct. at 941). Because the forum selection clause was not inconsistent with arbitration, the court held that the arbitration provision was not "waive[d]." Id.
In Bank Julius Baer and DeMartini, the prior agreements were explicitly incorporated by reference into the new agreements, meaning that the prior agreements were not actually superseded. See Bank Julius Baer, 424 F.3d at 283 (noting that the subsequent agreement stated: "all the rights and remedies ... are cumulative and not exclusive of any rights or remedies provided under any other agreement" (internal quotation marks omitted)); DeMartini, 2012 WL 4808448, at *2 (noting that the subsequent agreement stated: "[a]ll other terms and conditions of the original... Agreement ... shall remain in full force and effect." (alteration in original) (internal quotation marks omitted)).
Similarly, in Sher, the subsequent agreement's application was explicitly limited to "matters covered by" that agreement. See 2012 WL 1377066 at *1. In essence, it functioned as an amendment to portions of the prior agreement rather than a superseding wholesale replacement of that agreement. Sher also cited with approval the Second Circuit's recognition that in circumstances where "invalidating the first agreement `would ... lead to absurd results,'" courts should not invalidate the first agreement. Id. at *3 (quoting Bank Julius Baer, 424 F.3d at 283).
Contrary to RBC's position, however, these cases do not hold that arbitration clauses in entirely superseded agreements remain effective unless specifically eliminated. Indeed, these cases could not support such a rule because none of them dealt with an entirely superseded agreement. When an agreement containing an arbitration provision is entirely superseded, as happened here, the existence of a "validly formed and enforceable arbitration agreement" is called into question. Granite Rock, 561 U.S. at ___, 130 S.Ct. at 2858. And as noted above, when making determinations related to formation, state
Both of our sister circuits to address the issue have held that when an entirely superseding agreement is silent on arbitration, arbitration cannot be compelled even if a prior agreement contained an arbitration clause. See Applied Energetics, 645 F.3d at 524-25; Dottore v. Huntington Nat'l Bank, No. 1:09-cv2636, 2010 WL 3861010, at *4 (N.D.Ohio Sept. 28, 2010), aff'd 480 Fed.App'x. 351 (6th Cir.2012); see also Burgess, 588 S.E.2d at 578.
RBC attempts to salvage its "silence is per se insufficient" argument by suggesting that the subsequent agreement in Applied Energetics did, in effect, specifically supersede the arbitration provision. In other words, the critical factor in RBC's view was not the fact that the prior agreement was entirely superseded, but rather the fact that the subsequent agreement contained an exclusive forum selection clause that specifically precluded arbitration. This provision stated that the parties shall resolve their disputes in state court. Id. at 525-26. The court found that this language plainly precluded arbitration because if a dispute shall be resolved in state court, it cannot be resolved through arbitration. Id. RBC contends that when the Second Circuit held that the "subsequent agreement ... plainly preclude[d] arbitration," id. at 525, it was referring to the exclusive forum selection clause which specifically precluded arbitration. There is no such clause in the PNC Agreement, and therefore RBC asks us to distinguish Applied Energetics.
RBC misunderstands the basis for the Second Circuit's holding in Applied Energetics. To be sure, the Second Circuit noted that the forum selection clause precluded arbitration, id., but the Second Circuit made clear that this was not the primary basis for its holding: "Even assuming,... that the [arbitration clause and the forum selection clause] could reasonably be read as complementary, we
It is critical that neither Bank Julius Baer nor Applied Energetics relied on the FAA's presumption to determine the threshold question of whether the prior agreement was entirely superseded. In Bank Julius Baer, the court applied the FAA's presumption only after determining that the superseding language in the merger clause would not be given full effect. 424 F.3d at 283-85. In Applied Energetics, the court analyzed whether the prior agreement was entirely superseded under state law. 645 F.3d at 526.
Because this case is like Applied Energetics and not like Bank Julius Baer in that the RBC Agreement was entirely superseded, the FAA's presumption simply does not apply. RBC's contention that silence is insufficient to invalidate a prior agreement's arbitration provision may well be correct when the FAA's presumption applies, but in cases like this where that presumption does not apply, arbitration clauses must be treated like any other portion of a party's agreement. And when "all prior agreements" are superseded, as they were here, a prior arbitration agreement is superseded because it obviously fits within the category of "all prior agreements."
This is precisely the conclusion reached by the Sixth Circuit in Dottore under facts that are nearly identical to those in this case. See 2010 WL 3861010, at *1-2. There, a bank and its customer replaced their original account agreement that contained an arbitration clause with a completely new agreement that did not mention arbitration but was "in every respect a fully self-contained document." Id. at *2, *4. The district court denied the bank's motion to compel arbitration, and the Sixth Circuit affirmed, even though the subsequent agreement neither mentioned arbitration nor contained an exclusive forum selection clause. See Dottore, 480 Fed. Appx. at 353. The fact that the new account agreement did "not include any arbitration provision, and [did] not refer to any previously existing agreement[]" was sufficient to render the prior agreement's arbitration provision ineffective. Dottore, 2010 WL 3861010, at *4.
We agree with the Second and Sixth Circuits, and hereby hold that an entirely superseding agreement renders a prior agreement's arbitration clause ineffective, even if the superseding agreement is silent on arbitration. The threshold determination of whether a subsequent agreement entirely superseded a prior agreement is made under state law, without applying the FAA's presumption. If the subsequent agreement only partially supersedes the prior agreement, amends it, or waives some but not all of its provisions, the second question is whether the arbitration provision was among the superseded, amended, or waived provisions.
RBC contends, in the alternative, that the district court must be reversed because arbitration can be required pursuant to the RBC Agreement's termination clause. That clause states:
RBC claims that the RBC Agreement was effectively terminated when PNC issued the PNC Agreement, and therefore the RBC Agreement's terms still apply to the dispute in question, which arose prior to this termination. Further, courts have consistently held that arbitration provisions survive the termination of the agreements containing those provisions. See, e.g., Nolde Bros., Inc. v. Local No. 358, Bakery & Confectionary Workers Union, 430 U.S. 243, 255, 97 S.Ct. 1067, 1074, 51 L.Ed.2d 300 (1977). The district court disagreed, holding that the RBC Agreement was superseded rather than terminated, but RBC insists this is a distinction without a difference.
RBC is incorrect. In cases like Nolde Brothers, the parties terminated their contractual relationship, leaving the reviewing court with two options: look to the now-terminated agreement, or resolve the dispute without resort to any agreement at all. The Court opted for the former, applying the FAA's presumption and reasoning that "there is little reason to construe this contract to mean that the parties intended their contractual duty to submit grievances [to arbitration] to terminate [with the contract]; the alternative remedy of a lawsuit is the very remedy the arbitration clause was designed to avoid." Id. at 254, 97 S.Ct. at 1073. Here, the court was faced with an entirely different choice: presume the now-superseded RBC Agreement's terms control, or look to the newly-agreed-to PNC Agreement. RBC asks us to choose the former based on the termination clause and the Court's reasoning in Nolde Brothers, but to do so in this case would be to ignore the terms of the RBC Agreement rather than merely making a presumption based on contractual silence. Nolde Brothers is therefore inapplicable.
Stated differently, the RBC Agreement contemplated two distinct scenarios: one—covered by the termination clause—would
Even if we hold that the RBC Agreement's arbitration clause is superseded, RBC claims that because the facts giving rise to this dispute occurred while the RBC Agreement was still effective, the dispute is subject to arbitration. In other words, RBC claims that the terms of the PNC Agreement apply only prospectively to govern the parties' relationship moving forward, not retroactively to govern interactions between the parties in the past.
In support of its claim, RBC accurately points out that where terms have been applied retroactively, contractual language explicitly authorized that result. See, e.g., Daniel v. Chase Bank USA, N.A., 650 F.Supp.2d 1275, 1288 (N.D.Ga.2009) (noting that although the original agreement did not require arbitration, the contract stated that terms could be amended at any time and that amended terms would apply to new transactions and "to all outstanding" debt). RBC claims that here, by contrast, nothing in the PNC Agreement authorizes retroactive application, and its case becomes even stronger in light of clearly prospective language in the RBC Agreement. The RBC Agreement states, "[w]e will normally set an effective date for each change, but if we do not do so, the effective date will be the date we make the change." Thus, because the PNC Agreement did not become effective until after litigation in this dispute began and well after the alleged breaches occurred, RBC concludes that the RBC Agreement's arbitration clause is applicable to resolve this dispute.
RBC also correctly points out that Dottore and Applied Energetics are distinguishable because in those cases, the alleged breaches occurred after the new agreements became effective, and thus after the arbitration clauses were superseded. Here, by contrast, the arbitration clause was not superseded until after the facts giving rise to this dispute occurred. RBC claims that this distinction requires us to reach a different holding here.
RBC's argument fails because, contrary to its assertion, the parties agreed to apply the terms of the PNC Agreement retroactively. The amendment clause in the RBC Agreement states that "the most current version of the Agreement supersedes all prior versions and will at all times govern." (Emphasis added.) "At all times" necessarily includes the past, present, and future, and therefore, according to the terms of the RBC Agreement, the superseding PNC Agreement governs this dispute even though the facts giving rise to it occurred in the past.
Further, while the alleged breaches in Dottore and Applied Energetics occurred after the arbitration provisions were superseded, the cases stand for the broader proposition that courts should honor the parties' agreements relating to arbitration. That is precisely what the district court did here. And as RBC noted, if parties agree that terms should be applied retroactively, we honor that choice unless prohibited from doing so. See Daniel, 650 F.Supp.2d at 1288.
The question remains whether there is a prohibition on retroactively applying the terms of the PNC Agreement as the parties intended. RBC argues that we should answer in the affirmative, to which Dasher responds that RBC is attempting to have it both ways. As Dasher explains, RBC is seeking to compel arbitration to resolve all disputes in this case, even though many of the fees at issue were assessed before an arbitration clause was added to the RBC Agreement for the first time in 2008. To explain this anomaly, which would have us retroactively apply terms adding an arbitration provision while refusing to retroactively apply terms superseding that same provision, RBC points to § 2 of the FAA. That provision states that "an agreement in writing to submit to arbitration an existing controversy ... shall be valid...." 9 U.S.C. § 2. There is, however, no statutory authorization permitting parties to remove from arbitration an existing controversy.
RBC's argument again fails. The fact that Congress explicitly required courts to honor retroactively applicable arbitration agreements in no way suggests that courts are prohibited from honoring parties' agreements to retroactively apply terms removing such provisions. After all, "arbitration is simply a matter of contract," First Options, 514 U.S. at 943, 115 S.Ct. at 1924. Thus, courts should simply enforce the parties' agreements, whether that means adding a retroactively applicable arbitration provision or removing it. Why, then, was § 2 necessary? The answer is that "[t]he FAA was enacted ... in response to widespread judicial hostility to arbitration agreements." Concepcion, ___ U.S. at ___, 131 S.Ct. at 1745. Section 2 therefore ensured that courts would "place arbitration agreements on an equal footing with other contracts," id. (emphasis added), and permit parties to add retroactively applicable arbitration clauses, just as it would permit parties to remove them.
There is one final reason to conclude that the PNC Agreement's terms should be applied retroactively, and that is North Carolina's policy requiring that contracts be construed against the drafter. See, e.g., Chavis v. S. Life Ins. Co., 318 N.C. 259, 347 S.E.2d 425, 427 (1986). If RBC had intended to limit the applicability of the PNC Agreement's terms to future disputes, RBC could have used the phrase "begin to govern" as it had before; instead, it used the phrase "at all times govern." While it may seem odd—and to RBC, regrettable—that RBC's successor voluntarily undermined RBC's pending attempt to arbitrate, that is a product of the agreement RBC drafted, which gave its assignee not only the right to compel arbitration but also the power to retroactively eliminate that right. The district court properly applied the terms of the parties' agreements as they were written and refused to relieve RBC of the consequences of its own drafting.
Finally, RBC argues that if the RBC Agreement is superseded for purposes of eliminating the arbitration provision, it should also be superseded for purposes of eliminating the provisions Dasher alleges were breached. See, e.g., Allied-Bruce Terminix Cos. v. Dobson, 513 U.S. 265, 281, 115 S.Ct. 834, 843, 130 L.Ed.2d 753 (1995) (holding that states may not "decide that a contract is fair enough to enforce all its basic terms (price, service, credit), but not fair enough to enforce its arbitration clause"). Further, RBC insists the district court violated the FAA's command, as interpreted by the Supreme Court in Concepcion, not to single out arbitration provisions for disfavored treatment. ___ U.S. at ___, 131 S.Ct. at 1746 (prohibiting states from using contract "defenses that apply only to arbitration or that derive their meaning from the fact that an agreement to arbitrate is at issue").
RBC's argument again fails for a number of reasons. First, the district court has not ruled on whether Dasher's claims are still viable; RBC merely predicts that the court will allow those claims to proceed. RBC's complaint is therefore premature, and even if RBC were correct in the abstract—which it is not—we could not reverse on this basis until the district court actually treated some other provision more favorably than the arbitration provision.
Second, and more importantly, RBC confuses two very different situations. RBC claims it had the right to compel arbitration under the RBC Agreement and that the district court denied that right, even though that agreement was not effective when the district court ruled. Dasher, by contrast, claims that he had the right not to be charged excessive overdraft fees under the RBC Agreement and that RBC violated that right at a time when that agreement was still effective. In other words, when RBC's right to compel arbitration was denied by the district court, RBC did not have a right to compel arbitration because the only agreement granting that right was not effective, but when
Far from applying a "defense[] that appl[ies] only to arbitration," Concepcion, ___ U.S. at ___, 131 S.Ct. at 1746, the district court was applying basic principles of North Carolina contract law—and common sense—that claims for breach accrue when a breach occurs. See Miller v. Randolph, 124 N.C. App. 779, 478 S.E.2d 668, 670 (1996). Thus, Dasher's claim accrued the moment RBC charged allegedly excessive fees. Finally, we note that if Dasher, like RBC, was asserting that the RBC Agreement's terms protect him today— that is, if he asserted a claim for breaching the RBC Agreement based on an excessive overdraft fee charged today—the district court would be required to dismiss his claims, just as it rejected RBC's claim that it was entitled to arbitration because the agreement granting that right was no longer effective. But this is not what Dasher is asserting, and it is this critical distinction in timing, not hostility towards arbitration, that explains the difference in treatment between the two parties' claims under the RBC Agreement.
For the foregoing reasons, we agree with the district court's conclusion that RBC cannot compel arbitration here. State law applies when courts determine whether a valid arbitration agreement is in effect, and the FAA's presumption does not. Under North Carolina law, the RBC Agreement was entirely superseded, and the arbitration agreement in that agreement therefore became ineffective. Based on this conclusion, the district court properly looked to the PNC Agreement to determine whether the parties agreed to arbitrate their disputes. Under North Carolina law, the PNC Agreement's silence is insufficient to form such an agreement. Further, based on the terms of the agreements, the PNC Agreement applies retroactively. Because the agreement governing the dispute at hand does not permit RBC to compel arbitration, the district court properly denied RBC's motion.