JED S. RAKOFF, District Judge.
By an Opinion and Order dated December 28, 2009 (the "December 28 Order," reported at 677 F.Supp.2d 661), the Court denied the motion of defendant Sterling Jewelers, Inc. ("Sterling") to vacate the arbitrator's determination that the arbitration agreements between Sterling and its employees, including the plaintiffs in the above-captioned class action lawsuit, permitted class arbitration of plaintiffs' employment discrimination claims. On January 26, 2010, Sterling filed a notice of appeal of the December 28 Order. That appeal is presently pending before the Second Circuit. Thereafter, Sterling, pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 62.1, filed a motion in this Court seeking an "indicative ruling" as to whether the Court would reconsider its December 28 Order in light of the Supreme Court's recent decision in Stolt-Nielsen, S.A. v. AnimalFeeds International Corp., — U.S. —, 130 S.Ct. 1758, 176 L.Ed.2d 605 (2010). The Court received full briefing on this motion and held oral argument on June 30, 2010. For the following reasons, the Court hereby indicates that if jurisdiction were restored, it would reconsider its December 28 Order and vacate the arbitrator's ruling permitting class arbitration.
By way of background, in June 1998 Sterling put in place a three-step program
The parties then briefed the issue of class arbitrability to the arbitrator. Sterling argued, among other things, that certain provisions of the RESOLVE agreements, including requirements that each arbitration be held near where the employee worked and that the arbitrator apply local law, were incompatible with class arbitration. The plaintiffs responded chiefly by arguing that under then-applicable Second Circuit precedent, where, as in the RESOLVE agreements, the arbitration clauses do not expressly preclude class arbitration, class arbitration may be permitted. See Stolt-Nielsen SA v. Animal-Feeds Int'l Corp., 548 F.3d 85, 101 (2d Cir.2008), rev'd, — U.S. —, 130 S.Ct. 1758, 176 L.Ed.2d 605 (2010).
On June 1, 2009, the arbitrator ruled that the RESOLVE agreements did not prohibit class arbitration, and for that reason allowed class arbitration to proceed. Pursuant to the choice-of-law clause contained in the agreements, this ruling (as amended, the "June 1 Award") applied Ohio law to the issue of whether class claims were authorized under the arbitration contract, and noted that the question of whether class arbitration is permitted by an agreement that does not expressly so provide had not been addressed by the Ohio courts. The arbitrator then reasoned:
Sterling Rule 62.1 Mem., 5/13/10, Ex. A (June 1 Award), at 4-5. Accordingly, the arbitrator concluded that the RESOLVE agreements could not be construed to prohibit class arbitration.
On June 30, 2009, Sterling filed a motion before this Court to vacate the June 1 Award. Sterling also moved to stay arbitration proceedings pending the Supreme Court's decision in Stolt-Nielsen S.A. v. AnimalFeeds International Corp., which presented the question of whether permitting class arbitration where the relevant arbitration clauses were "silent" on class arbitration was consistent with the Federal Arbitration Act ("FAA"), 9 U.S.C. § 1 et seq. This Court denied the motion to stay for the reason, among others, that the Supreme Court's "eventual decision might be distinguishable on the basis that the agreements in Stolt-Nielsen arose in the maritime context, were standard industry contracts, and/or were entered into by sophisticated commercial parties." December 28 Order, 677 F.Supp.2d at 667-78.
On April 27, 2010, the Supreme Court issued its decision in Stolt-Nielsen, reversing the Second Circuit decision relied upon by this Court in the December 28 Order and by the arbitrator in her June 1 Award. The opinion of the Court held that the arbitration panel in Stolt-Nielsen exceeded its powers by "simply . . . impos[ing] its own view of sound policy regarding class arbitration" rather than "interpret[ing] and enforc[ing] [the] contract." 130 S.Ct. at 1767-68. This holding was founded on
The parties in Stolt-Nielsen stipulated that they had reached "no agreement" on the issue of class arbitration. Id. at 1775. The Supreme Court held that the arbitration panel there impermissibly required Stolt-Nielsen, S.A., the party seeking to avoid class arbitration, to "establish that the parties to the charter agreements intended to preclude class arbitration." Id. (internal quotation marks omitted). In passages highly relevant to the instant motion, the Supreme Court reasoned as follows:
Id. at 1775-76 (citations omitted). For these reasons, the Court rejected the arbitration panel's presumption that "the parties' mere silence on the issue of class-action arbitration constitutes consent to resolve their disputes in class proceedings." Id. at 1776.
Against this background, Sterling argues in its Rule 62.1 motion that the arbitrator
Plaintiffs concede, as they must, that the June 1 Award did not by its terms rest upon a finding that the parties manifested any affirmative intention to permit class arbitration. See Transcript, 6/30/10, at 24 ("MR. SELLERS: . . . I will concede that there's nothing explicit in the [arbitrator's] clause construction that provides for a finding of assent by the parties; and that the arbitrator, based on the legal standards that were applicable then, was focused on whether there was any intention to preclude it."). Rather, consistent with the arbitral award upheld by the Second Circuit in Stolt-Nielsen, Arbitrator Roberts started from the premise that an arbitration clause silent on class arbitration may be construed to permit such arbitration, devoted her analysis to determining whether there was any indication that the parties intended to preclude class arbitration, and ultimately concluded that the agreements "do not prohibit" class arbitration. This approach is plainly incompatible with the Supreme Court's subsequent pronouncements in Stolt-Nielsen.
Nonetheless, plaintiffs urge the Court to leave the arbitrator's ruling undisturbed because, they argue, the record before the arbitrator evinces the parties' shared intent to permit class arbitration. Specifically, plaintiffs focus on the following aspects of the record before the arbitrator: (1) the broad language of the RESOLVE agreements' arbitration clauses, which provide for the arbitration of "any dispute, claim or controversy . . . against Sterling," and empower the arbitrator to award "any types of legal or equitable relief that would be available in a court of competent jurisdiction"; (2) that under Ohio law, any ambiguities in the arbitration agreements, which are contracts of adhesion, must be construed against the drafter (Sterling); (3) that there is a tradition of class claims in the context of employment discrimination litigation; (4) that Sterling deliberately chose not to amend the RESOLVE agreements to expressly preclude class claims; and (5) that certain consumer arbitration agreements drafted by Sterling, unlike the RESOLVE agreements, do include an express preclusion of class claims. Assuming arguendo that the June 1 Award may be sustained, notwithstanding its silence on many of these issues, as long as the record before the arbitrator provides some indication that the parties intended to permit arbitration of class claims,
First, as to the broad language of the arbitration clauses, the clauses at issue in Stolt-Nielsen contained similarly broad wording, providing for the arbitration of "[a]ny dispute arising from the making, performance or termination of this Charter Party." 130 S.Ct. at 1765. Second, as to the claim that the RESOLVE agreements are contracts of adhesion, while this might be a "colorable argument" in the abstract, see December 28 Order, 677 F.Supp.2d at 667, an Ohio intermediate appellate court, construing the very agreement here in issue, has expressly reached the contrary result, W.K. v. Farrell, 167 Ohio App.3d 14, 26-27, 853 N.E.2d 728 (2006) (rejecting Sterling employee's claim that RESOLVE agreement was adhesive or unconscionable), and there is no Ohio case to the contrary. Third, while many Title VII lawsuits are litigated as class claims (and many are not), there is no basis for asserting that there is any long-standing custom of class arbitration of such claims. Last, with respect to Sterling's final two arguments, these contentions presume that Sterling had some obligation to affirmatively clarify that the RESOLVE agreements precluded class arbitration, which is directly contrary to Stolt-Nielsen's rejection of the notion that "parties' mere silence on the issue . . . constitutes consent to resolve their disputes in class proceedings." 130 S.Ct. at 1776.
Even when the most persuasive aspects of the foregoing arguments are taken together, plaintiffs still fail to identify any concrete basis in the record for the arbitrator to conclude that the parties manifested an intent to arbitrate class claims.
Finally, plaintiffs attempt to distinguish Stolt-Nielsen from this case on its facts. Plaintiffs emphasize that Stolt-Nielsen arose in the context of an antitrust dispute between two commercially sophisticated parties: Stolt-Nielsen, S.A., the owner and operator of parcel tankers, and Animal-Feeds International Corp., a cargo-shipper.
This Court, however, does not read Stolt-Nielsen so narrowly, and instead finds that these distinctions cannot cure the defects in the June 1 Award in light of Stolt-Nielsen's essential holding. The opinion of the Court in Stolt-Nielsen clearly held, in unqualified terms, that "[a]n implicit agreement to authorize class-action arbitration . . . is not a term that the arbitrator may infer solely from the fact of the parties' agreement to arbitrate." Id. at 1775. While contextual factors such as the sophistication of the parties, their relative bargaining position with respect to the arbitration clauses, and any pertinent tradition of dispute resolution might aid in construing ambiguous manifestations of the parties' intentions, they cannot establish assent to class arbitration where, as here, the contract itself provides no reason to believe the parties reached any agreement on that issue.
Finally, although plaintiffs are correct that here, unlike in Stolt-Nielsen, there is no stipulation between the instant parties that the RESOLVE agreements are "silent" on class arbitration, this is not a point that cuts in their favor. As noted, the RESOLVE agreements contain provisions that, among other things, require claimants to complete a multi-step process before submitting their disputes to an arbitrator, require the arbitration to take place in a local venue, and require the arbitrator to apply local law. While the June 1 Award concluded that these provisions were not incompatible with class arbitration, and this Court declined to vacate that award under the law of the Circuit at the time, these features, if anything, support the inference that the parties here may have intended to preclude class arbitration; they certainly do not evince any assent to permit arbitration of class claims. Cf.Fensterstock v. Educ. Fin. Partners, 611 F.3d 124, 141 (2d Cir.2010) (holding that an arbitration clause expressly purporting to waive the right to class arbitration was unconscionable as a matter of California law; severing that clause as unenforceable; but then concluding that the arbitration agreement, as severed, was "silent as to the permissibility of class-based arbitration, and under Stolt-Nielsen we have no authority to order class-based arbitration").
For the foregoing reasons, if jurisdiction were restored to this Court, the Court would reconsider its December 28 Order and vacate the June 1 Award permitting class arbitration as having been made in excess of the arbitrator's powers. See Stolt-Nielsen, 130 S.Ct. at 1775 ("[A] party may not be compelled under the FAA to submit to class arbitration unless there is a contractual basis for concluding that the
Pursuant to Rule 62.1(b), Sterling is directed bring this Memorandum Order to the attention of the Court of Appeals. The Clerk of this Court is directed to close documents 72 and 76 on the docket of this case.
SO ORDERED.