On July 15, 2024, the California Supreme Court issued its decision in Ramirez v. Charter Communications, Inc., clarifying California law on the enforceability of several common arbitration provisions and the standards by which courts must review arbitration agreements. The decision is a helpful reminder for employers to work with experienced employment counsel to regularly review and update existing arbitration agreements.
The Court’s Holdings
In Ramirez, the defendant Charter Communications required the plaintiff to sign an arbitration agreement as a condition of her employment. Last week, the California Supreme Court weighed in and held that three of the four provisions identified by the lower courts could not be enforced because they were substantively unconscionable.
Ultimately, the California Supreme Court remanded the matter for the lower court to determine if it could sever the unconscionable provisions. In so doing, the Court instructed that the test for severability is qualitative, not quantitative. The key question is whether “the central purpose of the contract is tainted with illegality,” not whether the number of substantively unconscionable provisions exceeds a certain numerical limit. The Court also ruled that an arbitration agreement can only be cured by severing or limiting unlawful provisions, not through a court reforming, augmenting, or rewriting the agreement. Finally, the Court ruled that courts must consider whether severing the unconscionable provisions and enforcing the agreement furthers the interests of justice.
What This Means for California’s Employers
This ruling provides welcome clarification about whether courts will enforce arbitration agreements with the common provisions discussed earlier in this Alert. The opinion is also a reminder that California law on arbitration agreements is constantly evolving and that arbitration agreements should be regularly reviewed and updated if they are going to be enforced by a court. Employers are strongly encouraged to use this case as an opportunity to review existing arbitration agreements with experienced employment counsel.
Please contact us if you have questions about how this new case will affect your arbitration agreement or need advice about how to proceed.
Wilson Turner Kosmo’s Special Alerts are intended to update our valued clients on significant employment law developments as they occur. This should not be considered legal advice.
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