Another Blow to Class Action This week, the Supreme Court continued its aggressive effort to favor corporations by forcing customers to raise grievances through individual arbitration rather than a class action or some other joint legal challenge...The decision makes it very hard, if not impossible, to stop bad corporate practices because the potential award for an individual would be too small to justify a suit.
New York Times Editorial Another Blow to Class Action ByTHE EDITORIAL BOARD
This week, the Supreme Court continued its aggressive effort to favor corporations by forcing customers to raise grievances through individual arbitration rather than a class action or some other joint legal challenge.
In American Express Company v. Italian Colors Restaurant, the court ruled 5 to 3 that a group of merchants could not bring a class action against the company even on antitrust grounds because each had signed a contract that required complaints to be taken to individual arbitration.
The decision makes it very hard, if not impossible, to stop bad corporate practices because the potential award for an individual would be too small to justify a suit.
American Express requires merchants that want to accept its corporate and premium charge cards to also accept American Express credit cards, at a fee that is 30 percent higher than other credit cardsâ fees. Italian Colors Restaurant and others claimed that by requiring them to accept the third card the company is subjecting them to a âtying arrangement,â in violation of federal law.
The merchants sought typical damages of $5,000, but it would cost an individual merchant hundreds of thousands of dollars to try to prove an antitrust claim. The arbitration provision in their contracts prohibited them from sharing the cost or from consolidating their claims into one case, so each was left with no way to press a claim.
For the past three decades, the Supreme Court has ruled that individual arbitration is an acceptable way to resolve a dispute only when it gives the challenger a realistic chance of enforcing the claim. But as Justice Elena Kagan explained in her dissenting opinion, there is also a longstanding principle that âwhen an arbitration agreement prevents the effective vindication of federal rights, a party may go to court.â
The Supreme Court was wrong to bar the class action, asserting that federal law does not guarantee plaintiffs âan affordable procedural path to the vindication of every claim.â By doing so, Justice Kagan said, the majority turns arbitration from a method of resolving disputes into âa foolproof way of killing off valid claims.â The decision is one more example of the courtâs favoring powerful corporations over small businesses and individuals.