Elizabeth Hart et al v. Charter Communications, Inc. et al
Filing
55
JUDGMENT/ORDER GRANTING JOINT STIPULATION AND MOTION TO CONFIRM FINAL AWARD AND ENTERING JUDGMENT by Judge David O. Carter 53 . Pursuant to the order of the Arbitrator, both sides will bear their own costs, neither side is entitled to an award of attorneys fees against the other, and the administrative fees of arbitration totaling $2,250 and the compensation and expenses of the Arbitrator totaling $4,125 shall be borne as incurred by the parties. The clerk shall docket th is judgment pursuant to Federal Arbitration Act, 9 U.S.C. section 13, and it shall have the same force and effect, in all respects, as, and be subject to all the provisions of law relating to, a judgment in an action. IT IS SO ORDERED AND ADJUDGED. LET JUDGMENT BE FORTHWITH ENTERED ACCORDINGLY. SEE DOCUMENT FOR FURTHER INFORMATION. (twdb) Modified on 4/18/2019 (twdb).
1 Jamin S. Soderstrom, Bar No. 261054
jamin@soderstromlawfirm.com
2 SODERSTROM LAW PC
3 Park Plaza, Suite 100
3 Irvine, California 92614
Tel: (949) 667-4700; Fax: (949) 424-8091
4
Douglas L. Mahaffey, Bar No. 125980
5 dougm@mahhaffeylaw.com
MAHAFFEY LAW GROUP, PC
6 20162 SW Birch Street, Suite 300
Newport Beach, California 92660
7 Tel: (949) 833-1400; Fax: (949) 263-8736
8 Counsel for Plaintiffs and the Proposed Class
LATHAM & WATKINS LLP
9
Daniel Scott Schecter (Bar No. 171472)
daniel.schecter@lw.com
10
10250 Constellation Boulevard, Suite 1100
11 Los Angeles, CA. 90067
Tel.: 424.653.5500; Fax: 424.653.5501
12 LATHAM & WATKINS LLP
Matthew A. Brill (admitted pro hac vice)
13
matthew.brill@lw.com
Andrew D. Prins (admitted pro hac vice)
14
andrew.prins@lw.com
555 Eleventh Street, NW
15
Washington, D.C. 20004
16 Tel.: 202.637.2200; Fax.: 202.637.2201
17 Attorneys for Defendants
18
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
19
CENTRAL DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA
20
ELIZABETH HART and LE’ROY
Case No. 8:17-cv-00556-DOC-RAO
ROBERSON, individually and on behalf of
all others similarly situated,
ORDER GRANTING JOINT
STIPULATION AND MOTION TO
Plaintiffs,
CONFIRM FINAL AWARD AND
v.
ENTERING JUDGMENT [55]
CHARTER COMMUNICATIONS, INC.
Court Arbitration Order: Nov. 8, 2017
and SPECTRUM MANAGEMENT
Final Arbitration Award: March 29, 2019
HOLDING COMPANY LLC,
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
Defendants.
28
1
1
Plaintiff Elizabeth Hart1 (“Hart”) and Defendants Charter Communications, Inc.
2 and Spectrum Management Holding Company, LLC (“Defendants”) have jointly
3 submitted a Notice of Final Award of Arbitrator and Joint Stipulation and Motion to
4 Confirm Final Award and Enter Judgment which provides as follows:
5
WHEREAS, on March 28, 2017, Hart filed an original class action complaint in
6 this Court against Defendants, Dkt. 1, and on June 26, 2017 she filed a First Amended
7 Complaint against Defendants. Dkt. 29.
8
WHEREAS, on July 24, 2017, Defendants filed a Motion to Compel Arbitration
9 and to Stay Claims, Dkt. 30, and Hart opposed Defendants’ motion, Dkt. 33; see also
10 Dkt. 34 (Defendants’ Reply); Dkt. 35 (Hart’s Motion for Leave to File Surreply); Dkt.
11 36 (Defendants’ Opposition to Motion for Leave); Dkt. 38 (Order Denying Motion for
12 Leave).
13
WHEREAS, on November 8, 2017, the Court granted Defendants’ Motion to
14 Compel Arbitration and to Stay Claims, Dkt. 39, and made the following findings:
15
a.
Hart received in two 2014 billing statements written notice by U.S. mail of
16
the Time Warner Cable Inc. (“TWC”) 2014 Residential Services Subscriber
17
Agreement (“RSSA”) and disclosures in the billing statements were
18
“reasonably conspicuous.” Id. at 6-8.
19
b.
“[T]he 2014 RSSA is a contract that binds [Hart]” but it “decline[d] to
20
decide the existence or validity of any other contracts or arbitration
21
provisions to which [Hart] purportedly agreed, including the 2010 and 2016
22
RSSAs.” Id. at 8.
23
c.
“[T]he existence and validity of the 2014 RSSA, which contains an
24
arbitrability delegation clause (discussed below), requires this Court to
25
refrain from deciding the gateway arbitrability issues presented by the
26
purported opt outs [of the 2016 and 2017 RSSAs].” Id. at 8-9 n.2.
27
28
1
Hart’s co-plaintiff Le’Roy Roberson’s claims are currently stayed and were not part of
the arbitration filed by Hart.
2
ORDER GRANTING MOTION TO CONFIRM FINAL AWARD AND ENTERING JUDGMENT
1
d.
Hart admitted in the First Amended Complaint that “there is sufficient
2
identity of parties” between TWC and Defendants and her factual assertions
3
in the First Amended Complaint bind her to an admission that Defendants
4
are the successors in interest to TWC. Id. at 9.
5
e.
“[B]y operation of the law of Delaware, where Defendants are—and TWC
6
was—incorporated, the merger had the effect of endowing Defendant
7
Spectrum Holding with TWC’s rights” under the 2014 RSSA and, given the
8
identity of TWC and Spectrum Holding, Hart’s claims against Charter,
9
Spectrum Holding’s parent company, also may be referred to arbitration. Id.
10
f.
The 2014 RSSA’s incorporation by reference of the AAA’s Commercial
11
Arbitration Rules in its arbitration provision constitutes clear and
12
unmistakable evidence that contracting parties agreed to arbitrate
13
arbitrability, and that the wording of the phrase “whether arbitration is
14
appropriate . . . will be decided by an arbitrator, not a court” represents an
15
“explicit agreement to refer questions of whether arbitration is appropriate
16
to an arbitrator. Id. at 11.
17
g.
18
19
The 2014 RSSA “evinces an agreement to submit issues of arbitrability to
an arbitrator.” Id. at 12.
WHEREAS, the Court stayed Hart’s claims filed in court pending the completion
20 of arbitration proceedings. Id. at 12.
21
WHEREAS, on January 25, 2018, Hart filed a Demand for Arbitration against
22 Defendants.
23
WHEREAS, on March 22, 2018, Hart filed a First Amended Demand for
24 Arbitration and Request for Dismissal of Arbitration Based on (1) the Fact that the
25 Arbitration Clause is “Null and Void” by Its Own Terms, and, Alternatively (2) the
26 Inarbitrability of Claims for Injunctive Orders and Similar Relief.
27
WHEREAS, on April 5, 2018, Defendants filed an Answer to Hart’s Amended
28 Demand for Arbitration and Counterclaims.
3
ORDER GRANTING MOTION TO CONFIRM FINAL AWARD AND ENTERING JUDGMENT
1
WHEREAS, on April 19, 2018, Hart filed an Answer to Defendants’
2 Counterclaims.
3
WHEREAS, on June 18, 2018, the AAA administratively appointed William J.
4 Tucker as the Arbitrator.
5
WHEREAS, on December 10, 2018, following motions and briefing, the
6 Arbitrator issued the Interim Award and held that
7
a.
“None of Hart’s six claims asserted in her Amended Arbitration Demand
8
are arbitrable, because none of them seek ‘money damages.’” Interim
9
Award at 7. The Arbitrator stated that “[c]onspicuously absent from Hart's
10
Amended Arbitration Demand is any reference to, let alone a request for,
11
‘damages,’” that “the 2014 RSSA specifically provides that, ‘claims for
12
injunctive orders or similar relief must be brought in a court,’” and ‘[t]he
13
only relief sought by Hart in her Amended Arbitration Demand is
14
‘injunctive orders or similar relief.’” Id. at 5. The Arbitrator further stated
15
that “Hart has chosen to use in the six claims asserted in her Amended
16
Arbitration Demand the very same wording of the arbitration provision in
17
the 2014 RSSA (‘injunctive orders or similar relief’),” that “[i]t is clear that
18
whatever ‘money damages’ encompass within the meaning of the arbitration
19
provision, they are not ‘injunctive orders or similar relief.’”
20
b.
“Spectrum’s First Counterclaim is moot, because it is subsumed in my
21
determination that none of Hart’s six claims in her Amended Arbitration
22
Demand seek ‘money damages’ and, therefore, none are arbitrable.” Id.
23
c.
24
25
26
“Spectrum’s Second Counterclaim and its Third Counterclaim are
arbitrable, because they seek ‘money damages.’” Id.
d.
“Spectrum’s Second Counterclaim and its Third Counterclaim cannot be
determined at this time by way of summary adjudication.” Id.
27
28
4
ORDER GRANTING MOTION TO CONFIRM FINAL AWARD AND ENTERING JUDGMENT
1
WHEREAS, on January 8, 2019, the Arbitrator granted Defendants leave to file a
2 Fourth Counterclaim and for Hart to file an anti-SLAPP special motion to strike
3 Defendants’ Second and Third Counterclaims.
4
WHEREAS, on January 15, 2019, Defendants filed a Fourth Counterclaim,
5 requesting that the Arbitrator enter an award “declaring that any relief sought by Claimant
6 in connection with her six proposed judicial claims in her Amended Demand that would
7 result in the payment of money, whether styled as restitution, disgorgement, or otherwise,
8 is relief that, pursuant to the parties’ agreement, the entitlement to which must be
9 arbitrated and cannot be litigated in court.”
10
WHEREAS, on January 29, 2019, Hart filed an Answer to Defendants’ Fourth
11 Counterclaim and requested that the Arbitrator rule that “the 2014 RSSA’s arbitration
12 clause does not cover any claims that arose in or after 2016,” that the Fourth Counterclaim
13 was “not yet ripe,” and/or that “equitable remedies such as restitution can only be
14 determined and awarded by a court.” On the same date, Hart also filed an anti-SLAPP
15 special motion to strike Defendants’ Second and Third Counterclaims.
16
WHEREAS, on March 29, 2019, following briefing of the anti-SLAPP motion, the
17 Arbitrator issued a Final Award in which he confirmed, adopted, and incorporated the
18 Interim Award and further held: “that anti-SLAPP motions are impermissible in private
19 nonjudicial arbitrations,” Final Award at 5; “the attorneys’ fees Spectrum requests in its
20 Third Counterclaim are not ‘damages’ proximately resulting from Hart’s alleged breach
21 of contract,” id. at 6; “the attorney’s fees Spectrum requests in its Second Counterclaim
22 are not ‘damages’ proximately resulting from Hart’s alleged breach of contract,” id. at 8;
23 and “Spectrum’s Fourth Counterclaim is meritless.” Id. at 9.
24 WHEREAS, the Arbitrator declined to decide what specific forms of relief (e.g.
25 restitution, disgorgement, etc.) constitute arbitrable “money damages” or non-arbitrable
26 “injunctive orders or similar relief,” and stated that “[s]hould the District Court consider
27 and rule substantively on Hart's causes of action, ruling that the relief she seeks does not
28 constitute ‘damages,’ my ruling dismissing Spectrum’s Fourth Counterclaim will have
5
ORDER GRANTING MOTION TO CONFIRM FINAL AWARD AND ENTERING JUDGMENT
1 been shown to be correct,” but, “[i]f, on the other hand, the Court rules that ‘restitution’
2 and ‘restitutionary disgorgement’ are in fact ‘damages,’ Hart will be precluded from
3 seeking such damages in this arbitration, because this Final Award will end the
4 arbitration,” and “[t]hat result would be eminently fair to Hart, since she has taken the
5 position that all the relief she has sought in the arbitration is ‘injunctive’ and ‘all similar
6 relief’ which she further contends may be awarded only in court,” and “I am simply
7 taking Hart at her word.”
8
WHEREAS, the Final Award issued by the Arbitrator held as follows:
9
(1)
Hart’s anti-SLAPP motion to strike is denied.
10
(2)
All of Hart’s causes of action asserted in this arbitration are dismissed.
11
(3)
All of Spectrum’s counterclaims filed in this arbitration are dismissed.
12
(4)
There is no prevailing party in this arbitration.
13
(5)
Neither party is entitled to an award of attorney’s fees against the other.
14
The administrative fees of the American Arbitration Association (“the
15
Association”) totaling $2,250, and the compensation and expenses of the
16
arbitrator totaling $4,125 shall be borne as incurred by the parties.
17
18
The Award is in full settlement of all claims submitted to this
Arbitration. All claims not expressly granted herein are hereby denied.
19 Id. at 10.
20
The Parties stipulated and jointly moved the Court to (1) issue an order pursuant
21 to the Federal Arbitration Act, 9 U.S.C. sections 9 and 13, confirming the Final Award;
22 (2) file such order with the clerk for the entry of judgment thereon, and (3) file certain
23 papers with the clerk in accordance with 9 U.S.C. section 13.
24
Having reviewed the 2014 RSSA’s arbitration clause and delegation provision, the
25 Court’s order dated November 8, 2017 that granted Defendants’ motion to compel
26 arbitration, the appointment of the Arbitrator, the Interim Award of Arbitrator dated
27 December 10, 2018, and the Final Award of Arbitrator dated March 29, 2019, and finding
28 no basis to vacate, modify, or correct the Final Award of Arbitrator pursuant to the
6
ORDER GRANTING MOTION TO CONFIRM FINAL AWARD AND ENTERING JUDGMENT
1 Federal Arbitration Act, 9 U.S.C. sections 9 through 11 (the Parties having raised none),
2 and pursuant to the Parties’ stipulation, there Court hereby GRANTS the Parties’ joint
3 motion to confirm the Final Award of Arbitrator in full.
4
Pursuant to the Federal Arbitration Act, 9 U.S.C. sections 9 and 13, the Court
5 attaches the following papers and instructs the clerk to file them with this ORDER:
6
a.
30-2);
7
8
the 2014 RSSA, attached as Exhibit 1 (also in the Court’s record as Dkt.
b.
the Court order dated November 8, 2017, attached as Exhibit 2 (also in the
Court’s record as Dkt. 39);
9
10
c.
the AAA’s appointment of the Arbitrator, attached as Exhibit 3;
11
d.
the Interim Award of Arbitrator dated December 10, 2018, incorporated into
the Final Award, attached as Exhibit 4; and
12
13
e.
the Final Award of Arbitrator dated March 29, 2018, attached as Exhibit 5.
14
The Parties’ joint motion is GRANTED and the Final Award of Arbitrator is
15 CONFIRMED IN FULL.
16
Pursuant to the order of the Arbitrator, both sides will bear their own costs, neither
17 side is entitled to an award of attorney’s fees against the other, and the administrative
18 fees of arbitration totaling $2,250 and the compensation and expenses of the Arbitrator
19 totaling $4,125 shall be borne as incurred by the parties.
20
The clerk shall docket this judgment pursuant to Federal Arbitration Act, 9 U.S.C.
21 section 13, and it shall have the same force and effect, in all respects, as, and be subject
22 to all the provisions of law relating to, a judgment in an action.
23
IT IS SO ORDERED AND ADJUDGED. LET JUDGMENT BE
24 FORTHWITH ENTERED ACCORDINGLY.
25
26 Dated:
April 17, 2019
27
The Honorable David O. Carter
28
United States District Judge
7
ORDER GRANTING MOTION TO CONFIRM FINAL AWARD AND ENTERING JUDGMENT
EXHIBIT 1
Case 8:17-cv-00556-DOC-RAO Document 30-2 Filed 07/24/17 Page 2 of 12 Page ID #:243
Time Warner Cable Residential Services Subscriber Agreement
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EXHIBIT A
Page 9
Case 8:17-cv-00556-DOC-RAO Document 30-2 Filed 07/24/17 Page 3 of 12 Page ID #:244
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EXHIBIT A
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Case 8:17-cv-00556-DOC-RAO Document 30-2 Filed 07/24/17 Page 4 of 12 Page ID #:245
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EXHIBIT A
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Case 8:17-cv-00556-DOC-RAO Document 30-2 Filed 07/24/17 Page 5 of 12 Page ID #:246
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information if, for example, the applicable Service account has gone unused for an extended period of time, if this
Agreement has been terminated by you or us, or if we replace Customer Use Equipment that holds such
information. Such deletions also may occur inadvertently. We will not be responsible for any loss or removal of such
data or information.
4. Special Provisions for Home Phone Subscribers
(a) Electrical Power is Required. Home Phone Service is delivered over a broadband connection and, as is the
case with a cordless phone, is electrically powered. If your broadband connection or power is interrupted, you may
not be able to make or receive calls or use 911, home security or medical monitoring services. This is true even if
your cable modem contains a battery.
(b) Home Security and Medical Monitoring. The Home Phone Service may not work properly with a third party’s
home security or medical monitoring system and we accept no responsibility for its performance with such systems. If
you intend to use the Home Phone Service with a third party’s home security or medical monitoring system, you are
responsible for making sure it works properly and for the cost of doing so. You should contact your home security or
medical monitoring provider to determine whether the Home Phone Service is compatible with its systems and to test
the system’s operation with the Home Phone Service.
(c) 911 Information. The cable modem that we provide to you for Home Phone Service is linked to the address on
your Work Order. Ensuring that your address is correctly listed with 911 databases normally takes between 24 and
120 hours from the time that you subscribe to Home Phone Service. If you move the modem to another address, you
violate this Agreement. Furthermore, if you call 911 from the new address using the modem, emergency personnel
will not be able to locate you. Also, as noted above, your Home Phone Service may not be available in the event of
an electrical power outage, or if your local TWC system experiences service issues, and in those instances you will
not be able to use the Home Phone Service to call 911.
(d) Directory Listing Errors. If we do not comply with your requests regarding directory listing information (for
example, list the wrong number or list a number you requested be unlisted), you may be entitled to a credit under our
policies or, if greater, an amount prescribed by applicable regulatory requirements. Please contact your local TWC
office for more information. Other than these credits, we have no liability with respect to directory listings.
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5. Special Provisions for HSD Subscribers
(a) Network Management and Monitoring. We may use Network Management Tools to make our Services
operate efficiently. We may monitor your bandwidth usage and patterns and your compliance with our Customer
Agreements.
(b) HSD Service Level Limits. Each HSD Service level may have a Maximum Throughput Rate, a Usage Limit or
other characteristics. We can set or change the Maximum Throughput Rate, Usage Limit or other characteristics of
any HSD Service level. If we do, we may put in place additional terms to address usage that is not consistent with
the resulting HSD Service level. For example, if we set or change the Usage Limit that applies to your HSD Service
level and you exceed the limit, we may suspend your HSD Service, reduce your Maximum Throughput Rate or
charge you for your excess usage. You may need to subscribe to a more expensive HSD Service level or pay for
additional bandwidth to avoid suspension or slower HSD. We will notify you of any new or changed Usage Limit (or
any material reduction in the previously published Maximum Throughput Rate) for your HSD Service level and any
related terms.
(c) Throughput Rates. We do not guarantee that you will obtain the Maximum Throughput Rate for the level of
HSD Service to which you subscribe at any given time or on a continuous basis. The Throughput Rate you
experience at any time will be affected by a number of factors, including the nature of the Internet and its protocols,
our facilities, the bandwidth we devote to carriage of protocol and network information, the condition and configuration
of our Equipment or Customer-Owned Equipment at your location, whether you use an in-home wi-fi network
(which can significantly limit the Throughput Rate obtained by devices attached to it), our use of Network
Management Tools, data volume and congestion on our network and the Internet, the time of day you are using the
HSD Service, the performance of the website servers you try to access, and the priority we give to our business
subscribers’ data traffic and specialized services we deliver using our Equipment as described in our Network
Management Disclosures.
(d) Your Transmissions. If you send or post materials through the HSD Service, you are responsible for the
material and confirm that you have all necessary rights to do so. You grant us, with no obligation to pay you, all rights
we need to complete your transmission or posting. If we determine that the transmission or posting violates our
Customer Agreements, we may (but have no duty to) delete the materials, block access to them or cancel your
account.
(e) Cable Modems. The HSD Service requires the use of a cable modem. You may lease a cable modem from us
for a monthly fee or purchase one from a list of modems authorized for use on our systems. For a list of TWCauthorized modems, see http://twc.com/approvedmodems. If you attempt to use a modem that is not on the list,
the HSD Service will not work. In addition, if you use a modem we do not supply, or if you do not replace the modem
we provide when we increase speeds, you may not be capable of obtaining our Maximum Throughput Rate.
(f) Addresses. Use of the HSD Service does not give you any ownership or other rights in any Internet Protocol,
email or Internet addresses that may be provided to you as part of the Service. We may modify or change these
addresses at any time without notice to you. Upon termination of an HSD Service account, we reserve the right to
permanently delete or remove any or all addresses associated with such account.
6. Objectionable Material and Parental Controls
Our Services make available some material that may offend you or be inappropriate for members of your household.
TWC provides Parental Control(s) and other tools that can filter or block access to certain video programming and
Internet content. Parental Control(s) for Internet can be downloaded at http://twc.com/parentalcontrols. In order to
use our Parental Control(s) for video programming, you generally must lease a Set-Top Box from us or use a TWC
App that has such capabilities. The availability and effectiveness of these tools may vary. Even if you use the
parental controls we provide and they work as intended, you may be exposed to materials you find objectionable.
7. If You Have Service Problems, You May Be Entitled to a Credit
(a) Service Problems. We will attempt to correct service problems caused by our Equipment or Software but we
are not required to install, service or replace Customer-Owned Equipment or software. Depending on the
circumstances, we may charge you for service calls. For more information, please contact your local TWC office.
(b) Outages and Credits. TWC has no liability for service interruptions except that, if you lose all Video, HSD or
Home Phone Service for more than 24 consecutive hours and the cause of the outage was within our reasonable
control (excluding service suspensions resulting from your failure to pay amounts you owe us or for violations of our
Customer Agreements), we will provide you a credit for that period if you request one. If you experience a service
problem with a VOD transaction, we will issue you a credit for the amount of the VOD purchase if you request one. All
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credit requests must be made within 30 days of your next bill following the outage or service issue. Unless required
by law, such credit will not exceed the fixed monthly charges for the month of such Service(s) interruption and will
exclude all nonrecurring charges, one-time charges, per call or measured charges, regulatory fees and surcharges,
taxes and other governmental and quasi-governmental fees. UNLESS PROHIBITED BY LAW, SUCH CREDIT WILL
BE YOUR SOLE AND EXCLUSIVE REMEDY FOR AN INTERRUPTION OF SERVICE(S).
(c) Force Majeure. We have no responsibility for service problems that are beyond our reasonable control. Examples
of problems beyond our reasonable control include those caused by storms and other natural disasters, vandalism,
terrorism, regulations or governmental acts, fires, civil disturbances, electrical power outages, computer viruses or
strikes.
(d) Applicable Laws. Applicable law may impose other outage credit requirements with respect to some or all of the
Services. If this is the case, we will follow the law.
(e) Non-TWC Equipment. Our Services may not work with Customer-Owned Equipment, or other equipment,
software or services that we did not provide to you. For example, some "cable ready" or "digital cable ready"
televisions and DVRs may not receive or support all of our Video Services even if we provide you with a
CableCARD™ as may be recommended by the device manufacturer. To get the full benefit of our Services, you may
need to lease Customer Use Equipment from us.
8. We May Change our Customer Agreements
(a) Changes May be Made Online. We may change our Customer Agreements by amending the online version of
the relevant document.
(b) Effectiveness. Any change to a Customer Agreement will only become binding on you 30 days after we make
that change. If you continue to use the Services following such 30-day period, you will have accepted (in other
words, agreed to be legally bound by) the change. If you do not agree to the change, you will need to contact your
local TWC office to cancel the Services you receive from us.
(c) Notice as to Certain Changes. We will provide you at least 30 days’ notice of any material change to the
provisions that limit the time to commence a legal action contained in Section 14 or the arbitration provisions
contained in Section 15 of this Agreement and any such change will become effective only after such notice period
has run.
(d) Changes are Prospective Only. Any change to a Customer Agreement is intended to be prospective only. In
other words, the amended version of the relevant document begins to apply only as of the end of the 30-day period
noted above.
9. If You Violate our Customer Agreements
(a) We Can Suspend or Terminate the Service. If we think you have violated our Customer Agreements, we have
the right to suspend or terminate any or all of the Services we provide to you (including your rights to use any
Software) without prior notification.
(b) Charges While Service Suspended. If we choose to suspend your Service, we may do so electronically and we
may require that you pay us a fee for restoring your Service in addition to charging you the regular cost for such
Service during the suspension. Service restoration fees are available from your local TWC office.
(c) We Can Pursue other Remedies. If we think you have violated our Customer Agreements we have the right to
seek compensation from you through arbitration or, if you have opted out of this Agreement’s arbitration provisions
as permitted under Section 15, or if we are seeking a court order that requires you to take or cease taking any action,
by suing you in court.
(d) No Waiver. TWC does not waive (in other words, give up) any rights under our Customer Agreements just
because we have not previously enforced such rights. To be legally binding on us, any waiver we grant must be in
writing. If we waive a violation of our Customer Agreements, it does not mean that we are waiving other rights,
including in respect of earlier or later violations.
10. Our Services are Not Guaranteed and Our Liability is Limited
(a) NO WARRANTIES. OUR SERVICES (WHICH, FOR PURPOSES OF THIS SECTION 10, ALSO REFERS TO
OUR EQUIPMENT AND SOFTWARE) ARE NOT GUARANTEED TO WORK, TO BE ERROR- OR VIRUS-FREE,
OR TO BE COMPATIBLE WITH ANY SERVICES, EQUIPMENT OR SOFTWARE NOT PROVIDED TO YOU BY
TWC OR OUR LICENSORS OR SUPPLIERS (INCLUDING CUSTOMER-OWNED EQUIPMENT). OUR SERVICES
ARE PROVIDED ON AN "AS IS" AND "AS AVAILABLE" BASIS. NEITHER WE NOR OUR LICENSORS OR
SUPPLIERS MAKE ANY WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND WITH RESPECT TO THESE SERVICES. THIS INCLUDES
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SO-CALLED “IMPLIED WARRANTIES” (SUCH AS THOSE OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A
PARTICULAR PURPOSE). IF THE LAW WHERE YOU LIVE SAYS WE CANNOT EXCLUDE CERTAIN
WARRANTIES, THEN THOSE WARRANTIES ARE NOT EXCLUDED.
(b) TWC’S LIABILITY IS LIMITED. EXCEPT FOR THE DIRECTORY LISTING SERVICE CREDITS DESCRIBED IN
SECTION 4 AND THE SERVICE INTERRUPTION CREDITS DESCRIBED IN SECTION 7 OF THIS AGREEMENT,
NEITHER WE NOR OUR EMPLOYEES, AGENTS, LICENSORS OR SUPPLIERS WILL BE LIABLE TO YOU FOR
ANY LOSSES OR DAMAGES OF ANY KIND BASED DIRECTLY OR INDIRECTLY ON YOUR RELATIONSHIP
WITH US OR OUR PROVISION OF THE SERVICES, WHETHER BASED ON BREACH OF CONTRACT, TORT
(FOR EXAMPLE, A NEGLIGENCE OR PRODUCT LIABILITY CLAIM), VIOLATION OF LAW OR REGULATION OR
ANY OTHER LEGAL THEORY. FOR EXAMPLE, WE ARE NOT LIABLE TO YOU FOR LOSSES OR DAMAGES
THAT RESULT FROM YOUR USE OR INABILITY TO USE THE SERVICES (INCLUDING 911 SERVICES), OR
FOR ANY LOSSES OR DAMAGES THAT MAY RESULT FROM INSTALLATION, USE, MODIFICATION, REPAIR
OR REMOVAL OF CUSTOMER USE EQUIPMENT OR CUSTOMER-OWNED EQUIPMENT. IN NO EVENT WILL
WE BE REQUIRED TO CREDIT YOU AN AMOUNT IN EXCESS OF YOUR SERVICE FEES FOR THE MONTH
DURING WHICH YOU SUFFER ANY LOSSES OR DAMAGES.
(c) SECURE YOUR COMMUNICATIONS AND DATA. THE SERVICES AND THE COMMUNICATIONS YOU MAKE
USING THEM MAY NOT BE SECURE. YOU ARE RESPONSIBLE FOR SECURING YOUR COMMUNICATIONS
AND DATA. TWC WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE IF A THIRD PARTY GAINS ACCESS TO THE SERVICES, THE
CUSTOMER-OWNED EQUIPMENT, OR YOUR COMMUNICATIONS OR DATA.
(d) DAMAGE OR LOSS TO YOUR PROPERTY. THE SERVICES MAY RESULT IN DAMAGE OR LOSS TO YOUR
OWN SERVICES, EQUIPMENT (INCLUDING CUSTOMER-OWNED EQUIPMENT), SOFTWARE AND DATA
(INCLUDING YOUR PERSONAL FILES). WE ARE NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY SUCH DAMAGE OR LOSS.
THIS INCLUDES DAMAGE OR LOSS RESULTING FROM SOFTWARE DOWNLOADS OR OTHER CHANGES OR
MODIFICATIONS THAT ARE MADE TO CUSTOMER-OWNED EQUIPMENT AS CONTEMPLATED IN THIS
AGREEMENT.
11. Your Privacy Rights and Obligations
(a) Applicable Law. Your privacy interests, including your ability to limit disclosure of certain information to third
parties, are addressed by, among other laws, the Federal Communications Act of 1934, as amended, and the
Electronic Communications Privacy Act. You grant us permission to collect, use or disclose your personal information
as described in our Subscriber Privacy Notice.
(b) TWC’s Privacy Policy. In accordance with applicable law and our own practices, we give each new customer our
Subscriber Privacy Notice at installation and provide all customers with our Subscriber Privacy Notice at least
annually. You may obtain the Subscriber Privacy Notice at http://help.twcable.com/policies.html or from your local
TWC office.
(c) Information from Interactive Services. When you or members of your household use interactive features of our
Services or Software, you may provide us or third parties with your personal information. For more information
regarding our collection, use and disclosure of your personal information, see our Subscriber Privacy Notice.
(d) Exceptions. TWC may (but has no duty to) disclose any information that it believes appropriate to protect its
rights, comply with law, safeguard its personnel, property and operations, or where it believes that individual or public
safety is in peril.
(e) Safeguard Your Account Information. You are responsible for protecting the information needed to securely
access your account information and verify orders (for example, your social security number or passwords that we
may issue to you). If someone else acquires this information (through no fault of ours), we may assume that you have
authorized that person’s use of the information and we may provide your personal information to that person as if
they were you.
12. You are Consenting to Phone and Email Contact
(a) Phone Calls. We may call or text you or authorize others to call or text you on our behalf using any number you
provide to us (or that we issue to you) for any purpose, including marketing of our Services. This is true even if your
numbers are included on state or federal “do not call” lists. You are responsible for charges for incoming text
messages on your wireless phone. However, if you ask to have your number placed on our “do not call” list, we will
not call or text you (or authorize others to call or text you) at that number for marketing purposes. To have your
number placed on our “do not call” list, contact your local TWC office.
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(b) Robo-Calls. We (or persons acting on our behalf) may use automated dialing systems or artificial or recorded
voices to contact you or leave you messages if you do not answer.
(c) Recording of Calls. You agree that we may monitor or record your telephone conversations with us (whether we
call you, or you call us). If you do not wish your telephone conversations with us to be monitored or recorded, you
should conduct any business with us in person at your local TWC office.
(d) Emails. We may email you or authorize others to email you on our behalf using any address you provide to us (or
that we issue to you) for any purpose, including marketing of our Services. If you ask to have your address placed on
our “do not email” list, we will not email (or authorize others to email) marketing messages to you at that address. To
have your address placed on our “do not email” list, contact your local TWC office.
13. You are Consenting to How We Provide You with Notices and Communications
(a) Video Lineup Changes. You authorize us to provide required notices to you regarding channel line-up changes
and other changes to our Services by providing the relevant information on our website, on your monthly bill, as a bill
insert, via email, in a newspaper or by any other communication permitted under applicable law.
(b) Other Notices. You authorize us to provide other notices to you using any method we determine appropriate,
including by electronic means (for example, email or online posting).
(c) Other Consents. We may ask you to provide consents or authorizations, including by electronic means including
email or your equipment (for instance, using your remote control to purchase a VOD movie, to request information
regarding an advertiser’s products or to “opt in” to a consumer study), and we are entitled to assume that any consent
or authorization we receive through your Services or from your location has been authorized by you.
(d) Email Address for Notice. Upon our request, you will provide us with a current email address that you regularly
check so that we may provide notices and communications to you at that address. If you stop using that email
address, you will provide us with a new address for such purposes.
14. Unless You Opt Out, You are Agreeing to Limit the Time You Have to Bring a Legal Action
(a) One Year Limit. You waive (in other words, give up) the right to commence any proceeding against TWC if the
relevant events occurred more than one year earlier.
(b) Opt Out. You may opt out of the waiver set forth in this section. If you do so, the normal statute of limitations in
your area will apply to any claims you may wish to assert. To opt out, you must notify TWC using one of the methods
described in Section 16, below, within 30 days of the date that you first became subject to this provision (i.e., the date
you first became subject to our Customer Agreements by signing a Work Order or using our Services or, if this
Section 14 (or a predecessor version that is not materially different from this Section 14) was not then a part of the
Customer Agreements, then the date that this Section 14 became binding on you in accordance with the terms of
Section 8(c), above).
15. Unless you Opt Out, You are Agreeing to Resolve Certain Disputes Through Arbitration
(a) Arbitration or Small Claims Court. Our goal is to resolve Disputes fairly and quickly. However, if we cannot
resolve a Dispute with you, then, except as described elsewhere in Section 15, each of us agrees to submit the
Dispute to the American Arbitration Association for resolution under its Commercial Arbitration Rules or, by separate
mutual agreement, to another arbitration institution. As an alternative, you may bring your claim in your local “small
claims” court, if its rules permit it. If you bring an action in small claims court, you waive (unless local law prohibits
such a waiver) discovery in that proceeding (in other words, unless local law prohibits you from doing so, you agree
you will not be able to depose TWC witnesses or seek non-public documents).
(b) Types of Claims. Each of us may bring claims against the other only on their own behalf, and not on behalf of
any official or other person, or any class of people, and neither of us may bring claims against the other alongside or
with claims, whether similar or not, brought by other people. Only claims for money damages may be submitted to
arbitration; claims for injunctive orders or similar relief must be brought in a court (other than claims relating to
whether arbitration is appropriate, which will be decided by an arbitrator, not a court). You may not combine a claim
that is subject to arbitration under this Agreement with a claim that is not eligible for arbitration under this
Agreement.
(c) Arbitration Decisions. The arbitrator will issue an award decision in writing but will not provide an explanation for
the award unless you or TWC requests one. Any arbitration award over $75,000 may be appealed to a three-person
panel appointed by the same arbitration institution that rendered the original award. Any such appeal must be filed
within 30 days and the appeal will be decided, based on that institution’s appeal rules, within 120 days of filing.
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(d) Costs. Before you initiate an arbitration proceeding, you may request that we advance on your behalf (1) the
arbitration filing fees (but only to the extent they exceed your local small claims court filing fees) and (2) the portion of
the arbitrator’s costs for which you would normally be responsible. If TWC wins the arbitration, you will reimburse us
for these advances. TWC will, of course, pay any fees or costs required under the law where you live.
(e) Opt Out. You may opt out of this Agreement’s arbitration provision. If you do so, neither you nor TWC can
require the other to participate in an arbitration proceeding and each us can sue the other in a court of law. To opt
out, you must notify TWC using one of the methods described in Section 16, below, within 30 days of the date that
you first became subject to this arbitration provision (i.e., the date you first became subject to our Customer
Agreements by signing a Work Order or using our Services or, if this Section 15 (or a predecessor version that is
not materially different from this Section 15) was not then a part of the Customer Agreements, then the date that
this Section 15 became binding on you in accordance with the terms of Section 8(c), above).
(f) Enforcement. If the prohibition against class action and other claims brought on behalf of third parties contained
in Section 15(b) is found to be unenforceable, then all of Section 15 other than subsection (g), below, will be null and
void.
(g) Jury Waiver. Any Dispute properly brought in a court of law in connection with our Customer Agreements
(including this Agreement) will be heard and decided by a judge, not a jury. Each of us waives (in other words, gives
up) the right to a jury trial in any such Dispute.
16. Opt Out Instructions
To opt out of the time limitation on claims that is set forth in Section 14, above, or the arbitration provisions in Section
15, above, you must use one of the following notification methods:
Send a written opt out request to:
Time Warner Cable
60 Columbus Circle, Rm 16-329
New York, NY 10023
Attn: Senior Director, Compliance and Legal Affairs
You must include in your written request your name, address and TWC account number and a clear statement that
you wish to opt out of this Agreement’s arbitration obligation and/or that you wish to opt out of this Agreement’s 1year limitation on your right to bring claims.
or
Visit the appropriate URL noted below and complete all required information:
To opt out of Section 14: http://www.timewarnercable.com/en/about-us/legal/privacy-policy/statute-oflimitations-opt-out.html
To opt out of Section 15: http://www.timewarnercable.com/en/about-us/legal/privacy-policy/arbitration-optout.html
17. Definitions
(a) “Addendum” means a document that you agree to when you sign up for or use a special TWC service or
promotional program. The Addendum supplements the terms of our other Customer Agreements for purposes of the
relevant special service or promotional program.
(b) "Agreement" means this Residential Services Subscriber Agreement, as amended from time to time.
(c) "Customer Agreements" refers to the agreements, notices and policies described in the introduction to this
Agreement.
(d) “Customer-Owned Equipment” means any devices and equipment that are owned by you, whether purchased
from us or someone else, and used by you to receive the Services. Customer-Owned Equipment does not include
Customer Use Equipment.
(e) “Customer Use Equipment” means the converter boxes, cable modems, remote controls and other devices and
pieces of equipment that we provide to you to receive the Services and that you must return to us if the Service is
cancelled.
(f) “Dispute” means any dispute, claim, or controversy between you and TWC regarding any aspect of your
relationship with us or any conduct or failure to act on our part, including claims based on breach of contract, tort (for
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example, a negligence or product liability claim), violation of law or any claims based on any other theory, and
including those based on events that occurred prior to the date of this Agreement.
(g) "Equipment" means Customer Use Equipment and other equipment utilized in connection with the Services.
Equipment does not include wiring on your premises and does not include Customer-Owned Equipment.
(h) "HSD Service" and "High Speed Data Service" means our broadband Internet service (including when
distributed over an in-home wi-fi network) and wireless data services (including our out-of-home wi-fi service).
(i) "including" or "include" means inclusion without limitation.
(j) “Maximum Throughput Rate” means the highest Throughput Rate that is provided by your level or tier of HSD or
Wireless Data Service.
(k) “Network Management Tools” are the tools and techniques we use to manage our network, ensure a quality
user experience and ensure compliance with our Acceptable Use Policy. Examples of some Network Management
Tools can be found in our Acceptable Use Policy and Network Management Disclosures. See
http://help.twcable.com/html/policies.html or contact your local TWC office.
(l) "Services" refers to the services and features you receive or order from us. These may include video, high speed
data, wireless data, home security and monitoring, and Home Phone services, equipment-based services like DVR
service, and free services that you may use in connection with any of our paid services. “In-home Services” refer to
Services that you use in your home; “out-of-home Services” refer to Services that you can use outside your home (for
example, wi-fi service you access in a public place through your TWC account and video programming you can watch
outside your home using a TWC App or TWCTV.com).
(m) "Software" refers to any software that we or our licensors provide or make available to you in connection with
our Services, including any software that has been downloaded to Customer Use Equipment or Customer-Owned
Equipment as contemplated in this Agreement.
(n) "Tariff(s)" are the materials TWC files with your local Public Service Commission (or similar state agency) that
describe some of the terms on which we offer our Home Phone Service.
((o) “Throughput Rate” refers to the rate at which data can be transferred between your location and our facilities
over a given period of time. The Throughput Rates that we mention in our marketing and other materials refer to our
Maximum Throughput Rates.
(p) "TWC" means Time Warner Cable Inc. and our subsidiaries that provide our Services, or any cable operator to
whom we assign this Agreement.
(q) “TWC App” means Software that we make available directly or through a third party that allows you to use a third
party’s device to access TWC Services.
(r) “Usage Limit” means the aggregate amount of “upstream” and “downstream” data that may be transferred
between your location and our facilities in a prescribed period (for example, a monthly billing period). If you are
unsure of whether your HSD Service level has a Usage Limit or how to monitor your data usage, check with your
local TWC office.
(s) "Video Service" refers to the video and/or audio programming Services we provide, including VOD offerings.
(t) "Work Order" means any TWC work or service order(s) that we have provided to you or provide in the future. We
provide you with a Work Order when you initiate service or when we visit your home (for example, to install additional
services or correct service problems). If you require a copy of any Work Order we have provided to you, please
contact your local TWC office.
(u) Headings. Headings used in this Agreement are for convenience only, do not form a part of this Agreement and
will not affect the meaning or interpretation of this Agreement.
18. Term of Agreement; Termination of Service
(a) Survival of Terms. The terms of this Agreement relating to the rights in and to Software (Sections 3(b) and
3(c)), limitations on liability and warranty disclaimers (Section 10), the time period within which you may bring claims
(Section 14), resolution of disputes (Section 15), our obligation to grant you service credits (Sections 4 and 7) and
your obligation to pay us and to indemnify us for certain third-party claims (Section 1) will survive (in other words,
continue to apply to you even after) the termination of this Agreement.
(b) Term. This Agreement remains in effect until you no longer receive any of the Services and any balance on your
account has been paid in full or waived in writing by us.
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(c) Our Right to Terminate. We may terminate your Services and your rights to use any Software or Equipment at
any time for any or no reason, including if we determine that you or a member of your household has received
Services from us in the past and failed to pay amounts owed to us.
(d) Your Right to Terminate. If you wish to terminate Services, you must notify us and either return any Customer
Use Equipment to us or provide us with reasonable opportunity to schedule a visit to your location to disconnect the
Services and recover Customer Use Equipment.
(e) Another Urban Myth Dispelled. You cannot terminate Services by writing "canceled" or any other message on
your bill or check.
19. The Rights of Third Parties
(a) No Transfers or Assignments. Except with our consent, you may not transfer or assign to any other person (in
other words, make another person legally responsible for) the Services, the Software, the Customer Use
Equipment or your obligation to comply with our Customer Agreements
(b) Contractors and Licensors. We may use contractors to assist us in providing the Services and we may provide
you with Software or Equipment that is owned or manufactured by a third-party. If you bring a claim against these
contractors or third parties, they have the same rights that we have under our Customer Agreements.
(c) No other Third Party Beneficiaries. Other than contractors and licensors mentioned in the preceding paragraph,
our Customer Agreements are not intended to benefit (in other words, to create any rights or obligations for) anyone
other than you and us.
20. What Happens if the Law in Your Area Conflicts with our Customer Agreements
(a) Conflict with Local Law. Our Customer Agreements may be the subject of legal requirements that apply where
you live or where we provide Services to you. If such a requirement conflicts with our Customer Agreements with
respect to one or more Services, the legal requirement will take priority over the part of our Customer Agreements
with which it conflicts, but only with respect to that part and only with respect to the Services to which such legal
requirement applies.
(b) Partial Invalidity. If a court or similar body determines that a portion of a Customer Agreement is invalid or
unenforceable, the rest of the agreement should stand. The surviving portions of the relevant Customer Agreement
should be interpreted as closely as possible (consistent with the law in your area) so as to reflect the intention of the
original. The only exception to this is that described in Section 15 regarding Arbitration.
21. What Happens if There is a Conflict between our Customer Agreements
(a) English Language Version Controls. If we have provided you with a non-English translation of any our
Customer Agreements, the English language version of that Customer Agreement will govern your relationship with
TWC and will control in the event of a conflict. The translation is provided as a convenience only.
(b) Conflicts with Work Order. In the event of a conflict between the terms of this Agreement and your Work
Order, then the terms of this Agreement control.
(c) Conflicts with Certain Other Agreements. In the event of a conflict between the terms of this Agreement and
the terms of any Addendum or our Terms of Service, then the terms of the other document will control with respect
to the applicable Service.
January 2014
EXHIBIT A
Page 19
EXHIBIT 2
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UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
CENTRAL DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA
JS-6
CIVIL MINUTES – GENERAL
Case No. SA CV 17-0556-DOC (RAOx)
Date: November 8, 2017
Title: ELIZABETH HART ET AL V. CHARTER COMMUNICATIONS, INC. ET AL
PRESENT:
THE HONORABLE DAVID O. CARTER, JUDGE
Deborah Lewman
Courtroom Clerk
Not Present
Court Reporter
ATTORNEYS PRESENT FOR
PLAINTIFF:
ATTORNEYS PRESENT FOR
DEFENDANT:
None Present
None Present
PROCEEDINGS (IN CHAMBERS): ORDER GRANTING
DEFENDANTS’ MOTION TO
COMPEL ARBITRATION [30]
Before the Court is Defendants Charter Communications, Inc. and Spectrum
Management Holding Company LLC’s (collectively, “Defendants”) Motion to Compel
Arbitration and to Stay Plaintiffs’ Claims (“Motion”) (Dkt. 30). The Court finds this
matter appropriate for resolution without oral argument. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 78; L.R. 715. Having reviewed the moving papers and considered the parties’ arguments, the Court
GRANTS Defendants’ Motion.
I.
Background
A.
Facts
Plaintiffs Elizabeth Hart and Le’Roy Roberson (collectively, “Plaintiffs”) were
subscribers to the Internet services of Time Warner Cable Inc. (“TWC”). First Amended
Class Action Complaint (“FAC”) (Dkt. 29) ¶¶ 19, 21. In 2016, “as part of a series of
corporate transactions, . . . TWC merged with and into” Defendants. Id. ¶ 8; see also id.
at 2 (asserting Defendant Spectrum Holding Company LLC was “formerly known as
‘Time Warner Cable’”); Declaration of Daniel J. Bollinger (“Bollinger Decl.”) (Dkt. 341) ¶¶ 4–8 & Exs. A–B (Dkts. 34-2, 34-3).
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In this putative class action, Plaintiffs allege that Defendants do not provide
Internet connections that are as fast as advertised because they “failed to provide a
network and infrastructure capable of supporting all of its subscribers and their promised
Internet speeds.” FAC ¶ 24. The FAC also asserts that Defendants increased charges to
consumers without adequate notice. Id. ¶ 25.
Defendants attest that, to receive residential Internet services, their subscribers
agree to be bound by a Residential Services Subscriber Agreement (“RSSA”), which
contains an arbitration provision. Declaration of Christine Flores (“Flores Decl.”) (Dkt.
30-1) ¶¶ 7, 11. Defendants identify several iterations of the RSSA that they contend
applied to Plaintiffs: a version operative between April 2010 and January 2014 (“2010
RSSA”), a version operative between January 2014 and April 2016 (“2014 RSSA”), and
a version operative between April 2016 and June 2017 (“2016 RSSA”).1 Id. ¶¶ 8–9, 34;
see id. Exs. A–B, I (Dkts. 30-2,30-3, 30-10). The first page of the 2014 RSSA notes, in a
gray box with red, all-caps text offset from the rest of the text on the page, that the
document “CONTAINS A BINDING ‘ARBITRATION CLAUSE,’ WHICH SAYS
THAT YOU AND TWC AGREE TO RESOLVE CERTAIN DISPUTES THROUGH
ARBITRATION . . . . YOU HAVE THE RIGHT TO OPT OUT OF THIS PART OF
THE AGREEMENT.” Id. Ex. A at 9. In pertinent part, the 2014 RSSA’s arbitration
provision reads:
[E]ach of us agrees to submit [a] Dispute to the American
Arbitration Association [(“AAA”)] for resolution under its
Commercial Arbitration Rules or, by separate mutual agreement, to
another arbitration institution. . . . Only claims for money damages
may be submitted to arbitration; claims for injunctive orders or
similar relief must be brought in a court (other than claims relating
to whether arbitration is appropriate, which will be decided by an
arbitrator, not a court). You may not combine a claim that is subject
to arbitration under this Agreement with a claim that is not eligible
for arbitration under this Agreement. . . . You may opt out of this
Agreement’s arbitration provision. . . . To opt out, you must notify
TWC . . . within 30 days of the date that you first became subject to
this arbitration provision (i.e., the date you first became subject to
our Customer Agreements by signing a Work Order or using our
1
Despite asserting that prior RSSAs also contained arbitration provisions, Defendants have not produced any
RSSAs operative before April 2010 that may have bound Plaintiff Hart, who has been a subscriber since 2006.
Flores Decl. ¶¶ 5, 11; see FAC ¶ 19.
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Services or, if this Section 15 (or a predecessor version that is not
materially different from this Section 15) was not then a part of the
Customer Agreements, then the date that this Section 15 became
binding on you in accordance with the terms of Section 8(c), above).
Id. at 16–17.
Section 8(c) of the 2014 RSSA states: “We will provide you at least 30 days’
notice of any material change to . . . the arbitration provisions contained in Section 15 of
this Agreement and any such change will become effective only after such notice period
has run.” Id. at 14. Further, section 18(a) of the agreement stated that the provision
governing resolution of disputes “will survive (in other words, continue to apply to you
even after) the termination of this Agreement.” Id. at 18.
Plaintiffs’ March and May 2014 billing statements advised that a “new TWC
subscriber agreement”—that is, the 2014 RSSA—would apply to them. Flores Decl.
¶¶ 21–26 & Exs. C–F (Dkt. 30-4 to 30-7); see Declaration of Elizabeth Hart (“Hart
Decl.”) (Dkt. 33-14) ¶¶ 4, 6. This advisement, which appears on the same page as the
statement of amount due and payment due date, indicates that the new agreement
“contains an arbitration clause,” and implores the reader to “[r]eview it &, if you wish,
‘opt out’ of some of the clauses at http://help.twcable.com/policies.html.” Flores Decl.
¶¶ 21–23 & Exs. C–D; see id. ¶¶ 24–26 & Exs. E–F (“Review & ‘opt out’ of some of the
clauses if you wish . . . .”). These billing statements were sent via U.S. mail to both
Plaintiffs. Flores Decl. ¶¶ 21–22, 24–25; Declaration of Sara Foust-Skudler (“FoustSkudler Decl.”) (Dkt. 34-4) ¶¶ 3–4; see id. ¶¶ 10–11 (“[T]hose unpaid balances
automatically caused these Billing Statements to be sent to Mr. Roberson’s address of
record on his Spectrum account by U.S. Mail.”); cf. Declaration of Le’Roy Roberson
(“Roberson Decl.”) (Dkt. 33-9) ¶ 4 (“I have occasionally missed the monthly email and
see an overdue balance the next month.”); but see id. (“I have never been shown or sent
any copy of a billing statement . . . .”).
Plaintiffs did not attempt to opt out of any RSSA until March 2017, when
Defendants sent them billing statements reminding them of “terms and conditions
applicable to their services.” See Flores Decl. ¶ 40; Roberson Decl. ¶ 6 & Exs. A–B
(Dkts. 33-10, 33-11); Hart Decl. ¶ 6 & Exs. B–C (Dkts. 33-16, 33-17). After receiving
these billing statements, both Plaintiffs, on March 15, 2017, sent letters attempting to opt
out of the 2016 RSSA. Flores Decl. ¶ 40; Roberson Decl. ¶ 6 & Ex. B; Hart Decl. ¶ 6 &
Ex. C. On June 21, 2017 and July 10, 2017, Hart and Roberson, respectively, also sent
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letters purporting to opt out of the 2017 RSSA. Flores Decl. ¶ 41; Roberson Decl. ¶ 6 &
Ex. D (Dkt. 33-13); Hart Decl. ¶ 6.
B.
Procedural History
Plaintiffs filed this putative class action suit on March 28, 2017 (Dkt. 1). On June
26, 2017, Plaintiffs filed the operative Complaint, the FAC, asserting six claims against
Defendants: (1) violation of the Lanham Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1125; (2) violation of the
California False Advertising Law, Cal. Bus. & Prof. Code § 17500 et seq.; (3) violation
of the California Automatic Renewal Law, Cal. Bus. & Prof. Code § 17600 et seq.;
(4) violation of the California Consumers Legal Remedies Act, Cal. Civ. Code § 1750 et
seq.; (5) violation of the California Unfair Competition Law, Cal. Bus. & Prof. Code
§ 17200 et seq.; and (6) restitution and unjust enrichment. See FAC ¶¶ 41–84.
Defendants filed the instant Motion on July 24, 2017. Plaintiffs opposed on
August 15, 2017 (“Opp’n”) (Dkt. 33); Defendants replied on September 6, 2017
(“Reply”) (Dkt. 34).
II.
Legal Standard
“[A]n agreement to arbitrate is a matter of contract.” Chiron Corp. v. Ortho
Diagnostic Sys., Inc., 207 F.3d 1126, 1130 (9th Cir. 2000). “[I]t is a way to resolve those
disputes—but only those disputes—the parties have agreed to submit to arbitration.” Id.
(quoting First Options of Chicago, Inc. v. Kaplan, 514 U.S. 938, 943 (1995)). The party
seeking to compel arbitration “bears ‘the burden of proving the existence of an agreement
to arbitrate by a preponderance of the evidence.’” Norcia v. Samsung Telecoms. Am.,
LLC, 845 F.3d 1279, 1283 (9th Cir. 2017) (quoting Knutson v. Sirius XM Radio Inc., 771
F.3d 559, 565 (9th Cir. 2014)).
The Federal Arbitration Act (“FAA”) provides that any arbitration agreement
within its scope “shall be valid, irrevocable, and enforceable.” 9 U.S.C. § 2. The FAA
“permits any party ‘aggrieved by the alleged . . . refusal of another to arbitrate’ to petition
any federal district court for an order compelling arbitration in the manner provided for in
the agreement.” Chiron Corp., 207 F.3d at 1130 (quoting 9 U.S.C. § 4). The Act “leaves
no place for the exercise of discretion by a district court, but instead mandates that district
courts shall direct the parties to proceed to arbitration on issues as to which an arbitration
agreement has been signed.” Dean Witter Reynolds Inc. v. Byrd, 470 U.S. 213, 218
(1985). When a party moves to compel arbitration, interpreting the parties’ intent on
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certain issues in the agreement remains “within the province of judicial review.” Momot
v. Mastro, 652 F.3d 982, 987 (9th Cir. 2011).
When a court is satisfied that an issue in an action is referable to arbitration, it
“shall on application of one of the parties stay the trial of the action until such arbitration
has been had in accordance with the terms of the agreement.” 9 U.S.C. § 3.
III.
Discussion
Defendants argue that this action should be compelled into arbitration and
that district court proceedings should be stayed, because at least one of the RSSAs binds
Plaintiffs to arbitrate their claims. Mot. at 5–6. In response, Plaintiffs assert that none of
the RSSAs bind them, and that, even if they are bound, Defendants cannot enforce an
agreement to arbitrate with TWC. See Opp’n at 1–3.
A.
The 2014 RSSA Binds Plaintiffs
Defendants proffer several theories by which they contend Plaintiffs are bound to
TWC’s 2016, 2014, 2010, or earlier RSSAs, which contain provisions for the arbitration
of Plaintiffs’ claims. Defendants claim that: (1) Plaintiffs are bound to all the RSSAs
because they accepted Defendants’ Internet services; (2) Plaintiffs are bound to the 2010
RSSA because they signed work orders in 2013 confirming they were bound to the 2010
agreement; (3) Plaintiffs are bound to the 2014 RSSA because they were given notice of
the revised agreement in their March and May 2014 billing statements; (4) Plaintiffs are
bound to the 2014 RSSA because they signed work orders in 2015 confirming they were
bound to the 2014 agreement; and (5) Plaintiffs are bound to the 2016 agreement because
Defendants posted the agreement on their website. See Motion at 5–9. Plaintiffs dispute
that they agreed to any of these RSSAs, arguing that Defendants did not give them
reasonable notice of the RSSAs and that Defendants did not secure Plaintiffs’ knowing
consent. See Opp’n at 10–19.
Whether Plaintiffs are bound by any of the RSSAs is a question of contract law
that turns on whether the Plaintiffs entered into a legally enforceable contract with TWC.
Under California law, an essential element of any contract is the mutual consent of the
parties, which usually requires “an offer communicated to the offeree and an acceptance
communicated to the offeror.” Donovan v. RRL Corp., 26 Cal. 4th 261, 271 (2001); see
also Cal. Civ. Code §§ 1550(2), 1565. It follows that an offeree cannot accept an offer the
offeree does not know exists, and a contracting party cannot unilaterally change the terms
of a contract without the other’s consent. Douglas v. U.S. Dist. Court for Cent. Dist. of
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Cal., 495 F.3d 1062, 1066 (9th Cir. 2007). Indeed, “[p]arties to a contract have no
obligation to check the terms on a periodic basis to learn whether they have been changed
by the other side.” Id. But giving notice of new terms of service—such as including a link
to a website with changed governing terms in a mailed billing statement—can be
sufficient notice to bind an offeree-consumer. Id. at 1066–67 (construing Bischoff v.
DirecTV, Inc., 180 F. Supp. 2d 1097, 1103–06 (C.D. Cal. 2002)); see also Cal. Civ. Code
§ 1589 (“A voluntary acceptance of the benefit of a transaction is equivalent to a consent
to all the obligations arising from it, so far as the facts are known, or ought to be known,
to the person accepting.”).
In March and May of 2014, Defendants mailed billing statements to both Plaintiffs
that noted that there was a new agreement that contained an arbitration clause. Flores
Decl. ¶¶ 21–26 & Exs. C–F; Foust-Skudler Decl. ¶¶ 3–4. The documents stated that
Plaintiffs could opt out of the arbitration provision, and provided a link to the full text of
the relevant agreement. See Flores Decl. ¶¶ 21–26 & Exs. C–F. These notices were
conspicuously featured in the substantive portion of the billing statements, on the page
that containwd the charges and payment due date, with the same font size as the
substantive billing line items. See Flores Decl. Ex. C, at 35; id. Ex. D, at 41; id. Ex. E, at
43; id. Ex. F, at 45. In the May 2014 billing statements, this notice was prefaced in all
caps: “NEW TWC SUBSCRIBER AGREEMENT.” Id. Ex. E, at 43; id. Ex. F, at 45.
Defendants claim that because Plaintiffs received clear notice of the new agreement and
continued to accept TWC’s services, the 2014 RSSA binds Plaintiffs. Mot. at 5–6.
In response, Plaintiffs argue that the billing statement disclosures were not
reasonably conspicuous and thus did not provide inquiry notice sufficient to bind
Plaintiffs to the 2014 RSSA. Opp’n at 15. However, in the March 2017 billing statements
sent to Plaintiffs, Defendants included notices of another new subscriber agreement
which were just as prominently displayed as the notices in the 2014 statements and did
not even include the link to the full terms of the agreement, and yet, the 2017 statements
put Plaintiffs on notice. Compare Roberson Decl. Ex. A, at 7 (“The terms and conditions
applicable to your services contain a binding arbitration provision . . . .”), and Hart Decl.
Ex. B, at 17 (same), with Flores Decl. Ex. C, at 35 (“You have a new TWC subscriber
agreement, which contains an arbitration clause . . . .”), and id. Ex. D, at 41 (same).
These 2017 notices spurred Plaintiffs to find the then-operative RSSA and try to opt out
of that arbitration provision. See Roberson Decl. ¶ 6 (“I learned of this ‘reminder’ and
figured out what ‘terms and conditions’ Spectrum was referring to . . . .”); Hart Decl. ¶ 6
(same). Consequently, Plaintiffs’ own declarations defeat their challenge that the notice
of the 2014 RSSA was not “[r]easonably conspicuous.” Specht v. Netscape Commc’ns
Corp., 306 F.3d 17, 35 (2d Cir. 2002) (construing California law); cf. Meyer v. Kalanick,
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200 F. Supp. 3d 408, 418 (S.D.N.Y. 2016) (denying that a contract was formed under
California law because the terms of service were too obscure, noting that “the phrase
‘Terms of Service & Privacy Policy’ is much smaller and more obscure, both in absolute
terms and relative to the ‘Register’ button.”), rev’d sub nom. Meyer v. Uber Techs., Inc.,
868 F.3d 66, 78 (2d Cir. 2017) (“[T]he design of the screen and language used render the
notice provided reasonable as a matter of California law. . . . Although the sentence is in
a small font, the dark print contrasts with the bright white background . . . .”).
Moreover, the importance of a billing statement—it contains information at the
heart of the service relationship—may make it well-suited for use a means to
communicate important information such as contract terms. In fact, a periodic billing
statement is a document with the purpose of notifying consumers of important matters
governing a service relationship, including changes from period to period in the payment
amount and due date. Compare Flores Decl. Ex. C, at 35 ($140.15 due March 27, 2014),
with id. Ex. E, at 43 ($155.00 due May 27, 2014). Thus, it may be an appropriate location
for a change of service notification. See James v. Comcast Corp., No. 16-cv-02218-EMC,
2016 WL 4269898, at *2 (N.D. Cal. Aug. 15, 2016) (finding that, when a
telecommunications service provider included a new arbitration provision in a billing
statement, a consumer who continued to use the services accepted the provision); cf.
Ackerberg v. Citicorp USA, Inc., 898 F. Supp. 2d 1172, 1176 (N.D. Cal. 2012)
(“Numerous courts have found that continued use or failure to opt out of a card account
after the issuer provides a change in terms, including an arbitration agreement, evidences
the cardholder’s acceptance of those terms.”).
Thus, if Plaintiffs received the 2014 billing statements, they would have been on
notice of the terms of the 2014 RSSA; their continued acceptance of Defendants’ services
would thus bind them to those RSSA terms. Plaintiff Hart does not dispute that she
received the billing statements containing these notices. See Hart Decl. at ¶ 6 (“[T]hey are
the same or similar to the monthly billing statements I usually received from TWC.”). On
the other hand, Plaintiff Roberson protests that because he signed up for paperless billing,
he did not receive such billing statements, and he denies receiving the March and May
2014 statements. Roberson Decl. ¶¶ 4–5. However, Defendants offer evidence that those
statements were mailed to Roberson because he had missed payments. Foust-Skudler
Decl. ¶¶ 3–4, 10–11. Roberson does not dispute missing some payments. See Roberson
Decl. ¶ 4. Roberson’s bare denial is insufficient to show that he never received these
billing statements, especially in light of Defendants’ affirmative proof of mailing, which,
under the mailbox rule, triggers the presumption that Roberson did in fact receive the
billing statements. Schikore v. BankAmerica Supplemental Ret. Plan, 269 F.3d 956, 963
(9th Cir. 2001) (“[T]he presumption of receipt established by the mailbox rule applied
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precisely to avoid the type of swearing contest in which the parties are presently
involved.” (internal quotation marks omitted)); see, e.g., Castro v. Macy’s, Inc., No. C
16-5991 CRB, 2017 WL 344978, at *3 (N.D. Cal. Jan. 24, 2017) (applying the common
law mailbox rule to defeat a party’s denial of receipt of an arbitration agreement by mail);
James, 2016 WL 4269898, at *2 & n.5 (same); Hill v. Anheuser-Busch InBev Worldwide,
Inc., No. CV 14-6289 PSG (VBKx), 2014 WL 10100283, at *3 (C.D. Cal. Nov. 26,
2014) (same).
Plaintiffs received, in their billing statements, written notice by U.S. mail of the
2014 RSSA and its arbitration provision. Thus, the Court finds that there is no factual
dispute that the 2014 RSSA binds Plaintiffs. Even assuming that the 2014 RSSA did not
bind Plaintiffs until 30 days after they had received notice of the new agreement, neither
Plaintiff opted out of the agreement by the time the opt-out period elapsed. See Flores
Decl. Ex. A at 14, 17; id. ¶ 40; Roberson Decl. ¶ 6; Hart Decl. ¶ 6. Failure to opt out after
adequate notice of the arbitration provision, coupled with Plaintiffs’ continued
acceptance of Defendants’ services, bound Plaintiffs to the arbitration provision
contained in the 2014 RSSA. See Cal. Civ. Code § 1589 (“A voluntary acceptance of the
benefit of a transaction is equivalent to a consent to all the obligations arising from it, so
far as the facts are known, or ought to be known, to the person accepting.”).
Thus, the Court finds that the 2014 RSSA is a contract that binds the Plaintiffs.
The Court declines to decide the existence or validity of any other contracts or arbitration
provisions to which Plaintiffs purportedly agreed, including the 2010 and 2016 RSSAs.2
2
As stated above, the Court declines to decide whether the 2016 RSSA binds Plaintiffs. Defendants assume the
2016 RSSA applies to Plaintiffs. See Motion at 9–13. They claim that “Spectrum made some minor updates to the
[2016] RSSA in respects that are not material to this motion.” Id. at 3. But the Court is not convinced that Plaintiffs
are bound to the arbitration provision in the 2016 RSSA. The language of the 2016 RSSA’s arbitration provisions is
indeed nearly identical to the 2014 version. See Flores Decl. Ex. B, at 20, 27, 30–31. However, the 2016 RSSA
substitutes the American Arbitration Association’s “Commercial Arbitration Rules” with its “Consumer Arbitration
Rules.” Id. at 30. As stated in the 2014 RSSA, the agreement the 2016 version replaced, TWC was to “provide
[subscribers] at least 30 days’ notice of any material change to . . . the arbitration provisions contained in Section 15
of this [2014] Agreement and any such change will become effective only after such notice period has run.” Id. Ex.
A, at 14.
Defendants have offered no evidence that it gave notice of this change to the arbitration provision in 2016.
See Motion at 3; cf. Douglas, 495 F.3d at 1066 (“Parties to a contract have no obligation to check the terms on a
periodic basis to learn whether they have been changed by the other side.”). Though Defendants seem to contend the
change is immaterial, see Motion at 3, the Court cannot decide based on the limited briefing on this issue that the
change in the applicable arbitration rules is indeed immaterial. See Flores Decl. Ex. A, at 17 (“To opt out, you must
notify TWC . . . within 30 days of the date that you first became subject to this arbitration provision (i.e., . . . if this
Section 15 (or a predecessor version that is not materially different from this Section 15) was not then a part of the
Customer Agreements, then the date that this Section 15 became binding on you . . . .” (emphasis added)). Plaintiffs
were apparently first given notice in their March 2017 billing statements of an RSSA purportedly operative
beginning in April 2016, and Plaintiffs opted out fewer than 30 days after Defendants gave notice of the changed
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Enforceability of the 2014 RSSA
Plaintiffs argue that, if an RSSA binds them, it binds them with respect to TWC,
the original party to the pre-2017 RSSAs, and thus Defendants cannot enforce the RSSAs
between Plaintiffs and TWC. Opp’n at 9–10. Defendants argue that Plaintiffs have
admitted that TWC and Defendants are one and the same and that, by operation of law,
Defendant Spectrum Holding has the right to enforce TWC’s RSSAs. Reply at 12–15.
First, Plaintiffs’ FAC admits that “there is sufficient identity of parties” between
TWC and Defendants. See Valley Casework, Inc. v. Comfort Constr., Inc., 76 Cal. App.
4th 1013, 1021 (1999). They allege in the FACthat “TWC merged with and into”
Defendants, and that Spectrum is “formerly known as ‘Time Warner Cable.’” FAC at 2, ¶
8. At least part of Plaintiffs’ claims against Defendants arise from TWC’s pre-merger acts
or omissions. See id. ¶ 12 (“For years and continuing through the present day,
Defendants have defrauded and misled consumers” (emphasis added)); id. ¶¶ 19, 21
(“[Plaintiffs] signed up for Defendants’ Internet services years ago when it was still
branded as ‘Time Warner Cable.’” (emphasis added)). These factual assertions bind
Plaintiffs to an admission that Defendants are the successors in interest to TWC. See
Amgen Inc. v. Conn. Ret. Plans & Trust Funds, 568 U.S. 455, 470 n.6 (citing Am. Title
Ins. Co. v. Lacelaw Corp., 861 F.2d 224, 226 (9th Cir. 1988)) (binding a party to a
concession in its pleadings); In re Barker, 839 F.3d 1189, 1195 (9th Cir. 2016) (“Judicial
admissions are ‘conclusively binding on the party who made them.’” (quoting Am. Title.
Ins. Co., 861 F.2d at 226)).
Second, by operation of the law of Delaware, where Defendants are—and TWC
was—incorporated, the merger had the effect of endowing Defendant Spectrum Holding
with TWC’s rights. Because Spectrum Holding is the surviving corporation in the
merger, it retains “all property, rights, privileges, powers and franchises, and all and
every other interest.” 8 Del. C. § 259(a); see Bollinger Decl. ¶¶ 4–8 & Exs. A–B.
Moreover, “[t]he Ninth Circuit has confirmed that non-signatories may enforce
arbitration agreements . . . [w]hen the charges against a parent company and its
subsidiary are based on the same facts and are inherently inseparable . . . .” McLeod v.
arbitration provision. Flores Decl. ¶ 9; Roberson Decl. ¶ 6; Hart Decl. ¶ 6; see Motion at 3–4; Flores Decl. Ex. A., at
14; Roberson Decl. ¶ 6 & Exs. A–B; Hart Decl. ¶ 6 & Exs. B–C. Thus, if the change in the applicable arbitration
rules was material, Plaintiffs may have opted out of the 2016 RSSA’s arbitration provision successfully.
Nonetheless, given the Court’s findings with respect to the 2014 RSSA, the Court cannot decide whether
the arbitration provision in the 2016 RSSA binds Plaintiffs. That is, even if Plaintiffs’ 2017 attempts to opt out of the
2016 and 2017 RSSAs’ arbitration provisions were successful, the existence and validity of the 2014 RSSA, which
contains an arbitrability delegation clause (discussed below), requires this Court to refrain from deciding the
gateway arbitrability issues presented by the purported opt outs.
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Ford Motor Co., No. EDCV 04-1255-VAP(SGLx), 2005 WL 3763354, at *4 (C.D. Cal.
Apr. 14, 2005) (quoting J.J. Ryan & Sons, Inc. v. Rhone Poulenc Textile, S.A., 863 F.2d
315, 320–21 (4th Cir. 1988)). Thus, given the identity of TWC and Spectrum Holding,
claims against Charter, Spectrum Holding’s parent company, also may be referred to
arbitration. See, e.g., Kramer v. Toyota Motor Corp., 705 F.3d 1122, 1129 (9th Cir. 2013)
(noting that a signatory may be equitably estopped from avoiding arbitration “when the
signatory alleges substantially interdependent and concerted misconduct by the
nonsignatory and another signatory and the allegations of interdependent misconduct
[are] founded in or intimately connected with the obligations of the underlying
agreement” (quoting Goldman v. KPMG, LLP, 173 Cal. App. 4th 209, 219 (2009))).
Because Plaintiffs have admitted the identity of parties and because Spectrum
Holding is endowed with TWC’s rights by operation of law, Defendants can enforce the
2014 RSSA.
C.
Delegation of Arbitrability Issues to the Arbitrator
Defendants contend that the parties agreed that questions of arbitrability of claims
were clearly and unmistakably delegated to an arbitrator. Mot. at 11–13. In response,
Plaintiffs argue that the incorporation of the AAA rules is qualified by a clause allowing
the parties to stipulate to an alternative and that the words “claims” and “appropriate” as
used in the arbitrability delegation provision are ambiguous. Opp’n at 19–21.
A party seeking to compel arbitration under the FAA has the burden to show that
(1) there exists a valid, written agreement to arbitrate in a contract, and (2) the agreement
to arbitrate encompasses the dispute at issue. Cox v. Ocean View Hotel Corp., 533 F.3d
1114, 1119 (9th Cir. 2008); see also 9 U.S.C. § 2. “Although [these] gateway issues of
arbitrability presumptively are reserved for the court, the parties may agree to delegate
them to the arbitrator.” Momot, 652 F.3d at 987. “[W]hether the court or the arbitrator
decides arbitrability is an issue for judicial determination unless the parties clearly and
unmistakably provide otherwise.” Mohamed v. Uber Techs., Inc., 848 F.3d 1201, 1208
(9th Cir. 2016) (quotation marks omitted) (quoting Oracle Am., Inc. v. Myriad Group
A.G., 724 F.3d 1069, 1072 (9th Cir. 2013)).
In the Ninth Circuit, “incorporation of the AAA rules constitutes clear and
unmistakable evidence that contracting parties agreed to arbitrate arbitrability.”3 Brennan
3
Section R-7 of the AAA’s Commercial Arbitration Rules provides, “The arbitrator shall have the power to rule on
his or her own jurisdiction, including any objections with respect to the existence, scope, or validity of the
arbitration agreement or the arbitrability of any claim or counterclaim. . . . The arbitrator shall have the power to
Case 8:17-cv-00556-DOC-RAO Document 39 Filed 11/08/17 Page 11 of 13 Page ID #:624
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
CENTRAL DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA
CIVIL MINUTES – GENERAL
Case No. SA CV 17-0556-DOC (RAOx)
Date: November 8, 2017
Page 11
v. Opus Bank, 796 F.3d 1125, 1130 (9th Cir. 2015). “[T]he holding of Opus Bank
applies . . . to non-sophisticated parties.” McLellan v. Fitbit, Inc., No. 3:16-cv-00036-JD,
2017 WL 4551484, at *2 (N.D. Cal. Oct. 11, 2017) (quoting Miller v. Time Warner Cable
Inc., No. 8:16-cv-00329-CAS (ASx), 2016 WL 7471302, at *5 (C.D. Cal. Dec. 27,
2016)); see Zenelaj v. Handybook Inc., 82 F. Supp. 3d 968, 973 (N.D. Cal. 2015) (prior to
Opus Bank, collecting cases that “found effective delegation of arbitrability regardless of
the sophistication of the parties”); cf. Mohamed, 848 F.3d at 1208–09 (upholding an
express delegation of arbitrability without considering the parties’ level of
sophistication).
Here, the 2014 RSSA incorporates the AAA’s Commercial Arbitration Rules in its
arbitration provision. Flores Decl. Ex. A, at 16. Plaintiffs argue that the clause allowing
parties to stipulate to a different arbitration institution is a qualification of this agreement
to the AAA’s rules. Opp’n at 20. However, providing parties the option to stipulate to a
different arbitration institution is inapposite to the unequivocal agreement to use the
AAA’s Commercial Arbitration Rules in the absence of such an agreement. The sentence
agreeing to AAA rules is supplemented, not qualified, by the clause allowing the parties
to stipulate to an alternative, and the agreement is no less clear for its inclusion. See
Flores Decl. Ex. A, at 16.
Moreover, the 2014 RSSA expressly dictates that “claims relating to whether
arbitration is appropriate . . . will be decided by an arbitrator, not a court.” Flores Decl.
Ex. A, at 16. Plaintiffs argue that the words “claims” and “appropriate” as used in this
clause are ambiguous. Opp’n at 20. However, though the wording of the clause is
awkward, its unambiguous meaning is not lost, especially when considered in
conjunction with the AAA’s relegation of jurisdictional authority to the arbitrator. The
parties are bound by their explicit agreement to refer questions of “whether arbitration is
appropriate” to an arbitrator. See Miller, 2016 WL 7471302, at *5 (holding that a similar
express agreement delegated arbitrability).
This order does not preclude Plaintiffs from arguing before the arbitrator that their
claims are outside the scope of their agreement to arbitrate. Indeed, some portion of the
claims might not be subject to arbitration given Plaintiffs’ attempts to opt out of the 2016
determine the existence or validity of a contract of which an arbitration clause forms a part.” Am. Arbitration Ass’n,
Commercial Arbitration Rules and Mediation Procedures 13 (2016),
https://www.adr.org/sites/default/files/Commercial%20Rules.pdf; accord Am. Arbitration Ass’n, Consumer
Arbitration Rules 17 (2016), https://www.adr.org/sites/default/files/Consumer%20Rules.pdf (same).
Case 8:17-cv-00556-DOC-RAO Document 39 Filed 11/08/17 Page 12 of 13 Page ID #:625
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
CENTRAL DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA
CIVIL MINUTES – GENERAL
Case No. SA CV 17-0556-DOC (RAOx)
Date: November 8, 2017
Page 12
and 2017 RSSAs in March, June, and July of 2017. Nevertheless, the 2014 RSSA evinces
an agreement to submit issues of arbitrability to an arbitrator.4
D.
Enforceability of the Agreement to Delegate Arbitrability
Defendants emphasize that Plaintiffs challenge that the arbitration agreement
generally—not the delegation provision specifically—is unenforceable. Opp’n at 21–22.
Defendants charge that Plaintiffs’ arguments are inapposite to the issue before this Court,
that is, “whether the particular agreement to delegate arbitrability” is unenforceable.
Opus Bank, 796 F.3d at 1132–33 (citing Rent-A-Center, W., Inc. v. Jackson, 561 U.S. 63,
71–75 (2010)); see Reply at 17. In Opus Bank, the Ninth Circuit recognized that an
arbitration clause and a delegation provision within the arbitration clause “are separate
agreements to arbitrate different issues” and that in such a scenario, “multiple severable
arbitration agreements exist.” Id. at 1133.
Plaintiffs’ arguments that the arbitration agreement is unenforceable are properly
left to the arbitrator to decide, per the express agreement of the parties. Because
Plaintiffs’ challenges with respect to unconscionability and waiver “failed to ‘make any
arguments specific to the delegation provision,’” this Court does not consider them. Id. at
1133 (quoting Rent-A-Center, 561 U.S. at 74); see Opp’n at 21–23; accord McLellan,
2017 WL 4551484, at *1 (“Challenges [to the validity of a delegation clause] may be
considered by courts, but challenges [to the validity of the agreement to arbitrate] must
go to the arbitrator pursuant to the delegation clause.”).
IV.
Disposition
For the foregoing reasons, the Court GRANTS Defendants’ Motion.
As noted above, the arbitrator may determine that Plaintiffs’ claims are not subject
to the agreement to arbitrate or that the agreement is unenforceable. Thus, dismissal of
Plaintiffs’ claims is inappropriate.
Accordingly, the case is STAYED pending the completion of arbitration
proceedings, pursuant to 9 U.S.C. § 3. The parties are ORDERED to file a status update
4
This necessarily includes issues of arbitrability relating to Plaintiffs’ claims for restitution and declaratory relief.
“[C]laims for injunctive orders or similar relief” are carved out of the 2014 RSSA’s arbitration provision. Flores
Decl. Ex. A, at 16. Nevertheless, the arbitrability delegation clause divests the Court of its power to determine
whether those claims are arbitrable. See Oracle Am., 724 F.3d at 1076 (“[W]hen a tribunal decides that a claim falls
within the scope of a carve-out provision, it necessarily decides arbitrability.”).
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UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
CENTRAL DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA
CIVIL MINUTES – GENERAL
Case No. SA CV 17-0556-DOC (RAOx)
Date: November 8, 2017
Page 13
on arbitration proceedings every six months from the date of this order until the
conclusion of arbitration in this matter.
The Clerk shall serve this minute order on the parties.
MINUTES FORM 11
CIVIL-GEN
Initials of Deputy Clerk: djl
EXHIBIT 3
•
AMERICAN
ARBITRATION
ASSOCIATION®
INTERNATIONAL CENTRE
FOR DISPUTE RESOLUTION "
Western Case Management Center
Neil Currie
Vice President
45 E River Park Place West, Suite 308
Fresno, CA 93720
Telephone: (877)528-0880
Fax: (855)433-3046
June 18, 2018
Jamin Soderstrom, Esq.
Soderstrom Law
3 Park Plaza
Suite 100
Irvine, CA 92614
Via Email to: jamin@soderstromlawfirm.com
Daniel S. Schecter, Esq.
Latham & Watkins, LLP
10250 Constellation Boulevard
Suite 1100
Los Angeles, CA 90067
Via Email to: daniel.schecter@lw.com
Case Number: 01-18-0000-5446
Elizabeth Hart
-vsCharter Communications, Inc.
and Spectrum Management Holding Co. LLC
Dear Parties:
Per the applicable Rules, the American Arbitration Association (AAA) has administratively appointed William J.
Tucker. Arbitrator Tucker accepted the appointment and has agreed to serve on this consumer matter at the
established compensation rate for consumer disputes.
In accordance with the California Arbitration Law (CCP §1281.85 et seq.), enclosed please find the duly
executed Notice of Appointment, which includes the arbitrator Disclosure Worksheet, the Notice of
Compensation Arrangements, and Arbitrator Tucker's resume.
For your review, we have also enclosed the Provider Organization Disclosure which is required under California
Code of Civil Procedure Section 1281.9.
Also enclosed is the AAA's Neutrals Data Base Search information as of June 15, 2018, which is provided to you
pursuant to California's Ethics Standards for Neutral Arbitrators in Contractual Arbitration Standard 8(b)(1)(A)
regarding whether a party, a lawyer in the arbitration, or an attorney of the law firm with which a lawyer in the
arbitration is currently associated is a member of the AAA's panel of arbitrators.
Pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure Section 1281.91, any party may serve a notice of disqualification on the
basis of the disclosure statement within fifteen (15) calendar days from the date of this letter. Copies of the
objection are to be provided to all parties. However, the arbitrator shall not be copied on any correspondence
regarding objections to their service.
If any objections are received, the other party will be given an opportunity to respond before the AAA makes a
determination, in accordance with the Rules, regarding the arbitrator's continued service.
Absent our receipt of a notice of disqualification within the time specified, the appointment of William J. Tucker
is confirmed, as indicated by the signed Oath of Arbitrator contained in the Notice of Appointment.
As requested by th e arbitrator, and specified in the Consumer Arbitration Rules, the parties and their
representatives must provide information to the AAA of any circumstances likely to raise justifiable doubt as to
whether the arbitrator can remain impartial or independen t. Further, such obligation to provide disclosure
information remains in effect throughout the arbitration.
Sincerely,
/s/
Heather Pope
Case Administrator
Direct Dial: (559)490-1909
Email: HeatherPope@adr.org
Fax: (855)433-3046
Supervisor Information: Sophia Parra, Manager of ADR Services, (559) 490-1907, SophiaParra@adr.org
HP/sp
Enclosures
bcc: William J. Tucker, Esq.
cc:
Christine M. Flores
Andrew D. Prins, Esq.
Diana Alderete
Paul Roy
Douglas L. Mahaffey, Esq.
Matthew A. Brill
Christie Schmieder, Esq.
EXHIBIT 4
•
AMERlCAN
ARBITRATION
INTERNATIONAL CENTRE
FOR DISPUTE RESOLUTION
ASSOCI ATI ON·
AMERICAN ARBITRATION ASSOCIATION
In the Matter of the Arbitration between:
Re: 01-18-0000-5446
Elizabeth Hart, Claimant
V.
Charter Communications, Inc., and Spectrum Management Holding Company,
LLC
INTERIM AWARD OF ARBITRATOR
I, William J. Tucker, THE UNDERSIGNED ARBITRATOR, having been
designated in accordance with the arbitration agreement in and between the
above-named parties entered into in January 2014, and having been duly sworn,
Claimant Elizabeth Hart ("Hart") having been represented by Jamin A.
Soderstrom of Soderstrom Law PC and Douglas L. Mahaffey of Mahaffey Law
Group, P.C., and Respondents Charter Communications, Inc., and Spectrum
Management Holding Company, LLC (collectively referred to as "Spectrum")
having been represented by Daniel S. Schecter, Matthew A . Brill, Andrew D.
Prins, Alexander L. Stout and Nicholas L. Schlossman of Latham & Watkins,
LLP, Hart and Spectrum having fully briefed their respective dispositive motions
addressing all six of Hart's claims in her Amended Arbitration Demand and all
three of Spectrum' s counterclaims, and I having reviewed the opening and
responding briefs of both parties on all of those claims, do hereby render this
INTERIM AWARD OF ARBITRATOR, as follows:
BACKGROUND FACTS
In 2017, Hart and another individual named Le'Roy Roberson filed a putative
class action in federal district court in the Central District of California against
Spectrum. Hart and Roberson asserted that Spectrum had "failed to provide a
network and infrastructure capable of supporting all of its subscribers and their
promised Internet speeds." Hart and Roberson further asserted that Spectrum had
increased charges to consumers, such as Hart and Roberson, without adequate
notice. Spectrum filed a motion to compel arbitration based on an arbitration
provision in a 2014 Residential Services Subscriber Agreement ("RSSA") as well
as subsequent RSSAs.
The arbitration provision provided in pertinent part:
Only claims for money damages may be submitted to arbitration;
claims for injunctive orders or similar relief must be brought in a
court (other than claims relating to whether arbitration is
appropriate, which will be decided by an arbitrator, not a court).
You may not combine a claim that is subject to arbitration under
this Agreement with a claim that is not eligible for arbitration
under this Agreement. .. .
On November 8, 2017, the District Court issued its ruling compelling
arbitration. The Court found that "the 2014 RSSA is a contract that binds the
Plaintiffs." The court further ruled that, "The parties are bound by their explicit
agreement to refer questions of 'whether arbitration is appropriate' to an
arbitrator." Further, said the Court, "This Order does not preclude Plaintiffs from
arguing before the arbitrator that their claims are outside the scope of their
agreement to arbitrate." Having so ruled, the court stayed the case "pending the
completion of arbitration proceedings, pursuant to 9 U.S.C. §3."
HART'S CLAIMS IN ARBITRATION
Pursuant to the District Court' s Order, Hart filed an Arbitration Demand
against Spectrum on January 26, 2018, and thereafter filed an Amended
Arbitration Demand. In her Amended Arbitration Demand, Hart asserted classaction allegations and pled the following claims: Count One (Fraudulent
Inducement); Count Two (Violation of California's False Advertising Law, Bus.
& Prof. Code §§ 17500 et. seq.); Count Three (Common . Law Fraud and
Misrepresentation); Count Four (Violation of the Electronic Funds Transfer Act
(15 U.S.C. §§1693 et. seq.); Count Five (Violation of California' s Consumers
2
Legal Remedies Act, Civ. Code §§ 1750 et. seq.); and Count Six (Violation of
California' s Unfair Competition Law, Bus. & Prof. Code §§17200 et. seq.).
In her Amended Arbitration Demand, Hart requested dismissal of the
arbitration "based on (1) the fact that the arbitration clause is 'null and void' by
its own terms, and, alternatively (2) the inarbitrability of claims for injunctive
orders and similar relief."
SPECTRUM'S COUNTERCLAIMS AGAINST HART
Spectrum filed three counterclaims against Hart in the arbitration. Count One
sought declaratory relief, in particular, a declaration that (1) any of Hart's six
causes of action are arbitrable to the extent they seek any form of money
damages; and (2) Hart's arbitrable claims for money damages are improperly
joined with non-arbitrable claims for injunctive relief.
Count Two of Spectrum's Counterclaims seeks a declaration that Hart
breached her agreement by filing her Amended Demand for Arbitration on behalf
of a putative class. It also seeks money damages.
Count Three of Spectrum's counterclaims seeks a finding that Hart breached
her agreement with Spectrum by (1) asserting class action claims; (2) bringing
suit alongside an unrelated third-party (Le'Roy Roberson); (3) combining
arbitrable claims for money damages with non-arbitrable claims for injunctive
relief; and ( 4) bringing suit in court when the delegation clause required the
threshold question of arbitrability to be submitted to an arbitrator.
NONE OF HART'S CLAIMS IN HER AMENDED ARBITRATION
DEMAND ARE ARBITRABLE
Both parties agree that, to the extent Hart has asserted a claim that does not
seek "money damages," that claim is not arbitrable. It is clear that none of the six
claims asserted by Hart in her Amended Arbitration Demand are arbitrable.
As an example, in Count One, Hart seeks the following relief:
Hart, individually and on behalf of all Class members, seeks an
individual, representative, and public injunctive order,
providing inter alia, injunctions against the above-described
conduct requiring Respondents to cease and correct all false and
3
misleading representations concerning Internet speeds and
reliability, orders granting rescission of the underlying
agreements entered into as a result of Respondents' false and
misleading representations, and, orders granting all similar
relief available." Amended Arbitration Demand ,r 40.
Hart seeks the exact same relief in Count Two. The only difference between
the wording of the relief sought in these counts is that in Count One, the last
phrase seeks "all similar relief available," whereas in Count Two, the last phrase
seeks "all similar relief available under the F AL." Amended Arbitration Demand
,r 46.
Hart seeks the following relief in Count Three:
Hart, individually and on behalf of all Class members, seeks
individual, representative, and public injunctive orders
requiring Respondents to cease and correct all false and
misleading representations concerning Internet speed and
reliability, and orders granting all similar relief available.
Amended Arbitration Demand ,r 53 .
Hart seeks the following relief in Count Four:
Hart, individually and on behalf of all Class members, seeks
individual, representative, and public injunctive orders
requiring Respondents to correct their unlawful policies and
practices and make clear and conspicuous disclosures of the
automatic payment terms and conditions and provide written
copies of all relevant terms, and orders granting all similar
relief available, including but not limited to costs and
reasonable attorneys' fees." Amended Arbitration Demand ,r
63.
Hart seeks the following relief in Count Five:
Under Sections 1780 and 1781 of the CLRA, Hart, individually
and on behalf of all Class members, seeks an individual,
representative, and public injunctive orders requiring
Respondents to cease and correct all false and misleading
4
representations concerning Internet speeds and reliability and
correct all unconscionable and illegal terms and conditions, and
orders granting all similar relief available under the CLRA,
including but not limited to costs and reasonable attorneys'
fees." Amended Arbitration Demand ii 72.
Hart seeks the following relief in Count Six:
Hart, individually and on behalf of all Class members, seeks
individual, representative, and public injunctive orders
requiring Respondents to cease and correct all false and
misleading representations concerning Internet speed and
reliability and provide clear and conspicuous disclosures
concerning automatic payment terms and policies, and orders
granting all similar relief available under the UCL and/or
CAPRI. Amended Arbitration Demand ii 84.
Conspicuously absent from Hart's Amended Arbitration Demand is any
reference to, let alone a request for, "damages." Spectrum asserts that
"restitution" is a remedy under at least some of the six claims asserted by Hart in
the arbitration, and that the reference to "money damages" in the 2014 RSSA
includes restitution, because restitution requires a payment of money by the
defendant to the plaintiff. However, the 2014 RSSA specifically provides that,
"claims for injunctive orders or similar relief must be brought in a court." The
only relief sought by Hart in her Amended Arbitration Demand is "injunctive
orders or similar relief."
Spectrum asserts that Hart has engaged in artful pleading, apparently noting
that Hart has chosen to use in the six claims asserted in her Amended Arbitration
Demand the very same wording of the arbitration provision in the 2014 RSSA
("injunctive orders or similar relief'). It does appear that Hart has consciously
done exactly that. The response, of course, is that Hart has every right to craft the
wording of the relief she seeks in such a way to avoid a ruling that any of her
claims are arbitrable. It is clear that whatever "money damages" encompass
within the meaning of the arbitration provision, they are not "injunctive orders or
similar relief." Spectrum has made that clear. It is also clear that Spectrum cannot
force Hart to seek "money damages" if she does not want to do so.
5
SPECTRUM'S FIRST COUNTERCLAIM IS MOOT
Based on the above, I find that none of the six claims asserted by Hart in her
Amended Arbitration Demand are arbitrable. Consequently, Spectrum's request
for a declaration that, if any such claims seek damages, they are arbitrable and
that Hart has breached the 2014 RSSA by combining arbitrable with nonarbitrable claims, is moot.
SPECTRUM'S SECOND COUNTERCLAIM IS ARBITRABLE
Spectrum's Second Counterclaim is arbitrable, because it seeks "money
damages" for breach of contract, specifically breach of the agreement that Hart
would not file a putative class action. The fact that Respondent has joined a claim
for declaratory relief with its claim for money damages may or may not be a
defense to this breach of contract claim, but that may not be determined at this
time by way of summary adjudication.
SPECTRUM'S THIRD COUNTERCLAIM IS ARBITRABLE
Spectrum's Third Counterclaim is arbitrable, because it seeks "money
damages" for breach of contract. Specifically, Spectrum asserts that Hart
breached her agreement with Spectrum that she not (1) assert a class action claim,
(2) bring suit alongside an unrelated third-party, (3) combine arbitrable claims for
money damages with non-arbitrable claims for injunctive relief, or (4) bring suit
in court in light of the delegation clause which required that the threshold
question of arbitrability be submitted to an arbitrator.'
However, this claim may not be determined at this time by way of summary
adjudication, but must be adjudicated in the ordinary course pursuant to the
applicable rules of the American Arbitration Association.
' Although Hart has not combined arbitrable claims for money damages with non-arbitrable claims for
injunctive relief in her Amended Arbitration Demand, she appears to have done so in the Complaint she
filed in District Court. I view Spectrum's breach of contract counterclaims as asserting that Hart
breached the 2014 RSSA (and perhaps subsequent RSSAs) by her filing in District Court, and not her
filings in arbitration.
6
CONCLUSION
None of Heart's six claims asserted in her Amended Arbitration Demand are
arbitrable, because none of them seek "money damages."
Spectrum's First Counterclaim is moot, because it is subsumed in my
determination that none of Hart' s six claims in her Amended Arbitration Demand
seek "money damages" and, therefore, none are arbitrable.
Spectrum' s Second Counterclaim and its Third Counterclaim are arbitrable,
because they seek "money damages."
Spectrum's Second Counterclaim and its Third Counterclaim cannot be
determined at this time by way of summary adjudication. Consequently, they will
be adjudicated in accordance with the applicable rules and procedures of the
American Arbitration Association. Case Administrator Heather Pope will arrange
for a telephonic conference call for us to discuss further proceedings in this
matter.
This Interim Award shall remain in ful I force and effect until the arbitrator
issues a Final Award.
Dated: December
7
L~ 2018
EXHIBIT 5
J\MERICAN
ARBITRATION
li,JTERl,J/\TIOI\JA L C Ei\JT R::
FOR DISP UTE ilESOLUT IOi,!
ASSOClATJON
AMERfCAN ARBITRATION ASSOCIATION
In the Matter of the Arbitration between:
Re:01-18-0000-5446
Elizabeth Hart, Claimant
V.
Charter Communications, Inc. and Spectrum Management Holding Co, Inc.,
Respondent
FINAL AW ARD OF ARBITRATOR
I, William J. Tucker, THE UNDERSIGNED ARBITRATOR, having been
designated in accordance with the arbitration agreement in and between the abovenamed parties dated at an unknown time in 2014, and having been duly sworn,
Claimant Elizabeth Hart ("Hart"), having been represented by Jamin Soderstrom of
Sodertrom Law, and Respondent Charter Communications, Inc. and Spectrum
Management Holding Co, Inc. ("Spectrum") having been represented by Daniel S.
Schecter, Matthew A. Brill, Andrew D. Prins, Alexander L. Stout and Nicholas L.
Schlossman of Latham & Watkins, LLP, and I having duly heard the proofs and
allegations of Claimant and Respondent by way of extensive briefing, having issued
an INTERIM AW ARD on December l 0, 2018, which is confirmed, adopted, and
incorporated as if fully set forth herein, and having reviewed the moving, opposition
and reply briefs of the parties on Hart's anti-SLAPP motion to strike Spectrum's
Second and Third Counterclaims, and having reviewed Spectrum's Fourth
Counterclaim, do render this FINAL A WARD OF ARBITRATOR, as follows:
1. BACKGROUND FACTS
On March 28, 2017, Hart filed a Complaint against Spectrum in the Southern
District of California. Spectrum brought a Motion to Compel Arbitration pursuant to
an arbitration provision in what it claimed were contracts entered into with Hart in
2014, 2016 and 2017. Hart opposed the motion, asserting the arbitration provisions
were unenforceable. On November 8, 2017, The District Court Judge granted the
motion and ordered the parties to arbitration. The Judge ruled that the question of
arbitrability was one for determination by the Arbitrator, not the Court.
In response to the Court's order compelling arbitration, on January 25, 2018,
Ha11 filed an arbitration demand with the American Arbitration Association.
Subsequently, on March 22, 2018, Hart filed her Amended Arbitration Demand.
In her Amended Arbitration Demand, Hart asserted six causes of action. In each
cause of action, Hart sought only "injunctive" and "all similar relief." In none of the
six causes of action did Hart seek money damages. In her Prayer, Hart sought
dismissal of the arbitration she had filed on the grounds she was not seeking
"damages" in any of her claims.
Claimant based her request for dismissal on the arbitration provision(s) in the
document(s) Spectrum contended were contracts between the parties. Those
arbitration provisions provided that all claims for damages must be arbitrated, and
that injunctive and all other equitable relief must be sought only in court.
Spectrum opposed Hart's request for dismissal of the arbitration on multiple
grounds. One such ground was that the "similar relief' Hart sought included
"restitution" and "restitutionary disgorgement." Spectrum argued that, since
restitution would require a payment of money by Spectrum to Hart and the putative
class members Hart sought to represent, her claims in arbitration did in fact seek
damages.
Both parties requested permission to file "dispositive motions," and I granted
that request. The parties briefed the issues and, on December 10, 2018, I issued an
Interim Award. In that Award I ruled that none of Hart's cause of action sought
money damages and, therefore, none of them were arbitrable.
Prior to the filing of the parties' dispositive motions, Spectrum requested
permission to file three counterclaims against Hart, and I granted that request. Hait
opposed those three counterclaims, and the viability of those counterclaims was also
made the subject of the parties' dispositive motions. In my Interim Award, I ruled
that Spectrum ' s First Counterclaim for declaratory relief was moot, and that the
2
Second and Third Counterclaims, although arbitrable -- because they sought money
damages -- could not be resolved in summary fashion and, instead, would need to be
arbitrated in the ordinary course.
Thereafter, on January 8, 2019, a telephonic conference with counsel for the
parties was held. The purpose was to determine how to proceed with the arbitration
of Spectrum's Second and Third Counterclaims. During that telephonic conference,
Hart sought permission to serve and file an anti-SLAPP motion to strike Spectrum's
Second and Third Counterclaims. I granted that motion and set a briefing schedule. I
have now reviewed the moving, opposition and reply briefs on that motion, and the
declarations, exhibits and case authorities accompanying those briefs.
Subsequent to this January 8, 2019 telephonic conference, Spectrum requested
permission to file a Fourth Counterclaim, and I granted that request. Spectrum
served and filed it, and Hart filed her answer denying the Fourth Counterclaim.
2. THE ANTI-SLAPP LEGISLATIVE SCHEME DOES NOT APPLY IN
ARBITRATIONS
The California Legislature's intent in enacting the anti-SLAPP statute was to
provide a mechanism for judges to dispose of cases at an early stage of the litigation,
if the claims infringed on the defendant's rights of freedom of speech or to petition
for redress of grievances, unless the defendant could prove he was likely to prevail
on the merits. Spectrum contends that the Legislature did not intend to apply the
same regime to private nonjudicial arbitrations.
Hart disagrees. She contends that arbitrators act like judges, and apply the same
legal principles as do courts in resolving disputes. Hart contends that arbitrators
base their decisions on the same laws as do judges. Thus, she asserts, an arbitrator
may strike a cause of action under California's anti-SLAPP statute.
In Sheppard v. Lightpost Museum Fund, 146 Cal. App. 4th 315, 323, the Court
addressed the issue, stating:
Section 425.16 [of the Code of Civil Procedure, the anti-SLAPP
statute] does not "expressly provide" that it applies to claims
asserted only in nonjudicial arbitration proceedings. This statute
was expressly intended to prevent abuse of the "judicial
process," and its terms are not reconcilable with a legislative
3
-~·-·
- ---------
intent to extend it to arbitration claims filed only in private
nonjudicial forums. It follows that the Legislature did not
authorize superior courts to strike arbitration claims filed only
in arbitral forums under section 425.16.
Hart contends that the Sheppard decision should not be read to preclude her
from prosecuting an anti-SLAPP motion in this arbitration. She contends that the
reason the Court of Appeal overruled the trial court's granting of the motion to strike
was that the pleading the moving party sought to have stricken was filed in an
arbitration proceeding, not before the court. In other words, there was nothing before
the court to strike.
Hart contends in her Opposition brief:
The Sheppard court agreed with the prevailing parties'
argument that the proper procedure was what Hart has done
here: file the anti-SLAPP motion in arbitration. "If Shepherd
wants to pursue a motion to strike, he should be required to do
so in the CORP [arbitration] forum. Sheppard at 319-20."
However, the statement, "If Sheppard wants to pursue a motion to strike, he
should be required to do so in the CORP forum," was not the court's statement. Rather,
it was the argument asserted by the party opposing the motion to strike. Consequently,
it does not stand for the proposition Hart asserts.
The court in Sheppard provided its reasoning for ruling that and anti-SLAPP
motion may not be made in arbitration proceedings. The court pointed out that the antiSLAPP legislation makes a "cause of action" in a "complaint," subject to a motion to
strike. The court noted that, "Complaint, cross-complaints and petitions are pleadings,
which are filed in courts to initiate judicial proceedings." 146 Cal. App.4 th at 323. By
contrast, said the court, "[A]rbitration claims filed only in arbitral forums ... are very
different [from pleadings] because they are not filed in courts and they do not initiate
judicial proceedings." (Emphasis in original).
The Court in Sheppard also noted that, "the Legislature expressly stated its
intent that section 425.16 target 'abuse of the judicial process,"' and [p]rivate
arbitration proceedings are not part of the judicial process; they are 'nonjudicial'
proceedings." 146 Cal. App. 4 th at 323. Thus, the court concluded that the anti4
SLAPP statute's "terms are not reconcilable with the legislative intent to extend it to
arbitration claims filed only in private nonjudicial forums." Id.
Other case authorities are to the same effect. For instance, in Garretson v. Post
(2007) 156 Cal. App. 4 th I 512, the defendant initiated nonjudicial foreclosure
proceedings. The plaintiff paid the amount defendant demanded in order to avoid
foreclosure, and then brought an action in court asserting several causes of action,
including a claim of wrongful foreclosure. In response, defendant filed an anti-SLAPP
motion to strike. The trial court granted the motion. The Court of Appeal reversed,
ruling that such a motion was not available in "nonjudicial" proceedings.
Similarly, in Century 21 Chamberlain & Associates v. Haberman (2009), the
Court of Appeal affirmed an order denying an anti-SLAPP motion, ruling:
Resolving an issue of first impression, we hold the anti-SLAPP
statute does not protect the act of initiating private, contractual
arbitration. The anti-SLAPP statute protects statements made
in, or concerning issues under review by, a "judicial
proceeding, or any other official proceeding authorized by
law." (§4 to 5.16, subd. (e)(l ), (2). Private, contractual
arbitration is neither. It is a private alternative to a judicial
proceeding. It is not an "official proceeding" because it is a
nongovernmental activity not reviewable by administrative
mandate or required by statute.
The only authority cited by Hart in support of her position is Hotels Nevada,
LLC v. L.A. Pacific Center, Inc. (2012) 203 Cal. App. 336. However, in that case, an
anti-SLAPP motion was permitted in an arbitration proceeding because the parties
expressly stipulated that it could be heard in the arbitration. Although Hart claims that
the parties similarly so stipulated in this case, she is incorrect. Spectrum did not so
stipulate. Rather, I simply granted Hart's request to file that motion, unaware at the
time that such motions may only be made in a judicial proceeding.
For the above reasons, I find that anti-SLAPP motions are impermissible m
private nonjudicial arbitrations, and I deny Heart's anti-SLAPP motion.
5
3. THE ATTORNEY'S FEES SPECTRUM REQUESTS IN ITS THIRD
COUNTERCLAIM ARE NOT "DAMAGES" PROXIMATELY RESULTING
FROM HART'S ALLEGED BREACH OF CONTRACT
Filing a lawsuit and making statements and arguments in court are examples of
the exercise of one's free speech and right to petition the court for redress of
th
grievances. Code Civ. Proc. §4 to 5.16 (e) (l); Navellier v. Sletten (2002) 29 Cal. 4
82, 90 (The right of petition encompasses "the basic act of filing litigation"); Briggs v.
Eden Council for Hope & Opportunity (1999) 19 Cal. 4 th 1106, 1115. See also Moss
Bros. Toy, Inc. v. Ruiz (2018) 27 Cal. App. 5 th 424, in which the court held that filing
a putative class action and opposing a motion to compel arbitration were protected
petitioning activities. Id. at 434.
In Moss, plaintiff employee filed a putative class action in court, and opposed
the defendant employer's motion to compel arbitration. In response, the employer
brought a claim for breach of contract and sought damages consisting of "legal costs,
attorney fees, and time spent" that the company allegedly would not have incurred if
the employee had submitted his individual employment-related claims in arbitration, as
a 20 IO agreement between the parties required. The court ruled that the employer's
claim was based on the employee's protected right of petition, and not the breach of
the 2010 arbitration agreement.
This case presents the same situation. Hart filed a putative class action lawsuit in
court and opposed Spectrum's motion to compel arbitration. Those filings are the bases
for spectrum's Third Counterclaim. In that counterclaim, Spectrum asse1is that Hart
breached her contract with Spectrum by filing the lawsuit in District Court, and in that
lawsuit, joining her claims with that of another plaintiff, and opposing Spectrum's
motion to compel arbitration, all in breach of Spectrum's contract with her.
Since Hart has an absolute constitutional right to petition the court in filing her
lawsuit in court and opposing Spectrum's claimed right to arbitrate her claims, Hart
cannot be said to have breached a contract with Spectrum. Were it otherwise, it would
render Hart's right to petition nugatory. The fact that Hart does not have a right to
have the Third Counterclaim stricken under the anti-SLAPP statute does not affect in
any way her constitutional right to petition the comi for redress of grievances. Since
Hart had a right to file the lawsuit and assert that the arbitration provision was null and
6
void, Spectrum's attorney's fees in litigating these issues with Hart cannot be
considered damages proximately resulting from Hart's alleged breach of contract.
A second, independent reason Spectrum is not entitled to recover its attorney's
fees as "damages" is that there is no contract between Spectrum and Hart that provides
for an award of attorney's fees to the prevailing party, nor is there any statute that
provides for an award of attorney's fees. Under the American rule, absent a statute
providing for attorney's fees, or an attorney's fees provision in a contract between the
parties, each party must bear its own attorney's fees.
Spectrum contends that the attorney's fees it incurred are the direct result of
Hart's breach of her agreement with Spectrum. Assuming Hart breached her contract
with Spectrum, despite the fact that her actions were constitutionally protected,
Spectrum's position is no different from that of any plaintiff suing a defendant for
breach of contract. See,~-, Olson v. Arnett (1980) 113 Cal. App. 3d 59; Navellier v.
Sletten, 106 Cal. App. 4 th 763.
In Naveliier, Plaintiff sought to enforce a settlement agreement, which included
a release. The defendant filed a counterclaim, asserting that the release was null and
void. Plaintiff incurred attorney's fees in defending itself against defendant's
counterclaims. Plaintiff claimed that defendant had breached its contract with Plaintiff
by filing those counterclaims, and asserting the invalidity of the settlement agreement,
and sought an award of attorney's fees as his "damages." The Court of Appeal rejected
this argument, ruling:
Plaintiffs' major item of damages, the attorney's fees incurred
in connection with the defendant's counterclaims, is not
available as a matter of law because neither a statute nor the
release provides for recovery of attorney's fees in this case.
The court in Navellier then discussed the similar situation presented in Olson v.
Arnett, supra, in which that court similarly ruled, stating:
Respondents contend that when appellant repudiated the
settlement, respondents were forced to continue to employ
attorneys and that therefore their attorney fees logically flow as
damages from the breach. (Citations omitted). However, to
allow respondents to recover their attorney's fees would be
7
contrary to the well-established [American] rule that in the
absence of a special statute or a contractual provision for
attorney's fees, the prevailing party is not entitled to recover
attorney's fees from his opponent. (Citations omitted).
The instant case is based on a contract, the agreement to settle
the underlying action. There is no contention or evidence that
there was any provision in the contract for attorney's fees.
Appellant breached his contract, and respondents had to employ
attorneys in order to enforce that contract. We think this case is
not basically different from any other contract action where the
nonbreaching party is forced to employ an attorney to enforce
the contract but is not entitled to his attorney's fees as damages.
113 Cal. App. 3d at 67-68.
The court in Navellier further noted that, when parties enter into a contract, they
are aware of the potential legal costs if one of the parties breaches the agreement. The
court noted that it is not unfair to require each party to pay its own legal costs in the
event of a breach of contract, if the patties did not find it necessary to include a fee
shifting provision when they entered into the agreement. 1
4. THE ATTORNEY'S FEES SPECTRUM REQUESTS IN ITS SECOND
COUNTERCLAIM ARE NOT HDAMAGES" PROXIMATELY RESULTING
FROM HART'S ALLEGED BREACH OF CONTRACT
Spectrum's Second Counterclaim is different from its Third Counterclaim. In its
Third Counterclaim, Spectrum asserted Hart breached the contract by filing a lawsuit
in District Court. In the Second Counterclaim, Spectrum asserts that Hart has breached
her agreement by filing her Amended Arbitration Demand, in which she sought relief
not only on her own behalf, but also on behalf of all putative class members, in
contravention of her agreement with Spectrum. However, for the reasons discussed
above, the attorney's fees it seeks as damages are not true damages. Since there is no
attorney's fees provision in any contract between Spectrum and Hart, and because
there is no statute which provides for an award of attorney's fees to the prevailing
party in a dispute such as this, Spectrum must bear its own attorney's fees.
Consequently, it has no damages.
1
8
Although Spectrum has cited cases to the contrary, I find that those cases were incorrectly decided.
Even if the attorney's fees Spectrum has incurred could constitute true damages,
Spectrum has not incurred any attorney's fees as a result of Hart's filing an Amended
Arbitration Demand on behalf of the putative class, as well as in her own individual
capacity. Claimant sought dismissal of all of her claims filed in the arbitration, and that
included claims on behalf of the putative class. Spectrum opposed Hart's "dispositive
motion" seeking a determination that none of her claims -- including her claim on
behalf of the putative class -- were arbitrable. Spectrum would have filed the same
Opposition to Hart's "dispositive motion" had all of Hart's claims in her Amended
Arbitration Demand been asserted solely on her own behalf. Moreover, the basis for
my ruling that none of Hart's claims were arbitrable was the fact that she sought only
"injunctive" and "all similar relief," and not because she had purported to bring those
claims on behalf of the putative class, as well as in her own individual capacity. 2
5. SPECTRUM'S FOURTH COUNTERCLAIM IS MERITLESS
Spectrum's Fourth Counterclaim asserts that Hart seeks "restitution" and
"restitutionary disgorgement," and that such relief constitutes "damages."
Consequently, in its Fourth Counterclaim, Spectrum seeks a declaration that Hart must
seek such "damages" in this arbitration, and not in court.
In my December 10, 2018 Interim Award, I noted that each of Hart's six causes
of action sought only "injunctive" and "all similar relief." Further, that all such relief
must be sought in court, and not in this arbitration. Consequently, I am in this Final
Award dismissing all of Hart's claims.
Since I am dismissing all of Hart's claims in this arbitration (as well as all of
Spectrum's counterclaims), this Final Award will end the entire dispute between the
parties in this arbitration, leaving them to whatever claims they may have in the
District Court action.
Presumably, Hart will seek "restitution" and "restitutionary disgorgement" in the
sti11-pending District Court action. Should the District Court consider and rule
substantively on Hart's causes of action, ruling that the relief she seeks does not
constitute "damages," my ruling dismissing spectrum's Fourth Counterclaim will have
been shown to be correct.
2 See Moss Bros.
Toy, fnc. v. Ruiz (2018) 27 Cal. App. 5 th 424,434, in which the court ruled that attorney's fees incurred by
a party in a case in which the opposing party allegedly breached an agreement to not file a class action, did not constitute
breach of contract damages.
9
If, on the other hand, the Court rules that "restitution" and "restitutionary
disgorgement" are in fact "damages," Hart will be precluded from seeking such
damages in this arbitration, because this Final Award will end the arbitration. That
result would be eminently fair to Hart, since she has taken the position that all the
relief she has sought in the arbitration is "injunctive" and "all similar relief~" which she
further contends may be awarded only in court. I am simply taking Hart at her word. 3
6. AWARD
Based on the above, and on my December 10, 2018 Interim award, I issue this
Final Award as follows:
(1) Hart's anti-SLAPP motion to strike is denied.
(2) All of Hart's causes of action asserted in this arbitration are dismissed.
(3) All of Spectrum's counterclaims filed in this arbitration are dismissed.
(4) There is no prevailing party in this arbitration.
(5) Neither party is entitled to an award of attorney's fees against the other.
The administrative fees of the American Arbitration Association ("the
Association") totaling $2,250, and the compensation and expenses of the arbitrator
totaling $4,125 shall be borne as incurred by the parties.
This A ward is in full settlement of all claims submitted to this Arbitration. All
claims not expressly granted herein are hereby denied.
'
Dated: Marchti, 20 l 9
C
/
~
~
fJd/4or1wi-4AJv~
William J.:~ucker, Arbitrator
I am unclear whether the litigation privilege asserted by Hart and/or Hart's claim that Spectrum elected
the equitable remedy of specific performance, thereby precluding an award of damages, apply.
However, based on the above, whether or not either or both would apply would not change the result.
10
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