Companies win big at U.S. top court on
worker class-action curbs
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[May 22, 2018]
By Lawrence Hurley
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Supreme
Court delivered a blow to the rights of workers on Monday by allowing
companies to require them to sign away their ability to bring
class-action claims against management, agreements already in place for
about 25 million employees.
The justices, in a 5-4 ruling with the court's conservatives in the
majority, endorsed the legality of the growing practice by companies to
compel workers to sign arbitration agreements waiving their right to
bring class-action claims on various disputes, primarily over wages and
hours.
The ruling could apply more broadly to discrimination claims like those
raised by women as part of the #MeToo movement raising awareness of
sexual harassment in the workplace but the court did not explicitly
address that issue.
Craig Becker, a former member of the U.S. National Labor Relations Board
and now general counsel of the AFL-CIO union federation, said the
decision will have a "chilling effect" on employees coming forward to
complain of mistreatment.
"It will cripple enforcement of all the major employment laws," Becker
added.
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Growing numbers of employers, alarmed by a rise in class-action claims
brought by workers on wage issues, have demanded that their workers sign
waivers. Class-action litigation can result in large damages awards by
juries and is harder for businesses to fight than cases brought by
individual plaintiffs.
Republican President Donald Trump's administration last year reversed
the government's stance in the case, siding with the companies. The
Justice Department said it was pleased with Monday's ruling. Democratic
former President Barack Obama's administration had supported a decision
made by the National Labor Relations Board in 2012 invalidating such
employment agreements. The board at the time had a Democratic majority.
The ruling is the latest in a series of pro-business decisions by the
conservative-majority Supreme Court in recent years curbing class-action
claims of various types and endorsing arbitration to resolve contractual
disputes. Companies have said arbitration is quicker and cheaper than
litigation in court.
Justice Neil Gorsuch, Trump's appointee to the court, wrote the ruling,
joined by the four other conservative justices. Gorsuch wrote that
federal arbitration law does not conflict with the National Labor
Relations Act, which outlines the right of workers to act collectively.
"The policy may be debatable but the law is clear: Congress has
instructed that arbitration agreements like those before us must be
enforced as written," Gorsuch wrote.
Workers have fought back against the waivers, arguing that the cost of
pursuing their cases individually in arbitration is prohibitively
expensive. The ruling does not affect workers represented by unions.
Writing in dissent on behalf of the court's four liberals, Justice Ruth
Bader Ginsburg called the ruling "egregiously wrong" and urged Congress
to take action to protect workers' rights.
'TAKE IT OR LEAVE IT'
"The court today holds enforceable these arm-twisted,
take-it-or-leave-it contracts -- including the provisions requiring
employees to litigate wages and hours claims only one-by-one. Federal
labor law does not countenance such isolation of employees," Ginsburg
said in a statement she read in court.
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President Donald Trump shakes hands with Judge Neil Gorsuch after he
was sworn in as an Associate Supreme Court in the Rose Garden of the
White House in Washington, DC, U.S., April 10, 2017. REUTERS/Joshua
Roberts/File Photo
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Ginsburg said she does not believe the ruling would apply to certain
claims alleging discrimination on the basis of race, gender,
religion or national origin covered by Title VII of the landmark
federal Civil Rights Act.
Civil rights advocates were not so sure.
"Today's decision will make it easier for employers to escape
liability for widespread discrimination and harassment. No American
should be forced to sign away their right to invoke the meaningful
protections afforded by our nation's critical civil rights laws,"
said Kristen Clarke, president of the Lawyers' Committee for Civil
Rights Under Law.
The ruling came in the biggest business case of the court's current
term, which began in October runs through the end of June.
The court in the coming weeks is due to rule in another big workers'
rights case involving a conservative challenge to fees that
public-sector workers like police and teachers who are not union
members are forced to pay to unions in certain states to cover the
expenses of collecting bargaining. [L2N1QG0ZA]
The three consolidated cases decided on Monday involved professional
services firm Ernst & Young LLP[ERNY.UL], gas station operator
Murphy Oil USA Inc[MOUI.UL] and healthcare software company Epic
Systems Corporation.
"When it comes to grievances regarding wages and hours, we believe
individual arbitration agreements strike that reasonable balance and
are pleased with the court's decision in support of this," Epic CEO
Judy Faulkner said in a statement.
The NLRB argued that the waivers violate federal labor law and let
companies evade their responsibilities under workplace statutes.
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About one in four private-sector non-union employees have signed
arbitration agreements that include class-action waivers, according
to the liberal-leaning Economic Policy Institute.
One U.S. law firm, Ogletree Deakins, seized on the ruling by
launching a service it said will help employers create arbitration
agreements containing class-action waivers for employees in less
than five minutes.
(Reporting by Lawrence Hurley; Editing by Will Dunham)
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