A New York federal judge recently shook up the employment law world when he ruled that a new federal law preventing employers from requiring arbitration in sexual harassment claims also blocked arbitration for other claims brought alongside in the same case.
Last year's Ending Forced Arbitration of Sexual Assault and Sexual Harassment Act (EFAA) prohibits employers from unilaterally enforcing arbitration agreements for disputes involving sexual harassment or sexual assault. But few believed that the law would be interpreted so broadly as to also sweep up non-sexual harassment claims that happened to be brought in the same legal action.
The EFAA amended the Federal Arbitration Act (FAA) and was signed into law on March 3, 2022, by President Joe Biden. It amended federal law by ending forced arbitration of sexual harassment and sexual assault disputes. The statute defines a sexual harassment dispute as "a dispute relating to conduct that is alleged to constitute sexual harassment under applicable federal, tribal or state law."
The version of the law passed by Congress specifically narrowed the definition of disputes to exclude retaliation, and thus we concluded that employers would have a solid argument to keep accompanying claims in arbitration. "This is an issue that will likely be disputed in litigation," we previously noted – and that prediction has now come to fruition.
Federal Judge Broadly Blocks Arbitration
Two decisions in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York recently analyzed the impact the EFAA would have when a worker brings other non-sexual harassment claims alongside a sexual harassment dispute.
In the first case, Teyo Johnson sued his former employer, Everyrealm, a digital real estate company headquartered in New York. As a condition of employment, Johnson entered into an agreement with Everyrealm containing a broad mandatory arbitration provision. He agreed that "any dispute or controversy" arising out of his employment would be settled by arbitration. The language used in the agreement is relatively standard language used widely today in pre-dispute arbitration agreements across the country.
Johnson's employment with Everyrealm ended poorly, and he filed a complaint, alleging sexual harassment alongside claims of race, gender and ethnicity discrimination. Everyrealm moved to compel arbitration of all of Johnson's claims except his claims of sexual harassment, acknowledging the EFAA prevented forced arbitration. Johnson argued that the remainder of his claims were not subject to arbitration under the EFAA because his complaint included sexual harassment claims, and therefore must be litigated in court.
The court agreed with Johnson on Feb. 24 and held that the EFAA renders an arbitration clause unenforceable as to the entire case involving sexual harassment claims.
Judge Paul Engelmayer's analysis relied on the congressional intent of the EFAA. The operative language of the EFAA makes a pre-dispute arbitration agreement invalid and unenforceable "with respect to a case which is filed under federal, tribal or state law and relates to the … sexual harassment dispute." He reasoned that the text of the statute makes clear that its invalidation of an arbitration agreement extends to the entirety of the case relating to the sexual harassment dispute, not merely the discrete claims that allege such harassment or relate to a sexual harassment dispute.
He said that Congress, in enacting the EFAA, can be presumed to have been sensitive to the distinct meanings of the terms "case" and "claim." The court continued by saying that it is also significant that the EFAA amended the FAA directly. Congress' choice to do so with text broadly blocking enforcement of an arbitration clause with respect to an entire "case" relating to a sexual harassment dispute reflects its rejection of the FAA norm of allowing individual claims in a lawsuit to be parceled out to arbitrators or courts, depending on each claim's arbitrability
Silver Lining?
In a second decision, however, Judge Engelmayer made clear that a worker cannot tack on an implausibly pled sexual harassment claim in order to avoid arbitration of other claims.
In Yost v. Everyrealm, Inc., decided on the same day as the first case, Katherine Yost filed a complaint against the company that included sexual harassment claims that were insufficiently pled such that they could not survive a motion to dismiss. Because Yost failed to allege plausible claims of sexual harassment, the judge dismissed those claims. Judge Engelmayer held that, without remaining sexual harassment claims, the EFAA was not implicated with respect to arbitration of the remaining non-sexual harassment claims.
Conclusion
The takeaway from these cases is that plaintiffs with pre-dispute arbitration agreements who bring plausible claims of sexual harassment now have an arrow in their quiver to avoid arbitration of all claims that are brought with that same lawsuit. Accordingly, we may now see more lawsuits trying to allege sexual harassment in order to avoid arbitration of other employment claims.
Employers need to be aware that these decisions may render your arbitration agreements unenforceable for all alleged claims, not just sexual harassment. We expect this issue to continue to be litigated across the country.
Melissa Camire and Henry Thomson-Smith are attorneys with Fisher Phillips in New York City. © 2023. All rights reserved. Reprinted with permission.
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