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What California’s Time Limits for Payment of Arbitration Fees Mean for Restaurants


Restaurant workers in a kitchen.

Arbitration agreement enforcement continues to take up California court space. A recent wave of cases highlight for the restaurant and food service industry and other employers the importance of timely payment of arbitrator and arbitration fees, particularly in California, to avoid an ejection from arbitration and return to court.

Often, and certainly in California, employer arbitration agreements require employers to pay most, if not all, employment arbitration fees. A failure to pay such fees timely in California may result in a waiver of the right to proceed in arbitration, and a court may order that the case proceed in court—perhaps even on a class basis—rather than in arbitration on an individual basis.

California Code of Civil Procedure Section 1281.98 requires that arbitration fees be paid within 30 days of the due date. The arbitration provider must issue an invoice identifying the fees owed and stating the date that fees are due. Often, professional arbitration services’ invoices state that the fees are due on the date of the invoice.

Importantly, under Section 1281.98, a late payment of fees constitutes a material breach of the arbitration agreement, which results in a waiver of the employer’s right to proceed in arbitration. Indeed, in recent decisions, state appeals courts have ruled that employers waived their right to arbitrate when fees were paid even one day late and even when such nonpayment was not intentional. These opinions have held that there is no grace period.

A California Court of Appeal decision, Hernandez v. Sohnen Enters., Inc., No. B323303 (May 22, 2024), offers a glimmer of hope on this issue. In Hernandez, the court held that, at least where the Federal Arbitration Act rather than California law applies, there is no basis for an automatic and mandatory finding that any tardiness in payment is a breach of the agreement requiring that the matter be removed from arbitration and returned to the court. Whether this holding applies to a particular agreement requires careful review of its language.

When California law applies, the failure to pay on time allows the employee to return the matter to court and terminate the arbitration and proceed in court. If the case is a class or collective action, it proceeds as one in court rather than arbitration on an individual basis. That is not the only penalty that impacts the tardy employer. As a mandatory sanction, the employer whose matter is sent back to court must pay the costs and attorney fees incurred by the employee in getting the matter back to court. The employee need not prove that the employer intentionally paid late or was motivated by a desire to delay the proceedings.

Further, under the law, the court can impose other harsh sanctions against the late-paying employer. These sanctions can include an evidentiary sanction that prohibits the drafting party from conducting any discovery in the civil action or terminating sanctions—such as an order striking the employer’s answer in the civil action or an order granting the employee a default judgment. The court can also find the employer in contempt of court. To avoid these sanctions, the employer must persuade the court that it acted with substantial justification or that there are other circumstances that make imposing the sanction unjust.

It is an issue frequently litigated because it has substantial consequences. If a court finds a failure to timely pay, a case previously ordered to individual arbitration may wind up in court as a class action.

These harsh penalties—and the active litigation over the issue—drive home the point that, once an employer decides to proceed with arbitration in California, it must do so with the expectation that the fees for arbitration, which can be considerable, will be paid swiftly.

Arthur K. Cunningham is an attorney with Jackson Lewis in Riverside, Calif. © 2024 Jackson Lewis. All rights reserved. Reposted with permission.

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