Employment Arbitration Agreements and Third-Party Beneficiaries - Section XI - Employment Arbitration - 2nd Edition
Thomas Carbonneau is the Samuel P. Orlando Distinguished Professor of Law at Penn State's Dickinson School of Law. Professor Carbonneau is commonly regarded as one of the world's leading experts on domestic and international arbitration. He serves on the editorial board of La Revue de L'Arbitrage and is the author of ten highly acclaimed books and 75 scholarly and professional articles on arbitration.
Originally from Employment Arbitration - 2nd Edition
Employment Arbitration Agreements and Third-Party Beneficiaries
Thomas E. Carbonneau
(i) An Introduction to the Issue and the Case
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit has ruled that an arbitration agreement entered into by an employee (at the behest of his employer) with an arbitration service provider is unenforceable because it contains an illusory promise under state contract law. In the court’s assessment, “[t]he contract [was]…hopelessly vague and uncertain as to the [service’s] obligation.…For all practical purposes, [the service’s] promise under this contract ‘makes performance entirely optional with the promisor.’” The contract also lacked consideration and mutuality of obligation and was, therefore, unenforceable.
The facts of the case are an eloquent statement of the extraordinary lengths to which some business entities will go to deprive their lower level employees of their basic legal rights. Ryan’s apparently had not been sufficiently reassured by the fact that it could lawfully impose an obligation to arbitrate unilaterally upon its employees either as a mandatory condition of employment or of continued employment. Perhaps fearing that courts would eventually reverse the legality of that practice, Ryan’s entered into an agreement with Employment Dispute Services (EDS), a specialized arbitration service-provider. The purpose of the contract was “to have EDS provide an arbitration forum for all employment-related disputes between Ryan’s and its employees.” Ryan’s then required its prospective employees to enter into a contract with EDS to use its services exclusively to resolve any employment disputes that arose with Ryan’s. The contract language emphasized that the contracting parties were the employee and EDS; Ryan’s was described as “a third-party beneficiary of the contract.”
Section XI. Employment Arbitration Agreements and Third-Party Beneficiaries
(i) An Introduction to the Issue and the Case
(ii) Penn v. Ryan's Family Steak Houses, Inc.