Here’s
how you can fight back.
Chase, the banking behemoth that provides credit cards to thousands of
Americans, sent an email to many of its customers which seeks to
strip those customers of most of their rights to sue the bank if the bank
violates the law.
Though the email gives those customers the ability to opt out of this effort to strip away their rights, the instructions on how to do so are buried deep in the email — deep enough that the bank likely hopes that no one will read that far.
Though the email gives those customers the ability to opt out of this effort to strip away their rights, the instructions on how to do so are buried deep in the email — deep enough that the bank likely hopes that no one will read that far.
The
subject of the email is “Important information regarding changes to your Chase
account.” A copy of this email was forwarded to ThinkProgress by a Chase
customer who received it.
The
relevant portions of the email concern forced arbitration, an abusive practice
largely invented by conservatives on the Supreme Court.
Beginning
in the 1980s, the Supreme Court began to rewrite the Federal Arbitration Act of 1925 — a statute
that, in Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s words, was intended to allow “merchants
with relatively equal bargaining power” to resolve disputes through private
arbitrators — to allow companies to force workers and consumers into a
privatized arbitration system that favors corporate parties.
This rewriting accelerated in the 21st century, with a series of 5-4 decisions that departed sharply from the Arbitration Act’s text.
This rewriting accelerated in the 21st century, with a series of 5-4 decisions that departed sharply from the Arbitration Act’s text.
The
Act, for example, exempts “workers engaged in foreign or interstate commerce.”
Nevertheless, in Circuit City v. Adams, the Supreme Court held that most
workers engaged in foreign or interstate commerce may be forced into
arbitration agreements.
Similarly,
in AT&T Mobility v. Concepcion, the
Supreme Court held that companies may force their customers to sign away their
right to join a class action lawsuit as a condition of doing business for that
company.
More recently, in Epic Systems v. Lewis, a 5-4 court explained that workers can be forced to sign a forced arbitration agreement with a class action ban under pain of firing.
More recently, in Epic Systems v. Lewis, a 5-4 court explained that workers can be forced to sign a forced arbitration agreement with a class action ban under pain of firing.
As
a paper by the Economic Policy Institute’s Ross Eisenbrey explains, individual
workers forced into arbitration are less likely to prevailbefore an arbitrator than they are
before a real judge. And when they do prevail, they typically receive far less
money.
Similarly,
class action bans effectively allow companies to illegally take money from
their workers or consumers with impunity, so long as they only take a little
bit at a time.
Class
actions allow multiple plaintiffs, who all share a similar grievance against
the same defendant, to join together in a single lawsuit against that
defendant. They are particularly important when a company engages in widespread, low-dollar lawbreaking against many individuals.
Suppose,
for example, that a bank decides to illegally charge a $150 fee to each of its
100,000 credit card customers. Nearly none of these customers will sue the bank
over a matter of only $150, because the cost of litigating such a case will
exceed the amount of money at issue. So if the customers cannot join together
in a class action, the bank will walk away with a cool $15 million ($150 *
100,000).
How
to opt-out
The
Chase email contains both a forced arbitration provision and a ban on class
actions. It “provides that all disputes between you and Chase must be resolved
by BINDING ARBITRATION,” and explicitly states that parties to the forced
arbitration agreement “GIVE UP YOUR RIGHT TO GO TO COURT (except for matters
that may be taken to a small claims court).” The email further provides that
class actions “are not available under this agreement to
arbitrate.”
Though
the email does allow some claims to proceed in small claims court rather than
before an arbitrator, it also provides that such claims must proceed “on an
individual basis.” Thus, the email seeks to immunize Chase from class action
litigation.
Significantly,
however, the email also provides that customers may opt out of the forced
arbitration provision and class action ban, but only if they comply with very
specific instructions.
Can
I (the customer) reject this agreement to arbitrate?
Yes.
You have the right to reject this agreement to arbitrate if you notify us no
later than 8/9/2019. You must do so in writing by stating that you reject
this agreement to arbitrate and include your name, account number, address and
personal signature.
Your notice must be mailed to us at P.O. Box 15298, Wilmington, DE 19850-5298. Rejection notices sent to any other address, or sent by electronic mail or communicated orally, will not be accepted or effective.
Your notice must be mailed to us at P.O. Box 15298, Wilmington, DE 19850-5298. Rejection notices sent to any other address, or sent by electronic mail or communicated orally, will not be accepted or effective.
If
you received this email, in other words, and do not wish to give up your rights
to your credit card company, you must send a letter via snail mail to
the P.O. Box listed above — and you must do so by early August.
Though
it may be surprising that Chase allows people to opt-out of forced arbitration,
the opt-out provision serves a very specific legal purpose. As Professor
Charlotte Garden writes in a recent paper on forced arbitration,
California law arguably permits courts to strike down forced arbitration provisions if that provision is imposed without choice. So it’s in a company’s interest to give customers a choice to opt-out — so long as the choice is buried where few people are likely to notice it.
California law arguably permits courts to strike down forced arbitration provisions if that provision is imposed without choice. So it’s in a company’s interest to give customers a choice to opt-out — so long as the choice is buried where few people are likely to notice it.
As
Garden explains, the delivery service Grubhub imposed a forced arbitration
agreement on its drivers. Yet “only two delivery drivers of thousands had opted
out of the [forced arbitration provision] during the months after Grubhub added
its opt out clause.”
Similarly, “only 270 drivers out of more than 160,000” opted out of Uber’s forced arbitration agreement. Thus, opt-out clauses help protect companies from a court decision invalidating a forced arbitration agreements, and they typically do so at virtually no cost to the company. Few people notice them. Fewer still probably understand them. So almost no one opts out.
Similarly, “only 270 drivers out of more than 160,000” opted out of Uber’s forced arbitration agreement. Thus, opt-out clauses help protect companies from a court decision invalidating a forced arbitration agreements, and they typically do so at virtually no cost to the company. Few people notice them. Fewer still probably understand them. So almost no one opts out.
Chase,
however, cannot prevent members of the media from reporting on this abusive
practice. Nor can it prevent any of its customers who read this column from
invoking the opt-out provision.
Disclaimer:
This column does not contain legal advice and does not create an
attorney/client relationship. If you wish to obtain legal
advice, consult your own lawyer.