The Federal Arbitration Act says that courts must honor arbitration
clauses, including those governing employment relationships. So the
arbitration clause that an employee signs with management on her first
day of employment means she cannot sue the company in court for
discrimination or other claims. One exception to that is the
"transportation industry" exception. We have few cases that interpret
that exception. This is one of them.
The case
Bissonette v. LePage Bakeries Park St., LLC,
issued on May 5. Plaintiffs deliver baked goods to stores and
restaurants by truck. They claim the defendant denied them overtime pay
and other wage and hour violations in violation of the Fair Labor
Standards Act and Connecticut law. They want to sue in federal court,
however, and not submit to arbitration. The common wisdom is that court
is a more favorable forum for plaintiffs than arbitration. Management
wants the case sent to arbitration. Plaintiffs claim the transportation
industry exception allows them to sue in court. The district court
granted defendants' motion to compel arbitration, and the Court of
Appeals affirms in a divided vote.
While the
FAA says transportation workers are not required to arbitrate, the
Supreme Court has never defined what that phrase means. Under the FAA,
employment contracts are not subject to arbitration involving "seamen,
railroad employees and any other class of workers engaged in foreign or
interstate commerce." The class of workers encompassed by the residual
clause is "transportation workers." As the Second Circuit sees it, the
two examples in the FAA, seamen and railroad employees "locate the
'transportation worker' in the context of a transportation industry." In
Erving v. Virginia Squires Basketball, 468 F.2d 1064 (2d Cir. 1972),
the Second Circuit said the FAA exclusion is limited to workers involved
in the transportation industry. That is still good law, the Court of
Appeals says.
The holding: "an individual
works in a transportation industry if the industry in which the
individual works pegs its charges to the movement of goods or
passengers, and the industry's predominant source of commercial revenue
is generated by that movement." Under this interpretation, plaintiffs
are in the baking industry, not the transportation industry. Yes, they
drive the baked goods to stores and restaurants, but these places are
paying for the baked goods, not the transportation that brought the
baked goods to these locations.
Writing for
the majority, Judge Jacobs notes this holding leaves open other issues
for review: what about (1) people work work in the transportation
industry but do not themselves move the goods or passengers, like
supervisors, ticket salespersons, and luggage attendants; (2) workers
who transport goods and passengers within a state when the goods or
passengers originate out of state; (3) people who work for major retailers who
transport goods intrastate within a larger transportation network that
is interstate, like Amazon? Cases from around the country have addressed
these issues, but none in the Second Circuit. If you have a case that
deals with these issues, take a look at this ruling and choose from the
cases that suit your fancy.
Judge Pooler
dissents, stating that the plaintiffs in this case are transportation
workers, relying on Justice Barrett's formulation when she sat on the
Seventh Circuit:
Both we and our sister circuits have repeatedly emphasized that transportation workers are those who are actually engaged in the movement of goods in interstate commerce. To determine whether a class of workers meets that definition, we consider whether the interstate movement of goods is a central part of the class members’ job description. Then, if such a class exists, we ask in turn whether the plaintiff is a member of it. Sometimes that determination is easy to make—as it is for truckers who drive an interstate route. Sometimes that determination is harder—as it is for truckers who drive an intrastate leg of an interstate route. Whether easy or hard, though, the inquiry is always focused on the worker’s active engagement in the enterprise of moving goods across interstate lines. That is the inquiry that Circuit City demands.
Under
this test, Judge Pooler writes, "the plaintiffs here are paradigmatic
transportation workers" in part because their work consists of
delivering baked goods and their daily work is centered on the transport
of goods in interstate commerce.
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