Arbitration agreements are common in commercial and consumer contracts. But two parties can litigate an arbitrable dispute in court if neither party seeks arbitration. That presents a problem if one party changes its mind and invokes its arbitration rights months or years after the lawsuit was filed and substantial litigation activity has taken place. Federal and state courts agree that a party can waive its arbitration rights by engaging in sufficient litigation activity without seeking arbitration, but they take different approaches to deciding how much litigation is too much. Two basic methods exist. Some courts say waiver requires the party opposing arbitration to show it would be prejudiced by the delay. Others say that waiver does not...
Part I of this Article sketches the basics of arbitration law and practice, and traces the developme...
Arbitration is the process whereby parties submit disputes to a third, neutral party who will issue ...
In 1925, Congress enacted the Federal Arbitration Act (FAA) as a means of quelling judicial hostilit...
Due to the high costs of litigation and the backlog on court dockets, parties to a contract are begi...
Arbitration agreements are common in commercial and consumer contracts. But two parties can litigate...
This note addresses the lawsuit described above, Elliott v. KB Home N.C., Inc., concerning whether K...
The FAA states that federal courts are to order parties to arbitration only “upon being satisfied th...
As arbitration agreements have grown in use, they have become controversial, with many critics descr...
If you have entered into a contract for goods or services with a corporation recently, then chances ...
The number of employers that require employees to agree to mandatory arbitration of disputes as a co...
The Supreme Court’s interpretation of the Federal Arbitration Act is universally touted as favoring ...
The American system of arbitration is constantly evolving. From the first formal arbitration tribun...
Given the emphasis with which the Supreme Court has made clear its policy favoring arbitration, it i...
Arbitration clauses, like most terms in a contract, are enforceable against either party and, unless...
Despite talk of a “federalism revival,” state law is quietly losing ground in the U.S. Supreme Court...
Part I of this Article sketches the basics of arbitration law and practice, and traces the developme...
Arbitration is the process whereby parties submit disputes to a third, neutral party who will issue ...
In 1925, Congress enacted the Federal Arbitration Act (FAA) as a means of quelling judicial hostilit...
Due to the high costs of litigation and the backlog on court dockets, parties to a contract are begi...
Arbitration agreements are common in commercial and consumer contracts. But two parties can litigate...
This note addresses the lawsuit described above, Elliott v. KB Home N.C., Inc., concerning whether K...
The FAA states that federal courts are to order parties to arbitration only “upon being satisfied th...
As arbitration agreements have grown in use, they have become controversial, with many critics descr...
If you have entered into a contract for goods or services with a corporation recently, then chances ...
The number of employers that require employees to agree to mandatory arbitration of disputes as a co...
The Supreme Court’s interpretation of the Federal Arbitration Act is universally touted as favoring ...
The American system of arbitration is constantly evolving. From the first formal arbitration tribun...
Given the emphasis with which the Supreme Court has made clear its policy favoring arbitration, it i...
Arbitration clauses, like most terms in a contract, are enforceable against either party and, unless...
Despite talk of a “federalism revival,” state law is quietly losing ground in the U.S. Supreme Court...
Part I of this Article sketches the basics of arbitration law and practice, and traces the developme...
Arbitration is the process whereby parties submit disputes to a third, neutral party who will issue ...
In 1925, Congress enacted the Federal Arbitration Act (FAA) as a means of quelling judicial hostilit...