The underlying dispute involved four named plaintiffs pursuing arbitration over breach of contract, fraudulent inducement, and wage-and-hour violations. Two arbitrators found the agreements enforceable; two found them unconscionable. The district court then used only the unfavorable rulings to block arbitration for 255 additional employees seeking to opt into the action. The Ninth Circuit found this approach transformed bilateral arbitrations into an unauthorized class-like proceeding that lacked the procedural safeguards required for such actions.
Employers should note this decision as a significant reinforcement of arbitration agreements against sophisticated avoidance tactics. The ruling makes clear that prior arbitral outcomes cannot be weaponized to invalidate agreements for non-parties, and that courts cannot circumvent the FAA's individualized consent requirement through estoppel doctrine. For companies facing employment litigation, the decision strengthens the enforceability of arbitration clauses even when earlier arbitrations yield mixed results.