Employer Had No Duty To Call Arbitration Agreement To Attention Of Employee.
When Michael Conyer became employed by Hula Media, the employer's handbook did not have an arbitration clause. Several months later, Conyer signed the "receipt and acknowledgment" page, which was the final page of a revised employee handbook that did include an arbitration clause. Conyer sued the employer for sexual harassment, and claimed he would never have signed an arbitration agreement if he knew it existed. The trial court denied a motion by the employer to compel arbitration, and defendant Hula Media appealed. Michael Conyer v. Hula Media Services, LLC, et al., B296738 (2/8 8/26/20) (Grimes, Bigelow, Wiley). Reversed.
The Court of Appeal held "the employee demonstrated his assent to the arbitration clause by signing the acknowledgment, and the employer had no duty to call the arbitration agreement to the employee's attention."
However, under an unconscionability analysis, the Court of Appeal found that the provisions in the arbitration clause concerning arbitrator's fees and costs and attorneys fees, were unenforceable. Why? A clause providing the arbitrator shall award attorney fees to the prevailing party conflicts with FEHA, since "the defendant in a FEHA case may only recover attorney fees when the plaintiff's action was frivolous, unreasonable or groundless." But that was not enough to make the arbitration clause unenforceable, because the unenforceable provision could be severed.
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