The Class Action Waiver Is Enforceable.
When a financial advisor brought a putative class action against Credit Suisse for deferred compensation, Credit Suisse moved successfully to dismiss based on an arbitration requirement in its Employee Dispute Resolution Program. The financial advisor appealed, arguing that Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) rule Rule 13204(a)(4) barred arbitration of his claim. Cristopher M. Laver v. Credit Suisse Securities (USA) LLC, No. . 18-16328 (9th Cir. 9/18/20) (Feinerman, Gould, Murguia).
The FINRA rule provides in part, "A member or associated person may not enforce any arbitration agreement against a member of a certified or putative class action with respect to any claim that is the subject of the certified or putative class action" until certain conditions are met, for example, until there is a denial of class certification.
So why didn't the FINRA rule apply to bar arbitration of Mr. Laver's class action claim? Because there was also a class action waiver, and the FINRA rules do not make a class action waiver unenforceable. Because the class action waiver is effective, there can be no class action, thus making the FINRA rule barring arbitration of class action claims inapplicable.
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