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2011/09/09


Arbitration provisions: little darlings and little monsters

Formato: Documento pdf| Idioma: Documento en inglés inglés | Tamaño:0.23MB | Tiempo descarga: 0'1''
Autor: Stephen E. Friedman
Estados Unidos de América
Método ADR: Arbitraje

Sumario

Biografía

This Article takes a new approach to resolving the growing tension between the Federal Arbitration Act (FAA) and the unconscionability doctrine. While arbitration provisions are favored under the FAA, they are viewed far more skeptically by courts applying unconscionability to refuse enforcement of one-sided arbitration provisions. This tension, which has increased dramatically in recent years, represents a major fault line in contract law.

Jurisprudence and commentary on this issue have assumed that courts have the authority to apply the unconscionability doctrine to arbitration provisions. This Article refutes that assumption, taking the position that Congress, in passing the FAA, removed from the courts the power to use unconscionability to deny enforcement of arbitration provisions. This argument is based on the language and structure of the FAA, the FAA’s legislative history, commentary contemporaneous with the passage of the FAA, and the nature of unconscionability. To the extent it is necessary to protect vulnerable parties from one-sided arbitration provisions, judicial application of the unconscionability doctrine cannot be the solution. This Article suggests that the arbitration system itself may be capable of addressing any such overreaching.
Stephen E. Friedman is an Associate Professor of Law at Widener's Delaware Campus. Professor Friedman received a B.A. summa cum laude and Phi Beta Kappa from Yale University in 1989, and a J.D. cum laude from Harvard Law School in 1992.

Following graduation from law school, Professor Friedman was an associate on the trial team of the Philadelphia law firm of Dechert, Price & Rhoads. Professor Friedman joined the Widener faculty in 1998 and teaches Contracts, Sales & Leases, Arbitration, and Secured Transactions.

Professor Friedman is a co-chair of the ABA Business Law Section Annual Survey Subcommittee (Uniform Commercial Code) as well as co-editor of the Business Law Section’s Annual Uniform Commercial Code Survey. He is also a volunteer literacy tutor with the Delaware County Literacy Council.

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