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« Consumer Groups File Amicus Brief in Important National Bank Act Preemption Case | Main | Overlooking the Obvious in the Supreme Court's Disappearing Docket? »

Thursday, December 07, 2006

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This back-and-forth has been very informative. Roger's and Mike's posts were terrific. As to Mike's post, I think his last point is powerful. Federal decisional law under the Federal Arbitration Act is, to put it charitably, favorable to the big guys. Plaintiffs' litigation victories, though admirable and impressive, are on the margins. We basically have a system in which when the big guy wants to arbitrate, the big guy can arbitrate. A case like the Supreme Court's decision in Bazzle suggests that the big guy not only gets to arbitrate, but to arbitrate on the big guy's terms, even if the result the little guy wants can't reasonably be described as premised on hostility to arbitration (again, see Bazzle). Therefore, unless Congress changes the basic rules, as Mike says, in the long run, the only things likely to be sustained are things that the big guys perfer. Of course, the big guys would prefer NO class actions, either in aribtration OR court, and it is possible, as Mike acknowledges, the big guys might not get that. (But, as I believe Roger pointed out, in some jurisdictions consumer class actions are very difficult to maintain these days.)

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