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Great Editorial on Arbitration

1/22/2014

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Tremendous editorial by the SF Chronicle. 

A real breath of fresh air and truthtelling about the chains that pre-dispute arbitration clauses create.  Funny, businesses love to spin about how great arbitration is, but they don't want you to be able to choose or decline it.

What is it that they know that makes them think that, if you have a choice, you won't choose arbitration?

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Before you buy a car, download this app (Android or iPhone)

11/17/2013

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The National Association of Consumer Advocates (NACA) offers consumers a great free tool to download and review before shopping for a motor vehicle.  You can access the app on your desktop or laptop by going to www.USLemonLawLawyers.com.  Or take it with you to the dealer's by downloading it from the Apple App Store or the Google Play Store (Android).

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Great reflective report: What do you do when what "Everybody knows" is 100% wrong?

10/21/2013

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A powerful retrospective report showing the real facts behind the notorious "McDonald's Hot Coffee" case -- the gruesome burns, the fact that she was in a parked car, not a moving one, the fact that McDonald's had hundreds of warnings that it was serving dangerously hot coffee, the fact that the plaintiff only asked for her medical bills to be paid (before McDonald's offered her a paltry $800 against medical bills of $10,000) -- on and on, the "outrageous" result turns out to have been more than justified, and the only real outrage is that McDonalds and the Chamber of Commerce have managed to fool most people into thinking that they were the victims in this case.

Watch this excellent New York Times report, and then if you really want to understand how corporate America tries to turn real people against each other (the better to fleece them, and keep them from standing up to big corporations), look for the great movie "Hot Coffee" too.


P.S.  Click here to make a contribution -- one-time or monthly -- to help make another documentary that helps set the record straight about the civil justice system, the only part of government where real people get to stand toe-to-toe and fight back on level ground with corporations.  That's why corporations hate it so much, and why they want to tell you lies, so you'll hate it too
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That's Some Catch, That Catch-22

9/4/2013

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Once upon a time, there was a country where the courts could tell the difference between business-to-business disputes and consumer-to-business disputes.

     The law for the commercial disputes values efficiency above all other concerns, which makes a lot of sense for disputes involving businesses, which are often fictitious entities anyway (corporations), with no personal stake in the problems. 
      Further, being fictitious legal persons, entirely created under the law and having no natural rights of their own, the corporations involved in most business litigation could hardly claim to fall under the 7th Amendment right to a jury trial -- the companies only had the rights that the law gave them, and since they essentially all just wanted their disputes resolved in a predictable, roughly fair way, it was no problem that Congress said that they could bind each other to arbitration clauses, which sent their fights out of the court system and into private arbitration, where there are no juries, and there is no open court system that creates precedent with each decision.

     The problem is that, as in the Terminator movies, the creatures we created to help us have turned on us and taken over: the corporations have seized control of the courts and have persuaded a majority of the U.S. Supreme Court justices that, not only are they actually entitled to full constitutional liberties, including full First Amendment rights to "speak," they also should be allowed to force real people into arbitration, meaning that when you sue one of these fictitious people, you find yourself in a topsy-turvy world that Joseph Heller, author of Catch-22, could not have imagined on his most cynical day.

     We've been heading towards this mess ever since the first decisions in the late 19th Century that perverted the 14th Amendment, turning it from an aid to freed slaves into a weapon for the just-forming multinational corporations.  The recent "Citizens United" decision -- a fantastic act of historic judicial activism, with the Supreme Court majority going completely outside the bounds of the case before it to create a new superclass of corporate citizens (all the rights of people but none of the duties) is the best known of the long train of absurd decisions that, one by one, are turning real people into servants of the new superclass.

     Which brings us to today's fantastic absurdity, where the federal 2nd Circuit, the appellate court for the Northeast, the second-highest court in all the land (and a leading court for commercial disputes), has held that a New York consumer -- that is, a flesh and blood person like you, one who might be under the vague impression that your Constitutional rights are at least as important as the "rights" of a legal fiction like a corporation -- must go to binding arbitration in Arizona to pursue the scoundrels who ripped off the consumer and essentially reduced the consumer to abject poverty (the company was one of the many (most?) bogus credit repair companies who promise to help you climb OUT of the hole with your credit cards).

   There is no way to put it except to say that this is the kind of thing that terrifies people who study history, because this is the kind of thing that survivors study when they try to figure out "What was the spark that caused the explosion?  How did what seemed to be a civilized place suddenly erupt in such fury?"

    I would love to be wrong about this, but since the DNA of corporations requires that they grab all the power and money that they can, and that they do everything that they can get away with (to compete with all the others), expecting corporations to restrain themselves and not abuse consumers and real people is like expecting Donald Trump to take and keep a vow of silence and poverty.  Thus, absent a miracle -- never the thing to bet on -- this isn't likely to get better.  And that means we might well be getting close to finding out something awful, like what the 21st Century American equivalent is for 19th Century France's guillotine.
   Read on:




  • Today’s Arbitration Outrage: Second Circuit Says Destitute New York Resident Consumer Must Arbitrate Case in Arizona Leave a comment By Paul Bland, Senior Attorney @PblandBland
  • Periodically, people ask me rhetorical questions like, "How much worse can the law of arbitration get? I mean, it's so incredibly bad that it has to have bottomed out, right?"
  • As Jane Wagner famously wrote [for Lily Tomlin], no matter how cynical you become, it's never enough to keep up.
  • The Second Circuit has just issued an opinion that reminds us that it is still possible for the law of arbitration to become even more terrible for consumers. In Duran v. The J. Hass Group, a woman who is essentially on the edge of being destitute alleges (very credibly) that she was the victim of a last-dollar scam, promised services that she didn't receive.
  • The defendants allegedly operated a credit repair scheme, under which they took a fee of almost $4,000 from the consumer to settle all of her credit card debt, and then did nothing for her. So her credit card companies were suing her, she owed all the money that she’d owed when she first interacted with the defendants, and she was now completely broke. These allegations make an extremely strong claim under the Credit Reporting Act. The allegations and facts are discussed in greater detail in the district court’s opinion, available at 2012 WL 3233818 (E.D.N.Y. June 8, 2012).
  • It probably will not surprise anyone who follows consumer law (although it would come as a surprise to nearly any actual consumer) that the defendant had an arbitration clause. What's striking is that the clause requires consumers (including the New York resident Ms. Duran) to arbitrate their claims across the country IN ARIZONA.  Now, courts have been striking down these kinds of distant forum provisions in decisions going back 20 years.  E.g., Patterson v. ITT Consumer Fin. Corp., 18 Cal. Rptr. 2d 563 (1993). But in the wake of more recent U.S. Supreme Court decisions, particularly the catastrophic Rent-A-Center, West, Inc. v. Jackson, 130 S. Ct. 2772 (2010), a lot of bad actors out there have been experimenting with how unfair they can make their arbitration clauses and get away with it.
  • This strategy worked pretty well for the defendants in this case. The Second Circuit required Ms. Duran to arbitrate her claim, and enforced the provision requiring it to take place in Arizona. They noted that there is a "logical flaw" and an "unusual" quality to the result, because if Ms. Duran's only remedy is to argue to the arbitrator that it's unfair and unconscionable to require her to arbitrate in Arizona, she first has to GO to Arizona to do it. Oh well, the Court explains, this is what the Supreme Court would have wanted.
  • I think the decision is wrong, and that the better arguments are with the plaintiffs, and I'm very hopeful that a lot of other courts wouldn't go with this conclusion. 
  • But the case does show how the U.S. Supreme Court's ongoing adventures in re-writing and expanding the Federal Arbitration Act have a cost. What will the next scam artist put in their arbitration clause? Is there any reason that the Second Circuit would not have enforced a clause requiring the arbitration to take place in New Zealand on Leap Day? After all, why couldn't the New Zealand arbitrator figure out if that's fair?  What if the arbitration clause required that the arbitration take place on the newly non-planet Pluto?
  • If bad actors can get away with making arbitration clauses increasingly grossly unfair, and all the courts just wash their hands, do a Pontius Pilate, and say “well, this may SEEM really unfair, but oh well, it’s what the Supreme Court would have wanted,” mandatory arbitration will have no conceivable claim to any sort of legitimacy. It will become a complete joke, an openly rigged deal. 
  • Because saying that a poor person in New York can only get a refund of money stolen from her if she travels across the United States to begin the process of trying to get it back IS a joke, and it IS a rigged deal.
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Arbitration Purgatory

5/21/2013

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Great story in an intriguing San Diego nonprofit news outlet called "Justice for Sale: Arbitration Purgatory." 

The story is about what happens when you try holding a car dealer accountable.  Thanks to the US Supreme Corp's love affair with arbitration -- the dispute resolution method intended for parties in parity with each other, and typically for those who need to keep dealing with each other -- consumers increasingly find that they have signed away their constitutional right to a civil trial.  When you get ripped off by a big company these days, most often you will find that they have locked you into an arbitration agreement where they not only get to keep you from having the dispute heard by a jury of your peers, they also get to choose the forum.  And since the big companies are the only repeat players in the game, guess who the arbitrators (who are themselves totally unaccountable to you) worry about pleasing?  Hint: It's not you. 

Part 2: Justice for Sale:  Ignoring the Law

Part 3:  Justice for Sale:  The War on Consumer Class Actions


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Contact your State Rep. and Senator: Say YES to HB 3160!

5/7/2013

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The download to the right explains why it's so important that we all act now to tell Salem to

STOP LETTING INSURANCE COMPANIES ABUSE OREGONIANS, END THEIR SPECIAL PRIVILEGES WITH HB 3160

hb_3160_fact_sheet.pdf
File Size: 136 kb
File Type: pdf
Download File

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Welcome, "The Desk" readers

3/29/2013

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I was impressed by Ms. Gunderson's wish to help her readers and explain things to them correctly -- a difficult task when writing about the law in the few words allowed in a column.  I wrote her a note thanking her for mentioning me, and added two suggestions:  One, we didn't discuss the small claims court limit, so I didn't know she had found something with the old, lower limit of $7,500.  The current limit for small claims court is $10,000.  Second, I wish I had thought of NACA.net when we spoke and she asked me how consumers could find an attorney to help with a defective product or service.  NACA -- National Association of Consumer Advocates -- attorneys are likely to be much more experienced in handling consumer problems, and NACA attorneys (like me) are all committed on the consumer side of things:  to join NACA, you have to agree that you won't represent any business against a consumer.

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Wise words

3/29/2013

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"Never forget, the law is never settled until it is settled right, it is never right until it is just, and it is never just until it serves society to the fullest."
                                                                                                                                    -- Trial lawyer Harry Philo.
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Don't Reverse Any Mortgages Until You Read This Free Guide Front-to-Back

1/25/2013

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(hat tip to "The Housekeeping Report")

NCOA Issues Updated Guide for Seniors Considering a Reverse Mortgage


     The National Council on Aging (NCOA) today issued the 2013 version of Use Your Home to Stay at Home™, the official reverse mortgage consumer booklet approved by the U.S. Department of Housing & Urban Development (HUD). The guide is designed to help seniors understand the pros and cons of a reverse mortgage. Reverse mortgages allow homeowners who are 62 or older to convert home equity into cash while remaining in the home.

     Amy Ford, director of NCOA’s Reverse Mortgage Counseling Services Network, called the guide “an older homeowner’s best resource when it comes to examining whether a reverse mortgage is right for them.”

A free copy of the guide is available (download the pdf by clicking here).

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FTC Should Strengthen, Not Weaken, "Cooling Off" Rule

12/26/2012

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The Federal Trade Commission is proposing to weaken the "Cooling Off Rule" that helps protect consumers from abuse by sellers who sell you goods away from their regular place of business (door-to-door, or the traveling shows that rent hotel rooms, etc.).

For whatever strange reason, the FTC is proposing to allow more sales to escape the rule by raising the threshold dollar value from $25 to $130. 

This is dumb.  Instead of weakening the rule, the FTC should strengthen consumer protection by making it clear that internet sales are covered by the rule.  Here's the comment I submitted at the FTC comment site.

          Rather than diminish the protections afforded by the cooling off rule, the FTC should instead make clear that all internet sales are presumptively governed by the rule, and require that sellers adhere to the rule for goods and services purchased over the internet except
 
           (1) When the "goods" consist of software that is downloaded immediately upon conclusion of the purchase transaction; or

          (2) when the buyer is informed, with a clear and conspicuous disclosure, that the cooling off period is limited to the lesser of three days or the period before seller delivers the goods to the delivery carrier for delivery to the consumer;

          AND, if the seller does not transfer the goods to the carrier within the promised period, then the buyer may refuse the goods at delivery and receive a full refund of the total price paid, including delivery charges.


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