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Lower Court Decisions Show that Concepcion’s Scope Remains Unresolved

Updating a prior post on the impact of the Concepcion decision, two recent lower court cases have demonstrated the limits of Concepcion’s reach and identify at least two particular claims that could render class-action waivers unenforceable: unconscionability and Magnuson-Moss Act claims.

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Will Concepcion Allow Arbitration Agreements to Squash Consumer Class Actions?

Not entirely—at least that’s the conclusion according to this article in the most recent ABA Infrastructure issue. The key holding of the Supreme Court decision in AT&T Mobility LLC v. Concepcion–that the Federal Arbitration Act (FAA) preempts any state rule invalidating class-action waivers (such as the Discover Bank v. Super. Ct. rule in California prohibiting non-class arbitration clauses)–significantly bolsters the already superior bargaining power of defendants in class-action suits and undermines the ability ofconsumers to even undertake these suits. (There is already some evidence that banks have increased adoption of arbitration clauses as a result of the decision)

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