I don’t understand how arbitration ever came to be. It completely bypass the court systems, the very court systems that are put in place exactly for the purpose of making these type of decisions.
It’s meant for B2B lawsuits, so they can both avoid extra litigation costs. They forced it onto consumers because they wanted to win more. They get to choose their arbitrator and avoid more public cases.
There has been some push back in recent years. This article by Consumer Reports shows some ways as to how people have been fighting back.
It doesn’t completely bypass the courts. Arbitrators don’t have the authority to enforce anything by themselves.
After both sides present their case, an arbitrator will write an opinion. That opinion must still be sent to an actual judge who checks it for errors and who has to take responsibility for enforcing it. Though it’s rare, judges have on occasion thrown out the arbitrator’s opinion.
I don’t understand how arbitration ever came to be. It completely bypass the court systems, the very court systems that are put in place exactly for the purpose of making these type of decisions.
It’s meant for B2B lawsuits, so they can both avoid extra litigation costs. They forced it onto consumers because they wanted to win more. They get to choose their arbitrator and avoid more public cases.
There has been some push back in recent years. This article by Consumer Reports shows some ways as to how people have been fighting back.
It makes sense to have the option, but this trend of signing away your rights in the fine print should be outlawed.
Especially if you didn’t sign anything.
Some consumer products are showing up with arbitration notices on the packaging now, and they count opening the box as “accepting” the agreement.
It doesn’t completely bypass the courts. Arbitrators don’t have the authority to enforce anything by themselves.
After both sides present their case, an arbitrator will write an opinion. That opinion must still be sent to an actual judge who checks it for errors and who has to take responsibility for enforcing it. Though it’s rare, judges have on occasion thrown out the arbitrator’s opinion.