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Los Angeles Times
Los Angeles Times
Business
Paresh Dave

In stinging decision for Uber drivers, appeals court says they must go to arbitration

Uber drivers who have banded together to take the ride-hailing company to court now may have to shift strategies and settle for smaller payouts than they had sought.

The U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco said Wednesday that drivers who signed up with Uber in 2013 and 2014 must go to arbitration, not the courts, to resolve disputes with the company.

U.S. District Judge Edward Chen previously ruled that the arbitration agreements were unenforceable and unconscionable. But the appeals panel said Chen lacked the authority to make that call because the contracts require an arbiter to decide "all matters."

The ruling applies directly to two drivers' challenge of Uber's background-check practices in a proposed class-action lawsuit. But it could have an effect on dozens of lawsuits across the nation. Uber drivers have used the threat of a class-action lawsuit to extract concessions from the San Francisco company. Having to go to arbitration largely takes the specter of mass litigation off the table.

One key federal case that could now be derailed concerns whether Uber drivers should have been treated as employees, with additional benefits and protections, as opposed to independent contractors. Uber had agreed to a $100 million settlement, which Chen rejected last month, calling it unfair and inadequate.

He said $100 million would amount to only 10 percent of what the plaintiffs' side estimated to be the full value of drivers' claims. But plaintiffs' attorney Shannon Liss-Riordan expressed disappointment in Chen's decision, anticipating the consequences of the ruling that arrived Wednesday.

"Today's decision is not good for the class," Liss-Riordan said in a statement. "Although it was issued in a different case from mine, the 9th Circuit's decision endorsed Uber's attempt to use its arbitration agreement to avoid a systemic challenge to its classification of drivers as employees through a global class action."

Now, Uber could drop the settlement talks altogether because the appeals court could go on to unwind Chen's certification of a class of drivers, forcing most of the drivers to individual arbitration. One-on-one fights typically result in smaller benefits for complainants.

The class currently includes some 240,000 drivers from California and Massachusetts. If the arbitration agreements are enforced, the class could be reduced to 8,000 people _ those who had rejected the arbitration agreements when they joined Uber's driver roster.

"Arbitration is a fair, speedy and less-costly alternative to class-action litigation," Ted Boutrous, an attorney for Uber, said in a statement. "We've always believed our optional arbitration agreements should have applied in this case, and we're pleased with the court's decision today."

Liss-Riordan said, "The battle is far from over."

Wednesday's appellate decision allows some claims to continue in the courts, specifically those brought under a California law that allows individuals to step into the shoes of state regulators and sue for labor law violations.

And Liss-Riordan said she has "more than 1,500 Uber drivers signed up in California to pursue individual arbitrations if necessary."

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