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11/17/2008
Dale Emch
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You can't always get your day in court with arbitration clauses

They're legal, they're binding, and they're everywhere. Arbitration clauses are appearing in routine video rental agreements to complex business contracts. I wrote about this issue in on Sunday for Legal Briefs, my Toledo Blade column that appears every other week. A reader wrote that she had signed a contract with a cell-phone company after receiving assurances that it would provide good coverage in her area. She wanted to know whether she could sue for fraud. Regardless of whether she had a good claim for fraud, I suspected she would be stuck in the arbitration system. I looked at the terms the agreement the company posted online and, sure enough, it contained an arbitration clause. Arbitration is a method of dispute resolution separate from the court system. Promoters believe it's cheaper and faster than going to court. Detractors think it has the potential to dodge statutory and common law, and is used by big business to avoid the jury system. I'm somewhere in the middle on the issue. People always want to sue until they realize the time and expense it might take to get any justice. If the case isn't worth that much money, it might make sense to seek arbitration. At the same time, we've spent hundreds of years developing the common law. Ideas and theories build upon each other and offer guidance to courts and lawyers. I don't like the idea that potentially unique issues will be decided in forums that won't add their decisions or reasoning to the body of common law. People also don't realize just how binding arbitration clauses are. Lawyers can sometimes get around an arbitration clause, but the clauses generally are presumed reasonable because both parties agreed to to arbitration as part of the contract. So, before you sign your next cell-phone or video store agreement, check it out to see whether it contains an arbitration clause. Before you sign on the dotted line, make sure you understand the agreement.

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Charles Boyk Law Offices, LLC
PNC Bank Building
405 Madison Avenue
Suite 1200
Toledo, Ohio 43604
Phone: 419.241.1395
Fax: 419.241.8731
Toll Free: 800.637.8170

Bowling Green
121 E. Wooster Street,
Suite 255
Bowling Green, Ohio 43402
*by appointment only, please

South Toledo
5301 Southwyck Boulevard
Suite 107
Toledo, Ohio 43614

Findlay
612 Main Street,
Suite 107
Findlay, Ohio 45840

Swanton
10725 Airport Highway
Swanton, Ohio 43558

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