Laurie Murphy |
An employee
sued her employer for sexual harassment and other claims. The employer sought to compel arbitration pursuant
to the provisions of its employment handbook.
The employee contended (and the trial court agreed) that because the handbook
permitted the employer to change its provisions at the employer's sole
discretion, the arbitration policy was illusory and therefore unconscionable.
The court of appeals found the fact that the provisions
of a contract can be modified does not alone render a contract unconscionable
because the authority to change the provisions of a contract is limited by the covenant
of good faith and fair dealing.
Moreover, the court found that unconscionability requires a finding that
a contract is both procedurally and substantively unconscionable. Here, even if the employment handbook was
substantively unconscionable, there were no facts justifying a finding that it
was also procedurally unconscionable (i.e. no surprise or oppression). Serpa
v. California Surety Investigations Inc. 2013 DJDAR 5124.
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