Tagged: Arbitrator

If the Partial Final Award issued by the arbitrator is reviewable by the district court, would it be a violation of due process for the American Arbitration Association to disqualify the arbitrator before the parties had the opportunity to have the Award reviewed by the district court?

Even if Arbitrator David L. Gregory’s December 17, 2014 Partial Final Award was not “final,” it was still reviewable by the Southern District of New York and the Southern District of New York had jurisdiction to decide my March 17, 2014 Fraud Upon the Court Motion, because my Motion presented clear and convincing evidence that Michael P. Zweig and Loeb & Loeb LLP were engaging in a “pattern” of “fraud upon the Court” on William Morris’ behalf (e.g. Arbitrator Gregory compelled William Morris to produce the smoking gun, e-discovery evidence that was alleged to be concealed in Rowe by Leonard Rowe’s former attorneys at Sonnenschein Nath & Rosenthal LLP (now known as Dentons LLP) and counsel for William Morris [Michael P. Zweig & Helen Gavaris of Loeb & Loeb LLP] and CAA [Weil Gotshal & Manges LLP], admitted “Exhibit 31” into the “evidence of the record” when federal judge Robert P. Patterson refused to do so in Rowe on TWO separate occasions [in Jan. 2005 and Nov. 2012] and shifted the costs onto William Morris to pay my e-discovery expert to retrieve evidence from their 1998-1999 backup tapes before abruptly supsending discovery, cancelling the oral hearing and rendering his Partial Final Award) and should have been disqualified if default judgment weren’t granted by the federal court.

Even if Arbitrator Gregory’s Partial Final Award was lawfully vacated by Schnader LLP attorney Timothy K. Lewis (which it wasn’t), it still didn’t change the fact that: (1) William Morris never refuted the pyramid of historical, statistical and other forms of evidence proving my claims of intentional systemic disparate treatment, disparate impact, pre-hiring individual disparate treatment, antitrust and conspiracy to interfere with human rights of people of African descent after fully arguing their motions for summary judgment, (2) Lewis did not vacate Arbitrator Gregory’s three Interim Decisions which stated a lot of the same things mentioned in Gregory’s Partial Final Award, and thus (3) Lewis was collaterally estopped from reversing Gregory’s decisions regarding the admissibility of “Exhibit 31” in my case. Based on the last reason alone, Lewis’ decision to enforce William Morris’ mandatory, pre-dispute arbitration agreements without any reasoning or citation of the law, constitutes a clear obstruction of justice, because Arbitrator Gregory’s decision to admit “Exhibit 31” into the “evidence of the record” supports that William Morris and their counsel were also engaging in “highly unethical criminal activity” — two distinct matters the AAA does not have jurisdiction to resolve.

Based on the number of adverse procedural decisions that Lewis made against me without fully be aware of the facts of the case and its complex procedural history, I asked him to simply render whatever final decision he was going to make. Since my procedural arguments were closely interconnected with the substance of my claims, I knew that Lewis could never render an impartial decision on the merits and his conclusions would ultimately be made in “manifest disregard of the law.” Due to the overall fraud Loeb & Loeb LLP and the American Arbitration Association were engaging in (e.g. I found out after Arbitrator Gregory was disqualified that Loeb & Loeb LLP attorney Christian Carbone was married to an executive for the American Arbitration Association, Sasha Angelique Carbone and the Carbones have never denied this claim), I knew that I would also be able to demonstrate to the SDNY violations of section 10 of the Federal Arbitration Act. Lewis refused my requests and as a result of my public protest to the overall fraud that was occurring in my case, he held me in contempt for violating his Confidentiality Order, dismissed my case with prejudice and on the merits and ordered me to pay William Morris $43,707.60.P. Kevin Castel of the Southern District of New York confirmed Lewis’ “Final Award,” revoked my in forma pauperis status and prejudiced my appeal by stating that it would not be made in “good faith.” Smdh.

“Are arbitrators inclined to decide issues of arbitrability in favor of arbitral jurisdiction?”

Source: Russell A. Smith. “Arbitrators and Arbitrability.” In Proceedings of the Sixteenth Annual Meeting of the National Academy of Arbitrators. Washington, D.C.: Bureau of National Affairs, 1963. pg. 90.

i received the last of “Judge” Timothy K. Lewis’ invoices a few days ago. William Morris will pay him and his law firm, Schnader LLP, more than $115,000.00 for five months of engaging in fraud, intentionally violating the Federal Arbitration Act and depriving me of my statutory & constitutional rights under the color of law. smdh!

Lewis needs to be disbarred immediately and locked up, along with the rest of ’em!

Source: http://www.schnader.com/.

 

“It is long past time for Congress to intervene. The Arbitration Fairness Act is no panacea, but it’s a start.”

YOU buy a cellphone, computer or car. You sign up for a credit card or open a retirement account. You apply for a job.

In all these circumstances, you’re told that you must agree to dozens of terms and conditions, set forth in technical verbiage and tiny print. Eager to complete your purchase — or desperate to be hired — you ultimately sign without reading.

If you’re lucky, nothing goes wrong. But a growing number of consumers and job seekers discover, when something does go wrong, that they have unknowingly agreed to waive their right to file a lawsuit. Instead, they must submit to arbitration.

For some, arbitration proves too costly to pursue. Among those who can afford the fees, many learn they cannot enforce their legal rights because arbitration decisions do not need to be based on the law; arbitrators have their own procedures, and some studies have found that they are systematically biased in favor of the companies that hire them. Lawyers are often unwilling to represent arbitration complainants because of award caps in the agreements. And increasingly, these accords bar class-wide arbitrations. Because arbitration decisions are typically not disclosed and not subject to appeal, consumers and workers are left without recourse and must bear the cost of unfair, deceptive and harmful practices.

One 2008 study in the University of Michigan Journal of Law Reform examined employment and consumer contracts used by 21 major corporations and found mandatory arbitration clauses in 93 percent of the employment contracts and 77 percent of the consumer contracts. But Congress has repeatedly failed to step in and fix this system. The proposed Arbitration Fairness Act of 2011 would be a step in the right direction. The legislation would make predispute agreements to arbitrate consumer and employment disputes unenforceable. Similar bills, introduced in 2007 and 2009, both died in committee.

It wasn’t always this way.

Until the early 20th century, American courts often refused to enforce agreements to arbitrate, insisting that parties ought to have their day in court. This began to change with the 1925 enactment of the Federal Arbitration Act, which established that agreements to arbitrate were enforceable like any other contract.

While the arbitration act was initially envisioned as applying primarily to disputes between commercial equals, since the 1980s, the United States Supreme Court has interpreted it in ways that have facilitated corporate America’s efforts to force consumers and employees into arbitration. This trend has accelerated in the last few years.

The standard historical account begins with the Federal Arbitration Act, but the practice of extrajudicial dispute resolution has a much longer history. Mid-19th century Americans across several territories and states — including Florida, California and New York — engaged in a nearly forgotten debate concerning “conciliation courts.”

Widely adopted throughout Europe and its colonies during the late 18th and early 19th centuries, these were institutions composed of respected community leaders seeking to persuade disputants to accept an equitable compromise in secret, lawyer-free proceedings and without regard to the formal rule of law.

Despite the efforts of American proponents of these courts, proposals to establish them went nowhere. In the view of their opponents (including businessmen and lawyers), such courts were incompatible with the American commitment to freedom.

Adjudication, they successfully insisted, was a vital bulwark of liberty. It enabled individuals to publicly assert their rights as equal citizens under the law. As one delegate to the 1846 New York State Constitutional Convention argued, “In a free country like this” — one “where every man was the equal of his fellow-man” — “there would always be litigation.”

There was one exception to the failure of conciliation courts to take root here. The Freedmen’s Bureau courts established in the Reconstruction South to provide justice to the recently freed slaves were modeled on European conciliation courts.

These courts were embraced by the white Northern elite precisely because of perceived parallels between the newly freed African-Americans and European peasants, many of whom had themselves only recently been released from serfdom. But members of this same elite refused to subject those they called Yankees (namely, white men like themselves) to conciliation.

As this history suggests, leading Americans concluded that the practice of conciliation was incompatible with full citizenship in a free democracy. Although we rightly cringe at these men’s willingness to subject particular groups to what they viewed as lesser forms of justice, this history is worth recalling today as ordinary citizens are increasingly being forced into arbitration under the guise of free contract.

This is not to suggest that arbitration today and conciliation of the sort described here are identical. Nor is it to claim that our court system is flawless or that arbitration is always inappropriate. When freely entered and in certain kinds of disputes (especially those between commercial entities), arbitration can save much time and expense to the satisfaction of all.

But as deployed by corporations against many thousands of individual consumers and employees, it bears a troubling likeness to the 19th-century concept of conciliation as a practice suited only for a subservient underclass.

It is long past time for Congress to intervene. The Arbitration Fairness Act is no panacea, but it’s a start.

Source: http://www.nytimes.com/2012/03/07/opinion/stuck-in-arbitration.html.

6 days before my brief is due, my laptop CRASHED!!!!!!

I was just beginning to work on my reply to William Morris’ Motion to Terminate the Proceeding due Tuesday, May 20, 2014 and this shit happens! at wits' endangryat wits' endangryat wits' endangryat wits' endangryat wits' endangryat wits' end Due to my dire economic circumstances, I have no idea how I will be able to fix this problem…At this stage, I really don’t know how I’m going to be able to continue with this arbitration proceeding without an oral hearing.

during our second conference call earlier this week, Arbitrator Timothy K. Lewis refused to issue a decision regarding the enforceability of William Morris’ arbitration agreements (per P. Kevin Castel’s July 20, 2011 Stay Order), while continuing to entertain William Morris’ counterargument that I breached their agreement by attempting in good faith, to uphold the public policy goals of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 (e.g. eradicate institutional racism throughout William Morris’ workplace and Hollywood) when I filed my complaint with the Southern District of New York. smdh!!!

In less than 2 months of being involved in this case and issuing decisions only favorable to William Morris, this fraudulently appointed arbitrator has made more than $23,500.00 from violating and depriving me of my constitutional and statutory rights under the color of law. And although I objected to having someone who is not employed by the AAA to profit from this case — Bradley A. Nankerville, an Associate at Lewis’ law firm Schnader LLP — the AAA has allowed this person to act as Lewis’ “research assistant.” Of course, the only things he seems to be researching are things that are adverse to me.

After I informed Lewis that he improperly made a decision on that issue in his Order vacating Arbitrator David L. Gregory’s Partial Final Award without ever discussing the facts of the case or citing the law, he basically told me to move on. I am not a lawyer, but clearly the unique arguments I raised challenging the enforceability of William Morris’ pre-dispute, mandatory arbitration agreements have merit if no finder of fact can write an impartial opinion explaining why the arbitration agreements I signed as a condition of employment are enforceable as a matter of law and public policy.  If they could, they would have easily been able to apply the law based on the facts of the case, to demonstrate why William Morris’ contracts should be upheld in this particular case and explain why arbitration is a more appropriate forum than the federal court, to achieve the public policy goals of this nation’s antidiscrimination statutes. They cannot for a reason…

If Lewis issues a “final” decision on the merits without resolving this preliminary matter, he will have “exceed[ed] his powers” and violated other portions enumerated under section 10 of the Federal Arbitration Act — in the same way that Arbitrator David L. Gregory did. This is why at the end of the call, I stated that as long as fraud was continuing to occur in this proceeding, I could no longer continue arbitrating this case in good faith. How much more corruption and fraud do I have to endure on my own before someone comes to my aid and helps me in speaking out against these injustices?!

and Bradly A. Nankerville should have ZERO INVOLVEMENT in this case.

Nobody signed up for Lewis AND this Nankerville KID! The contract says one arbitrator will oversee this case — not a panel or quasi-panel. Given that Nankerville is not employed by the AAA, he should have ZERO INVOLVEMENT with this case. If Lewis expects to get paid $1,000 AN HOUR for his services, he cannot inform both parties after he’s been fraudulently appointed, that he’ll be shifting “research” responsibilities onto this unknown character.

http://www.schnader.com/professionals/xprProfessionalDetailsSchnader.aspx?xpST=ProfessionalDetail&professional=320&op=fullbio.