AT&T loses appeal
High court says company can't force arbitration
Bob Egelko, Chronicle Staff Writer Tuesday, October 7, 2003
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AT&T's 7 million California long-distance customers won the right to keep taking their complaints to court, instead of a secretive arbitration system, thanks to the U.S. Supreme Court, which rejected the company's appeal Monday.
The justices, without comment, denied review of a decision in February by the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco that found AT&T's arbitration rules oppressive and unenforceable. The ruling upheld a magistrate's January 2002 decision that allowed California customers to sue AT&T in court with none of the restrictions the company sought to require.
It is one of several recent cases in which state and federal courts in California have overturned major companies' arbitration rules. The basis for those rulings is an August 2000 state Supreme Court decision that one-sided arbitration programs could not be imposed on consumers or employees.
AT&T, California's largest long-distance carrier, adopted mandatory arbitration in 2001 for its 60 million customers nationwide. Under the system, customers must refer all complaints to a panel of arbiters, whose rulings are nearly impossible to appeal.
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