When we let commerce trump the Constitution

Published on

The San Diego Union-Tribune


Until recently, the independent judiciary was the last branch of government where the average person could reasonably expect to prevail over the rich and powerful corporation.

Just as winter turned to spring, the U.S. Supreme Court took the perilous position that an individual’s constitutionally protected legal rights, the very foundation of this nation, can be disregarded by a corporation’s commercial needs. The highest court in the land ruled that companies can force workers into binding arbitration as a condition of employment.

That a corporate contract, particularly one as unavoidable as for employment, can now supersede the Seventh Amendment’s right to trial shows that even the Founding Father’s most cherished principles have succumb to the growing commercial needs of corporations to save money and to secrecy.

These twin commercial priorities are the primary virtues of the private justice system that is mandatory binding arbitration. Because arbitrators depend on repeat business from corporate defendants, the justice they dole out is rarely as costly as a jury’s.

Since the public cannot see corporate crimes in the secret process, it cannot hold corporations accountable for them.

Discovery, the legal right of an injury party to obtain evidence by which a case can be proven, is not even a right in arbitration, merely in the discretion of the arbitrator. Individuals can be precluded from even asking for documents from a corporation that might prove their case. Since there can be no judicial review by a court of an arbitrator’s legal errors, an individual can lawfully be denied other traditional legal protections, such as a decision based on legal precedent. All this helps a corporation’s commercial prospects but would make the Founding Fathers turn over in their grave.

The right to trial was the only amendment to the United States Constitution that was unanimously ratified by the states. It is a right, however, that has been vilified by a corporate public relations machine whose reach, apparently, extends to the highest court in the land.

The corporate lobby has decried “the litigation explosion” even while the number of civil lawsuits per capita has steadily decreased. Corporate stigmatization of the “frivolous lawsuit” has even scared many individuals away from exercising their constitutional legal rights. Amazingly, corporations have managed to turn Americans against the very justice system that keeps them free, and now to turn an entire branch of government against the constitutional rights it was charged with protecting.

The reasoning behind supporting forced arbitration is that it is more cost efficient and expeditious. The private justice system is certainly more cost-effective for the corporation, which does not have to face an angry jury. It is hardly so for the consumer, who has to pay for a $400 per hour arbitrator with a financial interest in keeping the clock running. Nor are prevailing plaintiffs entitled to recover their attorney fees in arbitration, as they are in court. There is much evidence that arbitration is less expeditious than court proceedings as well, particularly when the corporation wants it to be.

Individuals lack leverage in the process against large corporations and their legions of defense attorneys. The real motive behind the judicial preference for forced arbitration appears to be economic, limiting the corporation’s commercial costs. When commercial arguments trump constitutional protections, the individual and their rights are in grave danger.

Under the same commerce over the Constitution reasoning:

  • Free speech would not include criticizing a corporation because damaging revelations could jeopardize its commerce, hurt corporate profits, send the company’s stock plummeting, and threaten stock-dependent retirement nest eggs.
  • Individuals would not have the freedom to associate for the purpose of collective bargaining. Unionization would be seen to conflict with the corporation’s fundamental commercial needs to make new demands on workers for total loyalty and would impede the company’s global competitiveness.
  • The state’s ability to take over power generation plants, under the right of eminent domain in the California Constitution, would be invalidated. Corporate property would be sovereign soil not subject to U.S. law since corporations are global entities competing in a global commercial market.

The coup de grace for the judicial branch will be when the Supreme Court actually privatizes itself out of existence. At least then, when the corporate lawyers picked by the Supreme Court to replace itself render their rulings, we won’t have to hear about them. Greatly expanded corporate secrecy laws will, no doubt, protect individuals from disclosure of any legal matter potentially impacting a corporation’s bottom line.

Court is executive director of the Los Angeles-based Foundation for Taxpayer and Consumer Rights.

Consumer Watchdog
Consumer Watchdoghttps://consumerwatchdog.org
Providing an effective voice for American consumers in an era when special interests dominate public discourse, government and politics. Non-partisan.

Latest Videos

Latest Releases

In The News

Latest Report

Support Consumer Watchdog

Subscribe to our newsletter

To be updated with all the latest news, press releases and special reports.

More Releases