Suski v. Coinbase, Inc., --- F.4th ----, 2022 WL 17726673, No. 22-15209 (9th Cir. Dec. 16, 2022)
Affirming the district
court, the court of appeals agreed that Coinbase’s arbitration agreement
didn’t cover claims based on a sweepstakes it ran, which had a separate set of
rules that didn’t compel arbitration. As the court described it:
When plaintiffs created their
Coinbase accounts, they agreed to the “Coinbase User Agreement,” which contains
an arbitration provision. They later opted into the Sweepstakes’ “Official
Rules,” which include a forum selection clause providing that California courts
have exclusive jurisdiction over any controversies regarding the sweepstakes.
Plaintiffs brought claims under California’s False Advertising Law, Unfair
Competition Law, and Consumer Legal Remedies Act against Coinbase and
Marden-Kane, Inc., a company hired by Coinbase to design, market, and execute
the sweepstakes.
First, the User Agreement did not delegate to an arbitrator
the question of whether the forum selection clause in the Sweepstakes’ Official
Rules superseded the arbitration clause in the User Agreement. Arbitrability “is
an issue for judicial determination unless the parties clearly and unmistakably
provide otherwise.” Issues of contract formation may not be delegated to an
arbitrator. The relevant delegation clauses gave the arbitrator the ability to
decide disputes related to scope/interpretation of the agreement.
But the “scope” of an arbitration clause “concerns how
widely it applies, not whether it has been superseded by a subsequent
agreement.” Thus, the district court properly decided the issue, and was
correct that the forum selection clause superseded the prior arbitration
agreement. Under California law, “ ‘[t]he general rule is that when parties
enter into a second contract dealing with the same subject matter as their
first contract without stating whether the second contract operates to
discharge or substitute for the first contract, the two contracts must be
interpreted together and the latter contract prevails to the extent they are
inconsistent.’ ” The integration clause of the earlier User Agreement didn’t
preclude a superseding contract from being formed in the future. “By including
the forum selection clause … the Official Rules evince the parties’ intent not
to be governed by the User Agreement’s arbitration clause when addressing
controversies concerning the sweepstakes.” Cases in which there was an
arbitration clause and an arguably inconsistent forum selection clause in the
same contract were inapposite.
Moreover,
as the district court explained,
the Official Rules cannot be reconciled with the User Agreement. The Official
Rules apply to all Sweepstakes entrants, including entrants who are not subject
to the User Agreement because they used an alternative mail-in procedure.
Despite Coinbase’s arguments, the Official Rules make no distinction between
entrants who are Coinbase users subject to the User Agreement’s arbitration
clause and those who are not because they used an alternative mail-in entry
procedure.
Interesting question: can you make free entries subject to
an arbitration agreement too? Or would that come too close to conferring a
benefit on the sweepstakes provider, removing the free alternate means of entry
that prevents the sweepstakes from being an illegal lottery?
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