Nitro-Lift Technologies, L. L. C. v. Howard , 133 S. Ct. 500 ( 2012 )


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  •                  Cite as: 568 U. S. ____ (2012)            1
    Per Curiam
    SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
    NITRO-LIFT TECHNOLOGIES, L. L. C. v. EDDIE LEE
    HOWARD ET AL.
    ON PETITION FOR WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE SUPREME
    COURT OF OKLAHOMA
    No. 11–1377. Decided November 26, 2012
    PER CURIAM.
    State courts rather than federal courts are most fre­
    quently called upon to apply the Federal Arbitration Act
    (FAA), 
    9 U. S. C. §1
     et seq., including the Act’s national
    policy favoring arbitration. It is a matter of great im­
    portance, therefore, that state supreme courts adhere to a
    correct interpretation of the legislation. Here, the Okla­
    homa Supreme Court failed to do so. By declaring the
    noncompetition agreements in two employment contracts
    null and void, rather than leaving that determination to
    the arbitrator in the first instance, the state court ignored
    a basic tenet of the Act’s substantive arbitration law. The
    decision must be vacated.
    *    *     *
    This dispute arises from a contract between petitioner
    Nitro-Lift Technologies, L. L. C., and two of its former
    employees. Nitro-Lift contracts with operators of oil and
    gas wells to provide services that enhance production.
    Respondents Eddie Lee Howard and Shane D. Schneider
    entered a confidentiality and noncompetition agreement
    with Nitro-Lift that contained the following arbitration
    clause:
    “ ‘Any dispute, difference or unresolved question be­
    tween Nitro-Lift and the Employee (collectively the
    “Disputing Parties”) shall be settled by arbitration by
    a single arbitrator mutually agreeable to the Disput­
    ing Parties in an arbitration proceeding conducted in
    2      NITRO-LIFT TECHNOLOGIES, L. L. C. v. HOWARD
    Per Curiam
    Houston, Texas in accordance with the rules existing
    at the date hereof of the American Arbitration Associ­
    ation.’ ” Pet. for Cert. 5.
    After working for Nitro-Lift on wells in Oklahoma, Texas,
    and Arkansas, respondents quit and began working for
    one of Nitro-Lift’s competitors. Claiming that respondents
    had breached their noncompetition agreements, Nitro-Lift
    served them with a demand for arbitration. Respondents
    then filed suit in the District Court of Johnston County,
    Oklahoma, asking the court to declare the noncompetition
    agreements null and void and to enjoin their enforcement.
    The court dismissed the complaint, finding that the con­
    tracts contained valid arbitration clauses under which an
    arbitrator, and not the court, must settle the parties’
    disagreement.
    The Oklahoma Supreme Court retained respondents’
    appeal and ordered the parties to show cause why the
    matter should not be resolved by application of Okla.
    Stat., Tit. 15, §219A (West 2011), which limits the en­
    forceability of noncompetition agreements.         Nitro-Lift
    argued that any dispute as to the contracts’ enforceability
    was a question for the arbitrator. It relied for support—
    as it had done before the trial court—upon several of this
    Court’s cases interpreting the FAA, and noted that under
    Buckeye Check Cashing, Inc. v. Cardegna, 
    546 U. S. 440
    ,
    446 (2006), “this arbitration law applies in both state and
    federal courts.” Record in No. 109,003 (Okla.), p. 273.
    The Oklahoma Supreme Court was not persuaded. It
    held that despite the “[U. S.] Supreme Court cases on
    which the employers rely,” the “existence of an arbitration
    agreement in an employment contract does not prohibit
    judicial review of the underlying agreement.” 
    2011 OK 98
    ,
    ¶15, n. 20, ¶16, 
    273 P. 3d 20
    , 26, n. 20, 27. For that prop­
    osition, the court relied on the “exhaustive overview of
    the United States Supreme Court decisions construing the
    Federal Arbitration Act” in Bruner v. Timberlane Manor
    Cite as: 568 U. S. ____ (2012)            3
    Per Curiam
    Ltd. Partnership, 
    2006 OK 90
    , 
    155 P. 3d 16
    , which found
    Supreme Court jurisprudence “not to inhibit our review
    of the underlying contract’s validity.” 273 P. 3d, at 26.
    Finding the arbitration clauses no obstacle to its review,
    the court held that the noncompetition agreements were
    “void and unenforceable as against Oklahoma’s public
    policy,” expressed in Okla. Stat., Tit. 15, §219A. 273 P. 3d,
    at 27.
    The Oklahoma Supreme Court declared that its decision
    rests on adequate and independent state grounds. Id., at
    23–24, n. 5. If that were so, we would have no jurisdiction
    over this case. See Michigan v. Long, 
    463 U. S. 1032
    ,
    1037–1044 (1983). It is not so, however, because the
    court’s reliance on Oklahoma law was not “independent”—
    it necessarily depended upon a rejection of the federal
    claim, which was both “ ‘properly presented to’ ” and “ ‘ad­
    dressed by’ ” the state court. Howell v. Mississippi, 
    543 U. S. 440
    , 443 (2005) (per curiam) (quoting Adams v.
    Robertson, 
    520 U. S. 83
    , 86 (1997) (per curiam)). Nitro-
    Lift claimed that the arbitrator should decide the con­
    tract’s validity, and raised a federal-law basis for that
    claim by relying on Supreme Court cases construing the
    FAA. “ ‘[A] litigant wishing to raise a federal issue can
    easily indicate the federal law basis for his claim in a
    state-court petition or brief . . . by citing in conjunction
    with the claim the federal source of law on which he relies
    or a case deciding such a claim on federal grounds . . . .’ ”
    Howell, 
    supra, at 444
     (quoting Baldwin v. Reese, 
    541 U. S. 27
    , 32 (2004); emphasis added). The Oklahoma Supreme
    Court acknowledged the cases on which Nitro-Lift relied,
    as well as their relevant holdings, but chose to discount
    these controlling decisions. Its conclusion that, despite
    this Court’s jurisprudence, the underlying contract’s valid­
    ity is purely a matter of state law for state-court deter­
    mination is all the more reason for this Court to assert
    jurisdiction.
    4      NITRO-LIFT TECHNOLOGIES, L. L. C. v. HOWARD
    Per Curiam
    The Oklahoma Supreme Court’s decision disregards this
    Court’s precedents on the FAA. That Act, which “de­
    clare[s] a national policy favoring arbitration,” Southland
    Corp. v. Keating, 
    465 U. S. 1
    , 10 (1984), provides that a
    “written provision in . . . a contract evidencing a transac­
    tion involving commerce to settle by arbitration a contro­
    versy thereafter arising out of such contract or transaction
    . . . shall be valid, irrevocable, and enforceable, save upon
    such grounds as exist at law or in equity for the revocation
    of any contract.” 
    9 U. S. C. §2
    . It is well settled that
    “the substantive law the Act created [is] applicable in state
    and federal courts.” Southland Corp., 
    supra, at 12
    ; see
    also Buckeye, 
    supra, at 446
    . And when parties commit to
    arbitrate contractual disputes, it is a mainstay of the Act’s
    substantive law that attacks on the validity of the con­
    tract, as distinct from attacks on the validity of the arbi­
    tration clause itself, are to be resolved “by the arbitrator
    in the first instance, not by a federal or state court.”
    Preston v. Ferrer, 
    552 U. S. 346
    , 349 (2008); see also Prima
    Paint Corp. v. Flood & Conklin Mfg. Co., 
    388 U. S. 395
    (1967). For these purposes, an “arbitration provision is
    severable from the remainder of the contract,” Buckeye,
    
    supra, at 445
    , and its validity is subject to initial court
    determination; but the validity of the remainder of the
    contract (if the arbitration provision is valid) is for the
    arbitrator to decide.
    This principle requires that the decision below be va­
    cated. The trial court found that the contract contained a
    valid arbitration clause, and the Oklahoma Supreme
    Court did not hold otherwise. It nonetheless assumed the
    arbitrator’s role by declaring the noncompetition agree­
    ments null and void. The state court insisted that its
    “[own] jurisprudence controls this issue” and permits
    review of a “contract submitted to arbitration where one
    party assert[s] that the underlying agreement [is] void and
    unenforceable.” 273 P. 3d, at 26. But the Oklahoma
    Cite as: 568 U. S. ____ (2012)              5
    Per Curiam
    Supreme Court must abide by the FAA, which is “the
    supreme Law of the Land,” U. S. Const., Art. VI, cl. 2, and
    by the opinions of this Court interpreting that law. “It
    is this Court’s responsibility to say what a statute means,
    and once the Court has spoken, it is the duty of other
    courts to respect that understanding of the governing rule
    of law.” Rivers v. Roadway Express, Inc., 
    511 U. S. 298
    ,
    312 (1994). Our cases hold that the FAA forecloses pre­
    cisely this type of “judicial hostility towards arbitration.”
    AT&T Mobility LLC v. Concepcion, 563 U. S. ___, ___
    (2011) (slip op., at 8).
    The state court reasoned that Oklahoma’s statute “ad­
    dressing the validity of covenants not to compete, must
    govern over the more general statute favoring arbitration.”
    273 P. 3d, at 26, n. 21. But the ancient interpretive prin­
    ciple that the specific governs the general (generalia spe-
    cialibus non derogant) applies only to conflict between
    laws of equivalent dignity. Where a specific statute, for
    example, conflicts with a general constitutional provision,
    the latter governs. And the same is true where a specific
    state statute conflicts with a general federal statute.
    There is no general-specific exception to the Supremacy
    Clause, U. S. Const. Art. VI, cl. 2. “ ‘[W]hen state law
    prohibits outright the arbitration of a particular type of
    claim, the analysis is straightforward: The conflicting rule
    is displaced by the FAA.’ ” Marmet Health Care Center,
    Inc. v. Brown, 565 U. S. ___, ___–___ (2012) (per curiam)
    (slip op., at 3–4) (quoting AT&T Mobility LLC, supra, at
    ___–___ (slip op., at 6–7)). Hence, it is for the arbitrator to
    decide in the first instance whether the covenants not to
    compete are valid as a matter of applicable state law. See
    Buckeye, 
    546 U. S., at
    445–446.
    For the foregoing reasons, the petition for certiorari is
    granted. The judgment of the Supreme Court of Oklaho­
    ma is vacated, and the case is remanded for proceedings
    not inconsistent with this opinion.
    It is so ordered.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 11-1377

Citation Numbers: 184 L. Ed. 2d 328, 133 S. Ct. 500, 568 U.S. 17, 2012 U.S. LEXIS 8897

Judges: Per Curiam

Filed Date: 11/26/2012

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/19/2024

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