LD 1218
pg. 4
Page 3 of 94 An Act To Enact the Revised Uniform Arbitration Act Page 5 of 94
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LR 468
Item 1

 
These various, currently nonstatutory grounds for vacatur are
discussed at length in the Section C to the Comment to Section
23.

 
An important caveat to the general rule of FAA preemption is
found in Volt Information Sciences, Inc. v. Stanford
University, 489 U.S. 468 (1989) and Mastrobuono v. Shearson
Lehman Hutton, Inc., 514 U.S. 52 (1995). The focus in these
cases is on the effect of FAA preemption on choice-of-law
provisions routinely included in commercial contracts. Volt
and Mastrobuono establish that a clearly expressed contractual
agreement by the parties to an arbitration contract to conduct
their arbitration under state law rules effectively trumps the
preemptive effect of the FAA. If the parties elect to govern
their contractual arbitration mechanism by the law of a
particular State and thereby limit the issues that they will
arbitrate or the procedures under which the arbitration will
be conducted, their bargain will be honored - as long as the
state law principles invoked by the choice-of-law provision do
not conflict with the FAA's prime directive that agreements to
arbitrate be enforced. See, e.g., ASW Allstate Painting &
Constr. Co. v. Lexington Ins. Co., 188 F.3d 307 (5th Cir.
1999); Russ Berrie & Co. v. Gantt, 988 S.W.2d 713 (Tex. Ct.
App. 1999). It is in these situations that the RUAA will have
most impact. Section 4(a) of the RUAA also explicitly provides
that the parties to an arbitration agreement may waive or vary
the terms of the Act to the extent otherwise permitted by law.
Thus, when parties choose to contractually specify the
procedures to be followed under their arbitration agreement,
the RUAA contemplates that the contractually-established
procedures will control over contrary state law, except with
regard to issues designated as "nonwaivable" in Section 4(b)
and (c) of the RUAA.

 
The contractual election to proceed under state law instead
of the FAA will be honored presuming that the state law is not
antithetical to the pro-arbitration public policy of the FAA.
Southland and Terminix leave no doubt that anti-arbitration
state law provisions will be struck down because preempted by
the federal arbitration statute.

 
Besides arbitration contracts where the parties choose to be
governed by state law, there are other areas of arbitration
law where the FAA does not preempt state law, in the absence
of definitive federal law set out in the FAA or determined by
the federal courts. First, the Supreme Court has made clear
its belief that ascertaining when a particular contractual
agreement to arbitrate is enforceable is a matter to be
decided under the general contract law principles of each
State. The sole limitation on state law in that regard is the
Court's assertion that the enforceability of arbitration
agreements must be determined by the same standards as are
used for all other contracts. Terminix, 513 U.S. at 281 (1995)
(quoting Volt, 489


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