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| Jones Act Federal Circuits' & State Decisions - 7th Circuit | |||||||||
| Tuesday, 15 December 2009 04:17 | |||||||||
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Case Name: Michael Sherwood v. Marquette Transportation Company, LLC, and Bluegrass Marine LLC. Date Decided: November 23, 2009 Court: United States Court of Appeals Seventh Circuit Judge: Chief Judge Easterbrook Citation: 2009 WL 4016607 Background: Sherwood alleged he suffered an injury while working as a deckhand who's vessels travel on the Mississippi River. Sherwood has asked for arbitration.
The district court denied the motion to stay concluding that the Federal Arbitration Act preempts any state law concerning arbitration, and does not allow for arbitration to apply to contracts of employment of seamen. Basically, the district court stated that if the federal Act applied, arbitration must proceed under its terms; but if the federal Act does not apply, then arbitration is forbidden. Issue: Held: In fact, this Court has held that the limited scope of federal enactment does not preempt legislation on subjects that Congress has chosen not to regulate. Defendant, Bluegrass, appealed arguing that interlocutory review is auhorized of any order "refusing a stay of any action under section 3 of this (FAA) title". However, this Court found that this does not apply to any employment contract involving a seaman and Bluegrass's motion relied upon Illinois Law, neither which applies to a motion to stay litigation when the state, not the federal, law is the source of the obligation to arbitrate. Ultimately, because defendants seek apply State law to their appeal, this Court ruled that they had no jurisdiction and denied defendants' appeal. Comment: Applicable to this case, the Act states that "nothing shall apply to contracts of employment of seamen" (9 U.S.C. §1). Generally, state law that disfavors the enforcement of arbitration agreements will be preempted by the FAA. However, here, the contract involved a seaman, and therefore, was not within the FAA's reach and did not preempt it. This leaves the determination to state law and as such, is not within the federal appeals courts' jurisdiction. Steve Gordon
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