Suppose there’s an old employment agreement between the employer and employee. Then the employer fires the employee. But there’s been a few intervening events and it’s not exactly clear that the employment agreement still applies. Indeed, there’s another contract (let’s call it an supplier agreement) that seems to provide an independent basis for ending the relationship. Nevertheless, the employment agreement contains an arbitration provision. Are the parties still required to go to arbitration even when one party (namely the employer) argues the contract is void? Yes, says a new Connecticut Appellate Court decision called Stack v. Hartford Distributors, Inc.. (For background, the employment lawyers out there should look first at a 2007 Supreme Court case that established the strong preference to enforcement of arbitration provisions, which you can find here. The rest of us can carry on.) For the court, it noted that the employer appears to ...
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