Competence-Competence: A Comparative Analysis

Lawrence W. Newman and David Zaslowsky

The U.S. Supreme Court’s recent decision in Henry Schein v. Archer and White Sales, No. 17-1272, 2019 WL 122164 (Jan. 8, 2019) has attracted much attention in that it has been viewed as further support for the court’s strong preference for enforcing the terms of arbitration agreements as written. But the undercurrent in Henry Schein was the competence-competence principle—that is, does U.S. law apply the principle that arbitrators are the ones who are competent to decide whether a particular dispute is arbitrable? In this article, we look at the development of that issue under U.S. law and compare it to how other countries address the issue.

The Development of U.S. Law



In 1986, the Supreme Court held that the question of arbitrability is undeniably an issue for judicial determination. It said, “unless the parties clearly and unmistakably provide otherwise, the question of whether the parties agreed to arbitrate is to be decided by the court, not the arbitrator.” AT&T Technologies v. Communication Workers of America, 475 U.S. 643, 649 (1986).

The logical corollary of this holding, of course, is that if the parties “clearly and unmistakably” do delegate authority to decide jurisdiction to the tribunal, that decision must be respected. This point was confirmed by the Supreme Court in its 1995 ruling in First Options of Chicago v. Kaplan. There, the Supreme Court stated that “the court’s standard for reviewing the arbitrator’s decision about its jurisdiction should not differ from the standard courts apply when they review any other matter that parties have agreed to arbitrate.” In other words, “the court should give considerable leeway to the arbitrator, setting aside his or her decision only in certain narrow circumstances.”

Another development in the law concerned whether there was a sufficiently clear and unmistakable delegation of the arbitrability issue to the arbitrators when parties agreed to arbitrate under institutional rules that granted such authority to the arbitrators. Many courts answered that issue in the affirmative. For example, Belnap v. Iasis Healthcare, 844 F.3d 1272, 1280 (10th Cir. 2017) concerned an arbitration agreement that called for arbitration administered by JAMS. JAMS Rule 8(c) provides that “jurisdictional and arbitrability disputes, including disputes over the formation, existence, validity, interpretation or scope of the agreement under which Arbitration is sought, and who are proper Parties to the Arbitration, shall be submitted and ruled on by the Arbitrator.” Based on this rule, the Tenth Circuit held that agreeing to a JAMS-administered arbitration was an agreement that the arbitrators would decide the issue of arbitrability.