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PRECEDENTIAL UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT _____________ No. 23-3177 CHARLES L. ADLER; GRANT ADLER; CM ADLER, LLC, Appellants v. GRUMA CORPORATION, DBA Mission Foods; GUERRERO MEXICAN FOOD PRODUCTS, Etc. _____________________________________ On Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of New Jersey (District Court No. 3:22-cv-06598) District Judge: Honorable Robert Kirsch _____________________________________ Argued November 6, 2024 (Filed: April 16, 2025) Before: KRAUSE, SCIRICA, and RENDELL, Circuit Judges. Stephen J. Brown David H. Chen Susan E. Galvao Bleakley Platt & Schmidt One N Lexington Avenue White Plains, NY 10601 Hannah M. Kieschnick [ARGUED] Public Justice 475 14th Street Suite 610 Oakland, CA 94612 Shelby H. Leighton Public Justice 1620 L Street NW Suite 630 Washington, DC 20036 Counsel for Appellants Christopher B. Fontenelli Richard J. Reibstein [ARGUED] Troutman Pepper Locke 200 Vesey Street Brookļ¬eld Place, 20th Floor New York, NY 10281 Counsel for Appellees _________ OPINION OF THE COURT _________ 2 RENDELL, Circuit Judge. Plaintiļ¬s Charles and Grant Adler, through their business entity, Plaintiļ¬ CM Adler LLC, distributed tortillas and other food products of Defendant Gruma Corporation to grocery stores in the central New Jersey area pursuant to a āStore Door Distributor Agreementā (SDDA). When Defendant terminated the relationship, Plaintiļ¬s brought this lawsuit. ļæ½e District Court dismissed the case, concluding that under the SDDA, Texas law governed and the case should proceed to arbitration. Plaintiļ¬s urge the District Court should have ļ¬rst considered the applicability of the Federal Arbitration Act (FAA) and conclude that it did not apply to their contract because it was a ācontract[] of employmentā and, as distributors, they belong to a āclass of workers engaged in . . . interstate commerce.ā 9 U.S.C. § 1. Plaintiļ¬s also dispute the District Courtās decision to apply Texas rather than New Jersey law and raise objections to its interpretation of the contract as well as its decision to bind two non-signatories under an estoppel theory. We agree with Plaintiļ¬s that the District Courtās choice- of-law analysis was ļ¬awed because it failed to consider the impact of three New Jersey public policies on its arbitrability ruling. Before considering that aspect of the District Courtās ruling, however, and based on our opinion in Harper v. Amazon.com Servs., Inc., 12 F.4th 287 (3d Cir. 2021), we will address the applicability of the FAA. Because the record on that issue is fully developed, and the question it presents is a purely legal one, we can conclude on appeal that the FAA does not apply to the SDDA. We will then remand for the District Court to consider the arbitrability analysis anew under state 3 law. We will also instruct the District Court on remand to reevaluate, if necessary, whether the individual Plaintiļ¬s, who did not sign the arbitration agreement, are bound by its terms. I. Plaintiļ¬s allege that in March 2014, CM Adler LLC entered into the SDDA with Defendant Gruma Corporation to distribute Defendantās tortillas and other food products to stores in Trenton and surrounding areas of central New Jersey. ļæ½e SDDA was signed on behalf of CM Adler LLC by non- party Mary Adler. Plaintiļ¬s Charles and Grant Adler, not themselves signatories to the contract, performed the LLCās work for the next eight years, until Defendant terminated Plaintiļ¬sā distributorship āwithout causeā in June 2022. Appx 033, ¶ 10. Plaintiļ¬s then brought this lawsuit. ļæ½ey alleged Defendantās termination was retaliatory because Plaintiļ¬s had begun organizing with other distributors to discuss their legal rights. Plaintiļ¬s alleged that Defendantās actions violated state and federal labor laws, including failing to pay minimum wages and making unlawful deductions. ļæ½ey urged that their relationship was governed by these labor laws based on the degree of control Defendant exerted over Plaintiļ¬sā day-to-day work. Plaintiļ¬s also urged that the SDDA was in substance a āfranchiseā agreement subject to New Jerseyās Franchise Practices Act, N.J. Stat. § 56:10-1 et seq., and that, therefore, termination without cause was forbidden. Appx 069ā072. Defendant moved to dismiss and compel arbitration based on a provision in the SDDA, which stated that, with certain exceptions not relevant here: 4 [A]ll . . . claims and causes of action arising out of or relating to this Agreement (including, without limitation, matters relating to this Subsection 15(i) regarding arbitration, matters relating to performance, breach, interpretation, meaning, construction, or enforceability of all or any part of this Agreement, and all claims for rescission or fraud in the inducement of this Agreement) shall be resolved by arbitration through JĀ·AĀ·MĀ·S/Endispute (āJAMSā) as provided in Subsection 15(i)(iii) [sic] below. Appx 096, § 15.i.ii. Defendantās motion invoked both the FAA, 9 U.S.C. § 1 et seq., and the Texas Arbitration Act (TAA), Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code, ch. 171. As support for the application of Texas law, Defendant pointed to the choice-of-law provision in the SDDA, which states: ļæ½is Agreement shall be governed by and construed in accordance with the laws of the State of Texas. ļæ½e Federal Arbitration Act, 9 U.S.C. § 1 et seq. shall also apply as needed to uphold the validity or enforceability of the arbitration provisions of this Agreement. Appx 098, § 15.k. Defendant also attached a declaration listing its contacts with Texas, including that Texas was the location of its headquarters and the state where it performed many of its business operations. Plaintiļ¬s opposed arbitration. ļæ½ey contended the FAA does not apply due to its exemption for ācontracts of 5 employment of seamen, railroad employees, or any other class of workers engaged in foreign or interstate commerce.ā 9 U.S.C. § 1. Charles Adler submitted a declaration recounting Plaintiļ¬sā transportation work, including āreceiv[ing] shipments of Gruma product,ā āload[ing] the Gruma product on to . . . trucks,ā and ātransport[ing] the product to the Gruma accounts.ā Appx 123ā24, ¶ 24. Plaintiļ¬s also urged that, notwithstanding the partiesā selection of Texas law, New Jersey law should apply to bar arbitration based on various aspects of New Jersey public policy. ļæ½e District Court granted Defendantās motion and compelled arbitration. Adler v. Gruma Corp., No. 22-cv-6598, 2023 WL 7490006, at *10 (D.N.J. Nov. 13, 2023). It did not address whether the FAA applied or evaluate Plaintiļ¬sā exemption argument. 1 It found the parties had contracted for Texas law, under which the arbitration agreement was enforceable, and rejected Plaintiļ¬sā bid to apply New Jersey law instead. Id. at *6ā7. In conducting the choice-of-law analysis, the District Court focused on the partiesā respective contacts with Texas and New Jersey but did not weigh the New 1 In its opinion, the District Court included a footnote stating: Plaintiļ¬s also argue that they should be exempt from arbitration under the FAA because they are interstate transportation workers under the exception found in 9 U.S.C. § 1. As noted above, the parties have entered into a valid arbitration agreement which contains a delegation clause; therefore, issues pertaining to arbitrability must be decided by an arbitrator. Adler, 2023 WL 7490006, at *10 n.8 (citation omitted). 6 Jersey policies Plaintiļ¬s urged would undermine the arbitration agreement. Id. at *3ā6. Next, the District Court decided that Charles and Grant Adler, who did not sign the contract, were estopped from challenging its arbitration provision because they āacted as parties toā the contract when they performed the LLCās work. Adler, 2023 WL 7490006, at *8. It then construed the arbitration provision to contain a ādelegation clause,ā whereby the arbitrator, rather than a court, should interpret the scope of the arbitration provision. Id. It thus declined to determine which of Plaintiļ¬sā claims āar[ose] out of or relat[ed] toā the contract. Id.; Appx 096. Finally, the District Court dismissed the case so it could proceed to arbitration under Texas law. Plaintiļ¬s then ļ¬led the instant appeal. II. ļæ½e District Court had jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. §§ 1331, 1367(a), and 1332(a). We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291. We review the grant of a motion to compel arbitration de novo, applying the same standard that āshould have been appliedā in the District Court. Singh v. Uber Techs. Inc. (Sing I), 939 F.3d 210, 217 (3d Cir. 2019). If the motion can be decided ābased on the face of a complaint, and documents relied upon in the complaint, ā a motion-to-dismiss standard should be used; otherwise, the summary judgment standard should be applied. Guidotti v. Legal Helpers Debt Resol., LLC, 716 F.3d 764, 776 (3d Cir. 2013) (quotation marks omitted). ļæ½e District Court here stated it would employ the motion-to- dismiss standard, but its opinion cites facts from the partiesā 7 declarations submitted in connection with the motion. Adler, 2023 WL 7490006, at *2, *4 & n.4. We therefore will use the summary judgment standard and ask whether Defendant, as the moving party, has āshow[n] that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and [Defendant] is entitled toā an order compelling arbitration āas a matter of law.ā Guidotti, 716 F.3d at 772 (quoting Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a)). We review the District Courtās decision to sua sponte conclude that the contract contained a ādelegation clauseā for abuse of discretion. See United States v. Dowdell, 70 F.4th 134, 140 (3d Cir. 2023) (existence of waiver and decision to excuse waiver reviewed for abuse of discretion). ļæ½e interpretation of unambiguous contractual language is reviewed de novo. Skƶld v. Galderma Labāys L.P., 917 F.3d 186, 191 n.9 (3d Cir. 2019). III. ļæ½e District Court was presented with a fairly straightforward question: whether the parties had an enforceable agreement to arbitrate and under what law. However, the answer to that question lies in the sometimes not so straightforward principles of federalism, choice of law, and contract interpretation. See Harper, 12 F.4th at 294. A. Sources of Arbitration Law When a district court is presented with a request to enforce an agreement to arbitrate, it must determine whether that agreement is enforceable under applicable law. Harper, 12 F.4th at 295. Based on the principles of federalism set out in Erie R. Co. v. Tompkins, 304 U.S. 64 (1938), federal courts will enforce both federal and state arbitration law, Bernhardt v. Polygraphic Co. of Am., 350 U.S. 198, 202ā03 (1956), but will 8 give precedence to federal law where the two conļ¬ict, Volt Info. Scis., Inc. v. Bd. of Trustees of Leland Stanford Junior Univ., 489 U.S. 468, 477 (1989). Here, the potentially applicable federal law is the FAA, whose ā āprincipal purposeā . . . is to āensure that private arbitration agreements are enforced according to their terms.ā ā AT&T Mobility LLC v. Concepcion, 563 U.S. 333, 344 (2011) (alterations omitted) (quoting Volt, 489 U.S. at 478). ļæ½e FAA declares most written arbitration agreements āvalid, irrevocable, and enforceable, save upon such grounds as exist at law or in equity for the revocation of any contract,ā and enacts procedures for sending parties to arbitration and staying pending litigation. See 9 U.S.C. §§ 2ā4. But the FAA does not apply to all contracts, since it exempts, as relevant here, ācontracts of employment of seamen, railroad employees, or any other class of workers engaged in foreign or interstate commerceā (the ā§ 1 exemptionā). 9 U.S.C. § 1. Where the request is to enforce an arbitration agreement under state law, and a question arises as to which stateās law applies, the court will use the choice-of-law rules of the forum state, even where the parties have contracted for application of a particular stateās law. Harper, 12 F.4th at 295 (citing Collins v. Mary Kay, Inc., 874 F.3d 176, 183 (3d Cir. 2017)). It may also need to consider whether the FAA preempts any state laws that would otherwise govern. If the partiesā contract is within the scope of the FAA, state laws that conļ¬ict with the FAA or would āstand as an obstacle to the accomplishment of the FAAās objectivesā will be preempted. Concepcion, 563 U.S. at 343. ļæ½us, where the FAA would require the court to enforce the agreement, a state law that would prevent its enforcement will usually be preempted. See Southland Corp. v. Keating, 465 U.S. 1, 15ā16 (1984) (holding preempted a California franchise statute to the extent it would preclude enforcement of 9 an agreement to arbitrate). But pro-arbitration state lawsāi.e. laws that would enforce the agreementāgenerally remain in force. Harper, 12 F.4th at 293ā94. And, of course, if the partiesā agreement is outside the scope of the FAA altogether, the FAA will not preempt any state laws that may apply to it, including laws that may render the agreement unenforceable. Cf. Lewis v. Cir. City Stores, Inc., 500 F.3d 1140, 1152 (10th Cir. 2007) (ā[W]hen the FAA applies to an arbitration agreement, the FAA preempts conļ¬icting state law . . . .ā (emphasis added)). Importantly, under both federal and state arbitration law, the starting place is typically the partiesā agreement, and that will usually dictate whether, and under what law, arbitration should take place. See Harper, 12 F.4th at 294. ā[P]arties are generally free to structure their arbitration agreements as they see ļ¬t,ā and where they āhave agreed to abide by state rules of arbitration, enforcing those rules according to the terms of the agreement is fully consistent with the goals of the FAA.ā Volt, 489 U.S. at 479. ļæ½e forum state here, New Jersey, generally allows parties to choose the stateās law that will govern their contracts, but choice-of-law principles may override that selection under certain circumstances. See Arafa v. Health Express Corp., 233 A.3d 495, 506 (N.J. 2020) (conducting a choice-of-law analysis before deciding to apply New Jersey arbitration law as selected by the parties); Grandvue Manor, LLC v. Cornerstone Contracting Corp., 272 A.3d 36, 44 (N.J. Super. Ct. App. Div. 2022) (conducting a choice-of-law analysis before enforcing partiesā selection of New York arbitration law). 10 B. When a Party Seeks Enforcement Under Either Federal or State Arbitration Law Defendantās motion to compel arbitration urged that the District Court had authority to issue such an order under either the FAA or Texas law, both of which favor arbitration. Plaintiļ¬s countered that the FAA did not apply, and the Court should decline to enforce the partiesā selection of Texas law pursuant to New Jerseyās choice-of-law rules because three New Jersey policies disfavored arbitration: (1) a policy against forum- selection clauses in franchise agreements; (2) a policy requiring arbitration provisions in employment contracts to be clear about the diļ¬erence between arbitration and litigation; and (3) a policy requiring arbitration provisions in employment contracts to be clear about their coverage of statutory claims. In Harper, we advised, where arbitration is sought under both the FAA and state law, and the parties contest the FAAās applicability under 9 U.S.C. § 1, district courts must follow a three-part inquiry: At step one, . . . a court must consider whether [the § 1 exemption applies]. . . . If that analysis leads to murky answers, a court moves to step two and assumes [the] § 1 [exemption] applies, taking the FAA out of the agreement. But the court then considers whether the contract still requires arbitration under any applicable state law. . . . If the arbitration clause is also unenforceable under state law, then the court reaches step three, and must return to federal law and decide whether § 1 applies . . . . 11 Harper, 12 F.4th at 296. ļæ½e parties here dispute whether, under Harper, courts must always start with the FAA, or whether they may ājumpā to independent state law to compel arbitration (i.e., Harperās step two). We need not settle this issue, however. Under either reading, the District Court erred in relying on cases interpreting the FAA despite not having determined that the FAA applied. See Adler, 2023 WL 7490006, at *7 (citing In re FirstMerit Bank, N.A., 52 S.W.3d 749 (Tex. 2001), as an authority on Texas arbitral law when, in fact, the case applies the FAA). Without deciding whether courts may ājumpā to Harperās step two, we will analyze these issues anew, beginning with the partiesā dispute over whether the FAA applies. ļæ½at question may be answered cleanly on the present undisputed record, and it has the potential to obviate the need for a murkier choice-of-law analysisābecause, if the FAA does apply, it would require us to ā ārigorously enforceā [the] arbitration agreement[] according to [its] terms,ā Am. Exp. Co. v. Italian Colors Rest., 570 U.S. 228, 233 (2013), and preempt any contrary New Jersey policies, Concepcion, 563 U.S. at 343. 2 ļæ½e District Courtās opinion suggests it believed it should bypass the determination as to the applicability of the FAA because the SDDA contained a ādelegation clauseāāi.e., an agreement to delegate matters of arbitrability to an arbitrator. See Adler, 2023 WL 7490006, at *10 n.8 (declining to decide whether the FAA applied because āissues pertaining to arbitrability must be decided by an arbitratorā). But, notwithstanding the presence of a delegation clause, a court 2 Since Plaintiļ¬s concede that the relevant New Jersey policies would be preempted, see Reply Br. 8, we need not decide that issue. 12 still may not send a dispute to arbitration without ļ¬rst determining that there is an agreement to arbitrate that is enforceable under applicable law. See New Prime Inc. v. Oliveira, 586 U.S. 105, 111 (2019). ļæ½at is because ā[a] delegation clause is merely a specialized type of arbitration agreement,ā which a court must evaluate in the same manner as it would āany otherā arbitration agreement. See id. at 112 (in part quoting Rent-A-Ctr., W., Inc. v. Jackson, 561 U.S. 63, 70 (2010)). Accordingly, New Prime instructs that there is an āantecedentā statutory inquiry that the court should address before enforcing a delegation clause. Id. It addressed the question: whether the court must āleave disputes over the application of [FAA] § 1ās exception for the arbitrator to resolve?ā Id. at 108. ļæ½e Court said no. Id. at 111. ļæ½at principle is squarely implicated here. We will thus proceed to address that issue. IV. ļæ½e FAA applies to most written agreements to arbitrate, but exempts ācontracts of employment of seamen, railroad employees, or any other class of workers engaged in foreign or interstate commerceā (the ā§ 1 exemptionā). 9 U.S.C. § 1. Plaintiļ¬s contend the SDDA was such a contract. A. Standard for the § 1 Exemption ļæ½e FAAās exemption for āany . . . class of workers engaged in . . . [interstate] commerceā is limited to ātransportation workers,ā Circuit City Stores, Inc. v. Adams, 532 U.S. 105, 118ā19 (2001)āi.e., those workers who are āactively āengaged in transportationā of . . . goods across borders,ā Sw. Airlines Co. v. Saxon, 596 U.S. 450, 458 (2022) 13 (quoting Circuit City, 532 U.S. at 121). ļæ½at inquiry turns on āthe actual workā such workers ātypicallyā perform. Id. at 456. In assessing the nature of the employeesā work, the court may look beyond individual employees to the āclassā of workers, thus considering such evidentiary sources as āthe contents of the partiesā agreement(s), information regarding the industry in which the class of workers is engaged, information regarding the work performed by those workers, and various textsāi.e., other laws, dictionaries, and documentsāthat discuss the parties and the work.ā Singh I, 939 F.3d at 227ā28. But ā[a] transportation worker need not work in the transportation industryā to ļ¬t the exemption. Bissonnette v. LePage Bakeries Park St., LLC, 601 U.S. 246, 256 (2024); see also Brock v. Flowers Foods, Inc., 121 F.4th 753, 761 (10th Cir. 2024) (ļ¬nding food distributors to be transportation workers). Instead, the focus is āwhat [the worker] does [for the employer], not what [the employer] does generally.ā Saxon, 596 U.S. at 456. In addition, a worker whose āwork is āso closely relatedā to interstate commerce āas to be in practical eļ¬ect part of itā ā is an interstate transportation worker, even if that worker does not personally cross state lines. Singh v. Uber Techs., Inc. (Singh II), 67 F.4th 550, 558 (3d Cir. 2023) (quoting Singh I, 939 F.3d at 220). What matters is whether the work āis a āconstituent partā of the interstate movement of goods or people rather than a āpart of an independent and contingent intrastate transaction.ā ā Id. (quoting Immediato v. Postmates, Inc., 54 F.4th 67, 77 (1st Cir. 2022)). ā[R]are engagementā with interstate commerce is not enough; instead, āinterstate movement of goods or passengers [must be] a central part of the job description of the classā of workers. Id. at 557 (quotation marks omitted). And the exemption does not cover 14 āworkers who engage in primarily local economic activity with only tangential interstate connections.ā Id. at 558. āFood delivery drivers, for example, can be distinguished from Amazon delivery drivers, as the former deliver food only after it has left the stream of interstate commerce. Similarly, Chicago taxi drivers provide independent local service which is not an integral part of interstate transportation.ā Id. at 558ā 59 (citations and quotation marks omitted) (citing Rittmann v. Amazon.com, Inc., 971 F.3d 904, 916 (9th Cir. 2020); Wallace v. Grubhub Holdings, Inc., 970 F.3d 798, 802ā03 (7th Cir. 2020); United States v. Yellow Cab Co., 332 U.S. 218, 233 (1947)). By way of illustration, in Saxon, the employeeās primary duty was to manage other workers in the loading and unloading of cargo planes, although the employee would āfrequentlyā move the cargo herself as well. Saxon, 596 U.S. at 456. ļæ½e Supreme Court reasoned that, regardless of her other duties, those who āphysically load and unload cargo on and oļ¬ planes traveling in interstate commerce are, as a practical matter, part of the interstate transportation of goods.ā Id. at 457. By contrast, in Singh, the plaintiļ¬s, who drove for Uber, were predominantly local, intrastate transporters. See Singh II, 67 F.4th at 555 (quoting the district courtās ļ¬nding that ā2% of all ridesā were interstate and ālikely occur[red] due to the happenstance of geographyā). ļæ½ese driversā ā[i]ncidental border crossings [were] insuļ¬cientā to meet the exemption given that the bulk of their work was ānot typically involved with the channels of interstate commerce.ā Id. at 559. And while Uber drivers would sometimes take passengers to and from the airport, these did not count as interstate trips because there was no āsingle ticket that includes both ļ¬ight and rideshareā; the latter was an āindependent local service.ā Singh 15 II, 67 F.4th at 562 (in part quoting Yellow Cab, 332 U.S. at 232ā 33). B. Application to the Present Undisputed Facts We turn to the partiesā declarations to see if the exemption āļ¬tsā based on the undisputed facts. 3 Defendant shipped tortillas and other food products from Pennsylvania into New Jersey and then tasked Plaintiļ¬s with distributing them to Defendantās customers in Trenton and surrounding areas. To that end, Plaintiļ¬s received Defendantās products at their New Jersey warehouse, loaded the products onto trucks, drove them to their buyers, unloaded and shelved the products, and maintained the clientsā accounts. Transporting Defendantās goods constituted ā[a] large componentā of Plaintiļ¬sā day-to- day work. Appx 124, ¶ 25. Defendant oversaw this work and ācoordinate[d] . . . the purchase and distribution of its productsā from its Texas headquarters, Appx 112, ¶ 6, and with an āArea Managerā in New Jersey, Appx 122, ¶ 14. Plaintiļ¬s were Defendantās exclusive distributors in the territory and 3 While neither the District Court nor the parties discuss this aspect, we take the parties to not dispute the facts in their declarations. ļæ½e District Court cited these facts interchangeably with those in the complaintāwithout objection then or before us on appealāand no party asked for discovery to controvert the other sideās account. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(d) (specifying circumstances under which summary judgment may be denied for discovery). Defendant also conceded it was ānot in a position . . . to disputeā Charles Adlerās declaration. Tr. Oral Arg. 22:25-23:1. We thus take the facts in the partiesā declarations as undisputed and examine whether they give rise to the § 1 exemption. 16 were prohibited from selling competing products. ļæ½us, Plaintiļ¬s reason, Defendant used distributors like them to move products to customers across the state line, making them ādirect and necessaryā to the interstate movement of goods. Appellantsā Br. 21. And because Plaintiļ¬s worked directly and exclusively for Defendant rather than as āindependentā local resellers, they argue their delivery trips formed a ā āconstituent partā of the interstate movement of [Defendantās] goodsā rather than separate āintrastate transaction[s].ā See Singh II, 67 F.4th at 558. Both before the District Court and on appeal, Defendant oļ¬ered little substantive argument that these facts do not establish Plaintiļ¬s as part of a class of transportation workers engaged in interstate commerce. In particular, Defendant does not dispute Plaintiļ¬sā contention that distributors who work directly with an interstate manufacturer and move the manufacturerās goods along āthe last mile of [their] interstate journeysā qualify as interstate transportation workers despite not personally crossing state lines. See Brock, 121 F.4th at 768 (quoting Rittmann, 971 F.3d at 916); Singh II, 67 F.4th at 558 (āAmazon delivery drivers who ālocally transport[ed] goods on the last legs of interstate journeys,ā fell under [the] § 1 [exemption] because their work occurred āwithin the ļ¬ow of interstate commerce.ā ā (quoting Waithaka v. Amazon.com, Inc., 966 F.3d 10, 13 (1st Cir. 2020))). Instead, Defendantās principal contention is that Plaintiļ¬s did not spend a suļ¬cient portion of their time on transportation, since their other responsibilities included āsell[ing], market[ing], and servic[ing] [Defendantās] products; servic[ing] and maintain[ing] [Defendantās] accounts; plac[ing] product orders; put[ting] the product on supermarket shelves and displays; remov[ing] stale products; 17 keep[ing] up the relationships with the accounts; and sell[ing] displays and present[ing] sale items to [Defendantās] accounts.ā Appelleeās Br. 41. But Defendant points to no facts to controvert Plaintiļ¬sā assertion that āa large componentā of their work for Defendant āinvolved the transportation of goods and product.ā Appx 124, ¶ 25. And while Defendantās brief includes a passing reference to a need for discovery, Defendant did not seek discovery before the District Court and does not suggest what discovery it would conduct or how the results of such discovery might contradict Plaintiļ¬sā assertion that transportation was āa large componentā of their work. Moreover, many of what Defendant calls Plaintiļ¬sā non-transportation activities are really just the mechanics of how Plaintiļ¬s moved products manufactured in Pennsylvania to stores in New Jersey. For example, āplac[ing] [a] product[] order[]ā or āput[ting] the product on supermarket shelvesā are steps in the transportation process, like loading or unloading a truck. Appelleeās Br. 41. ļæ½ese responsibilities are not unlike those of the ramp supervisor in Saxon who managed and trained other ramp workers in addition to handling cargo herself. See 596 U.S. at 454. Accordingly, we perceive no genuine dispute that Plaintiļ¬s were transportation workers engaged in interstate commerce. Defendant also urges that, if Plaintiļ¬s are correct that their contract was a āfranchise agreement,ā it could not also be a ācontract of employment.ā We disagree. In New Prime, the Supreme Court embraced a broad interpretation of the concept of a ācontract of employment,ā concluding that a contract of employment for purposes of the FAA is any āagreement to perform work,ā regardless of whether it is for an employee or an independent contractor. 586 U.S. at 110, 114. Depending on its terms, a franchise agreement may be an agreement to 18 perform work. New Jerseyās deļ¬nition of a āfranchiseā is any āwritten arrangement . . . in which a person grants to another person a license to use a trade name, trade mark, service mark, or related characteristics, and in which there is a community of interest in the marketing of goods or services.ā N.J. Stat. § 56:10-3. A franchisor may contract for a franchisee to āperform workā for the franchisor while using the franchisorās trademarks. Cf. Brock, 121 F.4th at 757, 767, 770 (ļ¬nding the § 1 exemption applicable to a ādirect-store-deliveryā distributorship agreement that, like the one here, included terms for the protection of the sellerās āprofessional imageā); Brock v. Flowers Food, Inc., 673 F. Supp. 3d 1180, 1182 (D. Colo. 2023) (describing the drivers as āindependent distributor franchiseesā). Here, clearly, the SDDA and undisputed facts show Plaintiļ¬s contracted with Defendant to āperform workā by distributing Defendantās food products. For these reasons, the FAA does not apply to the partiesā agreement to arbitrate. V. Because the FAA does not apply, the remaining arbitration issues must be evaluated under state law. Harper, 12 F.4th at 296. ļæ½at begins with the forum state and its choice- of-law rules. Id. at 295. New Jersey follows diļ¬erent choice- of-law analyses depending on whether the contract selects a speciļ¬c stateās law. See Arafa, 233 A.3d at 506. ļæ½e SDDA speciļ¬ed that Texas law would apply to the partiesā āAgreement,ā and the District Court interpreted that to mean Texas law governed whether the arbitration provision of the agreement was enforceable. On appeal, Plaintiļ¬s disagree with that contract interpretation. ļæ½ey urge the parties only 19 agreed that Texas law would govern their substantive obligations under the contract, not whether the arbitration provision of that contract was enforceable. 4 As noted above, the choice-of-law provision contains two sentences: āļæ½is Agreement shall be governed by and construed in accordance with the laws of the State of Texas. The Federal Arbitration Act, 9 U.S.C. § 1 et seq. shall also apply as needed to uphold the validity or enforceability of the arbitration provisions of this Agreement.ā Appx 098, § 15.k (emphasis added). ļæ½e ļ¬rst sentence by its terms applies to the entire agreement, which does include the arbitration provision. But even assuming, as Plaintiļ¬s argue, that the ļ¬rst sentence standing alone does not adopt Texas law as to matters of arbitrability, the second sentence is more speciļ¬c and bolsters the argument that Texas arbitration law was contemplated. Unless the words āalsoā and āas neededā are mere surplusage, the parties must have anticipated that Texas law was to apply to the arbitration provision, but, if necessary, the FAA would āalsoā apply āas neededāāspeciļ¬cally, āas needed to uphold the validity or enforceability of the arbitration provision[].ā Id. So, there is a clear directive that the FAA was not intended as the sole source of arbitration law. Rather, it was intended to prevent any doubt about the validity or enforceability of the arbitration provision under Texas law. Read together, the unambiguous meaning of the provision is that Texas law shall apply to the SDDAās arbitration provision, and if needed, the 4 Plaintiļ¬s raise this speciļ¬c issue for the ļ¬rst time on appeal, having only disputed the choice of Texas versus New Jersey law before the District Court. Nonetheless, we will address it as it involves a matter of law that is easily resolved lest it be raised again on remand. 20 FAA may āalso applyā to uphold the enforceability of this speciļ¬c provision. Cf. Carter v. Exxon Co. USA, a Div. of Exxon Corp., 177 F.3d 197, 206 (3d Cir. 1999) (interpreting contract to avoid superļ¬uity); Grandvue Manor, 272 A.3d at 44 (interpreting a contractual selection of New York law to govern whether an arbitration provision was enforceable). ļæ½e SDDAās language contrasts with the choice-of-law provision in Rittmann v. Amazon.com, Inc., 971 F.3d 904 (9th Cir. 2020), which speciļ¬ed that the contract would be āgoverned by the law of the state of Washington . . . except forā the contractās arbitration provision. Id. at 920 (emphasis added). ļæ½e Ninth Circuit read the transitional phrase āexcept forā to exclude Washington law on matters of arbitrability. Id. Here, the transitional term āalsoā indicates Texas law will extend even to those parts of the contract where the FAA may also play a role. ļæ½e principal precedent Plaintiļ¬s rely on is Mastrobuono v. Shearson Lehman Hutton, Inc., 514 U.S. 52 (1995). But that case was quite uniqueāit had nothing to do with which stateās arbitration law should be applied. Instead, it had to do with the authority of arbitrators to award punitive damages in an arbitration conducted under the FAA, where the parties had chosen New York law to govern the contract generally. Id. at 56. New York law permitted punitive damages to be awarded only by a court, and the issue was whether the partiesā agreement to the application of New York state law generally went so far as to limit the arbitratorās remedial authorityābased on a New York law that did not even outlaw punitive damages but allocated remedies to certain tribunals. Id. ļæ½e Court, not surprisingly, said no. Id. at 63. 21 Plaintiļ¬s cite Oberwager v. McKechnie Ltd., 351 F. Appāx 708 (3d Cir. 2009) (not precedential), for the proposition that an arbitration provision must evidence a āclear intentā that the chosen stateās arbitration law is to apply. See id. at 710 (quoting Roadway Package Sys., Inc. v. Kayser, 257 F.3d 287, 293 (3d Cir. 2001), abrogated on other grounds by Hall St. Assocs., L.L.C. v. Mattel, Inc., 552 U.S. 576 (2008)). But Oberwager and the other cases requiring āclear intentā are addressing a diļ¬erent issue: whether a provision selecting a particular stateās law should be read as āopt[ing] outā of the FAA and replacing the FAAās procedures with state procedures. See id. Here, we have already decided that the FAA does not apply. And we can easily conclude that the parties agreed that Texas law should govern the arbitrability of their dispute. ļæ½erefore, the District Court did not err in ļ¬nding that the parties agreed to the application of Texas law regarding the enforceability of arbitration agreements. VI. Because we agree with the District Court that the parties contracted for Texas arbitration law to apply, we turn to whether the New Jersey federal court should have rejected that provision under its choice-of-law rules. As explained below, we conclude that the District Court erred in its analysis, and we will vacate its order and remand for the District Court to apply the analytical framework set out in this Opinion. A. Enforcement of Contractual Choice-of-Law Clauses in New Jersey āOrdinarily, when parties to a contract have agreed to be governed by the laws of a particular state, New Jersey courts 22 will uphold the contractual choice if it does not violate New Jerseyās public policy.ā Instructional Sys., Inc. v. Computer Curriculum Corp., 614 A.2d 124, 133 (N.J. 1992). But, as relevant here, the choice-of-law clause may be invalidated on policy grounds if three elements are met: (1) New Jersey has a āmaterially greater interestā in the ādetermination of the particular issueā in dispute; (2) application of Texas law conļ¬icts with a āfundamentalā New Jersey policy; and (3) New Jersey law would apply āin the absence of an eļ¬ective choice of law by the parties.ā Id. (quoting Restatement (Second) of Conļ¬ict of Laws § 187(b) (1969) [hereinafter Restatement § 187(b)]). Neither party disputes the third element, namely that New Jersey law is the relevant law that would govern the arbitrability dispute absent the partiesā selection of Texas, so the focus is on the ļ¬rst two elements: whether New Jersey has a āmaterially greater interestā in the arbitrability dispute and whether any relevant āfundamentalā policies of New Jersey would be harmed by application of Texas law. In moving to compel arbitration, Defendant provided a certiļ¬cation from its Vice President of Retail Sales detailing connections between its business and Texas. According to that declaration, Defendant maintained a headquarters in Texas, managed its business aļ¬airs there, and coordinated and paid distributors such as Plaintiļ¬s from that location, among other activities. ļæ½e District Court took these facts as true in ruling on Defendantās motion, and, lacking Plaintiļ¬sā objection, we will do the same. Plaintiļ¬s responded with three New Jersey policies that, in their view, prohibited enforcement of the choice-of-law clause on the issue of arbitrability. We describe them without vouching for their correctness as statements of New Jersey law or applicability here: 23 First, Plaintiļ¬s contended the partiesā contract was a āfranchise agreementā subject to New Jerseyās Franchise Practices Act, under which a mandatory arbitration clause would be presumptively invalid. N.J. Stat. § 56:10-7.3(a)(3) (āIt shall be a violation of the [Act] for a motor vehicle franchisor to require a motor vehicle franchisee to agree to a term or condition in a franchise . . . which . . . [r]equires that disputes between the motor vehicle franchisor and motor vehicle franchisee be submitted to arbitration.ā). Plaintiļ¬s reasoned that the prohibition extends to all franchise agreements covered by the Act, not just motor vehicle franchises. In doing so, they relied on Kubis & Perszyk Assocs., Inc. v. Sun Microsystems, Inc., 680 A.2d 618 (N.J. 1996), in which the Supreme Court of New Jersey concluded as much when addressing the prohibition on forum-selection clauses found in the same statutory section. Id. at 626. ļæ½us, Plaintiļ¬s argued, enforcing the SDDAās arbitration clause under Texas law would violate this New Jersey policy. Second, Plaintiļ¬s urged that New Jersey requires arbitration agreements that waive a constitutional right, like the right to a civil jury trial enshrined in the New Jersey Constitution, art. I, to contain āclear and unambiguous language that the plaintiļ¬ is waiving her right to sue or go to court to secure relief.ā Atalese v. U.S. Legal Servs. Grp., L.P., 99 A.3d 306, 309, 315 (N.J. 2014). In Plaintiļ¬sā view, that rule applied to the SDDA because it was eļ¬ectively an employment contract, given the level of control Defendant exerted over Plaintiļ¬sā day-to-day work. Plaintiļ¬s interpreted the SDDAās arbitration provision as not suļ¬ciently clear about the diļ¬erence between arbitration and court proceedings. Third, also related to New Jerseyās requirements for the waiver of rights, Plaintiļ¬s contended that to waive a statutory 24 right, New Jersey requires an arbitration provision to āreļ¬ect [an] employeeās general understanding of the type of claimsā it covers, including whether it covers āstatutory claims arising out of the employment relationship or its termination.ā Moon v. Breathless Inc., 868 F.3d 209, 214 (3d Cir. 2017) (quoting Garļ¬nkel v. Morristown Obstetrics & Gynecology Assocs., P.A., 773 A.2d 665, 672 (N.J. 2001)). Plaintiļ¬s viewed the SDDAās speciļ¬cation of claims ārelating toā the contract as ambiguous about its coverage of statutory claims. ļæ½us Plaintiļ¬s argued to the District Court that enforcing the arbitration clause under Texas law as to their franchise and labor law claims would violate New Jersey public policy. B. District Courtās Reasoning In deciding to enforce the choice-of-law clause, the District Court did not consider the policies just described in its analysis. On the āmaterially greater interestā prong, the District Court focused on the partiesā geographic contacts with New Jersey and Texas, and determined that each state had an interest, and New Jersey had no āgreater interestā in the arbitration issue. Adler, 2023 WL 7490006, at *5. In particular, the District Court noted Defendantās Texas activitiesāits headquarters, management, and distributorship operationsā and reasoned these ties gave Texas āan interest in enforcing its companyās rights,ā while Plaintiļ¬sā geographic ties (ā[t]he fact that Plaintiļ¬s are residents of New Jersey and performed work under the SDDA in New Jerseyā) did not ānecessarily establish that New Jersey has a materially greater interest than Texas.ā Id. And it rejected Plaintiļ¬sā āfocus[] on whether the partiesā contractually chosen law violates New Jerseyās public policy.ā Id. ļæ½us, its opinion makes no mention of whether New Jerseyās alleged policies against arbitrating certain types of 25 disputes might give New Jersey an āinterestā that would be materially greater. See id. at *5ā6. ļæ½e District Court relied, inter alia, on several cases from the District of New Jersey, illustrative of which is Rosenberg v. Hotel Connections, Inc., No. 21-cv-4876, 2022 WL 7534445 (D.N.J. Oct. 13, 2022). ļæ½at case, like this one, confronted the issue of whether a New Jersey court would enforce an arbitration agreement under a foreign stateās law (as chosen by the parties) over an objection that the language failed the clarity requirement of New Jerseyās Atalese decision. 2022 WL 7534445 at *3. ļæ½e Rosenberg court, with little analysis, concluded New Jersey lacked a āmaterially greater interestā due to the fact that: (1) the parties had agreed to apply New York law, (2) the defendant āservice[d] clients in New York,ā and, (3) ā[m]ost importantly,ā the defendant āwas incorporated in New York at the time of the execution of theā agreement. Id. at *5. Based on the reasoning of this case and similar precedents, the District Court here found Defendantās Texas connections signiļ¬cant enough to require the application of Texas law. See Adler, 2023 WL 7490006, at *5. ļæ½e District Court alternatively concluded that, even if New Jersey did have a materially greater interest, compelling arbitration would not conļ¬ict with a fundamental New Jersey policy. But the District Court evaluated only one potential New Jersey policy and not the three Plaintiļ¬s had oļ¬ered. ļæ½e District Court viewed the policy question as whether Plaintiļ¬s could āassert[] any [New Jersey] statutory claimsā in an arbitral forum. Adler, 2023 WL 7490006, at *6. Since they concededly could, the District Court reasoned arbitration was no obstacle to New Jerseyās fundamental policies. Id. ļæ½e District Court did not consider whether, as Plaintiļ¬s claimed, 26 New Jersey had expressed policies against arbitration itself in franchise or employment contracts. C. Partiesā Arguments on Appeal Plaintiļ¬s object to the District Courtās reasoning on both prongs. On the materially greater interest prong, Plaintiļ¬s argue the District Court āengaged in an unduly narrow analysis of the statesā respective interests by focusing solely on the partiesā contacts with New Jersey and Texas.ā Appellantsā Br. 28. In Plaintiļ¬sā view, the āpolicy reasons underlying the stateās conļ¬icting lawsā may count as an āinterest,ā thereby giving New Jersey a āmaterially greater interestā despite Defendantās presence in Texas. Id. at 37 (quoting Homa v. Am. Express Co., 558 F.3d 225, 232 (3d Cir. 2009), abrogated on other grounds by Concepcion, 563 U.S. 333). On the fundamental policy prong, Plaintiļ¬s fault the District Court for considering only whether Plaintiļ¬s could vindicate their substantive rights in an arbitral forum, rather than the three public policies Plaintiļ¬s had oļ¬ered. Defendant mostly does not disagree with Plaintiļ¬s on the law. In particular, Defendant does not challenge Plaintiļ¬ās assertion that a stateās policies may count as an āinterestā favoring application of that stateās law under the āmaterially greater interestā prong. ļæ½us, if, as Plaintiļ¬s say, New Jersey has a policy against arbitration clauses in contracts like the SDDA, Defendant has not claimed a court should ignore that policy in weighing New Jerseyās interests under the ļ¬rst prong. And Defendant also does not contest Plaintiļ¬sā characterization that the District Courtās opinion failed to mention the three policies Plaintiļ¬s had advocated. See Appelleeās Br. 20 (recounting the factors the District Court relied on). 27 Defendant urges, however, that the District Courtās reasoning should be upheld because the policy interests, even if relevant, are ānot enoughā to overcome the partiesā agreement to use Texas law. Appelleeās Br. 23 (quoting SKF USA Inc. v. Okkerse, 992 F. Supp. 2d 432, 441 (E.D. Pa. 2014)). ļæ½us, Defendant insists, because the District Court evaluated the myriad contacts with Defendantās Texas operations, its conclusion that New Jersey lacked a āmaterially greater interestā should be aļ¬rmed. Id. at 20. Defendant also endorses the District Courtās reasoning that arbitration would not conļ¬ict with a fundamental New Jersey policy because Plaintiļ¬s may still bring their state-law claims in an arbitral forum. D. New Jersey Contractual Choice-of-Law Rules Require Consideration of Both Policies and Geographic Ties We conclude the District Courtās omission of consideration of New Jerseyās alleged policies regarding arbitration undermines its conclusion as to both aspects of the choice-of-law analysis, and will oļ¬er guideposts for its consideration of these issues on remand. 1. āMaterially Greater Interestā We begin with the āmaterially greater interestā prong. To determine which state has a āmaterially greater interestā in the application of its law to the issue in question, New Jerseyās choice-of-law rules ask for more than counting contacts: they call for an examination into whether New Jersey has expressed a āpolicy interestā in enforcing the protections of its own law regarding an issue over a contrary agreement by the parties. See Instructional Sys., 614 A.2d at 134ā35. Instructional 28 Systems is illustrative of this approach. ļæ½e plaintiļ¬ there was a New Jersey-based distributor of a software system sold by the defendant, a California-based Delaware corporation, and their contract selected the law of California to govern their aļ¬airs. Id. at 126, 130. When the defendant sought to terminate the distributorship, a dispute arose as to whether the plaintiļ¬ could obtain the protection of New Jerseyās Franchise Practices Act despite the contractual selection of California law. Id. at 133. Applying the test from Restatement § 187(b) set out above, the New Jersey Supreme Court looked to the fact that āNew Jersey has a strong policy in favor of protecting its franchisees.ā Id. at 135. It also noted New Jerseyās āsigniļ¬cant ācontactsā with the transaction,ā including that the plaintiļ¬ was ālocatedā in New Jersey, its employees resided there, and it had made āfranchise-speciļ¬c investmentsā there such as its āassetsā and āthe goodwill developed for [the defendant] by New Jersey residents.ā Id. Looking more broadly, the Court observed that the āprotection [of the Franchise Practices Act] may not be waived.ā Id. at 134. Yet, if the choice-of-law clause were enforced, āany large franchisor . . . could with a stroke of a pen remove the beneļ¬cial eļ¬ect of the franchiseeās stateās remedial legislationā just by āinsert[ing] . . . a choice of law provision requiring the application of the franchisorās home stateās law.ā Id. at 134ā35 (quotation marks omitted). Based on these considerations (and while deeming it a āclose questionā), the Instructional Systems court declined to enforce the choice- of-law clause. Id. at 134. We followed a similar approach in Homa, 558 F.3d 225, abrogated on other grounds by Concepcion, 563 U.S. 333. ļæ½e question there was whether New Jersey would apply its policy against certain class-action waivers (which, at the time, was thought not to conļ¬ict with the FAA) despite the partiesā 29 selection of Utah law. Id. at 227. Following the test from Restatement § 187(b), we ā āidentif[ied] the governmental policies underlying the law of each state and how those policies [were] aļ¬ected by each stateās contacts to the litigation and to the partiesā so that we c[ould] determine which state ha[d] the greater interest in resolving the issue of the class-arbitration waiverās validity.ā Id. at 232 (nested quotation marks omitted) (quoting Gantes v. Kason Corp., 679 A.2d 106, 109 (N.J. 1996), abrogated by McCarrell v. Hoļ¬mann-La Roche, Inc., 153 A.3d 207 (N.J. 2017)). ļæ½e New Jersey policy in question existed to allow āconsumers[] . . . to eļ¬ectively pursue their statutory rights under New Jerseyās consumer protection laws,ā whereas the contrary Utah policy served to āhonor[] freedom- of-contract principles and . . . protect Utah banks from unwarranted class-action suits.ā Id. (alterations omitted). We then looked at the partiesā contacts with Utah and New Jersey. On the Utah side, the defendant was a Utah bank, but it was a āwholly owned subsidiary of . . . a New York corporationā and the plaintiļ¬ would mail his payments to Florida. Id. On the New Jersey side, the plaintiļ¬ resided there, his claims were based on New Jerseyās Consumer Fraud Act, and New Jersey had an āinterest in protecting its consumersā ability to enforce their rights underā that statute. Id. We found the last two contacts most signiļ¬cant, and thus āpredict[ed] that the Supreme Court of New Jersey would determine that New Jersey has a materially greater interest than Utah in the enforceability of a class-arbitration waiver that could operate to preclude a New Jersey consumer from relief under the [New Jersey Consumer Fraud Act].ā Id. at 232ā33. ļæ½us Homa, like Instructional Systems, considered the in-state contracting partiesā āability to enforce their rights underā New Jersey law to be an āinterestā weighing in favor of New Jersey having a āmaterially greater interest.ā Id. 30 Defendant contends that reliance on Homa is āmisplacedā because the New Jersey policy at issue thereāa restriction on certain class-action waivers in consumer contractsāwas later held preempted by the FAA in Concepcion, 563 U.S. 333. Appelleeās Br. at 24 n.9. But since we have determined the FAA does not apply in this case, preemption is not an issue. Lewis, 500 F.3d at 1152 (ā[W]hen the FAA applies to an arbitration agreement, the FAA preempts conļ¬icting state law . . . .ā (emphasis added)). We do recognize that Homa relied, in part, on Gantes, 679 A.2d 106, whose speciļ¬c holding (concerning statutes of limitations) has been overruled. See McCarrell, 153 A.3d at 210. However, we do not believe the overruling of Gantes aļ¬ects the continued validity of the approach taken in Homaāat least insofar as that approach requires consideration of New Jersey policy interests regarding the speciļ¬c issue presented in a contractual choice- of-law analysis. Homa looked to Gantes only to give content to the phrase āmaterially greater interest,ā which Restatement § 187(b) does not deļ¬ne, by analogy to New Jerseyās āgovernmental-interestā test as then articulated by Gantes. Homa, 558 F.3d at 232. While New Jersey no longer uses the governmental-interest test for choosing statutes of limitations, see McCarrell, 153 A.3d at 210, this change is unrelated to Homaās conclusion that a state policy preference counts as an āinterestā in deciding which state has a āmaterially greater interest.ā For these reasons, it was incorrect for the District Court to reject Plaintiļ¬sā āfocus[] on whether the partiesā contractually chosen law violates New Jerseyās public policyā regarding arbitration, Adler, 2023 WL 7490006, at *5, as that indeed should have been considered as part of the āmaterially greater interestā analysis. If Plaintiļ¬s were correct that the 31 SDDA was a franchise agreement and its arbitration provision violated a statute designed to āprotect[] [New Jersey] franchisees,ā an argument could follow that New Jersey would not allow contracting parties to remove those protections merely āby providing in their agreement that the laws of another state will govern.ā Instructional Sys., 614 A.2d at 135; cf. also Restatement § 187, cmt. g (ā[A] fundamental policy may be embodied in a statute which makes one or more kinds of contracts illegal or which is designed to protect a person against the oppressive use of superior bargaining power.ā). ļæ½at is not to say the outcome would necessarily be that New Jersey had the greater interest, see Instructional Sys., 614 A.2d at 134 (calling the question ācloseā), but it does show that narrowing the focus to the partiesā geographic ties, and not focusing on the nature of the speciļ¬c issue (i.e., arbitration), missed the real question: whether New Jersey courts would insist on subjecting an interstate contract to certain requirements of New Jersey law regarding arbitration designed for the protection of the in-state contracting parties despite an agreement to use a diļ¬erent stateās law, see id. at 135. As noted, Defendant does not disagree that New Jerseyās policies were relevant, instead merely contending they were ānot enoughā to tip the balance on the materially greater interest prong. Appellee Br. 23 (quoting SKF, 992 F. Supp. 2d at 441). Defendant quotes SKF for the proposition that ā[i]t is not enough to assert that [one state] has a greater interest simply because application of [the other stateās] law runs contrary to a fundamental . . . policy [of the ļ¬rst state].ā 992 F. Supp. 2d at 441. To the extent that statement simply means that the āmaterially greater interestā prong wonāt turn exclusively on the policy aspect, we do not disagree. See Restatement § 187, cmt. g (āļæ½e forum will not refrain from applying the 32 chosen law merely because this would lead to a diļ¬erent result than would be obtained under the local law of the state of the otherwise applicable law.ā). Certainly both the geographic ties and the statesā policies regarding the issue in question are important considerations, and it could be said that the stronger a litigantās ties to New Jersey, the more likely New Jersey is to extend the protection of its fundamental policies. See id. But the connection between New Jersey and the arbitration dispute here was not so remote as to obviate the need for an analysis into whether the partiesā contacts and the strength of New Jerseyās policies were such as to give New Jersey the āmaterially greater interestā in the arbitration issue. 2. āFundamental Policyā We also agree with Plaintiļ¬s that the District Court erred in its analysis of the āfundamental policyā prong of Restatement § 187(b), because the District Court disregarded the three New Jersey policies Plaintiļ¬s had oļ¬ered and considered only whether arbitration would āpreclude Plaintiļ¬s from asserting any statutory claims under New Jersey law.ā Adler, 2023 WL 7490006, at *6. If the question is whether enforcement of Texas law would āviolate New Jerseyās public policy,ā Instructional Sys., 614 A.2d at 133, the nature of the policy itself and its relative importance must be considered. And the New Jersey Supreme Court has held that a choice of forum will sometimes violate public policy even where that forum is capable of āfaithfully and fairly apply[ing]ā New Jersey law and āaļ¬ord[ing] identical reliefā to that available in a New Jersey court. Kubis, 680 A.2d at 628. ļæ½erefore, Plaintiļ¬sā alleged policies needed to be evaluated to determine whether they were correct statements of New Jersey law, whether they applied on the facts of this case (i.e., whether the SDDA was a franchise agreement, whether its arbitration 33 clause was unclear, etc.), and whether those policies were suļ¬ciently āfundamentalā to justify setting aside the partiesā selection of Texas law. See Restatement § 187, cmt. g. ā»ā»ā» For these reasons, the District Court erred in its reasoning on choice of law. While the issue presents a legal question that could potentially be decided on appeal, Thabault v. Chait, 541 F.3d 512, 535 (3d Cir. 2008), we think the better course is to remand for the District Court to reconsider its analysis in light of our discussion. We will therefore vacate the District Courtās order and remand for it to complete the choice- of-law analysis under the framework discussed above. VII. We brieļ¬y address two remaining issues Plaintiļ¬s raise on appeal: (1) whether the District Court erred in its sua sponte reading of a ādelegation clauseā in the contract; and (2) whether the individual, non-signatory Plaintiļ¬s are bound to arbitrate. A. Delegation Clause When Defendant moved to compel arbitration, it asserted that all of Plaintiļ¬sā claims were within the scope of the arbitration provision. Plaintiļ¬s responded that their statutory claims were outside the scope of the provision because they did not relate to the SDDA. But the District Court did not decide that issue. Instead, it pointed to a provision it interpreted as a ādelegation clause,ā which would āhave the arbitrator decide whether a given claim must be arbitrated.ā Adler, 2023 WL 7490006, at *8. So it did not rule on whether 34 Plaintiļ¬sā statutory claims were within the scope of the arbitration provision. Plaintiļ¬s argue that by ābrief[ing] the merits of [Plaintiļ¬sā] challenge to the enforceability of the arbitration provision and ask[ing] the court to enforce the agreement over that challenge,ā Defendant āwaived any right it had under the SDDA to have enforceability issues decided by an arbitrator.ā Appellantsā Br. 47ā48. We disagree. Plaintiļ¬s do not challenge the correctness of the District Courtās reading of the SDDA, but assert that somehow Defendantās failure to raise the delegation clause constitutes waiver of the provision. While a party can waive a contractual right to arbitrate, White v. Samsung Elecs. Am., Inc., 61 F.4th 334, 340 (3d Cir. 2023), this rule does not speak to the propriety of a courtās interpreting contractual language for itself. Instead, the āwaiverā cases Plaintiļ¬s rely on involved, at most, litigants changing positions: ļ¬rst asking a court to decide an issue, then reversing course and demanding to arbitrate. Morgan v. Sundance, Inc., 596 U.S. 411, 415 (2022); United States ex rel Dorsa v. Miraca Life Scis., Inc., 33 F.4th 352, 357 (6th Cir. 2022); Bodine v. Cookās Pest Control Inc., 830 F.3d 1320, 1325 (11th Cir. 2016); In re Checking Acct. Overdraft Litig., 754 F.3d 1290, 1295 (11th Cir. 2014). ļæ½ey are of limited value here. Courts are permitted to disagree with litigants on matters of law, In re Mintze, 434 F.3d 222, 228 (3d Cir. 2006), which, in Texas, would include the interpretation of unambiguous contracts, Coker v. Coker, 650 S.W.2d 391, 393 (Tex. 1983). We see no reason to depart from that practice in a courtās consideration of a delegation clause in an arbitration agreement. 35 It is true courts should normally respect āthe principle of party presentationā by declining to āconsider . . . on [their] own initiativeā defenses not raised by the parties, Wood v. Milyard, 566 U.S. 463, 472 (2012), instead conļ¬ning their analysis to āonly those issues argued by interested and motivated litigants,ā Dowdell, 70 F.4th at 145. But that principle is not āabsolute,ā Wood, 566 U.S. at 473, and we do not believe it was violated here. ļæ½e District Court was presented with contractual language and asked to interpret it, which led it to the conclusion that an arbitrator was to decide matters of arbitrability. We ļ¬nd no abuse of discretion. 5 B. Estoppel Finally, the individual Plaintiļ¬s (Charles and Grant Adler) point out that they did not sign the contract and thus never agreed to arbitrate. ļæ½ese Plaintiļ¬s object to the District Courtās determination that they were bound under an estoppel theory. 6 5 We note Defendantās brief does not oļ¬er much in the way of support for the District Courtās exercise of discretion. Nevertheless, it is Plaintiļ¬s, as the parties seeking reversal, who must persuade us there was an abuse of that discretion, and Plaintiļ¬s have not done so. See Hart v. Elec. Arts, Inc., 717 F.3d 141, 148 (3d Cir. 2013) (āTo demonstrate an abuse of discretion, an appellant must show that the District Courtās decision was arbitrary, fanciful or clearly unreasonable.ā (alterations omitted)). 6 Before the District Court, Plaintiļ¬s oļ¬ered only a cursory opposition to Defendantās estoppel argument. However, the District Court addressed estoppel on the merits, and, on appeal, 36 Normally, arbitration under Texas law is a matter of consent: no agreement to arbitrate, no arbitration. Aerotek, Inc. v. Boyd, 624 S.W.3d 199, 204 (Tex. 2021). 7 But āunder certain circumstances, principles of contract law and agency may bind a non-signatory to an arbitration agreement.ā In re Kellogg Brown & Root, Inc., 166 S.W.3d 732, 738 (Tex. 2005). ļæ½us āa non-signatory plaintiļ¬ seeking the beneļ¬ts of a contract is estopped from simultaneously attempting to avoid the contractās burdens, such as the obligation to arbitrate disputes.ā Id. at 739. ļæ½at can happen if the non-signatory plaintiļ¬ās āclaims are ābased on a contractā containing an agreement to arbitrate.ā Id. at 740. āFor example, if a non-signatoryās breach-of-warranty and breach-of-contract claims are based on certain terms of a written contract, then the non-signatory cannot avoid an arbitration provision within that contract.ā Id. Defendant does not contend Plaintiļ¬s forfeited the issue (except as to Plaintiļ¬sā reliance on Morgan v. Sundance, Inc., 596 U.S. 411 (2022)). Accordingly, we will address estoppel on the merits as well. 7 ļæ½e District Court applied Texas law to decide whether the individual Plaintiļ¬s were bound to the contract. While there was a possible circularity to this reasoning (since presumably, if the individual Plaintiļ¬s were not bound to the contract, they were also not bound to its choice-of-law clause), we need not decide whether it was correct, since Plaintiļ¬s never argued for application of a diļ¬erent stateās estoppel law. We also do not address whether, on remand, a revised choice-of-law analysis might aļ¬ect the estoppel issue as well. See Erny v. Est. of Merola, 792 A.2d 1208, 1213 (N.J. 2002) (āOrdinarily, choice- of-law determinations are made on an issue-by-issue basis, with each issue receiving separate analysis.ā). 37 at 739. A non-signatory may also be bound if it āconsistently and knowingly insist[ed] that others treat it as a party to the contract during the life of the contract.ā ENGlobal U.S., Inc. v. Gatlin, 449 S.W.3d 269, 275 (Tex. Ct. App. 2014). 8 However, we do not believe the District Courtās analysis was adequate to justify binding the individual Plaintiļ¬s to a contract they did not sign. Its reasoning consisted mainly of noting the prominence of the SDDA in Plaintiļ¬sā allegations regarding their work for Defendant. See Adler, 2023 WL 7490006, at *8. But āa non-signatory plaintiļ¬ cannot be compelled to arbitrate on the sole ground that, but for the contract containing the arbitration provision, it would have no basis to sue.ā Kellogg, 166 S.W.3d at 740. In Kellogg, for example, a second-tier subcontractor was not bound by an arbitration clause in the ļ¬rst-tier subcontract, despite having been hired to supply parts for that contract, because it was not 8 We agree with Defendant that Morgan v. Sundance, Inc., 596 U.S. 411 (2022), did not undermine the foregoing articulation of Texas estoppel law, and in any event Plaintiļ¬s did not make that argument to the District Court and have therefore forfeited it. See Hickey v. Univ. of Pittsburgh, 77 F.4th 184, 191 n.5 (3d Cir. 2023) (arguments raised for the ļ¬rst time on appeal are forfeited). While Morgan clariļ¬ed the FAA is not a font of āspecial, arbitration-preferring procedural rules,ā 596 U.S. at 418, Texas courts had long recognized that āthe presumption [favoring arbitration] arises only after the party seeking to compel arbitration proves that a valid arbitration agreement exists,ā and thus refused to apply a pro-arbitration bent to their estoppel inquiry, Kellogg, 166 S.W.3d at 737. Accordingly, the authority cited by the District Court did not conļ¬ict with Morgan. 38 āseek[ing], through the claim, to derive a direct beneļ¬t from the contract containing the arbitration provision.ā Id. at 741. Here, the individual Plaintiļ¬sā claims were based on multiple theories, including federal and state labor laws and New Jerseyās Franchise Practices Act. ļæ½e District Court needed to consider not solely whether the individual Plaintiļ¬s performed work called for by the LLCās contract, but whether their claims ās[ought] the beneļ¬ts ofā it, id. at 739, as opposed to the beneļ¬ts of āobligations imposed by state law, including statutes, torts and other common law duties, or federal law,ā ENGlobal, 449 S.W.3d at 275. We also question the District Courtās conclusion that āthe individual Plaintiļ¬s acted as parties to the SDDAā merely by working for the LLC on business called for by the SDDA. See Adler, 2023 WL 7490006, at *8. Employees of a business are not necessarily parties to all of the businessās contracts. See SDDA § 7, Appx 084 (providing for the LLC to hire non-signatory employees). Moreover, Texas law contemplates a claim-by-claim estoppel determination rather than wholesale application to an entire lawsuit. See Kellog, 166 S.W.3d at 741 (analyzing separate claims separately). Some of Defendantās estoppel arguments were speciļ¬c to certain of Plaintiļ¬sā claims. For example, Defendant argued Plaintiļ¬sā Franchise Practices Act claim inherently sought the beneļ¬ts of the SDDA because a franchise must involve a āwritten arrangement.ā N.J. Stat. § 56:10-3. ļæ½at argument may not extend (or might apply diļ¬erently) to Plaintiļ¬sā labor law claims. Similarly, Defendantās argument that Plaintiļ¬sā claim for breach of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing was in reality a contract claim based on the SDDA would not extend to Plaintiļ¬sā claims asserting violations of statutes. 39 ļæ½e District Court also suggested that the estoppel inquiry could be delegated to an arbitrator because it ārelates to the partiesā agreement as a whole, not speciļ¬cally to the partiesā agreement to arbitrate.ā Adler, 2023 WL 7490006, at *8. While that statement was harmless (as the District Court proceeded to conduct the analysis itself rather than delegate it), it was incorrect. If the individual Plaintiļ¬s were not bound to the arbitration provision, they were necessarily not bound to its delegation clause. See Aerotek, 624 S.W.3d at 204 (arbitration is a matter of āconsentā); Coinbase, Inc. v. Suski, 602 U.S. 143, 151 (2024) (requiring a court to decide if a contract is in eļ¬ect before enforcing it). We will not perform the estoppel analysis on appeal since it may become moot if the outcome on choice-of-law results in there being no arbitration. On remand, the District Court should consider the estoppel analysis to the extent it is relevant. VIII. Accordingly, we will vacate the order compelling arbitration and remand for the District Court to complete the choice-of-law analysis under the correct framework, as well as evaluate, if necessary, whether the non-signatory Plaintiļ¬s are bound to the contract. 40
Case Information
- Court
- 3rd Cir.
- Decision Date
- April 16, 2025
- Status
- Precedential