Harrisburg, PA and Pittsburgh, PA
The Legal Intelligencer
(by Casey Alan Coyle and Ryan McCann)
Lee Corso was a fixture in college football for over 60 years, first as a coach and then as an analyst on ESPN’s College GameDay program. Coach Corso is known to many casual sports fans for his headgear segment, where he would put on the head of the mascot of the team he picked to win the signature game of the week—a feat he accomplished 431 times throughout his illustrious broadcasting career. But for diehard College GameDay fans, Coach Corso is synonymous with his catchphrase “Not so fast, my friend!,” which he often employed (with glee) when disagreeing with a pick from another analyst. While the college football season does not kick off for another six months, Coach Corso’s catchphrase is apropos because the reprieve from the heightened standard to enforce online arbitration agreements in Pennsylvania may be short lived.
Chilutti v. Uber
The story begins in 2016, when a woman registered for an Uber rider account. As part of the registration process, the woman agreed to Uber’s hyperlinked terms and conditions, which, in turn, contained an arbitration agreement. Such agreements are commonly referred to as “browsewrap” agreements. In contrast, “clickwrap” agreements are where a website presents users with specified contractual terms on a pop-up screen and users must check a box explicitly stating “I agree” in order to proceed. Three years later, the woman was injured while riding in an Uber. She and her husband subsequently filed a negligence suit against the company and its subsidiaries. The defendants filed a petition to compel arbitration, arguing that the terms and conditions of Uber’s app required the couple to arbitrate their claims. …