Olson v. Fca US, LLC
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
Date FiledMay 21, 2026
Docket24-6527
StatusPublished
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Full Opinion
FOR PUBLICATION
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
JEFFREY OLSON, No. 24-6527
D.C. No.
Plaintiff - Appellee,
2:18-cv-00360-
DJC-JDP
v.
ORDER AND
FCA US, LLC, a Delaware
AMENDED
Corporation, formerly known as
OPINION
Chrysler Group LLC,
Defendant - Appellant.
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Eastern District of California
Daniel J. Calabretta, District Court, Presiding
Argued and Submitted November 21, 2025
San Jose, California
Filed April 7, 2026
Amended May 21, 2026
Before: Mary M. Schroeder and Michelle T. Friedland,
Circuit Judges, and Karen E. Schreier, District Judge. *
*
The Honorable Karen E. Schreier, United States District Judge for the
District of South Dakota, sitting by designation.
2 OLSON V. FCA US, LLC
Order;
Opinion by Judge Friedland
SUMMARY **
Arbitration
The panel affirmed the district court’s denial of
automobile manufacturer FCA US, LLC’s motion to compel
arbitration.
Jeffrey Olson entered a contract with a car dealership to
lease a Jeep Grand Cherokee. The lease agreement
contained an arbitration agreement with a delegation clause,
which stated that questions about the scope of the arbitration
agreement must be decided in arbitration. FCA was not a
signatory to the lease agreement.
Olson was the named plaintiff in a federal class-action
lawsuit against FCA, the Jeep’s manufacturer, alleging
defects in the headrest. FCA argued that because the
arbitration agreement in Olson’s lease agreement with the
dealership contained a delegation clause, the district court
had no authority to decide whether FCA could enforce the
arbitration agreement and instead had to send that question
to arbitration.
The panel held that FCA cannot compel Olson to
arbitrate. With limited exceptions, non-parties to an
arbitration agreement cannot enforce the agreement’s terms
**
This summary constitutes no part of the opinion of the court. It has
been prepared by court staff for the convenience of the reader.
OLSON V. FCA US, LLC 3
against a signatory. Olson never agreed to arbitrate with
FCA, and no exceptions to the general rule that only parties
to an arbitration agreement can enforce it apply here.
The panel rejected FCA’s argument that, even if it cannot
enforce the delegation clause in Olson’s arbitration
agreement, the court should compel Olson to arbitrate his
dispute with FCA. First, the plain language of the agreement
does not require Olson to arbitrate any claims with
FCA. Second, under California law, FCA cannot use
equitable estoppel to enforce the arbitration agreement in
Olson’s lease.
COUNSEL
Mark P. Chalos (argued), Kenneth S. Byrd, Christopher E.
Coleman, and Amelia A. Haselkorn, Lieff Cabraser
Heimann & Bernstein LLP, Nashville, Tennessee; Stuart C.
Talley and Ian J. Barlow, Kershaw Talley Barlow PC,
Sacramento, California; for Plaintiff-Appellee.
Brandon L. Boxler (argued), Klein Thomas Lee & Fresard,
Richmond, Virginia; Fred J. Fresard, Klein Thomas Lee &
Fresard, Troy, Michigan; for Defendant-Appellant.
4 OLSON V. FCA US, LLC
ORDER
The opinion filed on April 7, 2026, is amended as
follows:
The first sentence on page 10, paragraph two, is amended
to read: Henry Schein involved a dispute between a dental
equipment distributor, Archer and White, and two
companies, Henry Schein and a successor in interest to a
dental equipment manufacturer, referred to collectively by
the Supreme Court as “Schein.”
The final sentence on page 11, paragraph two, and its
accompanying footnote are amended to read: The Supreme
Court treated as undisputed that the two companies referred
to as “Schein” were effectively parties to the contract1 and
instructed that “[w]hen the parties’ contract delegates the
arbitrability question to an arbitrator, . . . a court possesses
no power to decide the arbitrability issue . . . even if the court
thinks that the argument that the arbitration agreement
applies to a particular dispute is wholly groundless.”
1
Although neither Henry Schein nor the
successor in interest was an original
signatory to the contract containing the
arbitration agreement at issue in the case, the
Supreme Court treated them as equivalent to
a party to the contract. See Henry Schein, 586
U.S. at 66 (“The relevant contract between
the parties provided:¶ ‘Disputes. . . . Any
dispute arising under or related to this
Agreement (except for actions seeking
injunctive relief and disputes related to
trademarks, trade secrets, or other intellectual
OLSON V. FCA US, LLC 5
property of [Schein]), shall be resolved by
binding arbitration.’” (alteration inserting
“[Schein]” in original)). But that does not
mean we must do the same with FCA here.
The Supreme Court decided only one discrete
issue in Henry Schein and then remanded for
the Fifth Circuit to address any “other
arguments that Archer and White has
properly preserved,” id. at 72, one of which
was whether the third-party non-signatories
could invoke the arbitration clause at all, see
Archer & White Sales, Inc. v. Henry Schein,
Inc., 935 F.3d 274, 284 (5th Cir. 2019)
(treating as preserved but declining to
address “Archer’s alternative argument that
third parties to the arbitration clause cannot
enforce such an arbitration clause”).
The third sentence in the paragraph that begins on page
11 and continues to page 12 is amended to read: Again, in
Henry Schein, it was treated as undisputed that the
companies collectively referred to as “Schein” were
effectively parties to the arbitration agreement containing
the delegation clause.
With those amendments, the panel unanimously votes to
deny the petition for panel rehearing. Judge Friedland has
voted to deny the petition for rehearing en banc. Judges
Schroeder and Schreier recommend denial of the petition for
rehearing en banc. The full court has been advised of the
petition for rehearing en banc, and no judge has requested a
vote on whether to rehear the matter en banc. Fed. R. App.
P. 40.
6 OLSON V. FCA US, LLC
The petitions for rehearing and rehearing en banc are
DENIED. No further petitions may be filed.
OPINION
FRIEDLAND, Circuit Judge:
In this case, an automobile manufacturer seeks to enforce
a “delegation clause” in an arbitration agreement appearing
in a contract to which the manufacturer was not a signatory.
Plaintiff-Appellee Jeffrey Olson entered a contract with
a car dealership to lease a Jeep Grand Cherokee. An
arbitration agreement within the contract contained a
delegation clause, which stated that questions about the
scope of the arbitration agreement must be decided in
arbitration. Olson later became the named plaintiff in a
federal class-action lawsuit against the Jeep’s manufacturer,
FCA US, LLC (“FCA”), alleging defects in the headrest.
FCA was not a party to the lease agreement, but it
nevertheless relied on that agreement in filing a motion to
compel arbitration. FCA argued that because the lease
agreement contained a delegation clause, the district court
had no authority to decide whether FCA could enforce the
arbitration agreement and instead had to send that question
to arbitration. The district court rejected that argument and
denied FCA’s motion to compel arbitration. We affirm.
I.
In 2018, Shawn Alger filed a putative class-action
lawsuit in the United States District Court for the Eastern
District of California against FCA. On behalf of himself and
other individuals who owned or leased certain vehicles that
OLSON V. FCA US, LLC 7
FCA had manufactured, Alger asserted warranty and
consumer protection claims under California law, based on
alleged defects in the headrests of those vehicles.
Specifically, Alger alleged that certain FCA-manufactured
vehicles with spring-loaded headrests designed to deploy
during collisions have manufacturing defects that cause the
headrests to deploy unexpectedly, potentially harming or
distracting drivers. The district court certified the class. A
few years later, the district court granted Plaintiffs’ motion
to substitute class member Jeffrey Olson as named Plaintiff.
Olson had signed an agreement with a car dealership,
Autonation Chrysler Dodge Jeep (“the dealership”), when he
leased the allegedly defective Jeep that served as the basis
for his claims. Olson’s lease agreement includes an
arbitration agreement. In relevant part, the arbitration
agreement states:
By agreeing to this Arbitration Agreement
you are giving up your right to go to court for
claims and disputes arising from this Lease if
you or we choose to arbitrate.
• You or we may choose to have any
dispute between us decided by
arbitration, and not by a court or by
jury trial.
....
At your or our election, any claim or dispute
in contract, tort, statute, or otherwise between
you and us or our employees, agents,
successors or assigns that arises out of, or
relates to your credit application, this Lease
or any related transaction or relationship is to
be decided by neutral, binding arbitration.
8 OLSON V. FCA US, LLC
Also, to the extent allowed by law, the
validity, scope, and interpretation of this
Arbitration Agreement is to be decided
by neutral, binding arbitration.
If you or we choose to arbitrate a claim or
dispute, you and we agree that no trial by jury
or other judicial proceedings take place.
The lease agreement defines the terms “you” and “your”
as the lessee who signs the lease (Olson), and the terms “we,”
“our,” and “us” as the lessor who signs the lease (the
dealership) and its successors and assigns. FCA does not
claim to be an employee, agent, successor, or assign of the
dealership within the meaning of the agreement.
FCA moved to compel Olson to arbitration. FCA argued
that the delegation clause in the lease’s arbitration
agreement—i.e., the clause stating “to the extent allowed by
law, the validity, scope and interpretation of this Arbitration
Agreement is to be decided by neutral, binding
arbitration”—required an arbitrator to decide whether
Olson’s claims against FCA are arbitrable. In the
alternative, FCA argued that the court should itself interpret
the arbitration agreement to mean that Olson’s claims
against FCA must be decided in arbitration.
The district court denied FCA’s motion to compel
arbitration, and FCA appealed.
II.
“We review de novo the district court’s denial of a
motion to compel arbitration.” Hill v. Xerox Bus. Servs.,
LLC, 59 F.4th 457, 468 (9th Cir. 2023) (citation modified).
OLSON V. FCA US, LLC 9
III.
Arbitration is a matter of contract. “Generally, the
contractual right to compel arbitration ‘may not be invoked
by one who is not a party to the agreement and does not
otherwise possess the right to compel arbitration.’” Kramer
v. Toyota Motor Corp., 705 F.3d 1122, 1126 (9th Cir. 2013)
(quoting Britton v. Co-op Banking Grp., 4 F.3d 742, 744
(9th Cir. 1993)). But a litigant who is not a party to a
contract containing an arbitration agreement may compel
arbitration under that agreement if contract law in the
relevant jurisdiction would allow the litigant to enforce the
contract. Id. at 1128 (citing Arthur Andersen LLP v.
Carlisle, 556 U.S. 624, 632 (2009)).
A delegation clause is effectively a second arbitration
agreement in which the parties agree to arbitrate threshold
issues concerning the interpretation or scope of a primary
arbitration agreement. Rent-A-Center, W., Inc. v. Jackson,
561 U.S. 63, 68 (2010). “[T]he question ‘who has the . . .
power to decide arbitrability’ turns upon what the parties
agreed about that matter.” Kramer, 705 F.3d at 1128
(quoting First Options of Chicago, Inc. v. Kaplan, 514 U.S.
938, 943 (1995)). “Courts should not assume that the parties
agreed to arbitrate arbitrability unless there is clear and
unmistakable evidence that they did so.” First Options, 514
U.S. at 944 (citation modified). Where it is clear that the
parties have agreed to delegate questions of arbitrability to
an arbitrator, the Federal Arbitration Act requires federal
courts to enforce that delegation. Rent-A-Center, W., Inc.,
561 U.S. at 70.
Olson argues that the contractual language in the
arbitration agreement “expressly limits the power to invoke
the arbitration agreement to Mr. Olson and the dealership
10 OLSON V. FCA US, LLC
and to no one else,” so when he signed the arbitration
agreement with the dealership, Olson did not also agree to
arbitrate with FCA. For that reason, he argues, FCA cannot
force him to arbitrate anything with it under the agreement,
including the question of arbitrability. FCA responds that
because the arbitration agreement contains a delegation
clause that delegates the resolution of questions about the
agreement’s scope to an arbitrator, a court cannot decide
who can enforce the agreement and instead must send that
question to arbitration.
We agree with Olson that FCA may not compel him to
arbitrate. With limited exceptions, non-parties to an
arbitration agreement cannot enforce the agreement’s terms
against a signatory. Olson never agreed to arbitrate with
FCA, and no exceptions to the general rule that only parties
to an arbitration agreement can enforce it apply here.
A.
The dispute here is similar to that in Kramer v. Toyota
Motor Corp., 705 F.3d 1122 (9th Cir. 2013). In Kramer,
Toyota faced a class-action lawsuit from car owners and
lessees who alleged defects in braking systems that Toyota
had manufactured. Id. at 1124. The plaintiffs had signed
arbitration agreements with automobile dealerships, and
those agreements contained delegation clauses. Id. at 1124-
25. Toyota argued that, because the arbitration agreements
between the plaintiffs and the dealerships contained
delegation clauses, an arbitrator should decide whether a
nonsignatory to the arbitration agreement (such as Toyota)
could compel the plaintiffs to arbitrate their claims. Id. at
1127.
We examined the language of the arbitration agreements,
observing that, although the plaintiffs had agreed to
OLSON V. FCA US, LLC 11
delegation clauses that would send questions about
arbitrability of disputes with the dealerships to arbitration,
“the terms of the arbitration clauses [we]re expressly limited
to Plaintiffs and the Dealerships.” Id. We held that the
agreements therefore did not contain “clear and
unmistakable evidence” that the plaintiffs agreed to arbitrate
arbitrability with third parties such as Toyota. Id. We
accordingly concluded that it was the courts (and not an
arbitrator) that had the authority to decide whether the
dispute over alleged defects in the cars’ braking systems was
arbitrable. Id.
The terms in Olson’s arbitration agreement likewise
expressly limit the agreement to him and the dealership (and
its employees, agents, successors, or assigns, none of which
FCA claims to be). The agreement reads:
• You or we may choose to have any
dispute between us decided by
arbitration, and not by a court or by
jury trial.
....
At your or our election, any claim or dispute
in contract, tort, statute, or otherwise between
you and us or our employees, agents,
successors or assigns . . . is to be decided by
neutral, binding arbitration. Also, to the
extent allowed by law, the validity, scope,
and interpretation of this Arbitration
Agreement is to be decided by neutral,
binding arbitration.
Under Kramer, Olson’s arbitration agreement lacks “clear
and unmistakable evidence” that Olson agreed to arbitrate
12 OLSON V. FCA US, LLC
arbitrability with a third party such as FCA. 705 F.3d at
1127. Rather, the best reading of the agreement is that it
delegates to an arbitrator threshold issues regarding the
arbitrability of disputes between Olson and the dealership, if
either Olson or the dealership chooses to invoke arbitration.
Nothing in the text of the arbitration agreement hints that
third parties can enforce it.
FCA argues, however, that the Supreme Court’s decision
in Henry Schein, Inc. v. Archer & White Sales, Inc., 586 U.S.
63 (2019), has effectively overruled Kramer. According to
FCA, Henry Schein instructs that if a court concludes that a
party has entered into any valid arbitration agreement that
contains a delegation clause, the court must send all
questions about the scope of that agreement to an arbitrator,
regardless of the identity of the party invoking the delegation
clause. FCA misreads Henry Schein.
Henry Schein involved a dispute between a dental
equipment distributor, Archer and White, and two
companies, Henry Schein and a successor in interest to a
dental equipment manufacturer, referred to collectively by
the Supreme Court as “Schein.” Id. at 65-66. The equipment
manufacturer had entered into a contract with Archer and
White containing an arbitration clause that, by adopting the
arbitration rules of the American Arbitration Association,
incorporated a delegation provision. Id. The arbitration
clause specified, however, that actions seeking injunctive
relief were not subject to arbitration. Id. at 66. Archer and
White sued Schein, alleging violations of federal and state
antitrust law and seeking damages and injunctive relief. Id.
Schein moved to compel arbitration, but Archer and White
objected, arguing that the arbitration agreement barred
arbitration of disputes seeking injunctive relief, even if such
disputes also sought damages. Id. Schein responded that the
OLSON V. FCA US, LLC 13
delegation provision in the arbitration agreement meant that
an arbitrator, and not the court, had to decide whether the
arbitration agreement applied to the lawsuit. Id. The
question in the case was: who decides whether the antitrust
dispute is subject to arbitration, the arbitrator or the courts?
Id.
Some circuits had recognized an exception to the general
rule that delegation clauses must be enforced, allowing a
court to resolve arbitrability questions itself when the court
determined that the defendant’s argument for arbitration was
wholly groundless. Invoking that exception, the district
court in Henry Schein held that it could resolve the
arbitrability question, despite the delegation clause, because
Schein’s argument for arbitration was wholly groundless.
Id. at 67. The Fifth Circuit affirmed. Id. The Supreme Court
reversed, holding that the “wholly groundless” exception
was inconsistent with the Federal Arbitration Act and with
Supreme Court precedent. Id. at 68. The Supreme Court
treated as undisputed that the two companies referred to as
“Schein” were effectively parties to the contract 1 and
1
Although neither Henry Schein nor the successor in interest was an
original signatory to the contract containing the arbitration agreement at
issue in the case, the Supreme Court treated them as equivalent to a party
to the contract. See Henry Schein, 586 U.S. at 66 (“The relevant contract
between the parties provided:¶ ‘Disputes. . . . Any dispute arising under
or related to this Agreement (except for actions seeking injunctive relief
and disputes related to trademarks, trade secrets, or other intellectual
property of [Schein]), shall be resolved by binding arbitration.’”
(alteration inserting “[Schein]” in original)). But that does not mean we
must do the same with FCA here. The Supreme Court decided only one
discrete issue in Henry Schein and then remanded for the Fifth Circuit to
address any “other arguments that Archer and White has properly
preserved,” id. at 72, one of which was whether the third-party non-
signatories could invoke the arbitration clause at all, see Archer & White
14 OLSON V. FCA US, LLC
instructed that “[w]hen the parties’ contract delegates the
arbitrability question to an arbitrator, . . . a court possesses
no power to decide the arbitrability issue . . . even if the court
thinks that the argument that the arbitration agreement
applies to a particular dispute is wholly groundless.” Id.
In FCA’s view, “Henry Schein teaches that [if a valid
delegation clause exists] the analysis stops, the court has no
power to proceed, and the court must send [the question of
arbitrability] to arbitration.” But contrary to FCA’s
argument, Henry Schein does not create an exception to the
general rule that only the parties to an arbitration agreement
can enforce it. Again, in Henry Schein, it was treated as
undisputed that the companies collectively referred to as
“Schein” were effectively parties to the arbitration
agreement containing the delegation clause. Because the
Court in Henry Schein was not asked to consider whether a
delegation clause requires delegating the arbitrability
question to an arbitrator when there is not a valid arbitration
agreement between the party moving to compel arbitration
and the party it is seeking to compel to arbitrate, Henry
Schein does not abrogate Kramer.
Concluding otherwise would lead to absurd results.
FCA’s reading of Henry Schein would mean that delegation
clauses could be enforced even by third parties who have no
connection whatsoever to the underlying arbitration
agreement. For example, FCA’s argument suggests that
FCA could locate an arbitration agreement with a delegation
clause that Olson entered with his cell phone provider, use
Sales, Inc. v. Henry Schein, Inc., 935 F.3d 274, 284 (5th Cir. 2019)
(treating as preserved but declining to address “Archer’s alternative
argument that third parties to the arbitration clause cannot enforce such
an arbitration clause”).
OLSON V. FCA US, LLC 15
that agreement to move to compel arbitration of the present
automobile dispute, and thereby force a court to send the
case to an arbitrator to let the arbitrator decide whether the
cell phone arbitration agreement covered the automobile
dispute. That cannot be right. FCA’s theory would force
plaintiffs to arbitrate the arbitrability of their claims against
a theoretically limitless universe of defendants with whom
they have never agreed to arbitrate, which would undermine
the “fundamental principle that arbitration is a matter of
contract,” Rent-A-Center, 561 U.S. at 67, and the “first
principle” that “[a]rbitration is strictly a matter of consent,”
Coinbase, Inc. v. Suski, 602 U.S. 143, 148 (2024) (alteration
in original) (quoting Lamps Plus, Inc. v. Varela, 587 U.S.
176, 184 (2019)). 2
2
FCA contends that our sister circuits have concluded otherwise. But
none of the cases FCA relies on support that proposition. Several of the
cases are distinguishable because the third-party nonsignatories to the
arbitration agreements, who were seeking to enforce delegation clauses,
were either successors or assignees of a signatory to the arbitration
agreements. See Apollo Comput., Inc. v. Berg, 886 F.2d 469, 470
(1st Cir. 1989) (involving a nonsignatory that was assigned the rights of
the signatory under the contract that contained the arbitration
agreement); Contec Corp. v. Remote Sol., Co. Ltd., 398 F.3d 205, 207
(2d Cir. 2005) (involving a nonsignatory that was effectively the
successor organization to the signatory as the result of corporate
reorganization); Eckert/Wordell Architects, Inc. v. FJM Props. of
Willmar, LLC, 756 F.3d 1098, 1099 (8th Cir. 2014) (involving a
nonsignatory that was effectively an assignee of the original signatory).
The remainder of the cases FCA cites either do not actually address the
question of third parties’ enforcement of delegation clauses or apply
waiver or forfeiture doctrines to allow enforcement of delegation
clauses. See Blanton v. Domino’s Pizza Franchising LLC, 962 F.3d 842,
845 n.1 (6th Cir. 2020) (noting that the question whether a nonsignatory
could enforce a delegation clause was not before the court); Swiger v.
Rosette, 989 F.3d 501, 506 (6th Cir. 2021) (noting that the plaintiff failed
16 OLSON V. FCA US, LLC
B.
FCA argues that, even if it cannot enforce the delegation
clause in Olson’s arbitration agreement, we should compel
Olson to arbitrate his dispute with FCA. FCA offers two
alternative reasons: (1) under the plain language of the
arbitration agreement between Olson and the dealership,
FCA can compel arbitration of Olson’s claims; or (2) FCA
can use equitable estoppel to compel Olson to arbitration.
Both theories fail. 3
1.
FCA argues that the plain language of the arbitration
agreement covers Olson’s claims about the alleged headrest
defect. FCA points to language in the arbitration agreement
stating that it “covers ‘any’ claim related to ‘any related
transaction or relationship.’” FCA argues that because
Olson obtained the vehicle through the lease agreement
containing the arbitration agreement, his claims about the
vehicle necessarily are “related” to a transaction or
relationship covered by the lease agreement. That argument
ignores the rest of the text of the agreement, which limits its
application to claims or disputes between “you” (i.e., Olson)
and “us or our employees, agents, successors or assigns”
(i.e., the dealership and its employees, agents, successors, or
to specifically challenge the nonsignatory defendant’s power to enforce
the delegation clause); Becker v. Delek US Energy, Inc., 39 F.4th 351,
355-56 (6th Cir. 2022) (noting that the plaintiff failed to challenge the
enforcement of the delegation clause with enough specificity).
3
Before the district court, FCA also argued that it could enforce the
arbitration agreement as a third-party beneficiary to the lease agreement,
but the district court disagreed. FCA did not renew that argument in its
opening brief on appeal, so we consider it forfeited. Orr v. Plumb, 884
F.3d 923, 932 (9th Cir. 2018).
OLSON V. FCA US, LLC 17
assigns). Again, FCA does not claim to be an employee,
agent, successor, or assign of the dealership. The plain
language of the agreement therefore does not require Olson
to arbitrate any claims with FCA.
2.
Equitable estoppel prevents a person from enforcing
only the parts of a contract that are beneficial to him while
disclaiming the less desirable parts of that contract. Kramer,
705 F.3d at 1128. FCA argues that Olson would not have
any claims against it “but for the lease contract that contains
the arbitration agreement,” so FCA can use equitable
estoppel to compel Olson to arbitrate his claims.
Because the parties agree that California law governs the
lease agreement, we look to California law to determine
whether FCA can use equitable estoppel to compel Olson to
arbitrate. See id. (noting that we generally look to state
contract law to determine whether third parties can enforce
arbitration agreements). In Ford Motor Warranty Cases, 17
Cal. 5th 1122 (2025), the California Supreme Court clarified
the governing California law framework for determining
when a third party can use equitable estoppel to compel
arbitration under an agreement to which it was not a
signatory. Under that framework, FCA’s equitable estoppel
argument plainly fails.
In Ford Motor Warranty Cases, the plaintiffs brought
product defect claims against Ford, alleging that Ford had
violated its own express and implied warranties and engaged
in fraudulent concealment in its manufacture of certain
vehicles. Id. at 1125-26. Much like FCA in this case, Ford
sought to compel the plaintiffs to arbitrate their claims by
invoking arbitration clauses in sales contracts that the
plaintiffs had signed with third-party automobile
18 OLSON V. FCA US, LLC
dealerships. Id. at 1126. Ford argued that because all
warranties derive from the sale of goods, the plaintiffs’
warranty claims were necessarily intertwined with the sales
contracts the plaintiffs had signed with dealerships, and that
by bringing warranty claims, the plaintiffs were trying to
enforce beneficial terms of the sales contracts. Id. at 1126,
1133. Ford argued that equitable estoppel therefore allowed
it to compel the plaintiffs to arbitrate under the arbitration
clauses in those sales contracts. Id. at 1130.
The California Supreme Court rejected Ford’s argument,
holding that Ford, as a third party, could not enforce the
contracts’ arbitration clause. 4 The court first recognized the
general rule that only parties to a contract can enforce the
contract’s terms, and that Ford was not a party to the sales
contracts. It also observed that the arbitration agreement did
not by its own terms authorize third parties to enforce it. Id.
at 1128-30. The court then acknowledged that third parties
can, in limited circumstances, use equitable estoppel to
compel a plaintiff to arbitrate where “a plaintiff sues a third
party to assert a claim that is ‘intimately founded in and
intertwined with’ a contractual provision” in a contract
including an arbitration clause. Id. at 1126 (quoting
Metalclad Corp. v. Ventana Env’t Org.’l P’ship, 1
Cal. Rptr. 3d 328, 337 (Ct. App. 2003)); see also id. at 1131.
The court explained, however, that the plaintiffs’ warranty
claims arose under the Song-Beverly Consumer Warranty
4
In Ford Motor Warranty Cases, the arbitration clause read: “[a]ny
claim or dispute . . . which arises out of or relates to your credit
application, purchase, or condition of this vehicle, this contract or any
resulting transaction or relationship (including any such relationship
with third parties who did not sign this contract) shall, at your or our
election, be resolved by neutral, binding arbitration.” 17 Cal. 5th 1122,
1127 (2025) (first alteration in original).
OLSON V. FCA US, LLC 19
Act and other statutes “separate and apart from the [sales]
contracts,” id. at 1133 (quoting Yeh v. Superior Court, 313
Cal. Rptr. 3d 288, 295 (Ct. App. 2023)), and that “[e]ven
though a buyer may receive a manufacturer’s warranty
because it bought a manufacturer’s car from a dealer,
‘nothing in the California Uniform Commercial Code
suggests that this automatically makes the manufacturer’s
warranty a part of the sale contract between the buyer and
the dealership,’” id. at 1134 (quoting Davis v. Nissan N. Am.,
Inc., 319 Cal. Rptr. 3d 517, 531 (Ct. App. 2024)). Because
the plaintiffs’ product defect claims were not founded in or
intertwined with any contractual provision in the sales
contracts, Ford could not compel the plaintiffs to arbitrate
through equitable estoppel. Id. at 1138.
FCA’s argument for why it should be able to use
equitable estoppel to enforce the arbitration agreement in
Olson’s lease—that Olson would not have claims against
FCA if he had not leased the car—is exactly the type of
argument the California Supreme Court rejected in Ford
Motor Warranty Cases. Like the plaintiffs in Ford Motor
Warranty Cases, none of Olson’s claims are founded in or
intertwined with the terms of the lease agreement. Rather,
Olson’s claims rely on rights created by California statutes
and by a warranty provided directly by FCA. 5 Thus, under
Ford Motor Warranty Cases, FCA cannot use equitable
5
Olson asserted claims under the Consumers Legal Remedies Act, Cal.
Civ. Code § 1750 et seq.; California’s Unfair Competition Law, Cal.
Bus. & Prof. Code § 17200 et seq.; the Song-Beverly Consumer
Warranty Act, Cal. Civ. Code §§ 1792, 1791.1, 1794 et seq.; and Breach
of Express Warranty under state common law. Olson’s breach of express
warranty claim is based on FCA’s manufacturer warranty, and not on
any warranties appearing in the lease agreement itself.
20 OLSON V. FCA US, LLC
estoppel to enforce the arbitration agreement in Olson’s
lease.
IV.
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the district court’s
denial of FCA’s motion to compel arbitration.