Court Rejects Arbitration Clause That Relies on ‘Sign-In Wrap’
On March 30, 2025, the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of California, in Rodriguez v. Abercrombie & Fitch Trading Co., Case No. 3:25-cv-01890, refused to compel arbitration of a consumer’s false‑pricing claims, holding that an online retailer’s checkout page failed to provide conspicuous notice of its arbitration terms. The court also denied the retailer’s motions to dismiss class claims and stay the litigation.
The ruling is a stark reminder: While your terms of sale are important, so is the design of your website. The ruling reflects growing judicial scrutiny of “sign‑in wrap” agreements in e‑commerce and the difficulty of compelling arbitration of one‑off consumer purchases—especially when claims sound in statute, not contract.
The plaintiff purchased a “Short‑Sleeve Crew Baby Tee” for $6.99 from the defendant’s retail website. At checkout, the site displayed a “strike‑through” reference price of $14.95, suggesting the $6.99 price was a discount.
The plaintiff alleges the reference price was artificially inflated and the discount deceptive, bringing a putative class action under California’s False Advertising Law and Consumer Legal Remedies Act (CLRA) on behalf of “[a]ll persons who purchased any product from Defendant’s Website while in California at a purported discount from a higher reference price.”
The retailer moved to (1) compel arbitration under an alleged online agreement, (2) dismiss the plaintiff’s class claims on the theory that arbitration would preclude class representation, and (3) stay the court case pending arbitration.
The central question was whether the plaintiff agreed to arbitrate. The retailer pointed to its checkout page design. The final checkout screen used a two‑column layout:
At the bottom left, the page displayed:
Clicking “Updated Sales Terms” led to an arbitration clause. The defendant argued that clicking “Submit Order” constituted agreement to arbitrate, regardless of whether the customer also clicked “Updated Sales Terms.”
Under the Federal Arbitration Act, which applies to actions, like this one, under the court’s diversity jurisdiction, the court must determine (1) whether a valid arbitration agreement exists and (2) whether it covers the dispute. Applying California contract‑formation law and U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit guidance, the court evaluated two requirements for sign‑in wrap enforceability: reasonably conspicuous notice of terms and unambiguous manifestation of assent to those terms.
The court scrutinized both the visual design of the page and the context of the transaction (one‑off purchase vs. ongoing relationship). According to the court, several design choices weighed against conspicuous notice:
Although the advisal language was clear and placed near the action button—factors typically favoring enforceability—the court concluded that a combination of “clutter,” layout, and visual hierarchy meant that a reasonably prudent user might not see or appreciate the terms.
The court also found transaction context relevant, following recent decisions distinguishing ongoing relationships (e.g., accounts, memberships, recurring services), where users reasonably expect governing terms, from one‑time purchases, where some courts treat that expectation as weaker.
The plaintiff made a single purchase of a shirt, not a subscription or membership. The checkout required payment information but no full registration process, no user account creation, and no app download suggesting a continuing, governed relationship.
The court found this was a “relatively trivial transaction” where “most consumers would not expect to be bound by contractual terms,” relying on a recent decision refusing to enforce arbitration in a similar one-time online clothing purchase—even where the notice was arguably more prominent.
The retailer’s design did not meet its burden to show a reasonably prudent user would understand that clicking “Submit Order” bound them to arbitration.
Because notice was insufficient, the court reasoned that the plaintiff’s click on “Submit Order” could not constitute unambiguous assent to the terms—including arbitration. Without valid contract formation, the motion to compel arbitration was denied.
The retailer alternatively argued that, even if no contract was formed, the plaintiff should be compelled to arbitrate under equitable estoppel because she allegedly purchased a discounted/clearance item, and the clearance benefits and pricing were governed by the same “Updated Sales Terms” that contained the arbitration clause.
Under California law, equitable estoppel allows a defendant to compel arbitration where a plaintiff asserts claims based on a contract but attempts to avoid the arbitration clause within that same contract. The court rejected that theory here:
The court disagreed with the plaintiff’s “knowing exploitation” argument based on the apparent discount applied to the goods, holding that purchasing a discounted good—particularly where the terms were not conspicuous—did not constitute “knowing exploitation” sufficient to apply equitable estoppel. Because the plaintiff was not suing to enforce the “Updated Sales Terms” and did not knowingly accept benefits under those terms, the court held that equitable estoppel did not apply and again declined to compel arbitration.
The retailer argued that because the “Updated Sales Terms” required the plaintiff to arbitrate, she could not serve as a class representative. The retailer also sought a stay pending arbitration.
Given the court’s conclusions that there was no enforceable agreement to arbitrate and equitable estoppel did not apply, the court denied the motion to dismiss the class claims and the motion to stay the action. As a result, the putative consumer class action will proceed in federal court.
Businesses relying on online arbitration clauses—particularly in retail, direct‑to‑consumer, and subscription models—should audit their checkout and registration designs in light of the Rodriguez decision, ensuring that terms (including arbitration) are presented clearly and conspicuously and that the user experience supports a finding of mutual assent.
The information provided is not intended to be a comprehensive review of all developments in the law and practice, or to cover all aspects of those referred to.
Readers should take legal advice before applying it to specific issues or transactions.
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Originally published before the Ashurst Perkins Coie combination. See disclaimer.