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Georgetown Law 2025 Advanced eDiscovery Institute
November 21, 2025 | 8:30 AM – 9:30 AM ET
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Articles + Publications May 29, 2024
SCOTUS has once again clarified a court’s power to compel arbitration, this time in the context of conflicting delegation clauses. In doing so, the Court aptly acknowledged its standing tri-layered analysis of arbitral consent, noting, “[i]n prior cases, we have addressed three layers of arbitration disputes: (1) merits, (2) arbitrability, and (3) who decides arbitrability. This case involves a fourth: What happens if parties have multiple agreements that conflict as to the third-order question of who decides arbitrability?”[1]
Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson’s May 23, 2024 decision in Coinbase, Inc. v. Suski answered that where parties have agreed to two contracts with two conflicting delegation clauses — one that sends arbitrability disputes to arbitration, and the other that sends arbitrability disputes to the courts — the question of which contract governs is for the court to decide.
The Coinbase decision stems from a class action lawsuit brought against Coinbase by users of the cryptocurrency platform. Upon joining the platform, users first consented to an arbitration agreement containing a delegation clause that provided an arbitrator, not the court, the jurisdiction to decide whether an issue was arbitrable under the contract. In several instances, those same users then entered a second contract for a sweepstakes promotion that provided dispute resolution jurisdiction to California courts. After the users initiated the case in federal court, Coinbase moved to arbitrate the class action lawsuit, arguing that the initial contract required an arbitrator to determine arbitrability for all disputes. The users contended that the sweepstakes rules’ forum selection clause superseded this agreement, sending the arbitrability determination to a California court.
The Court resolved the question of whether a court or an arbitrator should determine arbitrability in favor of basic contract principles, observing that “[a]rbitration is a matter of contract and consent, and we have long held that disputes are subject to arbitration if, and only if, the parties actually agreed to arbitrate those disputes.”[2] In that vein, the Court held that determining whether a subsequent contract supersedes a prior contract presents a question of whether the parties consented to arbitration, a gateway question SCOTUS has already confirmed must be left to the courts.[3] See Rent-A-Center, West, Inc. v. Jackson, 561 U.S. 63, 71 (2010).
While this ruling does not represent an unexpected extension of the court’s power to determine gateway issues, it serves as a warning to those employing multiple delegation clauses across multiple contracts: parties must ensure their delegation clauses match, or risk the question of arbitrability being decided by the court.[4]
[1] Coinbase, Inc. v. Suski, 23-3, slip op. at 5 (2024).
[2] Id. at 1.
[3] See Frank H. Griffin IV, Matthew H. Adler & R. Zachary Torres-Fowler, Kavanaugh’s First Opinion: In Arbitration Agreements, Delegation Means Delegation, Troutman Pepper Insights (Jan. 11, 2019).
[4] See Robert A. Gallagher, Stephen W. Kiefer & Jane Fox Lehman, Do You Know Who Will Decide Whether Your Next Dispute is Subject to Arbitration?, Troutman Pepper Insights (Mar. 22, 2018).
* Meg Termat, a 2024 summer associate with Troutman Pepper who is not licensed to practice law in any jurisdiction, contributed to this article.
Speaking Engagements
Georgetown Law 2025 Advanced eDiscovery Institute
November 21, 2025 | 8:30 AM – 9:30 AM ET
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November 17, 2025 | 1:30 PM – 2:30 PM ET
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New York, NY
Leading the energy evolution.
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From compliance to the courtroom, we have you covered.
Learn more
Helping you focus on what matters – improving human health.
Learn more
Trusted advisors to leading insurers for 100+ years.
Learn more
Unlocking value in the middle market and beyond.
Learn more
Full-service legal advice from coast to coast.
Learn more
Applying radical applications of common sense
Explore More
Our standard-setting client experience program.
Explore more
Delivering life-changing help to those most in need.
Explore More
Our firm’s greatest asset is our people.
Explore More
Market-leading eDiscovery and data management services.
Explore more
The Pepper Center for Public Services
Explore more
Strategies helps businesses and individuals solve the complexities of dealing with the government at every level. Our team of specialists concentrate exclusively on government affairs, representing clients nationwide who need assistance with public policy, advocacy, and government relations strategies.
This unique program provides innovative and affordable opportunities to startups and early-stage emerging companies with a solid technology or scientific foundation. We help companies that have a quality management team in place and do not have other significant legal representation.
eMerge’s lawyers and technologists work together to deliver strategic end-to-end eDiscovery and data management solutions for litigation, investigations, due diligence, and compliance matters. We help clients discover the information necessary to resolve disputes, respond to investigations, conduct due diligence, and comply with legal requirements.
Stay ahead of the curve and in touch with our latest thinking on the issues that are top of mind across our practices and industry sectors.
Change happens fast in today’s turbulent world. Stay on top of the latest with our industry-specific channels.
Take a closer look at how we partner with clients to help them realize their goals.