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Romer-Pollis v. Ada

ARIZCTAPPDecember 24, 2009No. 1 CA-CV 08-0692Cited 9 times
Defendant WinAda

Case Details

Judge(s)
Portley, Johnsen, Barker
Status
Published
Procedural Posture
appeal

Outcome

The trial court dismissed plaintiff's appeal from an arbitration award because she failed to participate in good faith in the arbitration proceedings, and the appellate court affirmed the dismissal.

What This Ruling Means

**Romer-Pollis v. Ada County: Worker Loses Case for Not Participating in Required Arbitration** **What Happened** An employee named Romer-Pollis had a workplace dispute with Ada County that involved employment law claims related to the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA). Instead of going directly to court, the case went to arbitration—a process where a neutral third party resolves disputes outside of traditional court proceedings. However, Romer-Pollis failed to participate properly in the arbitration process, which the court determined showed she was not acting in good faith. **What the Court Decided** The arbitration panel ruled against Romer-Pollis, and when she tried to appeal that decision to the regular court system, both the trial court and appellate court dismissed her appeal. The courts found that because she didn't participate meaningfully in the arbitration proceedings, she couldn't challenge the outcome later. **Why This Matters for Workers** This case highlights an important lesson: if your employment contract requires arbitration, you must take the process seriously and participate fully. Even if you disagree with arbitration or prefer going to court, failing to engage properly can cost you the right to challenge an unfavorable decision. Workers should understand their dispute resolution procedures and participate actively in required processes.

This summary was generated to explain the ruling in plain English and is not legal advice.

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