Thomas Baker and others who bought new homes from Osborne Development Corp. sued for multiple defects in

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Thomas Baker and others who bought new homes from Osborne Development Corp. sued for multiple defects in the houses they purchased. When Osborne sold the homes, it paid for them to be in a new home warranty program administered by Home Buyers Warranty (HBW). When the company enrolled a home with HBW, it paid a fee and filled out a form that stated the following: “By signing below, you acknowledge that you . . . CONSENT TO THE TERMS OF THESE DOCUMENTS INCLUDING THE BINDING ARBITRATION PROVISION contained therein.” HBW then issued warranty booklets to the new homeowners that stated: “Any and all claims, disputes and controversies by or between the Homeowner, the Builder, the Warranty Insurer and/or HBW . . . shall be submitted to arbitration.” Were the new homeowners bound by the arbitration agreement, or could they sue the builder, Osborne, in court? Explain. [Baker v. Osborne Development Corp., 159 Cal.App.4th 884, 71 Cal.Rptr.3d 854 (Cal. App. 2008)]

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Business Law Text and Cases

ISBN: 978-1111929954

12th Edition

Authors: Kenneth W. Clarkson, Roger LeRoy Miller, Frank B. Cross

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