For your holiday reading pleasure … here’s another drafting nightmare case, dirt lawyers

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South Carolina’s Supreme Court has invalidated an arbitration agreement in a residential home purchase contract because of a sentence found to run afoul of public policy*. The homebuyers are free to pursue their lawsuit against the home builder.

Amanda and Jay Huskins bought a house from Mungo Homes. The arbitration section in the purchase contract included this sentence:

“Each and every demand for arbitration shall be made within ninety (90) days after the claim, dispute or other matter in question has arisen, except that any claim, dispute or matter in question not asserted within said time periods shall be deem waived and forever barred.”

The Court held that it is undisputed that this clause shortened the statute of limitations for any claim to the ninety-day period. Mungo conceded that this provision ran afoul of South Carolina Code §15-3-140 (2005), which forbids and renders void contract clauses attempting to shorten the legal statute of limitations.

The Huskins brought this lawsuit against Mungo, raising various claims related to the sale. Mungo asked the Circuit Court to dismiss the complaint and compel arbitration. The Huskins countered that the arbitration clause was unconscionable and unenforceable and the lower court granted the motion to compel arbitration. The Court of Appeals held the clause was unconscionable and unenforceable but ruled the clause could be severed from the rest of the arbitration agreement and affirmed the order compelling arbitration.

The Supreme Court stated that the better view is that the clause is unenforceable because it is void and illegal as a matter of public policy. The Court further noted that the contract contained no severability provision and that Mungo’s “manipulative skirting of South Carolina public policy goes to the core of the arbitration agreement and weighs heavily against severance.”

The Court mused that it has been steadfast in protecting home buyers from unscrupulous and overreaching terms, and stated that applying severance here would erode laudable public policy. The Court, therefore, declined to sever the unconscionable provision for public policy reasons. The entire arbitration provision was held to be unenforceable. The case was remanded to the Circuit Court for further action.

Drafting contracts for corporate clients can be tricky, dirt lawyers. Read this case and similar cases carefully!

*Huskins v. Mungo Homes, LLC, South Carolina Supreme Court Opinion 28245 (December 11, 2024).