Vaden v. Discover Bank
Case Overview
A federal court may not exercise jurisdiction over a §4 FAA petition based on the Federal Arbitration Act alone. Instead, the court must 'look through' the petition to the underlying substantive dispute. If that dispute would independently support federal question jurisdiction, the court may proceed — but the FAA itself supplies no jurisdictional hook.
Legal Issues
The Facts
Discover Bank filed suit in Maryland state court to collect a credit card debt from Vaden. Vaden counterclaimed under state consumer protection law. Discover, invoking an arbitration clause in the credit card agreement, filed a §4 FAA petition in federal district court to compel arbitration. The question was whether the federal court had jurisdiction to entertain that petition.
The Issue
Does the mere existence of an arbitration agreement — which necessarily invokes the Federal Arbitration Act — automatically confer federal question jurisdiction, allowing a party to bring or remove a §4 petition to federal court?
More specifically: does a motion under §4 of the FAA itself supply the 'arising under' federal question jurisdiction required by 28 U.S.C. § 1331?
The Rules
A party aggrieved by the failure of another to arbitrate under a written agreement may petition a federal court for an order directing arbitration. The court must have independent jurisdiction to entertain the petition.
Federal district courts have original jurisdiction over civil actions 'arising under' the Constitution, laws, or treaties of the United States. The FAA alone does not supply this jurisdiction.
The Application
When Discover filed its §4 petition to compel arbitration in federal court, the court looked through the procedural petition to the underlying dispute: a state-law debt collection claim and Vaden's state consumer protection counterclaim. Because the substance of the case involved only state contract and consumer law—with no federal question component—the court found no independent basis for federal question jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1331. The FAA provided the mechanism to enforce the arbitration clause, but not the jurisdictional foundation to resolve the dispute in federal court.
The Conclusion
**The Supreme Court held that a federal court cannot exercise federal question jurisdiction based on a §4 FAA petition alone — the FAA supplies no independent jurisdictional hook.** But the Court established the 'look-through' doctrine: a federal court must look through the §4 petition to examine the underlying substantive dispute. If that underlying controversy — the actual case the arbitration clause is being deployed to resolve — would independently qualify for federal question jurisdiction, the court may hear the §4 petition on that basis. Here, because the underlying dispute (a state-law debt collection and consumer protection counterclaim) raised no federal question, the district court lacked jurisdiction.
Bryan's read: The FAA is procedural, not jurisdictional. Filing a §4 motion is a federal procedure, but the question being resolved by the arbitrator is something else — typically a state-law contract or consumer dispute. The federal procedure alone cannot drag a state-law case into federal court. The look-through doctrine asks: if you peeled away the arbitration wrapper, would the underlying fight belong in federal court? If yes, proceed. If no, go back to state court. [VERIFY: confirm this reasoning against the opinion]
**Narrowed by Badgerow v. Walter (2022):** The look-through doctrine from Vaden applies only to §4 petitions to compel arbitration. It does not extend to §9, §10, or §11 FAA petitions (to confirm, vacate, or modify an award). For those, a federal court must find an independent jurisdictional basis on the face of the petition itself — no looking through.
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