What the Supreme Court’s Latest Arbitration Decision Means for Employers and Employees

May 22 2026

The Supreme Court Clarifies Federal Courts’ Role in Arbitration Disputes

Employees bringing discrimination and employment claims are often required to arbitrate their disputes instead of proceeding in court. But what happens after the arbitration ends? Can a federal court still step in to review the result?

The U.S. Supreme Court recently answered that question in Jules v. Andre Balazs Properties, No. 25-83 (May 14, 2026), holding that when a federal court already has jurisdiction over a lawsuit and pauses the case while arbitration proceeds, that same court can later confirm or review the arbitration award.

The case involved a former hotel employee who sued for discrimination under federal laws including Title VII and the Americans with Disabilities Act. After the lawsuit was filed, the employer argued the claims had to be arbitrated under an arbitration agreement signed during employment. The federal court paused the lawsuit while arbitration took place in California.

The arbitrator ultimately ruled against the employee. Afterward, the employee returned to federal court and asked that the court overturn the arbitration award. Meanwhile, the employer asked the court to confirm the award. The employee then argued that the federal court could not confirm or overturn the award, because the post-arbitration petitions themselves did not independently establish subject matter jurisdiction. In other words, the employee argued, the court did not have authority to hear and decide the case at that stage.

The Supreme Court rejected the employee’s argument in a unanimous decision. The Court explained that because the federal court properly had jurisdiction over the original employment discrimination lawsuit before sending the matter to arbitration, it retained authority to handle later motions related to the arbitration award. In other words, the court did not need a separate basis for jurisdiction once the case returned from arbitration.

The Court clarified that this rule is different from situations where parties proceed directly to arbitration without first filing a federal lawsuit. In those cases, parties seeking to confirm or challenge an arbitration award in federal court may still need to independently establish federal jurisdiction.

The decision is important to employees and employers alike; it provides clarity about where post-arbitration disputes can be resolved and confirms that federal courts maintain an ongoing role when a case originated there in the first place. If you are unsure whether your employment dispute must be resolved through arbitration, contact an employment lawyer at Garrison, Levin-Epstein, Fitzgerald & Pirrotti.

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Meaghan C. Kirby

About the Author

Meaghan Kirby

Meaghan Kirby is an associate attorney who represents Connecticut employees, both in and out of the courtroom. Since 2023, Meaghan has been ranked by Super Lawyers® as a Rising Star, a distinction given only to 2.5% of Connecticut attorneys under the age of 40. Learn More

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