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 1        IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO

 2   MARGARET GRIEGO, DECEASED, BY THE
 3   CO-PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVES OF HER
 4   PROBATE ESTATE, CELESTINO GRIEGO, JR.
 5   AND DANNY I. GRIEGO,

 6          Plaintiffs-Appellees,

 7 v.                                                                                   NO. 31,777

 8   ST. JOHN HEALTHCARE & REHABILITATION
 9   CENTER, L.L.C., SKILLED HEALTHCARE
10   GROUP, INC., SKILLED HEALTHCARE, L.L.C.,
11   and ADMINISTRATOR T.J. HICKS, JR.,

12          Defendants-Appellants.

13 APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF BERNALILLO COUNTY
14 Clay P. Campbell, District Judge

15   Harvey Law Firm, L.L.C.
16   Jennifer J. Foote
17   Dusti D. Harvey
18   Albuquerque, NM

19 for Appellees

20   Rodey, Dickason, Sloan, Akin & Robb, P.A.
21   Sandra L. Beerle
22   Robert W. Lasater, Jr.
23   Jocelyn Drennan
 1 Albuquerque, NM

 2 for Appellants

 3                              MEMORANDUM OPINION

 4 ZAMORA, Judge.

 5   {1}   Defendants appeal from the denial of their motion to dismiss the complaint and

 6 compel arbitration in this nursing home action filed by the representatives of the estate

 7 of a former resident. We agree with the district court that the arbitration agreement

 8 is void for substantive unconscionability as a matter of law, and we affirm.

 9 BACKGROUND

10   {2}   Because the parties are familiar with the facts of the case, we do not recite those

11 facts here but include them in our analysis below. We briefly note the procedural

12 history that led to this appeal.

13   {3}   After the death of Margaret Griego, who had been attacked by another resident

14 at Defendants’ nursing home, Plaintiffs in January 2011 filed a complaint alleging

15 negligence, misrepresentation, and a violation of the New Mexico Unfair Practices

16 Act, NMSA 1978, Sections 57-12-1 to -26 (1967, as amended through 2009), related

17 to the terms of the admission contract’s arbitration agreement (the Agreement).

18 Defendants responded in February 2011 with a motion to dismiss or stay litigation and

19 compel arbitration. Plaintiffs responded by arguing in part that the Agreement in Mrs.


                                                2
 1 Griego’s admissions contract could not be enforced, because it is procedurally and

 2 substantively unconscionable as a matter of law. The district court held hearings in

 3 May and September 2011. Both parties submitted proposed findings of fact and

 4 conclusions of law before the September hearing, as well as briefs after the hearing.

 5 On November 8, 2011, the district court issued its findings of fact, conclusions of law,

 6 and an order denying the motion to compel arbitration. This appeal followed.

 7 DISCUSSION

 8   {4}   Defendants argue that the district court applied the wrong legal standard for

 9 analyzing whether the Agreement is substantively unconscionable. They also contend

10 that the district court unexpectedly shifted the burden of proof to the Defendants and

11 did not allow them the opportunity to meet that burden. We focus on the question of

12 whether the Agreement is substantively unconscionable and whether Defendants met

13 their burden of proof to show that the Agreement was valid, enforceable, and therefore

14 substantively conscionable.

15 I.      Standard of Review

16   {5}   A district court’s denial of a motion to compel arbitration is reviewed de novo.

17 Cordova v. World Fin. Corp. of N.M., 2009-NMSC-021, ¶ 11, 146 N.M. 256, 208

18 P.3d 901. “Similarly, whether the parties have agreed to arbitrate presents a question

19 of law, and we review the applicability and construction of a contractual provision


                                               3
 1 requiring arbitration de novo.” Id. (internal quotation marks and citation omitted).

 2 “By both statute and case law, we review whether a contract is unconscionable as a

 3 matter of law.” Id.

 4 II.     The Agreement

 5   {6}   The standard arbitration form used by Defendants, and signed by Mrs. Griego’s

 6 legal representative, requires binding arbitration for some disputes and includes the

 7 Agreement in question, in particular this clause:

 8         By signing [the] Agreement, the parties relinquish their right to have any
 9         and all disputes associated with [the] Agreement and the relationship
10         created by the Admission Agreement and/or the provision of services
11         under the Admission Agreement (including, without limitation, claims
12         for negligent care against Arbor Brook or any of its employees,
13         managers, or members) . . . resolved through a lawsuit, namely by a
14         judge, jury[,] or appellate court, except to the extent that New Mexico
15         law provides for judicial action in arbitration proceedings. [The]
16         Agreement shall not apply to disputes pertaining to collections or
17         discharge of residents.

18 The Agreement requires all disputes, brought by either party, to be resolved through

19 arbitration except for those involving the discharge of residents and for collections.

20 The Agreement thus precludes any action in district court for all claims that a resident

21 is most likely to bring—negligent care—and reserves for Defendants a judicial forum

22 involving the claims they are most likely to bring—issues of discharge and

23 collections. See Ruppelt v. Laurel Healthcare Providers, LLC, 2013-NMCA-014,

24 ¶ 16, 293 P.3d 902, cert. denied, 2012-NMCERT-012.

                                               4
 1   {7}   The district court’s two-hour hearing in September 2011 focused mainly on the

 2 question of whether the Agreement was procedurally unconscionable. The issue of

 3 substantive unconscionability was raised early in the litigation by each parties’ briefs

 4 in support of and in opposition to the motion to dismiss and at a brief hearing in May.

 5 In addition, the parties were invited, before and after the September hearing, to submit

 6 proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law that examined the issue of

 7 substantive unconscionability, and each party also briefed that issue after the hearing.

 8   {8}   The district court ruled that the Agreement was not procedurally

 9 unconscionable, and that ruling is not challenged by Plaintiffs. The court then ruled

10 that the Agreement was substantively unconscionable. The district court’s decision

11 relied, in part, on this Court’s opinion in Strausberg v. Laurel Healthcare Providers,

12 LLC, 2012-NMCA-006, 269 P.3d 914, cert. granted, 2012-NMCERT-001. The

13 parties agree that the only issue before us is the substantive unconscionability of the

14 Agreement.

15   {9}   As a threshold matter, Defendants contend that the district court denied them

16 a fair opportunity to meet their burden of proof on conscionability. We therefore

17 begin by reviewing the burden of proof.

18 III.    Burden of Proof

19 A.      The Strausberg Opinion


                                              5
 1   {10}   The burden of proof in nursing home arbitration cases was confirmed by this

 2 Court in November 2011—after all arguments, findings of fact and conclusions of

 3 law, and briefs in this case were submitted below to the district court, but before the

 4 court issued its order. See Strausberg, 2012-NMCA-006, ¶ 20 (holding that when a

 5 nursing home requires an arbitration agreement for admission to the home and the

 6 patient contends that the agreement is unconscionable “the nursing home has the

 7 burden of proving that the arbitration agreement is not unconscionable”). The district

 8 court, after having surmised at the September hearing that Plaintiffs had the burden

 9 of proving that the contract was substantively unconscionable, concluded instead that

10 Defendants had the burden of proving that the contract clause was valid and

11 enforceable, citing Strausberg, which had been filed four days before the district

12 court’s order was issued.

13   {11}   Defendants now contend that they were unable to “meet [their] newly-imposed

14 burden of disproving the alleged substantive unconscionability” of the Agreement

15 because they did not have the benefit of the “new rule” handed down by Strausberg.

16 Defendants urge us to remand the case to the district court to allow them to meet their

17 burden of disproving the allegations of substantive unconscionability. We reject

18 Defendants’ contention as well as the request for remand.




                                              6
 1   {12}   We did not establish a “new rule” when we held in Strausberg that a nursing

 2 home has the burden of proving that an arbitration agreement is valid and enforceable

 3 when challenged to do so by a plaintiff who is responding to a defendant’s motion

 4 seeking to compel arbitration.

 5   {13}   New Mexico case law has been well established that principles of contract law

 6 apply to arbitration agreements. Under the New Mexico Arbitration Act, a legally

 7 enforceable contract is a prerequisite to arbitration. DeArmond v. Halliburton Energy

 8 Servs., Inc., 2003-NMCA-148, ¶ 9, 134 N.M. 630, 81 P.3d 573. Moreover, a party

 9 relying on a contract has the burden to prove it is legally valid and enforceable. Id.;

10 see also Corum v. Roswell Senior Living, LLC, 2010-NMCA-105, ¶ 3, 149 N.M. 287,

11 248 P.3d 329 (stating that the party attempting to compel arbitration carries the burden

12 of demonstrating that the arbitration agreement is valid). It is a “fundamental

13 principle that arbitration is a matter of contract[.]” Rivera v. Am. Gen. Fin. Servs.,

14 Inc., 2011-NMSC-033, ¶ 16, 150 N.M. 398, 259 P.3d 803 (internal quotation marks

15 and citation omitted). Courts must place arbitration agreements “on an equal footing

16 with other contracts . . . and enforce them according to their terms.” Id. (alteration in

17 original) (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). The Strausberg court

18 underscored that these contract rules “are well embedded in New Mexico

19 jurisprudence.” 2012-NMCA-006, ¶ 16. Strausberg further pointed out that “a


                                               7
 1 motion to compel arbitration is essentially a suit for specific performance of an

 2 agreement to arbitrate[,]” and “a party seeking specific performance has the burden

 3 of proving grounds for such relief.” Id. (internal quotation marks and citation

 4 omitted). Plaintiffs’ claim that the clause is substantively unconscionable or invalid

 5 does not relieve Defendants of their burden to prove that they have a valid contract

 6 that may be enforced. Strausberg merely confirmed New Mexico case law regarding

 7 the burden of proof in such a situation involving a nursing home seeking to compel

 8 arbitration.

 9 B.       Defendants Were Given the Opportunity to Meet Their Burden of Proof

10   {14}   It was sufficiently clear during litigation that the intertwined issues of

11 substantive unconscionability and the validity of the Agreement were squarely before

12 the district court from early on in the proceedings. After Plaintiffs filed their

13 complaint, Defendants responded with a motion to either dismiss or stay the litigation

14 and to compel arbitration. The unconscionability argument was raised in Plaintiffs’

15 response to Defendants’ motion. Defendants addressed Plaintiffs’ argument in their

16 March 28 reply brief. Defendants also argued the issue in their proposed conclusions

17 of law submitted to the court before the September 2011 evidentiary hearing. Finally,

18 at the evidentiary hearing, the district court told the parties:

19          [W]hat we’re going to do is you are going to submit new findings of fact
20          and conclusions of law . . . telling me where to find support for your

                                               8
 1          proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law. . . . I mean, I want you
 2          to walk me through, from your perspective, what the factors are that I’m
 3          supposed to consider with respect to procedural unconscionability, with
 4          respect to substantive unconscionability. . . . And you’re going to have
 5          to cover the burden of proof.” (emphasis added).

 6 The court then opined about its theory of the burden of proof, telling Plaintiffs’

 7 attorney, “I’ll just suggest . . . that you’ve got the burden of persuasion on that one.”

 8 After a discussion of basic contract law principles, the court continued, “[s]o that

 9 would seem to suggest, just from a common-sense perspective, that it’s not

10 [Defendants’] burden of proof to disprove procedural unconscionability and

11 substantive unconscionability. I’m pretty sure the law of contracts suggest[s]

12 otherwise.” The court concluded by telling Plaintiffs’ attorney that “you’ve got the

13 burden of persuasion if you want me to shift the burden of proof to [Defendants].”

14 However, turning to Defendants’ attorney, the court added, “obviously, since she’s

15 raised it, my two cents would be to include that in your legal conclusions, as well.”

16   {15}   In order to succeed in their motion to dismiss and to compel arbitration,

17 Defendants had to prove that the parties had a valid agreement to arbitrate. Subsumed

18 within that showing of validity is the need to refute the claim that the agreement is

19 substantively unconscionable. See Strausberg, 2012-NMCA-006, ¶ 16. Along those

20 lines, because Plaintiffs raised substantive unconscionability, Defendants were

21 required to put forth evidence showing that the Agreement was valid, or in other


                                                9
 1 words, substantively conscionable.        And in fact, Defendants had multiple

 2 opportunities—in two sets of briefs, in two sets of findings of fact and conclusions of

 3 law, and during the evidentiary hearing—to meet their burden of proof.

 4   {16}   Furthermore, if Defendants felt blind-sided by Strausberg’s declaration that

 5 nursing homes have the burden of proof in arbitration cases dealing with

 6 unconscionability, they had another opportunity, as they admit, to make their

 7 arguments and present evidence to the district court by filing a motion for

 8 reconsideration. See Rule 1-059(A) NMRA (stating that “the court may open the

 9 judgment if one has been entered, take additional testimony, amend findings of fact

10 and conclusions of law or make new findings and conclusions, and direct the entry of

11 a new judgment”). We see no reason to give Defendants another chance to present the

12 arguments they had adequate opportunity to make below.

13   {17}   We now turn to the question before us, and we begin by reviewing recent New

14 Mexico Supreme Court cases that set forth the analysis to be used when reviewing

15 arbitration agreements for substantive unconscionability.




                                             10
 1 IV.      New Mexico Supreme Court’s Jurisprudence on Arbitration Clauses

 2   {18}   Agreements to arbitrate may “be invalidated by generally applicable contract

 3 defenses, such as fraud, duress, or unconscionability.” Rivera, 2011-NMSC-033,

 4 ¶ 17 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). “Unconscionability is an

 5 equitable doctrine, rooted in public policy, which allows courts to render

 6 unenforceable an agreement that is unreasonably favorable to one party while

 7 precluding a meaningful choice of the other party.” Cordova, 2009-NMSC-021, ¶ 21.

 8 The doctrine covers both procedural and substantive unconscionability. Id. “[T]here

 9 is no absolute requirement in our law that both must be present to the same degree or

10 that they both be present at all.” Id. ¶ 24. We concern ourselves in the case before us

11 with only substantive unconscionability.

12   {19}   When analyzing an arbitration agreement for substantive unconscionability, we

13 are concerned with “the legality and fairness of the contract terms themselves” and we

14 “focus[] on such issues as whether the contract terms are commercially reasonable and

15 fair, the purpose and effect of the terms, the one-sidedness of the terms, and other

16 similar public policy concerns.” Id. ¶ 22. “Contract provisions that unreasonably

17 benefit one party over another are substantively unconscionable.” Id. ¶ 25. Our

18 Supreme Court has concluded that it is “unreasonably one-sided” for a company to

19 have the “ability . . . to seek judicial redress of its likeliest claims while forcing [a


                                              11
 1 customer] to arbitrate any claim [he or] she may have.” Rivera, 2011-NMSC-033,

 2 ¶ 53; see also Cordova, 2009-NMSC-021, ¶¶ 26-27.

 3   {20}   Rivera and Cordova set the standard for unconscionability of contracts

 4 involving lenders imposing arbitration agreements on borrowers. Last year, we

 5 applied those two decisions and their rationales to the universe of nursing home

 6 arbitration cases. We turn now to those opinions.

 7 V.       Recent Court of Appeals Precedent

 8   {21}   Three of this Court’s 2012 opinions have clarified our jurisprudence regarding

 9 substantive unconscionability in the realm of nursing home arbitration agreements.

10 We review them for guidance in our analysis.

11   {22}   This court has adhered to our Supreme Court’s doctrine of unconscionability

12 by stating clearly that “we refuse to enforce an agreement where the drafter

13 unreasonably reserve[s] the vast majority of his claims for the courts, while subjecting

14 the weaker party to arbitration on essentially all of the claims that party is likely to

15 bring.” Figueroa v. THI of N.M., 2013-NMCA-___, ¶ 30, ___ P.3d ___ (No. 30,477,

16 July 18, 2012), cert. denied, 2012-NMCERT-010.             “While no single, precise

17 definition of substantive unconscionability can be articulated, substantive

18 unconscionability broadly refers to whether the material terms of a contract are

19 patently unfair and more beneficially one-sided in favor of the more powerful party.”


                                              12
 1 Ruppelt, 2013-NMCA-014, ¶ 18, ___ P.3d ___. Substantive unconscionability

 2 requires a focus on fairness, not complete one-sidedness. Id. ¶ 14.

 3 A.       Figueroa

 4   {23}   In Figueroa, the nursing home had excluded from the arbitration requirement

 5 matters involving guardianship proceedings as well as collection and eviction actions,

 6 all of which either party was entitled to bring. 2013-NMCA-___ ¶¶ 2, 26. We

 7 proclaimed “that the inference that guardianship, collection, and eviction proceedings

 8 would be the most likely claims of the nursing home is self-evident.” Id. ¶ 31. While

 9 we acknowledged that “the arbitration agreement [could] be construed to grant some

10 rights to a judicial forum to the resident,” we stated that “these rights to a judicial

11 forum do not sufficiently act to remedy the gross disparity that results from [the

12 nursing home’s] reservation of its most likely claims to a judicial forum, while the

13 resident’s most likely claims are subject to arbitration.” Id. ¶ 28. This court noted that

14          [the d]efendant cannot avoid the equitable doctrine of unconscionability
15          by drafting an agreement that reserves its most likely claims for a
16          judicial forum, and provides some exemptions from arbitration to the
17          resident so that there is some appearance of bilaterality, when that
18          exemption is completely meaningless in practicality because the resident
19          would rarely, if ever, raise that type of claim against the nursing home.

20 Id. ¶ 30. We concluded that the arbitration agreement in question was “unreasonably

21 and unfairly one-sided in favor of” the nursing home. Id.

22 B.       Ruppelt

                                               13
 1   {24}   In Ruppelt, as in the case before us, the arbitration clause at issue exempted

 2 matters involving discharge of residents and collections from the arbitration process.

 3 2013-NMCA-014, ¶ 3. There, we reiterated that “substantive unconscionability

 4 requires a focus on fairness, not complete one-sidedness” and stated that “[c]ommon

 5 sense dictates that claims relating to collection of fees and discharge of residents are

 6 the types of remedies that a nursing home, not its resident, is most likely to pursue.”

 7 Id. ¶¶ 14, 15. We concluded that “although the exemption provision may facially

 8 appear to apply evenhandedly, its practical effect unreasonably favors

 9 [the d]efendants, and the provision’s bilateral appearance is inaccurate.” Id. ¶ 18.

10   {25}   While Figueroa and Ruppelt find substantive unconscionability in nursing

11 home arbitration agreements that permit the nursing home to pursue its most likely

12 claims, such as discharge actions and collections, in a court of law, we have stopped

13 short of suggesting that such exemptions represent per se unconscionability. See

14 Bargman v. Skilled Healthcare Group, Inc., 2013-NMCA-006, ¶17, 292 P.3d 1, cert.

15 granted, 2012-NMCERT-012 (stating that cases should still be examined on a case-

16 by-case basis). In Ruppelt, the defendants declined an invitation from this Court to

17 remand the matter for additional factual development of the argument that the

18 arbitration agreement’s exemptions were not unconscionable. 2013-NMCA-014, ¶ 17.

19 However, we refused to “rule out the possibility that probative evidence could be


                                              14
 1 offered in this type of case” rebutting a plaintiff’s claim that exemptions for discharge

 2 actions and collections are unfairly one-sided. Id.

 3 C.       Bargman

 4   {26}   Indeed, less than two months after Ruppelt was filed, we reversed a district

 5 court’s order denying a nursing home’s motion to compel arbitration and remanded

 6 the case. Bargman, 2013-NMCA-006, ¶ 24. In Bargman, as in the case before us,

 7 the arguments were narrowed to just the issue of the collections exemption. Id. ¶ 18.

 8 As Defendants do here, the nursing home in Bargman argued to this Court that the

 9 collections exemption was not one-sided because (1) the arbitration agreement

10 requires the nursing home to pay all arbitration fees, meaning it would not be cost-

11 effective for it to pursue arbitration to collect smaller fee amounts, and (2) the non-

12 complex nature of collections disputes makes it more efficient to litigate such claims

13 rather than submit them to arbitration. Id. ¶ 22. And as Plaintiffs do here, the

14 plaintiffs in Bargman argued against remand, contending that the defendants had

15 failed to make those arguments to the district court below. Id. ¶ 23. We concluded




                                              15
 1 in Bargman that

 2          [b]ecause at the time this matter was in the district court, Rivera,
 3          Figueroa, and Ruppelt had not been decided and the burden of proof was
 4          not all that clearly determined, and also because it is unclear that the
 5          district court would have considered evidence, we do not agree that [the
 6          d]efendants have somehow waived or not preserved [their] remand
 7          position.

 8 Id. (emphasis added).

 9   {27}   In the case before us, by contrast, as discussed in Section III, Defendants were

10 put on reasonable notice that they had the burden of proof to present evidence

11 showing that the Agreement was valid and enforceable. As previously noted, while

12 this Court’s opinions in Figueroa and Ruppelt came after the proceedings below, the

13 parties did have the benefit of the Rivera decision and its admonition that a

14 defendant’s “ability under the arbitration clause to seek judicial redress of its likeliest

15 claims while forcing [a plaintiff] to arbitrate any claim [he or] she may have is

16 unreasonably one-sided.” Rivera, 2011-NMSC-033, ¶ 53. Defendants were on alert

17 that they had the burden to bring forth evidence showing that the discharge and the

18 collections exemptions were valid and enforceable.

19 VI.      Whether the Agreement Is Substantively Unconscionable

20   {28}   The ultimate question before us, then, is whether, as a matter of law, the

21 Agreement is unfairly one-sided and therefore substantively unconscionable.



                                               16
 1   {29}   As the nursing home in Bargman did, Defendants here note that the discharge

 2 exclusion is necessitated by the requirements of state and federal law that dictate such

 3 matters be addressed in administrative hearings subject to judicial review. Plaintiffs

 4 do not dispute that assertion. That leaves us with the issue of the exemption for

 5 collections.

 6   {30}   Defendants rely on legal arguments in the absence of evidence below. They

 7 note that the collections exemption is bilateral, an observation rejected as irrelevant

 8 by both of New Mexico’s appellate courts. See, e.g., Figueroa, 2013-NMCA-___ ¶ 30

 9 (acknowledging “there [was] some appearance of bilaterality” but noting that the

10 “exemption is completely meaningless in practicality because the resident would

11 rarely, if ever, raise that type of claim against the nursing home”). Next, Defendants

12 ask us to “imagine a scenario” in which a resident may pursue litigation against a

13 nursing home over a collections matter, for example, being overcharged for services

14 provided. However, Defendants offered no supporting evidence below to show how

15 often such an imagined scenario has taken place or even how likely it would be.

16 Defendants also contended below that any collections dispute brought to district court

17 would be subject to mandatory court-annexed arbitration if it involved a sum less than

18 $25,000. As Plaintiffs note, such an arbitration proceeding would be non-binding, in

19 contrast with the Agreement’s binding nature, and it would not preclude Defendants


                                              17
 1 from fully litigating claims of less than $10,000 in Metropolitan Court. See LR Rule

 2 2-603 §§ II, V(D) NMRA; NMSA 1978, § 34-8A-3(A)(2) (2001).

 3   {31}   Defendants also contemplate, without citation to the record, a situation in which

 4 the cost of hiring three arbitrators to resolve a collections claim would exceed the

 5 amount in dispute. At no point below or on appeal do Defendants offer any evidence

 6 that would tend to show the costs involved in a collection dispute or how often

 7 residents pursue claims compared with how often nursing homes do.                   Such

 8 generalized assertions by counsel are not evidence.               See Muse v. Muse,

 9 2009-NMCA-003, ¶ 51, 145 N.M. 451, 200 P.3d 104 (“It is not our practice to rely

10 on assertions of counsel unaccompanied by support in the record. The mere assertions

11 and arguments of counsel are not evidence.”).

12   {32}   We are left with an undisturbed line of recent case law—beginning with

13 Cordova and Rivera in our Supreme Court and continuing with last year’s cases in this

14 Court—asserting unwaveringly that we find substantive unconscionability in an

15 unreasonably one-sided arbitration agreement that gives a company which drafts the

16 agreement the ability to seek judicial redress of its likeliest claims while forcing a

17 customer, who is the weaker party, to arbitrate any claim he or she may have. See

18 Rivera, 2011-NMSC-033, ¶ 53; Cordova, 2009-NMSC-021, ¶¶ 26-27; Figueroa,

19 2013-NMCA-___, ¶ 30; Ruppelt, 2013-NMCA-014, ¶¶ 16, 18; Bargman, 2013-


                                               18
 1 NMCA-006, ¶ 12-15. Residents or their representatives are most likely to bring

 2 claims involving negligence on the part of the nursing home.          Figueroa, 2013-

 3 NMCA-___, ¶ 32; Ruppelt, 2013-NMCA-014, ¶ 16. And no matter how many legal

 4 arguments—unsupported by evidence—that Defendants make to try to show that the

 5 collections exemption is not as one-sided as previous appellate opinions suggest, the

 6 unrebutted contention remains that collections claims are still the type of dispute a

 7 nursing home is most likely to bring against a resident and that a resident is least

 8 likely to bring. Rivera, 2011-NMSC-033, ¶ 53; Figueroa, 2013-NMCA-___, ¶ 31;

 9 Ruppelt, 2013-NMCA-014, ¶ 15.

10   {33}   Here, Defendants imposed an arbitration scheme that forced residents to submit

11 their most likely claims to arbitration while reserving for themselves the right to

12 litigate in a court of law the collections claims that they were most likely to bring.

13 Defendants had the opportunity but failed to present any evidence below that would

14 tend to prove that the collections exemption was not “unreasonably and unfairly one-

15 sided” in its own favor. As such, they failed to meet their burden of showing that the

16 Agreement was valid and enforceable. Therefore, it was not error for the district court

17 to deny Defendants’ motion to dismiss and compel arbitration.




                                              19
1 CONCLUSION

2   {34}   For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the ruling of the district court, and we

3 remand for proceedings consistent with this Opinion.

4   {35}   IT IS SO ORDERED.


5                                          __________________________________
6                                          M. MONICA ZAMORA, Judge


7 WE CONCUR:


8 __________________________________
9 MICHAEL D. BUSTAMANTE, Judge


10 __________________________________
11 CYNTHIA A. FRY, Judge




                                             20
