State Supreme Court hears arguments over Uber forced arbitration
[May 20, 2026]
By Sean Reed | The Center Square
(The Center Square) – Four years after two men – an Uber driver and a
passenger – died in a car wreck on the Stevenson Expressway, a wrongful
death lawsuit brought by the passenger’s widow against Uber was heard by
the Illinois Supreme Court Tuesday.
Arguments made before the court did not relate to the wrongful death
claim however. Instead, Justices considered arguments regarding the
rideshare service’s terms of use.
Mark Geller, a 60-year-old Uber passenger, died in an automobile crash
in April 2022. He and the driver were both killed when the driver lost
control of the vehicle and crashed.
Following the accident, Gloria Sheridan Geller filed a wrongful death
lawsuit against Uber, acting as the executor of her late-husband Mark’s
estate.
At stake is whether Uber can move the case into private arbitration, a
process companies often prefer to keep disputes out of public courtrooms
and limit opportunities for appeal.
Uber argued Gloria accepted Uber’s terms of use on her own account, so
her personal agreement prevents the estate she represents from a public
lawsuit.
The Circuit Court of Cook County ruled in favor of the Geller Estate,
which would have allowed the lawsuit to move forward.
Uber appealed the ruling, which was overturned based on the argument
that Gloria brought the lawsuit personally, rather than the estate
bringing the case.

Chuck Haskins, representing Geller, argued that the appellate court
misunderstood how the Illinois Wrongful Death Act works. A wrongful
death claim is brought on behalf of surviving relatives, raising
questions of if Gloria’s own Uber agreement should have any effect on
the case.
He also said the lower court violated the Federal Arbitration Act, which
requires courts to enforce most arbitration agreements – by applying the
clause without determining if it was valid to begin with.
“The trial court first found that Sheridan's agreement did not have
anything to do with this [lawsuit]. It called it irrelevant to this
dispute because her terms deal with her use. Mark's death dealt with his
use,” Haskins said.
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The exterior of the Illinois Supreme Court is shown in Springfield.
Photo: Greg Bishop / The Center Square

On Uber’s side, Clifford Berlow argued that the agreement between
Sheridan and Uber is valid and should apply since she is personally
in charge of the estate, even though her account was not involved in
the issue the lawsuit stems from.
“We know from wrongful death law that she controls the claim. She
gets to decide where to file it, who to retain as counsel to pursue
it, and whether or not to settle. And so her position to this court
is that she can do all of those things but is not legally empowered
to enter into an agreement to arbitrate,” Berlow said.
Justices questioned Berlow’s view of the case just a few seconds
after he began speaking.
Berlow asserted that the Federal Arbitration Act takes precedence
over any state law that would prohibit an agreement. In his view,
Geller’s control over the claim means her personal contract with the
company would dictate the forum to settle the case.
“My position is that if she sues Uber, then the question of who
decides arises and the decision maker will be the arbitrator,”
Berlow said. “There is a remedy for her if she disagrees with that
ruling from the arbitrator.”
Haskins warned if the court sides with Uber, companies could use
terms of service agreements to push families into lengthy
arbitration processes before they get the chance to reach a
courtroom.
The Court’s decision in the case is expected to come down late next
month.
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