With no explanation, chose the best option from "A", "B", "C" or "D". unconscionable because it was intertwined with a provision prohibiting the arbitrator from awarding punitive damages. Id. at 355. Importantly, the Abner court found that the arbitration agreement was unconscionable because the arbitration clause itself imposed a limitation on damages that deprived one of the parties of their substantive statutory remedies. Id. But Abner does not stand for the proposition that all arbitration agreements are unenforceable simply because the contract contains a separate and unconscionable provision. Rather, as sub sequent courts construing Abner have emphasized, the question is whether the arbitration clause is so intertwined with the unconscionable provision that the two clauses cannot be severed from each other. See Francis, 2011 WL 2174348 at *3-4 (<HOLDING>). In Abner, the arbitration clause itself

A: holding that an arbitration clause is valid despite an accompanying limitation on liability because the latter is severable in the event it is found unconscionable
B: holding that an arbitration clause was not unconscionable because it did not unreasonably favor the defendants
C: holding arbitration clause in credit card agreement unconscionable
D: holding that arbitration agreement was not unconscionable where agree ment did not limit punitive damages and limitation of liability provision was severable if unenforceable
A.