Papa, Inc. Faces Overtime & Minimum Wage Violation Claims Due To Alleged Misclassification

A California federal district court granted conditional collective certification of claims brought under the federal FLSA for minimum wage and overtime violations arising from the alleged misclassification of Pals employed by Papa, Inc.

The Case: Pardo v. Papa Inc.

The Court: California Superior CourtCalifornia Supreme Court

The Case No.: CV-496 June 2015

The Plaintiff: Pardo v. Papa Inc.

The plaintiffs in the case claim the company misclassified the Pals, assistants who provide daily living tasks and companionship to seniors, as independent contractors. According to the collective action complaint, Papa Inc.’s Pals were misclassified based on the following:

1. The company conducted background checks before allowing the workers to connect with customers.

2. Providing the workers with training and strict policies.

3. Setting the pay structure for the Pals.

4. Tracking the location and productivity of Pals workers.

5. Retaining the right to terminate Pal workers without cause or for violating rules imposed in the Papa Inc. contract.

The Defendant: Pardo v. Papa Inc.

The defendant in the lawsuit, Papa, Inc., operates an app allowing seniors and their families to access the services of “Papa Pals.” Pals assist with chores and offer companionship services. The company contends that the Pals are independent contractors because they choose how often they use the app. They also operate primarily at the direction of the seniors or the seniors’ families who access the app, and they do so free from the direct supervision of the company. The company argued that the court should deny the plaintiff’s certification motion because the plaintiffs failed to establish they suffered any failure to receive overtime wages or minimum wage because they worked so few hours. The court disagreed, finding that the arguments were related to the merits of the claims, which were not appropriate to consider at that time.

Details of the Case: Pardo v. Papa Inc.

The court concluded that the plaintiff adequately showed that Pal workers are treated as independent contractors, which creates the potential of not receiving overtime pay and minimum wages required by employment law for those legally classified as employees. This court’s decision seems to contradict past case decisions. For instance, in 2021, the Fifth Circuit decision in Swales v. KLLM Transport Services, LLC required district courts to scrutinize similarly situated workers from the outset of the case instead of issuing a lenient conditional certification in the early stages of the suit. The case brings attention to the continuing discussion of how companies should classify their workers.

If you have questions about how to file a California misclassification lawsuit, please get in touch with Blumenthal Nordrehaug Bhowmik DeBlouw LLP. Experienced employment law attorneys are ready to assist you in various law firm offices in San Diego, San Francisco, Sacramento, Los Angeles, Riverside, and Chicago.

The JetBlue California Wage Case Gets Early Approval

In recent news, JetBlue Airways agreed to a $3.6 million settlement to resolve flight attendants' class-action claims alleging that the carrier violated California labor law. The proposed settlement received preliminary approval from a federal judge.

The Case: Booher v. JetBlue Airways Corp

The Court: U.S. District Court, Northern District of California

The Case No.: 4:15-cv-01203

The Plaintiffs: Booher v. JetBlue Airways Corp

Plaintiffs in Booher v. JetBlue Airways Corp is a proposed class action filed in 2015 amidst a flurry of litigation over whether California's strict and detailed wage laws apply to flight attendants. The element creating difficulty is that flight attendants, by the nature of their jobs, are based in the state but spend most of their time on the job - in the air. The complaint accused JetBlue of requiring flight attendants to miss their rest periods and meal breaks and not paying them for the time as California law requires. The plaintiffs also claim JetBlue failed to issue accurate wage statements reflecting their pay, hours, etc.

The Defendant: Booher v. JetBlue Airways Corp

Other airlines and trade groups faced similar allegations questioning if a federal law regulating airlines and railroads preempted state laws and arguing that a ruling to the contrary would result in costly regulatory patchwork requiring airlines to eliminate services and increase prices. The defendant in the case, JetBlue Airways Corp, presented similar arguments in this case.

Details of the Case: Booher v. JetBlue Airways Corp

The California Supreme Court and the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals (which covers the state) ruled in recent years that state employment law generally applies and does not specify airlines, so the industry must comply with them. In 2016 and 2017, U.S. District Judge Jeffrey White dismissed many of the claims but then stayed the case pending appeals in several similar lawsuits. White vacated his earlier decisions and revived several claims against JetBlue in 2020 after the court issued plaintiff-friendly rulings. Earlier this year, the U.S. Supreme Court declined to look at the issue after receiving encouragement from the Biden administration to allow the lower court rulings to stand. Legal counsel for the plaintiff filed the proposed settlement in San Francisco federal court. The terms designate California flight attendants employed since 2011 as benefits of the settlement. While JetBlue Airways Corp agrees to pay $3.6 million to be distributed to more than 500 flight attendants to settle the long-running lawsuit, they deny any wrongdoing. The parties agree that the settlement would resolve the claims accusing JetBlue of failing to pay their workers for missed rest breaks or meal periods, violating California labor law.

If you have questions about how to file a California employment law complaint, please get in touch with Blumenthal Nordrehaug Bhowmik DeBlouw LLP. Experienced employment law attorneys are ready to assist you in various law firm offices in San Diego, San Francisco, Sacramento, Los Angeles, Riverside, and Chicago.

U.S. Supreme Court Sends Domino’s Wage Lawsuit Back to 9th Circuit

In recent news, the U.S. Supreme Court sent the Domino’s wage lawsuit back to the 9th Circuit.

The Case: Domino’s Pizza LLC v. Carmona

The Court: Supreme Court of United States

The Case No.: 21-1572

The Previous Ruling: Domino’s Pizza LLC v. Carmona

Domino’s Pizza LLC employed the ingredient delivery drivers that filed the wage and hour lawsuit. The previous ruling in the case, Domino’s Pizza LLC v. Carmona, was issued in December 2021 from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit. The 9th Circuit found that the drivers qualify for a federal law carveout from arbitration agreements because they deliver out-of-state products from Domino’s centralized California depot to various franchise stores throughout California.

The U.S. Supreme Court’s Ruling: Domino’s Pizza LLC v. Carmona

The U.S. Supreme Court took up the California wage and hour lawsuit against Domino’s Pizza LLC solely to send the case back to the lower court. The ingredient delivery drivers filed suit seeking to clarify which workers are exempt from mandatory arbitration based on their engagement in interstate commerce. The drivers delivered out-of-state products from Domino’s centralized California depot to franchise stores across the state. The Ninth Circuit found that this qualified them for a federal law carveout from arbitration agreements. However, the U.S. Supreme Court justices’ decision vacated the December 2021 ruling suggesting the appeals court reconsider the case in light of the recent decision in Southwest Airlines Co. v. Saxon.

The Dispute: Domino’s Pizza LLC v. Carmona

The Domino’s Pizza LLC v. Carmona case is falling amid a surge of litigation over transportation workers’ attempts to avoid mandatory arbitration of various employment disputes. Domino’s argued that the appeals court misinterpreted the Federal Arbitration Act and urged the high court to determine which class of transportation workers are covered by the exemption. Saxon did not offer a decision on the issue. In Saxon, the justices unanimously concluded that a former Southwest ramp supervisor qualified for the named exemption because she was involved in transporting goods across state or international borders, which fell inside the Act’s parameters. The finding allowed the ramp supervisor to pursue her overtime dispute in court rather than arbitration. However, in Saxon, the court specified that the exemption does not cover all transportation workers. Domino’s suggested the appeal is the ideal opportunity to settle the question resulting in a split among the Eleventh, Night, and Seventh Circuit Courts. In opposition, the drivers argue that the Ninth Circuit’s decision is in line with Saxon because the high court’s finding indicated the arbitration carveout applies when there is movement of goods in interstate commerce (even if the worker completing the transportation does not cross a state line themselves).

If you have questions about how to file a California employment law complaint, please get in touch with Blumenthal Nordrehaug Bhowmik DeBlouw LLP. Experienced employment law attorneys are ready to assist you in various law firm offices in San Diego, San Francisco, Sacramento, Los Angeles, Riverside, and Chicago.

Fresenius USA Manufacturing Moves for Summary Judgment in Overtime Suit

Fresenius USA Manufacturing allegedly violated California's labor laws governing meal periods, rest breaks, and overtime compensation. In a March 14, 2022 order, the court granted the Defendant's Motion for Summary Judgment.

The Case: Cota v. Fresenius U.S., Inc.

The Court: United States District Court, Southern District of California

The Case No.: 18cv1163-LAB

The Plaintiff: Cota v. Fresenius U.S., Inc.

The plaintiff in the case, Sergio Cota, worked for the Defendant, Fresenius USA Manufacturing, Inc. as a truck driver from May 21, 2008 through April 19, 2017. During his time employed at the company, Cota claims the company violated California's labor laws relating to meal periods, rest breaks, and overtime pay. He also filed derivative claims for failure to pay wages due upon termination, failure to provide accurate itemized wage statements as required by law, violation of California's Unfair Competition Law ("UCL"), and violation of the California Private Attorneys General Act ("PAGA").

The Defendant: Cota v. Fresenius U.S., Inc.

The defendant in the case (FUSA Manufacturing, plus parent company and co-defendant Fresenius USA, Inc.) employed Cota as a driver. In December 2018, after Cota filed his claims, the Secretary of Transportation declared that the Motor Carrier Safety Act of 1984 preempted California's meal and rest break rules for commercial drivers. The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration then stated that the declaration applied to any future enforcement of the specified statutes, even those connected with alleged conduct that occurred before the declaration.

Details of the Case: Cota v. Fresenius U.S., Inc.

When the Ninth Circuit Appeals Court took up another action involving the FMCSA's preemption decision (Int'l Bhd. of Teamsters, Local 2785 v. FMCSA, Case No. 19-73488), the parties in Cota v. Fresenius U.S., Inc. jointly moved to stay the case and await the court's decision. Since it was reasonable to expect the other case's ruling to be "controlling" in the Cota v. Fresenius U.S., Inc. case, the Court granted the motion to stay. In Int'l Bhd. of Teamsters, Local 2785 v. FMCSA, the Ninth Circuit upheld FMCSA's preemption determination but found that FMCSA's opinion on retroactivity was not a reviewable final agency action. In a March 14, 2022 order, the court determined that Cota's wage and rest period claims relied on unenforceable California state law and that his overtime allegations overlooked that he was exempt from the overtime protections used as the basis for the claim. The other wage-related claims Cota filed were derivative of the first three failed claims, and the attached UCL and PAGA claims cannot stand on their own without another claimed violation as support. Based on these arguments, the court granted Fresenius U.S.'s Motion for Summary Judgment and entered judgment in Defendant's favor.

If you have questions about how to file a California class action suit, please get in touch with Blumenthal Nordrehaug Bhowmik DeBlouw LLP. Experienced employment law attorneys are ready to assist you in various law firm offices in San Diego, San Francisco, Sacramento, Los Angeles, Riverside, and Chicago.

A Common Nucleus of Fact in Two Recent Employment Law Suits

In recent news, the court sides with Walmart in two different but connected wage statement violations lawsuits.

The Case: Anguiano-Tamayo v. Wal-Mart Assocs.

The Court: United States District Court, Northern District of California

The Case No.: 18-cv-04598-JSC

The Plaintiff: Anguiano-Tamayo v. Wal-Mart Assocs.

The plaintiff in the case, Anguiano-Tamayo, filed a putative class action in 2018 bringing claims under California Labor Code §§ 226 and 2698 against her employer, Walmart Assocs.

The Defendant: Anguiano-Tamayo v. Wal-Mart Assocs.

The defendant in the case, Walmart Assocs., moved to dismiss based on the plaintiff's failure to state a claim. The Court denied the motion to dismiss but stayed the case saying it was duplicative of an earlier-filed case pending at that time in the Northern District of California. The duplicative case concluded in 2021.

The Duplicitous Case: Magadia v. Wal-Mart Associates, Inc.

Roderick Magadia filed the duplicative putative class action in 2016 against his former employer Wal-Mart. (Magadia v. Wal-Mart Associates, Inc., No. 5:17-cv-00062-LHK, Dkt. No. 1-1.) Magadia alleged three violations of the California Labor Code:

• wage statement violations (adjusted overtime pay rates allegedly did not include hourly rates or hours worked),

• failure to list pay-period start and end dates on statements of final pay,

• and meal break violations.

In June 2018, Wal-Mart attempted to file a motion for reconsideration of the court's order granting partial summary judgment based on Canales (No. 5:17-cv-00062-LHK, Dkt. No. 129 at 3), a recent California Court of Appeals decision. The court denied "any motion for reconsideration" based on Canales. At the same time, Magadia attempted to amend the original complaint to add a new theory of liability based on Walmart's attempt to raise a new defense. The district court denied the request based on the advanced state of litigation combined with their denial of the defendant's request to raise a new defense. In response, the plaintiff's counsel filed the instant action on behalf of Ana Anguiano-Tamayo, a different employee, and filed an administrative motion to consider whether the two cases were related, arguing that they shared overlapping factual allegations regarding Wal-Mart's wage statements. Wal-Mart opposed claiming that the cases are based on unique theories of liability (Anguiano-Tamayo calls into question how certain wage statements reflect pay periods, and Magadia calls into question how wage statements reflect hourly rates and hours worked. The court denied the request to relate the two cases and stayed the more recently filed case, Anguiano-Tamayo v. Wal-Mart Assocs.

A Common Nucleus of Fact: Anguiano-Tamayo v. Wal-Mart Assocs.

After the conclusion of Magadia v. Wal-Mart Associates, Inc, the Anguiano-Tamayo v. Wal-Mart Assocs. case proceeded. While the theories behind the two cases were determined to be unique, in considering Anguiano-Tamayo v. Wal-Mart Assocs., the court decided that they did both arise out of the same transactional nucleus of fact. The court found that Magadia precludes the plaintiff's claim in Anguiano-Tamayo v. Wal-Mart Assocs. The court granted the Defendant's motion for judgment.

If you have questions about wage statement violations or need to file an employment law claim, please contact Blumenthal Nordrehaug Bhowmik DeBlouw LLP. Experienced employment law attorneys are ready to assist you in various law firm offices in San Diego, San Francisco, Sacramento, Los Angeles, Riverside, and Chicago.

Zero Motorcycles Settles Wage and Hour Claims with $425K Class Action Settlement

To resolve wage and hour claims that the company failed to provide workers with proper wages, Zero Motorcycles agreed to pay a $425,000 settlement.

The Case: Gutierrez v. Zero Motorcycles Inc.

The Court: Superior Court for the State of California, County of Santa Cruz

The Case No.: 19-CV-03725

The Plaintiff: Gutierrez v. Zero Motorcycles Inc.

The plaintiffs in the case are employees of Zero Motorcycles. According to the lawsuit, plaintiffs allege that the company violated California law by failing to calculate correct regular pay rates and forcing employees to perform off-the-clock work. Allegedly, these labor law violations resulted in the company paying their employees less than minimum wage and inaccurate overtime wages. The plaintiffs also claim that the company denied them rest and meal breaks, accurate itemized wage statements, separation wages, and related penalties (all of which constitute labor law violations).

The Defendant: Gutierrez v. Zero Motorcycles Inc.

The defendant in the case, Zero Motorcycles, manufactures and sells various motorcycles. The models they offer vary from street bikes to dual sport bikes. According to Zero Motorcycle's website, the California-based company specializes in high-performance electric technology. However, in the plaintiff's class action lawsuit, the company is accused of failing to pay its employees properly.

The Case: Gutierrez v. Zero Motorcycles Inc.

The wage-and-hour class action lawsuit, Gutierrez v. Zero Motorcycles Inc., listed several alleged labor law violations: paying their employees less than minimum wage, paying inaccurate overtime wages, denying employees their rest and meal breaks, failing to provide accurate itemized wage statements, failing to offer separation wages promptly, etc. The class action also included claims under California's Private Attorneys General Act (PAGA). Zero Motorcycles did not admit to any wrongdoing, but they did agree to pay the $425,000 settlement to resolve the alleged California labor law violations. The wage and hour settlement benefits those who worked for Zero Motorcycles in California between Dec. 16th, 2015, and June 13th, 2021. The settlement terms allow class members to collect a payment based on the number of workweeks they worked during the class period, so workers who completed a more significant number of workweeks during the class period will be eligible for a higher settlement payment. The proposed settlement agreement also includes a $30,000 payment to the California Labor & Workforce Development Agency for PAGA violations. The court scheduled a final approval hearing for the settlement for July 26th, 2022.

If you have questions about California employment law or need to file a wage and hour lawsuit, please get in touch with Blumenthal Nordrehaug Bhowmik DeBlouw LLP. Experienced employment law attorneys can assist you in various law firm offices in San Diego, San Francisco, Sacramento, Los Angeles, Riverside, and Chicago.

Class Action Lawsuit Alleged Merrill Lynch Violated Wage & Hour and Overtime Pay Laws

Did you know Merril Lynch resolved unpaid wage and overtime pay claims in a 2020 class action lawsuit with a settlement deal?

The Case: Scrooc v Merrill Lynch Pierce Feener and Smith Incorporated

The Court: Superior Court of the State of California County of Marin

The Case No.: CIV 2001671

The Plaintiff: Scrooc v Merrill Lynch Pierce Feener and Smith Inc.

The plaintiff in the case, Scrooc, made allegations under various California laws: the state's labor laws, the California Unfair Competition Law and the California Private Attorneys General Act or PAGA (a law that allows California workers to bring labor claims on behalf of the state's labor authority). The plaintiff filed a class action alleging Merrill Lynch underpaid their California financial advisors.

The Defendant: Scrooc v Merrill Lynch Pierce Feener and Smith Inc.

Merrill Lynch is an investment management company. The investment management company employs financial advisors and associates who work with customers to guide them in creating personalized investment plans and retirement plans. According to the Merrill Lynch website, the company employs more than 13,000 financial advisors.

Summary of the Case: Scrooc v Merrill Lynch Pierce Feener and Smith Inc.

Did Merrill Lynch take advantage of its California advisors by failing to pay wages properly? While Merrill Lynch did not admit any wrongdoing and continues to contend that its company complied with California wage-and-hour laws, it agreed to a $1.375 million class action lawsuit settlement to resolve the wage and hour and overtime pay claims. A $100,000 portion of the settlement fund was allocated for PAGA claims, including some payments to eligible class members and a sizeable financial penalty paid to California's Labor and Workforce Development Agency. Eligible class members include Merrill Lynch employees who worked in California as Client Associates between Aug. 26th, 2016, and May 12th, 2022, and had one of the following job titles: Registered Client Associate, Registered Senior Client Associate, Investment Associate, Private Wealth Associate, Sales Assistant, Sales Associate, Account Associate, Brokerage Associate or any other non-exempt administrative support position.

If you have questions about California employment law, wage and hour violations, or need help filing a California class-action lawsuit, please contact Blumenthal Nordrehaug Bhowmik DeBlouw LLP. Experienced employment law attorneys are ready to assist you in various law firm offices in San Diego, San Francisco, Sacramento, Los Angeles, Riverside, and Chicago.