Hilbers Class Action: Alleged Wage and Hour Allegations

In recent news, Hilbers faces wage and hour violation allegations in a California class action.

Case: Martin Couch v. Hilbers, Inc.

Court: Los Angeles County Superior Court of the State of California

Case No.: 25STCV34742

Get to Know the Plaintiff: Couch v. Hilbers

The plaintiff in the case, Martin Couch, is an individual who alleges he worked for the Hilbers entities as a non-exempt, hourly employee in California from January 2024 through May 2025. He filed a class action complaint on behalf of himself and other similarly situated current and former non-exempt employees, claiming the defendants engaged in uniform wage-and-hour practices that, among other things, failed to pay employees for all time worked (including alleged off-the-clock work) and failed to provide legally compliant meal and rest periods (and related premium pay), along with other associated Labor Code violations tied to pay practices and recordkeeping.

Who is the Defendant in the Case?

The defendant in the case, Hilbers, employed the plaintiff at a California operation. The plaintiff claims Hilbers engaged in wage-and-hour violations tied to its standard pay practices for non-exempt employees. The allegations would constitute violations of California Labor Code Sections §§ 201, 202, 203, 204, 210, 226.7, 510, 512, 558, 1194, 1197, 1197.1, 1198, 1198.5, and 2802.

The Plaintiffs Allege the Defendants Violated Multiple Labor Laws

According to the class action, the plaintiff alleged that Hilbers engaged in various business practices that violated labor law, including:

  1. Failing to pay employees for all the time they worked, including time worked “off the clock.”

  2. Expecting employees to complete pre-shift and post-shift work (like attending meetings) that wasn’t fully recorded or paid

  3. Failing to provide meal breaks, cutting breaks short, or requiring employees to work while clocked out during what was supposed to be an off-duty meal period.

  4. Failing to pay the additional “premium” hour of pay owed for missed meal breaks

  5. Underpaying overtime/double time (and other pay tied to the “regular rate”) because incentive/bonus pay wasn’t properly included when calculating the pay rates

  6. Failing to provide compliant paystubs/wage statements

  7. Failing to reimburse required business expenses (like personal cell phone services used for work)

  8. Failing to provide reporting-time pay when workers are required to report to work without being provided enough work

The Main Question of the Case: Couch v. Hilbers

The core question is whether the Hilbers entities had company-wide pay and scheduling practices that caused non-exempt employees to perform compensable work without full pay, including alleged off-the-clock work before/after shifts and during meal periods. The court will also need to evaluate whether employees were provided legally compliant meal and rest breaks, or instead were kept on duty/on call, interrupted, or required to work through breaks without receiving the required premium pay. A related issue is whether the employer correctly calculated and paid overtime and other wages tied to the “regular rate,” including whether incentive/bonus compensation was properly included. Finally, the case raises whether any alleged timekeeping and pay practice problems also resulted in non-compliant wage statements and unreimbursed business expenses across the proposed class.

As of January 2026, the case is pending in the Los Angeles County Superior Court of the State of California.

FAQ: Couch v. Hilbers

Q: What counts as “hours worked” in California?

A: “Hours worked” generally includes any time an employee is under the employer’s control or is allowed to work, including pre-shift/post-shift tasks.

Q: If an employee attends meetings or completes tasks off the clock, what wage rights may be triggered?

A: If that work is required or allowed, it should be paid and may also count toward overtime depending on the total hours worked in the day or week.

Q: What makes a meal break “off-duty?”

A: To qualify as “off duty,” an employee must be fully relieved of all work, and if the employee is required to work, the time may be compensable and can trigger premium pay penalties.

Q: How many rest breaks are required based on shift length, and what happens if staffing/workload prevents breaks?

A: Rest break entitlements generally increase with shift length, and heavy workload or staffing issues do not excuse missed breaks; when breaks are missed, premium pay may be owed to the employee.

Q: What is “premium pay” for missed meal/rest breaks, and when is an additional hour of pay owed?

A: Premium pay is one additional hour of pay at the employee’s regular rate owed when an employer fails to provide a compliant meal or rest break.

Q: How does bonus or incentive pay affect the “regular rate” used for overtime and other wage calculations?

A: Certain nondiscretionary bonuses and incentives must be included in the regular rate, which can increase the overtime rate and total wages owed.

If you believe your employer’s standard wage payment practices or overtime pay rate calculations may result in labor law violations, the employment law attorneys at Blumenthal Nordrehaug Bhowmik De Blouw LLP can help. Contact one of our offices in Los Angeles, San Diego, San Francisco, Sacramento, Riverside, or Chicago today to learn how to hold your employer accountable.

California Wage and Hour Lawsuit Claims Hyatt Violated Labor Law

In recent news, Hyatt Corporation faces allegations of California Labor Code violations stemming from employee claims that it did not pay for all hours worked.

Case: Josh Montes v. Hyatt Corporation dba The Seabird

Court: San Diego County Superior Court of the State of California

Case No.: 25CU065911N

Get to Know the Plaintiff: Montes v. Hyatt

The plaintiff, Montes, filed a class action complaint against Hyatt Corporation for allegedly failing to provide meal and rest breaks. Montes claims that rigorous work schedules left Hyatt employees unable to take off-duty rest breaks and not fully relieved of duty during rest periods. The plaintiffs specifically claimed that they were required to work more than 4 hours without a 10-minute rest period due to excessive workload and inadequate staffing. From time to time, employees were also allegedly denied both their legally mandated ten-minute rest breaks for shifts lasting 6 to 8 hours and all three of their legally mandated ten-minute breaks for shifts lasting 10 hours or more. According to the plaintiff, Hyatt Corporation also allegedly failed to provide the required one-hour wage payment for missed breaks.

Who is the Defendant in the Case?

The defendant in the case, Hyatt Corporation (dba The Seabird), faces allegations that it violated multiple California State Labor Code Sections, including §§ 201, 202, 203, 204, 210, 226.7, 510, 512, 558, 1194, 1197, 1197.1, 1198, 1198.5, and 2802.

The Plaintiffs Allege the Defendants Violated Multiple Labor Laws

In the court documents, the plaintiffs allege the company engaged in multiple labor law violations. In summary, the plaintiffs allege that the company failed to: pay at least minimum wages, pay accurate overtime wages, provide legally required meal breaks and rest periods, provide accurate wage statements, provide wages promptly, and reimburse workers for required business expenses.

The Main Question of the Case: Montes v. Hyatt

The main question in this case is whether Hyatt Corporation maintained policies, staffing levels, or scheduling practices that resulted in employees performing compensable work without lawful pay (including time tied to missed, late, or interrupted rest periods) in violation of California wage-and-hour requirements. The lawsuit alleges employees were overburdened and inadequately staffed, leading to situations in which they worked more than 4 hours without receiving the required 10-minute rest breaks and, in some instances, were denied the correct number of rest periods for shifts spanning 2–4 hours, 6–8 hours, and 10+ hours. A related issue is whether Hyatt allegedly failed to provide premium pay (one additional hour at the employee’s regular rate) when compliant rest periods were not provided, and whether those alleged break violations also connect to broader claims for unpaid minimum and overtime wages, wage statement inaccuracies, late payment of wages, and unreimbursed business expenses under the Labor Code sections cited in the complaint.

As of January 2026, the case was pending in the San Diego County Superior Court of the State of California.

FAQ: Montes v. Hyatt

Q: What are California’s rest break rules, and how many 10-minute breaks are required based on shift length?

A: California Labor Law requires employers to provide nonexempt employees with a paid, uninterrupted 10-minute rest break for every 4 hours worked. When feasible, the break must be in the middle of the work shift.

Q: If an employee works more than four (4) hours without a rest break, what pay or remedies may be owed?

A: If a nonexempt employee is not provided with a break during a work shift lasting more than four hours, the California employer is required to pay the employee “premium pay” as a penalty.

Q: What is “premium pay” for missed rest breaks, and when must an employer pay one additional hour of wages?

A: “Premium pay” is a penalty California employers are required to provide when they fail to provide a nonexempt employee with a legally mandated rest period or meal break. Premium pay equals one additional hour at the employee’s regular pay rate.

Q: Can “inadequate staffing” or heavy workloads be used to justify missed or shortened rest periods under California law?

A: No, inadequate staffing or heavy workloads do not excuse missed breaks, shortened breaks, or interrupted breaks. Employees must permit compliant rest breaks for their nonexempt employees and cannot use operational demands as justification for violating labor law requirements.

Q: How can rest break violations lead to additional claims for unpaid overtime, minimum wage shortfalls, or inaccurate wage statements?

A: In many cases, rest break violations result in other wage and hour claims “stacking” up. Missed, interrupted, or shortened breaks regularly lead to employees working “off-the-clock” or having their work hours recorded inaccurately. The violations trigger additional violations for: missed premium pay, inaccurate wage statements, minimum wage shortfalls, and unpaid overtime.

Q: What types of evidence are commonly used in class actions to show a pattern or practice of missed rest breaks (e.g., schedules, time records, policies, staffing data)?

A: In California, class actions attempting to establish a pattern or practice of missed rest periods and meal breaks often depend on a variety of evidence, including written policies or training manuals, payroll records, work schedules, or break logs (or log of a lack of breaks), labor budgets and staffing levels, manager communications, employee testimony, etc.

If you believe your employer’s regular business practices violate California labor laws, the employment law attorneys at Blumenthal Nordrehaug Bhowmik De Blouw LLP can help. Contact one of our offices in Los Angeles, San Diego, San Francisco, Sacramento, Riverside, or Chicago today to learn how to hold your employer accountable.

Employee Alleges Hi Pro Engaged in Labor Law Violations

Another California employer faces allegations that it failed to provide their employees with legally mandated rest breaks and meal periods. Doing so inevitably leads to additional labor law violations connected to timely pay, pay rates, and overtime calculations.

Case: Lisa Munoz v. Hi Pro, Inc.

Court: San Bernardino County Superior Court of the State of California

Case No.: CIVSB2536842

Get to Know the Plaintiff: Lisa Munoz v. Hi Pro, Inc.

The plaintiff, Lisa Munoz, filed a class action complaint against Hi Pro, Inc. on December 17, 2025, alleging that the defendant systematically violated labor laws by failing to provide proper meal and rest breaks, manipulating timekeeping records, requiring unpaid off-the-clock work, failing to properly calculate overtime wages and making unauthorized deductions from employee compensation.

Who is the Defendant in the Case?

The defendant in the case, Hi Pro, Inc., is a family-owned and operated trucking company operating out of Yucca Valley.

The Plaintiffs Allege the Defendants Violated Multiple Labor Laws

According to the complaint, the plaintiffs allege the company violated several labor laws when it failed to:

  1. Pay minimum wages

  2. Pay overtime wages

  3. Provide required meal breaks and rest periods.

  4. Provide accurate itemized wage statements.

  5. Pay wages when due

  6. Reimburse workers for necessary work expenses.

The alleged violations would constitute violations of California Labor Code Sections §§ 201, 202, 203, 204, 210, 226.7, 510, 512, 558, 1194, 1197, 1197.1, 1198, 1198.5, and 2802. As of January 2026, the case is currently pending in the San Bernardino County Superior Court of the State of California.

The Main Question in the Case: Lisa Munoz v. Hi Pro, Inc.

The main question in this case is whether Hi Pro, Inc. maintained policies or practices that denied employees legally compliant meal breaks and rest periods. The court will ask:

  • Were employees fully relieved of work duties for off-duty breaks?

  • Were employees kept on call during off-duty breaks?

  • Were employees interrupted during breaks to complete work duties?

  • How long did Hi Pro have their employees work before providing them with a break?

  • When employees did not receive appropriate rest breaks and meal periods, did the missed breaks result in additional employment law violations (such as minimum wage/overtime pay violations, inaccurate wage statements, late wage payment, unreimbursed business expenses, etc.?

FAQ: Lisa Munoz v. Hi Pro, Inc.

Q: What makes a meal period “off-duty” and legally compliant under California law?

A: In California, a meal period is “off duty” only if the employee is completely relieved of all work duties, they are uninterrupted while on their break is uninterrupted, they are free to leave the premises, and they are free of employer control. Additionally, the meal period must be provided before the end of the fifth hour of the employee’s shift.

Q: If an employee is interrupted during a meal break to handle work tasks, does that meal period still count as compliant?

A: If an employee’s break is interrupted so they can complete a job task or work duty, it is generally considered non-compliant since regulations require a 30-minute, uninterrupted, “off-duty” period. If the break is interrupted, it becomes an “on-duty” paid meal period, which is legal only if the nature of the work being performed prevents the employee from being relieved of their job duties and a written agreement exists.

​Q: Are California employers aware that providing rest breaks and meal periods is required by law?

A: Yes, all California employers should be aware that they must comply with labor law’s requirements for rest breaks and meal periods.

Q: When is a second meal period required, and what are the rules for shifts of ten (10) hours or more?

A: A second 30-minute unpaid meal period is generally needed if an employee works a shift longer than 10 hours in one workday.

Q: Is there a penalty when California employers don’t provide meal periods or rest breaks?

A: Yes, for a missed break, California employers should provide the employee with premium pay.

Q: How can meal/rest break violations connect to other claims like unpaid overtime, inaccurate wage statements, final pay violations, or expense reimbursement?

A: Meal and rest break violations often act as a catalyst for other wage and hour claims because California law considers the "premium pay" (one extra hour of pay) owed for missed breaks to be a form of wages. When these premiums are not paid, they trigger a domino effect, connecting directly to unpaid overtime, inaccurate pay stubs, and final pay violations.

If you believe your California employer violated labor law by failing to provide legally mandated meal breaks or rest periods, the employment law attorneys at Blumenthal Nordrehaug Bhowmik De Blouw LLP can help. Contact one of our offices in Los Angeles, San Diego, San Francisco, Sacramento, Riverside, or Chicago today to learn how to hold your employer accountable.

International Rescue Committee Employee Claims Company Didn’t Provide Breaks

In recent news, an International Rescue Committee employee claims the company failed to provide employees with meal breaks and rest periods, in compliance with labor laws.

Case: Brandon Thomas Fitzgerald v. International Rescue Committee Inc.

Court: San Diego County Superior Court of the State of California

Case No.: 25CU058378C

Get to Know the Plaintiff: Fitzgerald v. International Rescue Committee

The plaintiff in the case, Fitzgerald, worked for the International Rescue Committee from December 2024 through March 2025. Fitzgerald filed a class action complaint against International Rescue Committee Inc. for allegedly failing to provide employees with timely, off-duty meal and rest periods. According to the plaintiff, the company violated multiple labor laws, stemming from practices that prevented employees from taking off-duty meal breaks and rest periods.

Who is the Defendant in the Case?

The defendant in the case, International Rescue Committee, owns and operates humanitarian aid and refugee settlement in California.

The Plaintiffs Allege the Defendants Violated Multiple Labor Laws

According to the lawsuit, the defendant allegedly violated multiple California Labor Code sections (namely §§ 201, 202, 203, 204, 210, 226, 226.7, 510, 512, 558, 1194, 1197, 1197.1, 1198, and 2802). The allegations plaintiffs listed in the complaint included: failing to pay minimum wage; failing to pay overtime wages; failing to provide meal breaks and rest periods; failing to provide accurate itemized wage statements; failing to pay wages when due; and failing to reimburse employees for required expenses.

The Main Questions in the Case: Fitzgerald v. International Rescue Committee

California’s Wage Orders broadly define “hours worked.” The definition includes not only time on the posted schedule but also time when an employee is under the employer’s control or is permitted to work. The key issue here is whether International Rescue Committee Inc. required or permitted employees to work off the clock, including alleged work before and after shifts and during what were supposed to be off-duty meal periods, without pay. If that happened, the court would be looking at whether failing to track and compensate that time caused employees to receive less than the required minimum wage for all hours worked in the affected pay periods, regardless of whether they were paid by the hour, by piece, by commission, or by another method. As of January 2026, the case was pending in the San Diego County Superior Court of the State of California.

FAQ: Fitzgerald v. International Rescue Committee

Q: What counts as “hours worked” under California law?

A: Under California law, "hours worked" is defined broadly as all time during which an employee is subject to the control of an employer, including all the time the employee is "suffered or permitted to work, whether or not required to do so."

Q: When is an employer required to provide a compliant, off-duty meal period in California?

A: In California, employers must provide a compliant, unpaid, off-duty meal period of at least 30 minutes for any shift lasting more than five hours. This break must begin no later than the end of the employee's fifth hour of work. A second 30-minute break is required if the shift exceeds 10 hours.

Q: What are California's rest period requirements, and what happens if an employee can’t take an uninterrupted rest break?

A: In California, non-exempt employees must be provided with a paid, 10-minute uninterrupted rest break for every 4 hours worked (or major fraction thereof). Breaks should be in the middle of a work shift. If a break is missed, interrupted, or not provided, employers must pay one hour of “premium pay” (as specified by labor law).

Q: If an employee works during a meal break or while they are off-the-clock, can that time also trigger overtime obligations?

A: Yes, any time an employee spends working while “off-the-clock” or on an unpaid meal break counts as hours worked according to FLSA (the Fair Labor Standards Act), and can lead to overtime obligations of the total weekly hours exceeding 40.

Q: What information must appear on an itemized wage statement, and what are the penalties for inaccurate wage statements?

A: California’s Labor Code Section 226(a) requires employers to provide accurate, itemized wage statements including 9 specific mandatory details. Failing to comply with the requirements can result in penalties of $50 for the first violation, $100 per employee for each subsequent violation (up to a maximum of $4,000), plus potential lawsuits with associated attorney fees and costs.

Q: What remedies are typically sought in California wage-and-hour class actions involving missed breaks, unpaid wages, and unreimbursed expenses?

A: In most California wage and hour class actions, plaintiffs seek lost income for affected employees, enforcement of Labor Code compliance requirements, and financial penalties for systemic labor law violations.

If you believe your employer’s timekeeping policies caused you to miss overtime pay, shorted you on wages earned during overnight shifts, or resulted in inaccurate wage statements or final pay issues, the employment law attorneys at Blumenthal Nordrehaug Bhowmik De Blouw LLP can help. Contact one of our offices in Los Angeles, San Diego, San Francisco, Sacramento, Riverside, or Chicago today to learn how to hold your employer accountable.

Mega International Class Action: Employees Claim California Company Failed to Provide Breaks

In a recent California class action lawsuit, an employee alleged that Mega International failed to provide employees with appropriate meal breaks and rest periods.

Case: Deana Sinforosa Garcia Hernandez v. Mega International, LLC, MCO Services LLC

Court: Los Angeles County Superior Court of the State of California

Case No.: 25STCV30670

Get to Know the Plaintiff: Garcia Hernandez v. Mega International, MCO Services LLC

The plaintiff in the case, Deana Sinforosa Garcia Hernandez, was jointly employed by Mega International and MCO Services from May 2024 through September 2025. Garcia Hernandez was employed as an hourly, non-exempt employee, which means she is entitled to legally required meal breaks and rest periods, as well as minimum wage and overtime pay protections under labor laws. In the California class action, Garcia Hernandez claims the company failed to provide meal periods and rest breaks mandated by federal and state labor laws.

Who is the Defendant in the Case?

According to court documents, the defendants in the case were joint employers of the plaintiff, Garcia Hernandez, who worked for the company for a year and 4 months. Their business services included offering California corporate clients with business support and operational oversight.

The Plaintiffs Allege the Defendants Violated Multiple Labor Laws

The plaintiff alleged that Mega International/MCO Services violated labor laws governing meal breaks, rest periods, premium pay for missed breaks, etc.

The Main Question in the Case: Did the Company Provide Lawful Meal and Rest Periods?

The California class action lawsuit claims that the company failed to provide its employees with timely off-duty meal breaks and rest periods as required by labor law. As such, the court needed to consider whether the company complied with the applicable requirements of the California Labor Code and the Industrial Welfare Commission (IWC) Wage Orders. Specifically, the court must decide whether workers were relieved of duties and free of employer control during breaks and meal periods. The plaintiffs claim the company did not relieve employees of all their work duties during breaks due to workplace demands, standard policies, and business practices. In direct correlation to compliant breaks, the court must also consider whether the company complied with Labor Code section 226.7 by offering the proper premium pay to employees when compliant breaks were not provided. To determine compliance, the court is likely to consider time records, written policies, witness testimony, and workplace practices to pinpoint isolated incidents or a broader pattern of violations affecting multiple employees.

FAQ: Garcia Hernandez v. Mega International

Q: When are California employees legally entitled to a meal break?

A: California employees are entitled to a meal break (unpaid, off-duty, and at least 30 minutes) when they work over five hours (meal with the meal break starting no later than the end of the fifth hour). If the employee works a shift longer than 10 hours, they are entitled to a second 30-minute minimum meal break (off duty and unpaid).

Q: How many rest periods are California employers required to provide their employees?

A: California employers are legally required to provide all non-exempt employees with one paid 10-minute rest period (uninterrupted) for every four hours they work. Working a 3.5- to 6-hour shift entitles employees to one 10-minute break; working 6 to 10 hours entitles them to two 10-minute breaks; and working 10 to 14 hours entitles them to three 10-minute breaks.

Q: When discussing meal breaks and rest periods, what is the legal definition of “off duty?”

A: When discussing labor law and meal breaks/rest periods, “off duty” means an employee is relieved of all their work duties and job-related tasks, as well as control by the employer for the full break.

Q: What is the “premium pay” provided for missed rest periods at work in California?

A: In California, employers are required to provide compliant rest periods (10 minutes for each 4-hour work shift), and when they fail to comply with this requirement, employees are entitled to one additional hour of pay (referred to as “premium pay”) at their regular rate of compensation. Premium pay is required for each workday a violation occurs, regardless of the number of missed breaks.

Q: What sort of evidence can employees offer the California court to show meal break/rest period violations?

A: California employees attempting to present effective evidence of meal break/rest period violations to the court can present unrounded timecard records, personal logs of hours and breaks, testimony from co-workers, emails/texts showing work occurring during breaks, etc.

Q: Do many California employers violate labor laws governing meal breaks and rest periods?

A: Yes, meal and rest break violations are some of the most common, frequent, and costly labor law violations in California workplaces, frequently triggering class-action lawsuits and PAGA claims.

If you believe you were misclassified as exempt, worked more than 40 hours without overtime pay, or were denied legally required meal and rest breaks, the employment law attorneys at Blumenthal Nordrehaug Bhowmik De Blouw LLP can help. Contact one of our offices in Los Angeles, San Diego, San Francisco, Sacramento, Riverside, or Chicago today to learn how to hold your employer accountable.

Headway Faces a Class Action Alleging Overtime Pay Violations

Headway, a platform that matches patients with high-quality mental healthcare professionals to meet their needs, is accused of violating labor laws in a California class-action lawsuit.

Case: Tessa Brower-Walsh v. Therapy Match, Inc. dba Headway

Court: San Diego County Superior Court of the State of California

Case No.: 25CU053855C

Get to Know the Plaintiff: Tessa Brower-Walsh v. Therapy Match, Inc. dba Headway.

The plaintiff in the case, Tessa Brower-Walsh, filed a class action complaint alleging that the defendant failed to pay its employees for all hours worked accurately. Headway employed the plaintiff from August 2024 to May 2025.

Who is the Defendant in the Case?

The defendant in the case is Therapymatch, Inc.; however, hereinafter we’ll refer to them as Headway. Headway is a Delaware-based company doing significant business in California, including San Diego County. The company owns and operates a platform that connects patients with mental health care professionals.

The Plaintiffs Allege the Defendants Violated Multiple Labor Laws

As is often the case with California employment law claims, the plaintiffs allege that their employer violated multiple labor laws. The following labor law violation allegations were included in the complaint:

  • Failure to pay minimum wage

  • Failure to pay accurate overtime wages

  • Failure to provide employees with required meal breaks and rest periods

  • Failure to provide employees with accurate itemized wage statements

  • Failure to pay wages promptly

  • Failure to reimburse workers for required business expenses

The Main Question of the Case: Tessa Brower-Walsh v. Therapy Match, Inc., dba Headway

In Tessa Brower-Walsh v. Therapy Match, Inc., dba Headway, the main legal question was whether or not Headway’s wage statements complied with labor law. According to the plaintiff, Headway failed to provide all the required information on their wage statements (violating California Labor Code Section 226). Additionally, the court needs to consider the company’s history of wage payments, overtime calculations, and compensation practices to determine whether it violated labor laws governing minimum wage rates, overtime pay, and exempt classification.

FAQ: Tessa Brower-Walsh v. Therapy Match, Inc. dba Headway

Q: Has the Court decided on the Headway Overtime Class Action?

A: As of October 2025, the case, Tessa Brower-Walsh v. Therapy Match, Inc. dba Headway, was still pending in San Diego County Superior Court.

Q: Are California employers required to provide their employees with specific pay and wage information?

A: Yes, labor law is very specific about what data is required on an “accurate itemized wage statement.”

Q: What information is required on wage statements to comply with California Labor Code Section 226?

A: California employers must include the following information on wage statements to comply with labor laws: gross wages earned, total hours worked, the number of piece-rate units earned and the applicable piece-rates, any deductions, net wages earned, the dates of the pay period, employee name, last four digits of the employee’s social security number (or employee id number), name and address of the employer, hourly rates that apply to the pay period, and number of hours worked at each specified hourly rate.

Q: What qualifies as an exempt employee in California?

A: ​​To qualify as an exempt employee, California workers must pass a two-part test. First, the duties test. They must be “primarily” engaged in the duties that meet the test of the exemption. Second, the salary test. They must earn a monthly salary of at least twice California’s minimum wage for full-time employees (Labor Code § 515).

If you believe you were misclassified as exempt and denied overtime pay, or you were not paid for all hours worked, the employment law attorneys at Blumenthal Nordrehaug Bhowmik De Blouw LLP can evaluate your wage-and-hour claims and explain your options. Contact the firm’s offices in Los Angeles, San Diego, San Francisco, Sacramento, Riverside, or Chicago to discuss how you may be able to recover unpaid wages and pursue accountability under the law.

2025’s Biggest California Wrongful Death Cases: Four Landmark Outcomes

California juries are making it clear: when a death could have been prevented, the financial consequences can be huge. In 2025, some of the state’s largest wrongful death verdicts showed a clear change in how jurors view loss, corporate responsibility, and deterrence. Some believe this shift is tied to a post-COVID perspective, where the human cost of wrongful death feels more real and personal, leading to higher verdicts.

Wrongful Death Cases in California in 2025: Significant Examples

These three cases show that landmark wrongful death outcomes in California can look very different. They include a record jury verdict against a large company, a major settlement with a public agency over alleged system failures, and a published appellate decision that could change how damages are handled in future cases. Each case highlights a different way to achieve accountability and shows why wrongful death litigation was a major focus in 2025.

Case #1: Mae K. Moore v. Johnson & Johnson, et al.

Court: Los Angeles County Superior Court

Case No.: 21STCV05513

A Summary of the Case: The plaintiffsSummary of the Case: The plaintiffs are the family or estate of Mae K. Moore, who are either wrongful death survivors or estate representatives, depending on the legal filings. The defendants are Johnson & Johnson and other related companies. The lawsuit claimed that Mae K. Moore’s illness and death were caused by asbestos exposure from the defendants’ products, and that the companies failed to provide warnings or acted improperly.

The case is a landmark 2025 California wrongful death case because of the sheer size of the award. Such a large amount signifies the continued escalation of “nuclear verdict” risk in California wrongful death/product exposure matters and the willingness of juries to impose extraordinary damages in cases involving alleged corporate safety failures.

Case #2: County of Los Angeles v. Superior Court (related to the Noah Cuatro wrongful death civil case)

Court: California Court of Appeals

Case No.: B339093 (Cal. Ct. App., 2d Dist., Div. 4)

Attached to Trial Case No. 20STCV24771 filed in the Los Angeles Superior Court

Summary of the Case: Evangelina “Eva” Hernandez, both personally and as the legal representative for the child’s estate and siblings, filed a wrongful death lawsuit. She claimed that child welfare authorities failed to protect the child and did not act on clear warning signs of danger, including not following through on protective steps mentioned in the court record. In September 2025, LA County supervisors agreed to a $20 million settlement with the child’s family.

The Noah Cuatro wrongful death case was one of the most notable public-entity settlements in California in 2025. It brought attention to system accountability and involved a large settlement and significant public attention.

Case #3: Ng v. Superior Court

Case No.: G064257 (Cal. Ct. App., 4th Dist., Div. 3)

Underlying Trial Court Case Info: Orange County Superior Court, Case No. 30-2023-01360050

Summary of the Case: Joely Ng sued Los Alamitos Medical Center and doctors for medical malpractice and wrongful death after her husband, Kenneth Ng, allegedly received negligent care following a G-tube problem and improper placement. Ng developed sepsis and died three months later. The case led to a published appellate decision about whether wrongful death and survival or medical negligence claims can each have separate MICRA noneconomic damage caps, which is a key issue in California medical malpractice and wrongful death cases.

Ng v. Superior Court is a landmark 2025 wrongful death case because it changes how damages can be claimed and valued in medical malpractice wrongful death cases. It clarifies how wrongful death and survival claims are treated under MICRA’s cap rules.

Wrongful death cases are about more than just money, but the 2025 outcomes show something important: California juries and courts are more willing to impose serious consequences when families claim a preventable loss was caused by corporate wrongdoing, system failures, or poor care. Whether the result is a large verdict, a major public settlement, or a new legal precedent, the main theme is accountability and the need for careful, evidence-based legal work from the start.

If your family has lost a loved one and you think negligence or wrongdoing was involved, the wrongful death attorneys at Blumenthal Nordrehaug Bhowmik De Blouw LLP can help you learn about your legal options and what to do next. Contact our offices in Los Angeles, San Diego, San Francisco, Sacramento, Riverside, or Chicago to talk about how you may be able to seek accountability under California law.