Consumer Attorneys of San Diego offers its Second Annual Class Action Symposium on October 23-24

The educational opportunities for class action practitioners in California improved greatly in recent years (oddly coincident with significant increase in the number of attorneys trying their hand at class action litigation).  One of those great new opportunities for class action CLE occurs this Friday and Saturday in San Diego's gaslamp quarter.  Consumer Attorneys of San Diego will present its 2nd Annual Class Action Symposium.  The speakers include judges, mediators, and practitioners from both sides of the "v."

The blogosphere will be well represented by speaker Kim Kralowec, The UCL Practitioner and a Partner at Schubert Jonckheer Kolbe & Kralowec LLP.  And speaking of The UCL Practitioner, her blog now notes that you can register for one day of the two day symposium.  If obligations on Friday prevent you from attending, consider attending on Saturday.  You can also save money by registering more than one attendee from the same firm.

If nothing else, send the youngest attorneys in your firm so they can learn first hand from the people that do it right.  Because of the special nature of representative litigation, we have an obligation to maintain the highest possible practice standards.

In theory, Brinker Restaurant Corporation, et al. v. Superior Court (Hohnbaum) is fully briefed

The Brinker docket shows that all parties have filed their answers to the many amicus briefs.  In theory, this means that briefing is done.  But don't doubt the ability of attorneys to come up with a (good) reason for some supplemental brief or other.  See you next year for more on Brinker.

Brinker Restaurant Corporation, et al. v. Superior Court (Hohnbaum) is even closer to being fully briefed

Real Party in Interest, Adam Hohnbaum, has filed his consolidated answer to amicus curiae briefs.  The docket only shows the filing by Real Party in Interest, but, presumably, the Petitioner's consolidated answer has also been filed.  Depending upon where and how the brief is filed, it can take a day or two for the Court to indicate the filing on the docket.  This is very exciting news.  Now Brinker descends into the cone of silence until oral argument is set.  Seeing no basis for adjustment at this time, The Complex Litigator's Brinker projected Opinion Release Date remains at August 2010.

Brinker gets a little bit closer to the finish line

So Brinker Restaurant v. Superior Court (Hohnbaum) moves a bit closer to the light at the end of the tunnel.  After extensions were granted, the Petitioner and the Real Parties in Interest will both file their consolidated answers to amicus briefs on October 8, 2009.  But that's no small task; by my quick count, there are 22 amicus briefs filed in Brinker (view the docket).  That's twenty-two, give or take, in case you thought I double-clutched on the keyboard.  I'd say good cause exists for an extension to file consolidated answers.  Now, without having seen the amicus briefs, what do think the odds are that most of those amicus briefs (1) do nothing but repeat arguments that were in the 100+ page briefs by the parties, and/or (2) repeat other amicus briefs?  My bet is that about 90% of the amicus briefing from both sides could be run through a shredder with no loss of any argument.

Turning back to the timetable for resolution, imagine that you are a research attorney at the Supreme Court.  Imagine you have cases to review aside from Brinker.  Imagine you receive a couple of briefs in the 125-page range and around 22 amicus briefs.  Imagine they fall on you and crush your spine.  How long do you think it would take you to work up a draft opinion with a Justice?  Factor in the holidays, and I now think that my estimate of oral argument in March 2010 is a very optimistic.  I'm officially adjusting The Complex Litigator's Brinker Opinion Release Date from June 2010 to August 2010.  I should work up a graphic for this, like "Stormwatch Winter 2009" or "Firestorm!"  It will need shading and some sort of 3-D effect.

September 9, 2009 actions by the California Supreme Court

With no conference last week, September 9, 2009 was an active day for the California Supreme Court.  Some notable actions include:

  • A Petition for Review was granted in Loeffler v. Target Corporation [standing to sue for recovery of sales tax]
  • After the lead case of Arias was resolved, Deleon v. Verizon Wireless was dismissed to the Second Appellate District, Division Three
  • A Petition for Review was denied in Chau v. Starbucks Corporation [concerned judgment on discrete tip pooling issue]

In Rutti v. Lojack Corporation, Inc., a divided Ninth Circuit panel examines compensability of pre and post-workday activities

The whole business of "preliminary" and "postliminary" is a bit perplexing.  Under the Fair Labor Standards Act, 29 U.S.C. §§ 201-19 ("FLSA"), employers need not pay for "activities which are preliminary to or postliminary to said principal activity or activities, which occur either prior to the time on any particular workday at which such employee commences, or subsequent to the time on any particular workday at which he ceases, such principal activity or activities."  29 U.S.C. § 254(a)(2).  In Rutti v. Lojack Corporation, Inc. (August 21, 2009), the Ninth Circuit examined this admittedly "ambiguous" language in an attempt to discern whether "preliminary" and "postliminary" work by Lojack technicians was compensable.

The Court summarized the essential facts:

Rutti was employed by Lojack as one of its over 450 nationwide technicians who install and repair vehicle recovery systems in vehicles. Most, if not all of the installations and repairs are done at the clients’ locations. Rutti was employed to install and repair vehicle recovery systems in Orange County, and required to travel to the job sites in a company-owned vehicle. Rutti was paid by Lojack on an hourly basis for the time period beginning when he arrived at his first job location and ending when he completed his final job installation of the day.

In addition to the time spent commuting, Rutti sought compensation for certain “off-the-clock” activities he performed before he left for the first job in the morning and after he returned home following the completion of the last job. Rutti asserted that Lojack required technicians to be “on call” from 8:00 a.m. until 6:00 p.m. Monday through Friday, and from 8:00 a.m. until 5:00 p.m. on Saturdays. During this time, the technicians were required to keep their mobile phones on and answer requests from dispatch to perform additional jobs, but they were permitted to decline the jobs.  Rutti also alleged that he spent time in the morning receiving assignments for the day, mapping his routes to the assignments, and prioritizing the jobs. This included time spent logging on to a handheld computer device provided by Lojack that informed him of his jobs for the day.  In addition, it appears that Rutti may have completed some minimal paperwork at home before he left for his first job.

Slip op., at 11455.  The district court disposed of all federal claims through a motion for partial summary judgment.  The district court subsequently issued an order dismissing the remaining state law claims for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.

The majority first dealt with the claim for commuting time compensation, applying the Employee Commuting Flexibility Act ("ECFA"), 29 U.S.C. § 254(a)(2):

The ECFA’s language states that where the use of the vehicle “is subject to an agreement on the part of the employer and the employee,” it is not part of the employee’s principal activities and thus not compensable.

Slip op., at 11459.  Evidently, all an employer needs to do is narrowly define principal duties, and the rest is gravy.  The Court then rejected Rutti's contention that the heavy restriction on the use of the Lojack vehicle transformed the use of the vehicle from "incidental" to "integral."

The Court reached the same conclusion under California law.  Despite the more flexible "control" standard set forth in Morillion v. Royal Packing Co., 22 Cal. 4th 575 (2000).  The Court concluded that the use of the Lojack vehicle was more like a commute to a mandatory departure point than restricted time in an employer-controlled vehicle.

The Court then spent considerable time discussing the imprecise de minimis rule as it applied to Rutti's morning and evening activities.  The Court determined that Rutti had not supplied evidence that his morning activities consumed more than a couple of minutes or involved anything other than commute preparation, which was noncompensable.

The evening data transmission time was not so easily relegated to the de minimis woodshed.  Based on the evidence supplied in the District Court, the Ninth Circuit concluded that summary judgment was inappropriate.  The Court noted that the Ninth Circuit had no fixed time standard under the rule:  "Furthermore, we have not adopted a ten or fifteen minute de minimis rule."  Slip op., at 11474.  The evidence was also sufficient to overcome summary judgment:

Rutti asserts that the transmissions take about 15 minutes a day. This is over an hour a week. For many employees, this is a significant amount of time and money. Also, the transmissions must be made at the end of every work day, and appear to be a requirement of a technician’s employment. This suggests that the transmission “are performed as part of the regular work of the employees in the ordinary course of business,” Dunlop, 527 F.2d at 401, and accordingly, unless the amount of time approaches what the Supreme Court termed “split-second absurdities,” the technician should be compensated. See Anderson, 328 U.S. at 692.

Slip op., at 11476.

Circuit Judge Hall would have gone further, finding the postliminary data transmission by Rutti to be de minimis as well, despite the conflicting evidence.  Slip op., at 11479.

Circuit Judge Silverman dissented with the majority analysis of whether Rutti was controlled by his employer during his commute:

The majority attempts to distinguish Morillion by summarily concluding that “Rutti’s use of Lojack’s automobile to commute to and from his job sites is more analogous to the ‘home to departure points’ transportation in Morillion than to the employees’ transportation on the employer’s buses.” Aside from the lack of factual analysis to support this ipse dixit, the majority also utterly ignores the relevant question under California law, which is whether Rutti was “subject to the control of an employer” during his mandatory travel time. A straightforward application of Morillion easily answers that question in the affirmative. Rutti was required not only to drive the Lojack vehicle to the job site, but was forbidden
from attending to any personal business along the way. Because he was obviously under the employer’s control in these circumstances he was, under California law, entitled to be paid.

Slip op., at 11483.

As an aside, I've noticed that when Ninth Circuit Judges dissent, they really dissent.  No punches pulled.  It just confirms that the Ninth Circuit is far from the monolith it supposedly presents.

New study concludes that low-income workers are routinely the victims of unlawful employment practices

Anecdotally, it seems that wage & hour class actions are a subject of incresingly polarized views, both in and out of court.  Proponents of wage & hour class actions champion the need for private enforcement of wage & hour laws to protect workers.  Opponents decry the burdens they impose on businesses, describing wage & hour class actions as an "epidemic."  (I'm working on a detailed analysis of the "epidemic" charge and will have more to say on that subject at a later date.)  But a newly released study of wage-law violations in major U.S. cities provides fresh ammunition to the advocates of employee rights.

Broken Laws, Unprotected Workers, a report by the UCLA Institute for Research on Labor and Employment, the National Employment Law Project and the Center for Urban Economic Development, summarizes findings of a 2008 study in which 4,387 workers in low-wage industries in the three largest U.S. cities — Chicago, Los Angeles, and New York City — were surveyed to identify wage & hour violations.  The survey found that:

Finding 1: Workplace Violations Are Severe and Widespread in Low-Wage Labor Markets

We found that many employment and labor laws are regularly and systematically violated, impacting a significant part of the low-wage labor force in the nation’s largest cities. The framework of worker protections that was established over the last 75 years is not working.

Finding 2: Job and Employer Characteristics Are Key to Understanding Workplace Violations

Workplace violations are ultimately the result of decisions made by employers—whether to pay the minimum wage or overtime, whether to give workers meal breaks, and how to respond to complaints about working conditions. We found that workplace violations are profoundly shaped by job and employer characteristics.

Finding 3: All Workers Are at Risk of Workplace Violations

Workplace violations are not limited to immigrant workers or other vulnerable groups in the labor force — everyone is at risk, although to different degrees.

Report (excerpts from Executive Overview), at 2-5.  The New York Times ran one of the earliest articles about this Study, but since they couldn't be bothered to give me timely permission to quote any portion of their article, I can't be bothered to link to it.  The study's authors discovered what has been known by plaintiffs' attorneys in the wage & hour field for years - violations of wage & hour laws are at pandemic levels:

We found that there are significant, pervasive violations of core workplace laws in many low-wage industries. Workers are being paid less than the minimum wage and not receiving overtime pay. They are working off the clock without pay, and not getting meal breaks. When injured, they are not receiving workers’ compensation. And they are retaliated against when they try to assert their rights or attempt to organize.

Report (Introduction), at 9.

California Supreme Court activity for the week of August 17, 2009

The California Supreme Court held its (usually) weekly conference today. Notable results include:

  • A transfer Order issued in Pfizer, Inc. v. Superior Court (Galfano) following the decision in the lead case, In re Tobacco II Cases, 46 Cal. 4th 298 (2009).  See also, additional comments in this post at The UCL Practitioner.
  • A transfer Order issued in McAdams v. Monier following the decision in the lead case, In re Tobacco II Cases, 46 Cal. 4th 298 (2009).
  • A Petition for Review was denied in Olvera v. El Pollo Loco (arbitration agreement found unconscionable; no lucky for clucky).

 

Brinker news, and other California Supreme Court activity

This blog's last post on Brinker Restaurant v. Superior Court (Hohnbaum) indicated that the Reply Brief would be filed on July 6, 2009.  After a few unexpected bumps, the Reply Brief was filed on July 20, 2009.  The case is fully briefed.  Now the amicus bloodbath may commence.

In other Supreme Court news, today the Supreme Court denied review in Gomez v. Lincare (April 28, 2009).  See this prior post for information about Gomez.

And in Miller v. Bank of America, 46 Cal. 4th 630 (2009), the Supreme Court denied a Petition for Modification of the opinion.

Borello employment test influences areas outside workers' compensation law in Messenger Courier Association of the Americas, et al. v. California Unemployment Insurance Appeals Board

The Court of Appeal (Fourth Appellate District, Division One) issued an interesting opinion today that may have some employment class action implications. In Messenger Courier Association of the Americas, et al. v. California Unemployment Insurance Appeals Board (July 15, 2009), the Court considered the validity of NCM Direct Delivery v. Employment Development Department, Precedent Tax Decision No. P-T-495 (2007). The Court of Appeal affirmed the Trial Court's Order that upheld the validity of the Precedent Tax Decision. The interesting twist is that the Precedent Tax Decision applied the employment test of S.G. Borello & Sons, Inc. v. Department of Industrial Relations (1989) 48 Cal.3d 341 to an unemployment insurance assessment matter. The class action angle comes into play if developments in the definition of employment conclusively govern actions alleging misclassification of independent contractors. Specifically, Messenger noted that the right to control is the first test for employment, but if that test of control is not dispositive, the "secondary" factors may be applied to determine the correct nature of a service relationship. Slip op., at 6.