Arbitration agreements are more and more popular among employers (and the United States Supreme Court) as a
way to get out of concerted actions brought by wronged employees. In
California, they cannot be enforced to stop state prosecution of wage claims
through qui tam representative plaintiffs
under the Private Attorney General Act (“PAGA”), Cal.
Lab. Code § 2698 et seq. See Iskanian v. CLS Trans. Los Angeles, LLC (2004)
59 Cal.4th 348, 382-92.
Nevertheless, employers have sought ways to force PAGA actions
out of court and into arbitration, arguing that PAGA claims for wages should go
to arbitration, while only the statutory PAGA penalties could remain before a court.
A handful of cases in the Courts of Appeal have dealt with this issue, one of
which, Lawson v. ZB, N.A., (2017) 18
Cal.App.5th 705, is pending before the California Supreme Court. Bryan Schwartz
Law has submitted an amicus brief to the
California Supreme Court in this case.
On March 28, 2019, a California appellate court issued another
decision rejecting this argument, adding to the list of decisions protecting PAGA
enforcement in this rapidly developing area of
the law. See Zakaryan v. The Men’s Wearhouse, Inc. (Mar. 28, 2019) __Cal.App.5th__. To
understand why Zakaryan is noteworthy,
we must understand the legislative intent behind PAGA. Before PAGA was enacted
in 2003, California struggled to enforce the worker protections in the Labor
Code. The financial crisis was in full effect, and the state government could
not afford to oversee California’s massive workforce. So it decided to let
employees enforce the Labor Code themselves, on behalf of the state, provided
that first they comply with some straightforward procedures and the
state decides not to take the case itself. Cal. Lab. Code § 2699.3. A PAGA
action is “brought by an aggrieved employee on behalf of himself or herself and
other current or former employees.” Cal. Lab. Code § 2699. PAGA also provides
for penalties to be assessed against liable employers. Cal. Lab. Code §
2699(f). The state gets 75% of any PAGA award, while the employee gets 25% plus
reasonable attorney fees and costs. Cal. Lab. Code §§ 2699(g)(1), (i).
Employers have tried to contract around PAGA using arbitration
agreements. It hasn’t worked. Although arbitration agreements can waive
employees’ class action rights (Epic
Systems Corp. v. Lewis, 138 S.Ct. 1612 (2018)), employers cannot force the
state to arbitrate its claims, which are vindicated through PAGA. Iskanian, 59
Cal.4th at 378-92. The
suing representative plaintiff just stands in the state’s shoes. Id at 386-87. Because an employee cannot
contractually waive a right belonging to the state, an arbitration agreement cannot waive
an employee’s right to proceed under PAGA.
Despite this, The Men’s Wearhouse tried to argue that a PAGA
claim for wages should go to arbitration. The California Court of Appeals didn’t
buy it in Zakaryan (Mar.
28, 2019) __Cal.App.5th__.
Plaintiff Zakaryan worked for The Men’s Wearhouse as a store
manager from 2002 until 2016, before suing under PAGA, alleging that the company
wrongfully misclassified its store managers as exempt from California’s
overtime and meal and rest break laws. The Men’s Wearhouse moved to send the
portion of Mr. Zakaryan’s claims involving underpaid wages to arbitration. It
lost, and appealed.
After a careful analysis of PAGA and arbitration law, the appellate
court rejected The Men’s Wearhouse’s argument for two reasons. First, splitting
the PAGA claim would violate California’s “primary rights theory,” under which
“one injury gives rise to only one claim for relief.” A PAGA claim, the court
ruled, involves “one and only one
‘particular injury’—namely the injury to the public that the ‘state labor law
enforcement agencies’ were created to safeguard.” Therefore, a PAGA claim
cannot be split between a court and arbitration.
Second, sending part of the case to arbitration would run
contrary to labor and arbitration law. PAGA awards the state 75% and the aggrieved
employee the remainder of “a single civil penalty,” the court observed, which
could not be properly heeded if portions of the civil penalties were syphoned
off to arbitration. Moreover, “a PAGA claim is, fundamentally, a representative
claim,” in which the suing employee represents other aggrieved employees in a
suit brought on behalf of the state. As such, there was no individual portion
of the claim to break off in an arbitration proceeding. In addition, Mr.
Zakaryan had elected to pursue claims under PAGA’s representative action
mechanism rather than his individual claims. Forcing him to arbitrate as if he
had brought individual claims would effectively hijack his case. Finally,
splitting the PAGA action would send the most important aspect of the claim to
be determined—the employer’s liability—to the arbitrator, thereby circumventing
the state’s right to have its enforcement action heard in court.
The California Supreme Court will soon decide this issue in Lawson.
If you have California wage claims and your employer is trying
to force you into arbitration, contact Bryan Schwartz Law.
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