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Litigating California Wage & Hour and Labor Code Class Actions

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the limitations period for a penalty claim would be only one year, 243 the effect of these<br />

penalty provisions can be significant. Suppose, for example, that an employer of 150<br />

employees is sued for a repeated violation of some obscure <strong>Labor</strong> <strong>Code</strong> section, <strong>and</strong> the<br />

violation affected each employee over the course of one year—during each of 26 biweekly<br />

pay periods. In this example the employer could be subject to penalties in the amount of<br />

more than $700,000. 244 Because penalties are cumulative for distinct <strong>Labor</strong> <strong>Code</strong><br />

violations, that figure could be doubled or tripled if there were multiple, recurrent <strong>Labor</strong><br />

<strong>Code</strong> violations (or if one act of misconduct violated multiple <strong>Labor</strong> <strong>Code</strong> provisions).<br />

Attorney’s fees to the prevailing plaintiff would augment that total. 245<br />

When Arnold Schwarzenegger became governor in 2004, one of his first initiatives was to<br />

attempt to repeal PAGA. Although he did not succeed in obtaining total repeal, he <strong>and</strong> the<br />

Legislature were able to reach a compromise to scale back a few of the most controversial<br />

provisions <strong>and</strong> to insert some additional procedural protections. SB 1809, signed into law<br />

in August 2004, effected the following changes to PAGA:<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

The bill repealed the requirement (formerly in <strong>Labor</strong> <strong>Code</strong> Section 431) that<br />

employers file a copy of their job application forms with the Division of <strong>Labor</strong><br />

St<strong>and</strong>ards Enforcement.<br />

Violations of <strong>Labor</strong> <strong>Code</strong> provisions that merely require notice, posting, agency<br />

reporting, or filing of documents with a state agency are now exempt from<br />

prosecution by aggrieved employees. An exception to this exemption was carved<br />

out for “m<strong>and</strong>atory payroll or workplace injury reporting.” 246<br />

All settlements in which penalties are paid must now be judicially approved.<br />

The court now may reduce the amount of civil penalty if, under the circumstances,<br />

the penalty otherwise would be “unjust, arbitrary <strong>and</strong> oppressive, or confiscatory.”<br />

247<br />

243<br />

244<br />

245<br />

246<br />

247<br />

<strong>Code</strong> Civ. Proc. § 340(a) (one-year statute of limitations on statutes to recover a penalty); Moreno v. Autozone, Inc.,<br />

2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 43873, at *4-10 (N.D. Cal. June 5, 2007) (analyzing PAGA <strong>and</strong> holding that a one-year statute of<br />

limitations applies); Thomas v. Home Depot USA Inc., 527 F. Supp. 2d 1003 (N.D. Cal. 2007) (same).<br />

$15,000 ($100 x 150 employees) for the first violation <strong>and</strong> then $30,000 for each of the 25 further violations, if the $200<br />

penalty is found to apply for all later pay periods. An employer may be able to demonstrate that it should only be fined<br />

for one continuous violation, in which case the proper penalty might be $100 for each violation, but under that scenario<br />

the employer would still be liable for $390,000 ($15,000 x 26 pay periods) see Amaral v. Cintas Corp., 163 Cal. App. 4th<br />

1157, 1209 (2008).<br />

Lab. <strong>Code</strong> § 2699(f).<br />

Lab. <strong>Code</strong> § 2699(g)(2).<br />

Lab. <strong>Code</strong> § 2699(e)(2).<br />

Seyfarth Shaw LLP | www.seyfarth.com <strong>Litigating</strong> <strong>California</strong> <strong>Wage</strong> & <strong>Hour</strong> <strong>Class</strong> <strong>Actions</strong> (12th Edition) 57

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