Summary
holding jurisdictional threshold is not met with amount in controversy of $4,821,139.20
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No. 1:19-cv-01013-DAD-EPG
07-07-2020
ORDER GRANTING MOTION TO REMAND AND REMANDING THIS ACTION TO KERN COUNTY SUPERIOR COURT
(Doc. No. 16)
This matter is before the court on plaintiff's motion to remand this action to the Kern County Superior Court. (Doc. No. 16.) Pursuant to General Order No. 617 addressing the public health emergency posed by the coronavirus outbreak, on April 22, 2020, the court took this matter under submission to be decided on the papers, without holding a hearing. (Doc. No. 23.) For the reasons set forth below, the court will grant plaintiff's motion to remand.
BACKGROUND
Plaintiff Andre Castillo ("plaintiff") initiated this putative class action in Kern County Superior Court on May 28, 2019. (Doc. No. 3, Ex. A ("Compl.").) In the complaint, plaintiff brings six causes of action alleging that his employer, defendant Trinity Services Group, Inc. ("defendant"), violated California labor law by failing to pay overtime wages, provide meal periods, permit rest breaks, provide accurate itemized wage statements, and pay all wages due upon termination. (Id.) Plaintiff also alleges that defendant violated California Business and Professions Code §§ 17200, et seq., by engaging in unfair and unlawful business practices. (Id.)
In his complaint, plaintiff also alleges that he is a resident of California, and he worked as a non-exempt employee for defendant, which "provides contracted food services for detention centers across the country, including in California." (Id. at ¶¶ 2, 10.) According to plaintiff, defendant "engaged in a systematic pattern of wage and hour violations" (id. at ¶ 3) and "systematically engaged in unlawful conduct . . ., such as failing to pay overtime and double time wages at the correct rate, failing to provide meal periods and rest breaks or compensation in lieu thereof, failing to furnish accurate wage statements, and failing to pay all wages due and owing upon separation of employment in a timely manner" (id. at ¶ 81).
Plaintiff seeks to represent a proposed class defined as: "All California citizens currently or formerly employed by Defendants as non-exempt employees in the State of California within four years prior to the filing of this action to the date the class is certified." (Id. at ¶ 20.) Plaintiff's complaint defines a proposed "waiting time" subclass as: "All Class Members who separated their employment with Defendants at any time within three years prior to the filing of this action to the date the class is certified." (Id. at ¶ 21.)
Although the class definitions refer to "Defendants" in the plural, Trinity Services Group, Inc. is the only named defendant in plaintiff's complaint, which also lists DOES 1 through 20 as defendants. (Compl. at ¶¶ 12-15.)
On July 25, 2019, defendant timely removed this action to this court pursuant to the Class Action Fairness Act ("CAFA"), 28 U.S.C. § 1332(d). (Doc. No. 1.) On March 3, 2020, plaintiff filed the pending motion to remand this action to state court, contending that defendant has failed to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that the amount in controversy exceeds $5 million as required by CAFA. (Doc. No. 16 at 3.) On April 21, 2020, defendant filed its opposition to plaintiff's motion to remand (Doc. No. 22) and a declaration from Khadeej a Morse, defendant's Chief People Officer (Doc. No. 22-1). On April 28, 2020, plaintiff filed his reply to defendant's opposition. (Doc. No. 24.) /////
On June 3, 2020, the court ordered the parties to submit additional evidence regarding the amount in controversy. (Doc. No. 26.) On June 17, 2020, defendant filed a supplemental declaration from Ms. Morse in support of defendant's opposition (the "Supplemental Morse Declaration") (Doc. No. 27), and plaintiff filed a supplemental declaration from plaintiff's counsel, Fawn F. Bekam, in support of plaintiff's motion to remand (the "Bekam Declaration") (Doc. No. 28).
On June 18, 2020, defendant filed objections to the Bekam Declaration. (Doc. No. 29.) On June 19, 2020, plaintiff filed a response to defendant's objections (Doc. No. 30), to which defendant file a reply (Doc. No. 31).
LEGAL STANDARD
A suit filed in state court may be removed to federal court if the federal court would have had original jurisdiction over the suit. 28 U.S.C. § 1441(a). Removal jurisdiction is based entirely on federal statutory authority. See 28 U.S.C. §§ 1441, et seq. Under CAFA, federal courts have jurisdiction "over certain class actions, defined in [28 U.S.C] § 1332(d)(1), if the class has more than 100 members, the parties are minimally diverse, and the amount in controversy exceeds $5 million." Dart Cherokee Basin Operating Co., LLC v. Owens, 574 U.S. 81, 84-85 (2014) (citing Standard Fire Ins. Co. v. Knowles, 568 U.S. 588, 592 (2013)). "Congress designed the terms of CAFA specifically to permit a defendant to remove certain class or mass actions into federal court." Ibarra v. Manheim Invs. Inc., 775 F.3d 1193, 1197 (9th Cir. 2015). "[N]o antiremoval presumption attends cases invoking CAFA." Dart Cherokee, 574 U.S. at 89.
A notice of removal must "contain[] a short and plain statement of the grounds for removal." Id. at 87 (quoting 28 U.S.C. § 1446(a)). For removal under CAFA, as the Supreme Court has explained, the notice of removal "need include only a plausible allegation that the amount in controversy exceeds the jurisdictional threshold." Id. at 89. "[A] removing defendant's notice of removal 'need not contain evidentiary submissions.'" Arias v. Residence Inn by Marriott, 936 F.3d 920, 922 (9th Cir. 2019) (quoting Ibarra, 775 F. 3d at 1197). The amount in controversy alleged in defendant's notice of removal "should be accepted when not contested by the plaintiff or questioned by the court." Dart Cherokee, 574 U.S. at 87. "Evidence establishing the amount is required by § 1446(c)(2)(B) only when the plaintiff contests, or the court questions, the defendant's allegation." Id. at 89. When the defendant's assertion of the amount in controversy is challenged, "both sides submit proof and the court decides, by a preponderance of the evidence, whether the amount-in-controversy requirement has been satisfied." Id. at 88. A preponderance of the evidence standard requires that the defendant "provide evidence establishing that it is 'more likely than not' that the amount in controversy exceeds" the jurisdictional threshold. Sanchez v. Monumental Life Ins. Co., 102 F.3d 398, 404 (9th Cir. 1996). Removal is proper "'if the district court finds, by a preponderance of the evidence, that the amount in controversy exceeds' the jurisdictional threshold." Dart Cherokee, 574 U.S. at 88.
"The amount in controversy is simply an estimate of the total amount in dispute, not a prospective assessment of defendant's liability." Lewis v. Verizon Commc'ns, Inc., 627 F.3d 395, 401 (9th Cir. 2010). It "reflects the maximum recovery the plaintiff could reasonably recover." Arias, 936 F.3d at 927 (citing Chavez v. JPMorgan Chase & Co., 888 F.3d 413, 417 (9th Cir. 2018) (explaining that the amount in controversy includes all amounts "at stake" in the litigation "whatever the likelihood that [the plaintiff] will actually recover them")).
To determine the amount in controversy, courts look first to the complaint, and generally the sum claimed by the plaintiff controls if his claim appears to be made good faith. Ibarra, 775 F. 3d at 1197. Where the complaint does not state a damages amount, or where the defendant believes the complaint understates the damages amount, the defendant bears the burden to show by a preponderance of the evidence that the aggregate amount in controversy exceeds $5 million. Id. As the Ninth Circuit explained in Ibarra, "[t]he parties may submit evidence outside the complaint, including affidavits or declarations, or other summary-judgment-type evidence relevant to the amount in controversy at the time of removal." Id. (internal quotation marks and citations omitted). "Under this system, a defendant cannot establish removal jurisdiction by mere speculation and conjecture, with unreasonable assumptions," and "CAFA's requirements are to be tested by consideration of real evidence and the reality of what is at stake in the litigation, using reasonable assumptions underlying the defendant's theory of damages exposure." Id. at 1197-98. "[A] removing defendant is permitted to rely on 'a chain of reasoning that includes assumptions'" although "such 'assumptions cannot be pulled from thin air but need some reasonable ground underlying them.'" Arias, 936 F.3d at 925 (quoting Ibarra, 775 F. 3d at 1199). Assumptions that are founded on allegations in the complaint may be reasonable. Id.
ANALYSIS
Here, plaintiff challenges defendant's removal of this action and argues that defendant, in asserting that the amount in controversy exceeds $5 million, relied on assumptions that are "wholly unsupported" by the allegations in the complaint and the evidence. (Doc. No. 16 at 4.) Specifically, plaintiff challenges defendant's assumption of "a 100% violation rate for meal periods and rest periods for the entire class period," and assumption that "every class member suffered every violation at all times." (Id.)
Plaintiff does not argue that the other two CAFA requirements—minimal diversity and minimum class size—have been met. (See Doc. No. 16 at 2.) Plaintiff is a citizen of California and defendant is a citizen of Florida and Missouri, and employment records show that defendant has employed over 100 putative class members. (See Doc. No. 18 at ¶¶ 15, 18, 40.)
In opposition to plaintiff's motion for remand, defendant contends that its assumptions are reasonable "in light of plaintiff's allegations of defendant's 'systemic pattern of wage and hour violations,'" and the evidence provided by defendant in the Morse Declaration, which included "the approximate number of putative class members, their average rates of pay, and the number of workweeks for the relevant time period up to March 19, 2020." (Doc. No. 22 at 5.) Defendant also contends that it has assumed only a 50% violation rate—not 100%—for the missed rest periods because it assumes that the putative class members missed only one of the two rest periods provided per day, not both. (Id. at 9, 14.) In addition, defendant asserts that because "the amount in controversy is not limited to damages incurred prior to removal," defendant calculated ///// ///// ///// ///// the amount in controversy through March 19, 2020. (Id. at 13) (quoting Chavez, 888 F.3d at 414-415). Notwithstanding this position, defendant provided its calculations for pre-removal amounts as well, contending that either way the jurisdictional threshold is met. (Doc. No. 22 at n.1-10.)
Defendant does not explain the significance of March 19, 2020. Plaintiff filed the pending motion to remand on March 3, 2020. (Doc. No. 16.) Pursuant to the parties' joint stipulation, which the court granted on March 18, 2020, defendant's deadline to file an opposition to the pending motion was extended to April 21, 2020. (Doc. No. 20.) The court has reviewed the Supplemental Morse Declaration, which states that defendant's human resources department compiled a headcount report "on or about March 19, 2020" of all non-exempt employees in California from May 28, 2015 (four years before the complaint was filed) to March 19, 2020. (Doc. No. 27 at ¶ 6.) Presumably, the March 19, 2020 date has no particular significance beyond the fact that defendant generated a report on that date for its use in preparing its opposition to the pending motion to remand.
In reply, plaintiff argues that the Morse Declaration is insufficient and conclusory, and to the extent Ms. Morse used an end date of March 19, 2020, such data "from the date of removal to March 19, 2020 must be disregarded." (Doc. No. 24.) Second, plaintiff argues that defendant has misstated the law in claiming that it has assumed only a 50% violation rate for missed rest periods because, according to plaintiff, "[c]lass members can only recover one rest break penalty per day, regardless of the number of rest break violations per day." (Id. at 6.) Third, plaintiff reiterates her argument that a 100% violation rate is not supported by the allegations in the complaint or the evidence, particularly because defendant has not provided any "data from which the court may extrapolate that [d]efendant denied every employee a rest and meal break each day they worked and as a result owes each class member the highest possible penalty available for waiting time and inaccurate wage statements." (Id. at 8.) Lastly, plaintiff argues that it is improper for defendant to assume a 25% benchmark rate for attorneys' fees. (Id. at 8-9.) ///// ///// ///// ///// /////
A. Defendant's Supplemental Evidence
In response to the court's order directing the parties to submit additional evidence regarding the amount in controversy, both parties have filed supplemental declarations.
As explained below, the court finds that defendant has failed to satisfy its evidentiary burden based on its own deficient evidentiary showing. As a result, in resolving the pending motion to remand the court did not rely on the Bekam Declaration submitted by plaintiff. Accordingly, the court need not address the Bekam Declaration, defendant's objections to the Bekam Declaration, or plaintiff's response to those objections.
Defendant submitted the Supplemental Morse Declaration, which clarified the basis for defendant's calculations and provided further detail regarding the personnel and payroll information that Ms. Morse reviewed, including: "the total number of employees who were employed on a non-exempt hourly basis, their respective hire and termination dates, and their respective hourly rates of pay." (Doc. No. 27 at ¶ 4.) Specifically, Ms. Morse described a "headcount" report that was compiled on March 19, 2020 by defendant's human resources department and that came from defendant's "Kronos and Ultipro Human Resources informational databases, which include information on [defendant's] employees such as their states of residence, their assigned worksite, their overtime exemption status, their hire dates and if applicable, termination dates, and their hourly rates of pay." (Id.) That headcount report "was generated using a set of queries that reported the identities of all non-exempt employees working in California at some point between May 28, 2015 and March 19, 2020 and included each employee's hire and termination dates and their hourly rates of pay." (Id.) Using that information, Ms. Morse estimated that "approximately 654 non-exempt hourly employees were employed by [defendant] in California from May 28, 2015 to March 19, 2020" and that "there were approximately 36,187 workweeks worked by these employees from May 28, 2015 to March 19, 2020." (Id. at ¶ 6.) Based on the individual hourly rates of pay indicated in the headcount report, Ms. Morse calculated the average hourly rate of pay to be $12.58 per hour. (Id. at ¶ 9.) Ms. Morse declared that employees were generally paid on a weekly basis. (Id. at ¶ 10.) Ms. Morse also calculated that between May 28, 2015 and March 19, 2020, approximately 158 employees worked for at least 41 pay periods, and approximately 152 employees who worked less than 41 pay periods had worked a total of 2,261 pay periods. (Id. at ¶ 11.) Ms. Morse estimated that between May 28, 2015 and March 19, 2020, approximately 429 employees ended their employment and the average hourly rate of pay for those employees was approximately $12.11 per hour. (Id. at ¶ 13.)
The court finds that the Supplemental Morse Declaration is sufficient to support the employment data variables, such as hourly rate and number of workweeks, used by defendant to calculate the amount in controversy. See Avila v. Kiewit Corp., 789 F. App'x 32, 33 (9th Cir. 2019) (explaining that in satisfying defendant's burden to show the amount in controversy by a preponderance of the evidence, "[s]uch evidence can include declarations like those used by [defendant] in this case," which approximated the number of employees, workweeks, hourly rates, and average number of hours worked per day); see also Andrade v. Beacon Sales Acquisition, Inc., No. 19-cv-06963-CJC-RAOx, 2019 WL 4855997, at *4 (C.D. Cal. Oct. 1, 2019) (finding the declaration from a payroll director, who reviewed relevant employment records and estimated the number of employees, workweeks, and hourly rates, to be sufficient evidence to support defendants' amount-in-controversy calculations); cf. Avila v. Rue21, Inc., 432 F. Supp. 3d 1175, 1186-87 (E.D. Cal. 2020) (rejecting plaintiff's argument that the declaration from defendant's associate director of operational finance, which stated the number of employees and hourly rates, was per se insufficient and that defendant was required to provide corroborating documentation such as payroll records).
Citation to this unpublished Ninth Circuit opinion is appropriate pursuant to Ninth Circuit Rule 36-3(b).
However, the Supplemental Morse Declaration does not provide any evidence regarding the frequency of violations with respect to each of plaintiff's claims or the violation rate generally. While it is true that defendants are not "required to comb through its records to identify and calculate the exact frequency of violations," Andrade 2019 WL 4855997, at *4 (citation omitted), nonetheless a defendant cannot pull a violation rate out of thin air, Ibarra, 775 F. 3d at 1199. Thus, the Supplemental Morse Declaration—alone—is not sufficient to support defendant's estimated amount in controversy. See Avila, 432 F. Supp. 3d at 1186-87 (concluding that evidence in the declaration "can be sufficient depending on the allegations in the [complaint]").
Ms. Morse's "review of the complaint" and her "understanding" of what plaintiff's "allegations mean"—i.e., that all meal and rest periods were not provided, that all wage statements were defective, and that all employees who ended their employment were not provided their wages due upon termination—is not evidence. (Doc. No. 27 at ¶ 15.)
"As is common in wage-and-hour cases, the amount in controversy turns on the frequency of the alleged violations of California labor laws." Hayes v. Salt & Straw, LLC, No. 20-cv-03063-CJC-KSx, 2020 WL 2745244, at *3 (C.D. Cal. May 27, 2020) (citing cases). Because defendant has not submitted any evidence regarding violation rates, the court will now evaluate whether the 100% violation rate defendant relied upon to calculate the amount in controversy is based on a chain of reasoning and reasonable assumptions grounded in the allegations of plaintiff's complaint. See Arias, 936 F.3d at 925.
B. Violation Rate Used to Calculate Amount in Controversy
As a preliminary matter, the court addresses the parties' arguments regarding whether the amount in controversy can include post-removal amounts (as defendant argues) or whether the date of removal is the cut-off date for estimating the amount in controversy (as plaintiff argues). Plaintiff relies on the Ninth Circuit's decision in Rea v. Michaels Stores, Inc., 742 F.3d 1234, 1237 (9th Cir. 2014), which reiterated that "the general rule is that the amount in controversy is determined from the pleadings as they exist at the time a petition for removal is filed." (Doc. No. 24 at 5.) But Rea does not support plaintiff's argument here. The issue in Rea was whether post-removal developments, like the state court's decision to certify the class, can defeat federal court jurisdiction where such jurisdiction was properly invoked at the time of removal. Rea, 742 F.3d at 1237. Rea did not involve the question of whether wage and hour violations that occurred post-removal could be included in the amount in controversy. Moreover, plaintiff has failed to address the Ninth Circuit's recent decision in Chavez v. JPMorgan Chase & Co., 888 F.3d 413, 417-18 (9th Cir. 2018)—on which defendant relies—that is instructive on the issue at hand. (Doc. No. 22 at 5, 13.) In Chavez, the Ninth Circuit recognized its "oft-repeated statement that the amount in controversy is assessed as of 'the time of removal,'" but explained that:
When we say that the amount in controversy is assessed at the time of removal, we mean that we consider damages that are claimed at the time the case is removed by the defendant. . . . That the amount in controversy is assessed at the time of removal does not mean that the mere futurity of certain classes of damages precludes them from being part of the amount in controversy. . . . In sum, the amount in controversy includes all relief claimed at the time of removal to which the plaintiff would be entitled if she prevails.Chavez, 888 F.3d at 417-418. As an example, the Ninth Circuit stated that "[i]f a plaintiff claims at the time of removal that her termination caused her to lose future wages, and if the law entitles her to recoup those future wages if she prevails, then there is no question that future wages are 'at stake' in the litigation . . .." Id. at 417. Here, plaintiff asserts wage and hour claims on behalf of a class defined as current or former non-exempt employees of defendant in California "within four years prior to the filing of this action to the date the class is certified." (Compl. at ¶ 20) (emphasis added). The class definition provides for a future cut-off date in determining damages. It follows that at the time of removal, plaintiff's allegations claimed damages that extend beyond the date that plaintiff filed the complaint or the date that defendant removed this action. Moreover, for plaintiff's second and third causes of action for failure to provide meal periods and rest breaks, plaintiff alleges that "Plaintiff and Class Members suffered and continue to suffer a loss of wages and compensation." (Compl. at ¶¶ 56, 63) (emphasis added). Based on plaintiff's class definition and allegations of future damages, the court concludes that the amount in controversy at stake in this litigation is not limited to pre-removal violations.
Accordingly, below the court will evaluate defendant's estimates of the amount in controversy using the end date of March 19, 2020, not the date of removal.
1. Meal Period Violations
Under California Labor Code § 512(a), employers must provide an uninterrupted meal period of not less than thirty minutes to employees who work more than five hours per day. A second meal period must be provided if an employee works more than ten hours per day. Cal. Lab. Code § 512(a). Employers are required to pay an employee an additional one hour of pay at the employee's regular pay rate for each work day that a compliant meal period is not provided. Id. § 226.7(c).
Plaintiff alleges that "[d]uring the relevant time period, Plaintiff and Class Members did not receive compliant meal periods for working more than five (5) and/or ten (10) hours per day because their meal periods were missed, late, and/or short," and that "[a]t all relevant times, Defendants failed to pay Plaintiff and Class Members meal period premiums for missed, late, and/or short meal periods . . .." (Compl. at ¶¶ 53, 55.) These alleged meal period violations are one of the ways that defendant allegedly "engaged in a systematic pattern of wage and hour violations." (Id. at ¶ 3.)
Based on these allegations, defendant assumes a 100% violation rate for plaintiff's meal period claim, calculating an amount in controversy of $2,276,162 ( = 12.58/hour * 36,187 workweeks * 5 days/workweek). (Doc. No. 22 at 14.) Defendant argues that assuming a 100% violation rate is reasonable because plaintiff alleges that defendant "systematically" and "at all relevant times" failed to provide compliant meal periods. (Id. at 13) (emphasis in original). Defendant further argues that its assumption is reasonable because plaintiff did not use any limiting language to specify the frequency of meal period violations, such as "often, sometimes, or even regularly." (Id. at 11.)
"A 100% violation rate calculation assumes violations occurring in every identified shift for each class member." Holcomb v. Weiser Sec. Servs., Inc., 424 F. Supp. 3d 840, 845 (C.D. Cal. 2019) (citing Ibarra, 775 F.3d at 1199 n.3).
The court does not agree that defendant's assumption of a 100% violation rate is reasonable here based on the language used in plaintiff's complaint. As the Ninth Circuit and district courts have concluded, the phrase "at all relevant times" does not necessarily mean that a violation always occurred, i.e., that defendant failed to provide a compliant meal period for every employee for every work day. See Branch v. PM Realty Grp., L.P., 647 Fed. App'x 743, 746 n.7 (9th Cir. 2016) ("We reject PMRG's assertion that Branch's use of the term 'at all relevant times' in the complaint allows it to assume a 100% violation rate. The term 'at all relevant times' in Branch's complaint does not refer to a violation rate."); Young v. Novartis Pharm. Corp., No. 17-cv-04390-EMC, 2017 WL 4638664, at *3 (N.D. Cal. Oct. 16, 2017) (concluding that "'at all material times' provides a time period within which violations occurred; it does not say how often within that time period violations occur"); Williams v. ETC Inst., No. 18-cv-01011-MEJ, 2018 WL 3105117, at *8 (N.D. Cal. June 25, 2018) (concluding that "'[d]uring all relevant time periods' establishes a timeframe in which the alleged violations took place, but it does not address how often those violations occurred").
Citation to this unpublished Ninth Circuit opinion is appropriate pursuant to Ninth Circuit Rule 36-3(b).
The court is also not persuaded that plaintiff's allegations of a "systematic pattern of wage and hour violations" and a "systematic" failure to provide compliant meal periods supports defendant's assumption of a 100% violation rate. See Ibarra, 775 F.3d at 1198-99 (finding defendant's assumption of a 100% violation rate unreasonable because "a 'pattern and practice' of doing something does not necessarily mean always doing something.") Following Ibarra, district courts have found violation rates between 25% to 60% to be reasonable based on "pattern and practice" and "policy and practice" allegations. See Cavada v. Inter-Cont'l Hotels Grp., Inc., No. 19-cv-1675-GPC-BLM, 2019 WL 5677846, at *4 (S.D. Cal. Nov. 1, 2019) (citing cases); see also Avila, 432 F. Supp. 3d at 1189 (finding "a violation rate of 40%—a median between 25% and 60%—to be reasonable"). The two district court cases cited by defendant to support applying a 100% violation rate are distinguishable. In Mejia v. DHL Express (USA), Inc., No. 15-cv-890-GHK-JCx, 2015 WL 2452755, at *4 (C.D. Cal. May 21, 2015), the court distinguished Ibarra and concluded that a violation rate of 100% was reasonable because the plaintiff in Mejia did "not allege that there was a 'pattern and practice'" but rather alleged that the "defendant 'adopted and maintained uniform policies, practices and procedures' that caused the purported violations of California's rest period law." The court in Mejia explained that "[i]t is not unreasonable to assume that when a company has unlawful policies and they are uniformly 'adopted and maintained,' then the company may potentially violate the law in each and every situation where those policies are applied." Id. Here, the reasoning in Mejia is inapplicable because plaintiff's allegations are more akin to the "pattern and practice" allegations in Ibarra. Similarly, defendant's reliance on the decision in Feao v. UFP Riverside, LLC, No. 17-cv-3080-PSG-JPRx, 2017 WL 2836207, at *5 (C.D. Cal. June 29, 2017) is unavailing because the plaintiff in that case alleged that the defendant had "engaged in a uniform policy and systematic scheme of wage abuse," and the court therefore concluded that defendant's assumed 60%—not 100%—violation rate for missed meal periods and rest breaks was reasonable.
Accordingly, defendant's use of a 100% violation rate to calculate the amount in controversy for plaintiff's meal period claims is not reasonable because it is not grounded in the allegations in plaintiff's complaint. Additionally, as discussed above, defendant has not submitted any evidence as to the frequency of violations, let alone evidence supporting the 100% violation rate it employed in reaching its conclusion regarding the amount in controversy.
2. Rest Period Violations
Under California Labor Code § 226.7(b), employers must permit employees to take rest periods for ten minutes per four hours worked in a work day. Employers are required to pay an employee an additional one hour of pay at the employee's regular pay rate for each work day that a compliant rest period is not provided. Cal. Lab. Code § 226.7(c).
Plaintiff alleges that "[d]uring the relevant time period, Plaintiff and Class Members did not receive a ten (10) minute rest period for every four (4) hours or major fraction thereof worked because they were required to work through their daily rest periods and/or were not authorized to take their rest periods," and that "[a]t all relevant times, Defendants failed to pay Plaintiff and Class Members rest period premiums for missed, late, and/or interrupted meal periods . . .." (Compl. at ¶¶ 60, 63.) As stated above, these alleged rest period violations are one of the ways that defendant allegedly "engaged in a systematic pattern of wage and hour violations." (Id. at ¶ 3.)
Similar to the meal period claims discussed above, defendant asserts the same arguments to justify its assumption of a 100% violation rate for plaintiff's rest period claims. (Doc. No. 22 at 14.) As the court explained, defendant's arguments are not persuasive. Accordingly, as with defendant's meal period violation rate assumptions, defendant's use of a 100% violation rate to calculate the amount in controversy for plaintiff's rest period claims is not reasonable because it too is not grounded in the allegations in plaintiff's complaint, and defendant has not submitted any evidence as to the frequency of the rest period violations.
Although defendant contends that counting one missed rest break per work day constitutes a 50% violation rate because an employee working eight hours is entitled to two breaks, this is incorrect. Notably, § 226.7 permits only one recovery per work day, not per rest period violation. See United Parcel Serv. Wage & Hour Cases, 196 Cal. App. 4th 57, 69 (2011) (holding employees are permitted only one premium per day "for failure to provide one or more rest periods").
In a passing footnote, defendant alludes to the notion that even if the court applied a 50% violation rate to plaintiff's meal period and rest period claims, the amount in controversy requirement would be met. (Doc. No. 22 at 19 n.14.) Applying a 50% violation rate results in an amount in controversy for the meal period claims of $1,138,081 [50% * (12.58/hour * 36,187 workweeks * 5 days/workweek )] and an amount in controversy for the rest period claims of $1,138,081 [50% * (12.58/hour * 36,187 workweeks * 5 days/workweek )].
The court does not determine that a 50% violation rate is appropriate here—and need not do so—because even assuming arguendo that a 50% violation rate for the meal period claims and rest period claims is reasonable, the resulting total amount in controversy is less than the jurisdictional threshold. As shown in the following table, even were the court to assume a 50% violation rate for plaintiff's meal and rest period claims and a 100% violation rate for the wage statement claims and waiting time claims, the subtotal amount in controversy is less than $5 million. Thus, unless a sufficient amount for attorneys' fees is included, the jurisdictional threshold is not met.
Claim | Amount with 100%violation rate | Amount with 50% violation ratefor meal and rest period claims |
---|---|---|
Meal Period Violations | $2,276,162.00 | $1,365,697.00 |
Rest Period Violations | $2,276,162.00 | $1,365,697.00 |
Inaccurate Wage Statements | $842,900.00 | $842,900.00 |
Waiting Time Penalties | $1,246,845.60 | $1,246,845.60 |
Subtotal: | $6,642,063.60 | $4,821,139.60 |
Attorneys' Fees (25% of subtotal) | $1,660,517.40 | |
Total: | $8,302,581.00 |
3. Attorneys' Fees
Defendant contends that the amount in controversy here should include attorneys' fees calculated using a "25% benchmark" of the subtotal amount and cites several district court cases that have applied this benchmark rate in determining amounts in controversy. (Doc. No. 22 at 17.) However, fatal to defendant's argument is that all of those cases pre-dated the Ninth Circuit's recent opinion in Fritsch v. Swift Transp. Co. of Ariz., LLC, 899 F.3d 785, 795 (9th Cir. 2018), in which the court explained that in the context of removal, "the defendant must prove the amount of attorneys' fees at stake by a preponderance of the evidence," and the court "may not relieve the defendant of its evidentiary burden by adopting a per se rule for one element of the amount at stake in the underlying litigation." In Fritsch, the Ninth Circuit recognized that "in common fund cases, we have estimated reasonable attorneys' fees to be 25 percent of the total recovery," but nevertheless squarely rejected the defendant's argument that "as a matter of law, the amount of attorneys' fees in controversy in class actions is 25 percent of all other alleged recovery." 899 F.3d at 796.
Here, defendant has not made any effort to meet its burden to prove the amount of attorneys' fees at stake in this action by a preponderance of the evidence. For example, defendant has not provided counsel's hourly rates or anticipated time expenditures from which an estimated lodestar could be calculated. See, e.g., Gonzalez v. Comenity Bank, No. 1:19-cv-00348-AWI-EPG, 2019 WL 5304925, at *11 (E.D. Cal. Oct. 21, 2019) (determining a reasonable estimate for attorneys' fees based on defendant's affidavit stating counsel's hourly rate and the court's knowledge of customary rates in comparable cases); Reyes v. Staples Office Superstore, LLC, No. 19-cv-07086-CJC-(SKX), 2019 WL 4187847, at *5 (C.D. Cal. Sept. 3, 2019) (estimating amount of attorneys' fees in controversy based on the plaintiff's attorney's admission of his hourly rate, together with the court's knowledge of customary rates and that comparable employment cases in that district tend to take between 100 and 300 hours to litigate through trial).
Consistent with the Ninth Circuit's opinion in Fritsch, the court will not relieve defendant of its evidentiary burden in this regard. See also Avila, 432 F. Supp. 3d at 1189 (calculating amount in controversy without any amount for attorneys' fees where the defendant had failed to present evidence establishing that attorneys' fees of 25% was a reasonable estimate); Salazar v. PODS Enters., LLC, No. 19-cv-260-MWF-KKx, 2019 WL 2023726, at *9 (C.D. Cal. May 8, 2019) ("Because it is Defendant's burden to establish the amount of attorneys' fees for CAFA jurisdiction, the Court could follow the Ninth Circuit's mandate in Fritsch and simply use $0.")
CONCLUSION
For the reasons set forth above, the court finds that defendant has failed to meet its burden of showing by a preponderance of the evidence that the amount in controversy in this case exceeds the jurisdictional threshold. In particular, defendant has submitted no evidence regarding its amount for attorneys' fees and has assumed a 100% violation rate which is not reasonably grounded upon the allegations of plaintiff's complaint.
Accordingly,
1. Plaintiff's motion to remand (Doc. No. 16) is granted;IT IS SO ORDERED.
2. This action is remanded to the Kern County Superior Court for all further proceedings; and
3. The Clerk of the Court is directed to close this case.
Dated: July 7 , 2020
/s/_________
UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE