Avelar v. HC Concrete Construction Group, LLC

CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Tennessee
DecidedJanuary 27, 2023
Docket3:22-cv-00292
StatusUnknown

This text of Avelar v. HC Concrete Construction Group, LLC (Avelar v. HC Concrete Construction Group, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Avelar v. HC Concrete Construction Group, LLC, (M.D. Tenn. 2023).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE MIDDLE DISTRICT OF TENNESSEE NASHVILLE DIVISION

LUIS AVELAR and MATEO GOMEZ, ) individually and on behalf of all similarly ) situated persons, ) ) Plaintiffs, ) ) v. ) Case No. 3:22-cv-00292 ) Judge Aleta A. Trauger HC CONCRETE CONSTRUCTION ) GROUP, LLC, AND JON HARRIS, ) ) Defendants. )

ORDER Before the court are (1) the defendants’ Motion for Court Approval of Defendants’ Versions of the Notice and Consent forms to be sent to putative opt-in plaintiffs in this Fair Labor Standards Act (“FLSA”) case (Doc. No. 29); (2) the plaintiffs’ Motion to Modify the December 22, 2022 Order and to Approve Plaintiffs’ Notice and Consent forms (Doc. No. 30). Both parties filed with their motions redlined versions of the plaintiffs’ proposed Notice and Consent forms, highlighting the changes both parties seek to make that are opposed by the other party. The plaintiffs’ motion, filed the same day as the defendants’, effectively operates as a response to the defendants’ motion, insofar as it addresses all of the same issues that the parties have not been able to resolve regarding the wording of the Notice and Consent forms to be distributed to putative opt-in plaintiffs. In addition, however, the plaintiffs also seek certain modifications to the Order entered on December 22, 2022 (“December 22 Order”) regarding the steps the defendants should be required to take to facilitate notice and extending the opt-in period. (Doc. No. 30.) The defendants filed an expedited Response to the plaintiffs’ motion, as a result of which the court deems both motions to be fully briefed. The plaintiffs’ Motion to Modify the December 22 Order (Doc. No. 30) is GRANTED IN PART AND DENIED IN PART, as set forth in Section I, below. The parties’ dueling Motions to Approve (Doc. Nos. 29, 30) are likewise GRANTED IN PART AND DENIED IN PART, as detailed in Section II, below.

I. THE PLAINTIFFS’ MOTION TO MODIFY ORDER A. Background In the December 22 Order (as modified by the Order entered January 9, 2023), the court, among other things, granted the plaintiffs’ Motion for Conditional Certification, conditionally certifying the case to proceed as a collective action under the FLSA on behalf of all current and former hourly paid construction workers who worked for defendant HC Concrete and who were classified as independent contractors at any time since September 23, 2019. (Doc. No. 25.) Rather than specifically approving or disapproving the language the parties proposed to be incorporated in the Notice and Consent forms to be distributed to putative opt-in plaintiffs, the court directed the parties to confer and present to the court revised and agreed-upon Notice and Consent forms by January 9, 2023, consistent with certain parameters provided by the court.

In addition, the December 22 Order directed the defendants to conduct a reasonable search of their records and to provide to plaintiffs’ counsel, by January 12, 2023, the names, last known home addresses, email addresses, and telephone numbers of all putative opt-in plaintiffs, “to the extent such information is in the defendants’ possession.” (Doc. No. 25, at 1.) The December 22 Order denied the plaintiffs’ request for a ninety-day notice period and instead established a sixty- day notice period (running from the date of the Notice) within which the putative opt-in plaintiffs could submit opt-in forms. The Order further denied the plaintiffs’ requests that the defendants be “required to post Notice of the lawsuit at their jobsites, to submit Notices with putative opt-in plaintiffs’ paychecks, or to produce contact information for putative opt-in plaintiffs that is not in their possession.” (Id. at 2.) Although not actually referenced in the Order, the Memorandum accompanying the Order noted that the plaintiffs had the “option of requesting additional information, such as dates of birth and social security numbers, in the event that the defendants cannot provide mailing addresses or if a significant number of notices are returned undelivered.”

(Doc. No. 24, at 15.) The December 22 Order further specified (as explained in the accompanying Memorandum) that “the denial of these requests [was] without prejudice to the plaintiffs’ ability to move for reconsideration of these decisions if they encounter substantial difficulty in contacting putative opt-in plaintiffs due to the defendants’ recordkeeping practices.” (Id.) B. The Parties’ Arguments The plaintiffs now represent that, although the defendants have produced an Excel spreadsheet with the names of 987 putative opt-in plaintiffs, they have produced no email addresses for any of these individuals, have produced phone numbers for only a small fraction of them (149 of the 987), and have produced no physical mailing address for eighty-three individuals (8.4% of the total) and incomplete mailing addresses for a “substantial” number of additional putative plaintiffs. (Doc. No. 30, at 2–3.) Based on the defendants’ provision of what the plaintiffs

characterize as “woefully deficient” contact information for the putative opt-in plaintiffs, the plaintiffs demand that the defendants be directed to take affirmative steps to provide complete contact information for “current workers who are or were classified as independent contractors at any time since September 23, 2019”—more specifically, that the court order defendants to “speak to each of these individuals, obtain their contact information, and provide it to Plaintiffs’ counsel.” (Id. at 9, 10.) The plaintiffs further request that the court modify the December 22 Order by (1) requiring the defendants to provide birthdates and social security numbers for all putative opt-in plaintiffs, to post copies of the Notice and Consent forms at all job sites, and to include copies of the Notice and Consent forms with the next paychecks of all opt-in plaintiffs currently working for the defendants; (2) approving dissemination of the Notice by text message; and (3) extending the notice period from sixty days to ninety days. In their Response, the defendants do not oppose the plaintiffs’ request to send notice to putative opt-in plaintiffs by text message. They note that they have provided phone numbers for

149 individuals and are “in the process of determining whether they can identify additional phone numbers.” (Doc. No. 33, at 5.) If so, they will provide them. (Id.) The court, accordingly, will grant the plaintiffs’ request to provide notice by text message (which, the court notes, was not requested by the plaintiffs in their original motion). The defendants oppose the plaintiffs’ other demands, which they characterize as an attempt to obtain extraordinary measures that were denied in the December 22 Order. The defendants assert that: (1) according to the plaintiffs’ own calculations, the defendants have provided last known home addresses for 91.6% of the putative opt-in plaintiffs, and, of that number, only nineteen appear to be incomplete; (2) the defendants have never requested or obtained email addresses from construction workers employed by them, and the court has not required them to produce

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Bluebook (online)
Avelar v. HC Concrete Construction Group, LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/avelar-v-hc-concrete-construction-group-llc-tnmd-2023.