Brooks v. AmeriHome Mortgage Company, LLC

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 8, 2020
DocketB298132
StatusPublished

This text of Brooks v. AmeriHome Mortgage Company, LLC (Brooks v. AmeriHome Mortgage Company, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brooks v. AmeriHome Mortgage Company, LLC, (Cal. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Filed 3/16/20; Certified for Publication 4/8/20 (order attached)

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION SIX

ANTHONY BROOKS, 2d Civil No. B298132 (Super. Ct. No. 56-2019- Plaintiff and Respondent, 00524903-CU-OE-VTA) (Ventura County) v.

AMERIHOME MORTGAGE COMPANY, LLC,

Defendant and Appellant.

AmeriHome Mortgage Company, LLC (AmeriHome) appeals an order granting Anthony Brooks’s motion for preliminary injunction to enjoin arbitration. We affirm. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY Brooks was an employee at AmeriHome. His employment contract included an arbitration clause. It states that “any dispute or controversy arising out of or relating to this Agreement or your employment . . . will be settled exclusively by arbitration . . . in accordance with, and pursuant, to the National Rules of Resolution of Employment Disputes of the American Arbitration Act.” In January 2019, Brooks filed a written notice of wage violation claims with the Labor and Workforce Development Agency (LWDA) pursuant to the Private Attorneys General Act of 2004 (PAGA). (Lab. Code,1 § 2698 et seq.) Brooks alleged he and other AmeriHome employees were “entitled to penalties and wages as allowed under [§ 2698 et seq.]” and “will seek [them] on his own behalf and on behalf of other similarly situated” employees. In response, AmeriHome filed a demand for arbitration with the American Arbitration Association (AAA). It sought “final and binding arbitration of Brooks’[s] individual claims,” including: that AmeriHome “failed to pay all wages to him, . . . failed to provide meal and rest breaks, failed to pay all wages timely, failed to provide accurate wage statements, failed to maintain payroll records, and failed to reimburse him for business related expenses.” AmeriHome alleged that the “California Labor Code violation claims at issue” were “dispute[s] or controvers[ies] arising out of Brooks’[s] employment with AmeriHome,” which the parties agreed to arbitrate pursuant to the employment contract. AAA initiated arbitration proceedings. Following the expiration of the required notice period giving LWDA an opportunity to investigate and file the claim (§ 2699.3, subd. (a)(2)(A)), Brooks filed a first amended complaint “on behalf of himself and other current and former aggrieved [AmeriHome] employees” in Ventura County Superior Court. He alleges a single cause of action under PAGA. The first amended

1 Further unspecified statutory references are to the Labor Code.

2 complaint alleges AmeriHome violated various Labor Code sections, including failure to pay minimum wage and overtime wages, provide meal periods and rest breaks, timely pay wages during employment, timely pay wages upon termination, provide complete and accurate wage statements, and reimburse business expenses.2 Unlike the LWDA notice, Brooks’s first amended complaint does not seek individual recovery for unpaid wages. The “prayer for relief” seeks only “civil penalties,” “costs and attorney[’s] fees,” and “other and further relief the court may deem just and proper.” Brooks filed a motion for a preliminary injunction to enjoin arbitration. AmeriHome filed a motion to stay proceedings pending arbitration. The trial court issued the preliminary injunction and denied the stay request. The court found that “allowing the arbitration to proceed would split a pure PAGA claim between the trial court and an arbitration forum. A PAGA claim is made on behalf of the State and, . . . the State cannot be compelled to go to arbitration.” The court further stated that whether Brooks is the “proper plaintiff to bring this matter on behalf of the State is a question for this [c]ourt, not an arbitrator.” DISCUSSION AmeriHome argues the trial court erred when it issued the preliminary injunction. We disagree. In determining whether to issue a preliminary injunction, the trial court must weigh two inter-related factors:

2 The first amended complaint alleges violations of the following: Labor Code sections 201, 202, 203, 204, 226, subdivision (a), 226.2, 226.3, 226.7, 510, 512, subdivision (a), 1174, 1194, 1197, 1197.1, 1198, 2800, and 2802.

3 (1) the likelihood the plaintiff will prevail on the merits, and (2) the relative interim harm the parties would suffer from the issuance or nonissuance of the injunction. (People ex rel. Gallo v. Acuna (1997) 14 Cal.4th 1090, 1109.) We review the trial court’s ruling for abuse of discretion. (Ibid.) We may affirm the trial court’s decision on any grounds which appear in the record. (D’Amico v. Board of Medical Examiners (1974) 11 Cal.3d 1, 19.) 1. Likelihood of Prevailing on the Merits The trial court did not abuse its discretion when it found that Brooks demonstrated a likelihood he would prevail on the issue of whether his claim was arbitrable. A PAGA action is fundamentally an action designed to protect the public, not to benefit a private party. (Zakaryan v. The Men’s Wearhouse, Inc. (2019) 33 Cal.App.5th 659, 669 (Zakaryan), disapproved on other grounds in ZB, N.A. v. Superior Court (2019) 8 Cal.5th 175, 196.) Under PAGA, an “aggrieved employee,” acting as a private attorney general, may bring a civil action personally and on behalf of other current or former employees to recover civil penalties for Labor Code violations. (§ 2699, subd. (a).) “The employee may not file his or her PAGA claim for particular labor law violations until first giving [LWDA] the opportunity to investigate and file the claim itself [citations] and, if [LWDA] elects not to get involved, [it] is nevertheless legally bound by the outcome of the employee-prosecuted PAGA claim [citations].” (Zakaryan, at pp. 669-670; § 2699.3.) If the PAGA action results in penalties, LWDA recovers 75 percent and the aggrieved employees recovers the remaining 25 percent of those penalties. (§ 2699, subd. (i).) In Iskanian v. CLS Transportation Los Angeles, LLC (2014) 59 Cal.4th 348, 384, our Supreme Court held that an

4 employment agreement compelling an employee to waive the right to bring a PAGA action “is contrary to public policy and unenforceable as a matter of state law.” The court explained that because a PAGA action is a representative action, a “‘single- claimant arbitration under the PAGA for individual penalties will not result in the penalties contemplated under the PAGA to punish and deter employer practices that violate the rights of numerous employees under the Labor Code.’” (Ibid.) The court also held that the Federal Arbitration Act (FAA) does not preempt state laws prohibiting PAGA waivers because the “FAA aims to ensure an efficient forum for the resolution of private disputes, whereas a PAGA action is a dispute between an employer and the state [LWDA].” (Ibid.) Where an employee alleges a “single representative cause of action under PAGA,” the claim “cannot be split into an arbitrable individual claim and a nonarbitrable representative claim.” (Williams v. Superior Court (2015) 237 Cal.App.4th 642, 649 (Williams).) In Williams, the employee filed a single-count PAGA action, seeking civil penalties and/or damages against the employer for its failure to provide off-duty rest periods pursuant to section 226.7. (Id. at p. 645.) The employer argued the employee must first arbitrate his individual claim to prove he was an “aggrieved employee.” (Id. at pp. 645-646.) The Court of Appeal disagreed, holding that because the PAGA claim was a representative, and not an individual, claim, the employee “cannot be compelled to submit any portion of his representative PAGA claim to arbitration, including whether he was an ‘aggrieved employee.’” (Id. at p. 649.) Here, Brooks’s complaint is, as the trial court described it, a “pure PAGA claim.” Brooks alleged a single cause

5 of action under PAGA and did not allege an individual claim for wage recovery in his complaint.

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Bluebook (online)
Brooks v. AmeriHome Mortgage Company, LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brooks-v-amerihome-mortgage-company-llc-calctapp-2020.