Driscoll v. Granite Rock

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 30, 2016
DocketH037662
StatusPublished

This text of Driscoll v. Granite Rock (Driscoll v. Granite Rock) 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
Driscoll v. Granite Rock, (Cal. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

Filed 11/30/16 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

BRIAN DRISCOLL et al., H037662 (Santa Clara County Plaintiffs and Appellants, Super. Ct. No. 1-08-CV103426)

v.

GRANITE ROCK COMPANY,

Defendant and Appellant.

Graniterock is a concrete company that manufactures, delivers and pours concrete. Its customers include home owners, private construction contractors, and contractors on large public works projects, such as schools, airport runways, and roads. Concrete is delivered by Graniterock’s concrete mixer drivers, who assist in loading the concrete into the mixer trucks, delivering the concrete to customers, and pouring the concrete at a construction site. Graniterock concrete drivers Brian Driscoll, Kenneth Gallardo, Donald Hopf, Chris Nowak and Brad Storm filed this action on January 17, 2008 on behalf of a class of approximately 200 current and former concrete mixer drivers. Plaintiffs claim that Graniterock failed to provide concrete mixer drivers with off-duty meal periods and failed to provide them with one additional hour of pay for meal periods during which the drivers opted to continue working. Plaintiffs sought restitution under Business and Professions Code section 17200, penalties under the Private Attorney General Act (ibid.) and damages and penalties under Labor Code sections 226.7 and 512, subdivision (a). Plaintiffs’ principal claim is that Graniterock failed to provide off-duty meal periods and/or failed to pay plaintiffs one additional hour of pay for duty-free meal periods. The trial court granted class certification of approximately 200 concrete drivers employed by Graniterock on or after January 7, 2004. The court designated two subclasses, the first being defined as “All ready-mix concrete drivers employed by Granite Rock Company on or after January 17, 2004, who signed a Graniterock form entitled ‘On Duty’ Meal Period Agreement.” The second subclass was defined as “All ready-mix concrete drivers employed [sic] Granite Rock Company on or after January 17, 2004, who either never signed a Granite Rock form entitled ‘On Duty’ Meal Period Agreement or who later provided a written notice purporting to revoke the Agreement.” The class action was tried without a jury, and the court returned a verdict in favor of Graniterock. The court found that Graniterock did not violate labor laws in its meal period policies. STATEMENT OF THE FACTS AND CASE The concrete that Granitrock produces is a perishable product that cannot be stored. It is mixture of rock, sand and cement. When water is added to the mixture, it creates a chemical reaction that causes the mixture to harden. For this reason, when there is concrete in the drum of a mixer truck, the drum must rotate at all times to prevent hardening. In addition, freshly batched concrete must be poured within 60-90 minutes to ensure its structural integrity. One of the duties of the concrete mixer drivers is to monitor the rotation of the truck drum. Graniterock provided its concrete mixer drivers with the option of signing an on- duty meal period agreement pursuant to Industrial Wage Commission (IWC) Wage Order No. 1, which states: “when the nature of the work prevents an employee from being relieved of all duty and when by written agreement between the parties an on-the-job paid 2 meal period is agreed to.” (IWC wage order No. 1-2001, subd. 11(C).) IWC Wage Order 1 requires that such agreement must be revocable by the employee at any time. (Ibid.) The On-Duty Meal Period Agreement that was provided to and signed by plaintiffs provides: “I understand that I may revoke this Waiver Agreement at any time by providing at least one (1) working day’s advance notice to my Manager of my decision.” Graniterock represented at trial that one day’s notice was the shortest amount of time for it to process a revocation of the agreement and provide an off-duty meal period. Graniterock also advised the concrete drivers that if they did not sign an On-Duty Meal Period Agreement and were asked to work through a meal, they would receive one hour of special pay called “Code 38 Pay, in addition to any pay required by the collective bargaining agreements.” Code 38 pay equaled one hour of pay. All concrete drivers acknowledged receiving and reviewing this policy. Drivers were also notified of their right to a 30-minute, off-duty meal period through IWC Wage Order and other mandatory state and federal postings at each Graniterock branch. The drivers testified that they understood that they could revoke the On-Duty Meal Period Agreement at any time. The evidence at trial showed that only three Graniterock drivers revoked their On-Duty Meal Period Agreement, and each of those drivers received an off-duty meal period and Code 38 pay. Prior to trial, plaintiffs brought a motion for summary adjudication of Graniterock’s affirmative defense of the existence of the On-Duty Meal Period Agreement. The court found that the one-day notice provision contained in the On-Duty Meal Period Agreement failed to satisfy the requirement in Wage Order 1, Section 11(C) that the Agreement allow employees to revoke the agreement at any time. Because the agreement was not legally compliant in its revocation provision, the court found the agreement invalid as a matter of law. 3 Following trial, the Court found that “Plaintiffs failed to prove that the drivers were forced, expected, or trained to involuntarily sign [On-Duty Meal Period Agreements] or to miss off-duty meal periods against their will.” The court noted that “numerous drivers testified that despite signing an [On-Duty Meal Period Agreement], they understood that they could get a meal at any time without revoking their [On-Duty Meal Period Agreement]. For [example], [driver] Bruce Nicholson understood he could ask for an off-duty meal at any time because it was in the Handbook and ‘it was told to us.’ Kelly Sohns knew she could ask for time off without revoking her [On-Duty Meal Period Agreement]. Brian Sheridan testified that ‘anytime we want lunch all we have to do is ask for it.’ Richard Walrod knew he could have asked for lunch off on the same day, but chose not to.’ ” Following consideration of the evidence at trial, including the testimony of numerous concrete mixer drivers and dispatchers, the court concluded that plaintiffs had not proven that Graniterock forced any driver to forgo an off-duty meal period. The court stated: “Graniterock has affirmatively notified its employees that they are entitled to a 30- minute off-duty meal period free from its control through its policies, postings and communications. Graniterock did nothing to interfere with drivers’ ability to take an off- duty meal period. Rather, drivers did not take off-duty meal periods because they did not want them. No one went hungry—they ate during their downtime. While dispatchers did not ask each employee every day whether s/he wanted an off-duty meal period, every driver stated that if asked s/he would say s/he did not want one. The law does not require that the dispatchers ask each day because that would be an exercise in futility.” The court further found that “Plaintiffs failed to prove that the drivers were forced, expected, or trained to involuntarily sign [On-Duty Meal Period Agreements] or to miss off-duty meal periods against their will.” The trial court entered judgment in favor of Graniterock and plaintiffs filed this appeal. In addition, Graniterock filed a cross-appeal of the trial court’s grant of 4 plaintiffs’ motion for summary adjudication of Graniterock’s affirmative defense related to the On-Duty Meal Period Agreement. DISCUSSION With regard to the primary appeal, plaintiffs argue that the trial court erred when it found that Graniterock provided off-duty meal periods in compliance with Labor Code1 sections 226.7 and 512, subdivision (a).

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Bluebook (online)
Driscoll v. Granite Rock, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/driscoll-v-granite-rock-calctapp-2016.