George Huerta v. Csi Elec. Contractors, Inc

39 F.4th 1176
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedJuly 8, 2022
Docket21-16201
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 39 F.4th 1176 (George Huerta v. Csi Elec. Contractors, Inc) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
George Huerta v. Csi Elec. Contractors, Inc, 39 F.4th 1176 (9th Cir. 2022).

Opinion

FOR PUBLICATION

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT

GEORGE HUERTA, an No. 21-16201 individual, on behalf of himself and all others similarly situated D.C. No. and as a representative 5:18-cv-06761-BLF plaintiff, Plaintiff-Appellant, ORDER v. CERTIFYING QUESTIONS TO CSI ELECTRICAL THE SUPREME CONTRACTORS, INC., COURT OF Defendant-Appellee, CALIFORNIA

and

FIRST SOLAR, INC.; CALIFORNIA FLATS SOLAR LLC; CA FLATS SOLAR 130, LLC; CA FLATS SOLAR 150, LLC; CAL FLATS SOLAR CEI, LLC; CAL FLATS SOLAR HOLDCO, LLC; MILCO NATIONAL CONSTRUCTORS, INC.; CALIFORNIA COMPACTION CORPORATION, Defendants. 2 HUERTA V. CSI ELEC. CONTRACTORS

Filed July 8, 2022

Before: Sandra S. Ikuta, Jacqueline H. Nguyen, and John B. Owens, Circuit Judges.

Order

SUMMARY *

California Law

The panel certified to the Supreme Court of California the following questions:

(1) Is time spent on an employer’s premises in a personal vehicle and waiting to scan an identification badge, have security guards peer into the vehicle, and then exit a Security Gate compensable as “hours worked” within the meaning of California Industrial Welfare Commission Wage Order No. 16?

(2) Is time spent on the employer’s premises in a personal vehicle, driving between the Security Gate and the employee parking lots, while subject to certain rules from the employer, compensable as “hours worked” or as “employer-mandated

* This summary constitutes no part of the opinion of the court. It has been prepared by court staff for the convenience of the reader. HUERTA V. CSI ELEC. CONTRACTORS 3

travel” within the meaning of California Industrial Welfare Commission Wage Order No. 16?

(3) Is time spent on the employer’s premises, when workers are prohibited from leaving but not required to engage in employer-mandated activities, compensable as “hours worked” within the meaning of California Industrial Welfare Commission Wage Order No. 16, or under California Labor Code Section 1194, when that time was designated as an unpaid “meal period” under a qualifying collective bargaining agreement?

We respectfully ask the Supreme Court of California to exercise its discretion to decide the certified questions set forth in section II of this order.

I. Administrative Information

We provide the following information in accordance with California Rule of Court 8.548(b)(1). The caption of this case is:

No. 21-16201

GEORGE HUERTA, an individual, on behalf of himself and all others similarly 4 HUERTA V. CSI ELEC. CONTRACTORS

situated and as a representative plaintiff, Plaintiff-Appellant,

v.

CSI ELECTRICAL CONTRACTORS, INC., Defendant-Appellee

FIRST SOLAR, INC.; CALIFORNIA FLATS SOLAR LLC; CA FLATS SOLAR 130, LLC; CA FLATS SOLAR 150, LLC; CAL FLATS SOLAR CEI, LLC; CAL FLATS SOLAR HOLDCO, LLC; MILCO NATIONAL CONSTRUCTORS, INC.; CALIFORNIA COMPACTION CORPORATION, Defendants.

The names and addresses of counsel for the parties are:

For Plaintiff-Appellant George Huerta: Lonnie C. Blanchard, III, 177 E Colorado Boulevard, Pasadena, CA 91105; Peter R. Dion-Kindem, The Dion-Kindem Law Firm, 2945 Townsgate Road, Suite 200, Westlake Village, CA 91301.

For Defendant-Appellee CSI Electrical Contractors, Inc.: Daniel Benjamin Chammas and Min Kyung Kim, Ford & Harrison, LLP, 350 S Grand Avenue, Suite 2300, Los Angeles, CA 90071. HUERTA V. CSI ELEC. CONTRACTORS 5

As required by Rule 8.548(b)(1), we designate George Huerta as the petitioner if our request for certification is granted. He is the appellant before our court.

II. Certified Questions

We certify to the Supreme Court of California the following three questions of state law that are now before us:

(1) Is time spent on an employer’s premises in a personal vehicle and waiting to scan an identification badge, have security guards peer into the vehicle, and then exit a Security Gate compensable as “hours worked” within the meaning of California Industrial Welfare Commission Wage Order No. 16?

(2) Is time spent on the employer’s premises in a personal vehicle, driving between the Security Gate and the employee parking lots, while subject to certain rules from the employer, compensable as “hours worked” or as “employer-mandated travel” within the meaning of California Industrial Welfare Commission Wage Order No. 16?

(3) Is time spent on the employer’s premises, when workers are prohibited from leaving but not required to engage in employer-mandated activities, compensable as “hours worked” within the meaning of California Industrial Welfare Commission Wage Order No. 16, or under California Labor Code 6 HUERTA V. CSI ELEC. CONTRACTORS

Section 1194, when that time was designated as an unpaid “meal period” under a qualifying collective bargaining agreement?

Our phrasing of these questions should not restrict the California Supreme Court’s consideration of the issues involved; that court may reformulate the questions. Cal. R. Ct. 8.548(f)(5).

We agree to accept and to follow the decisions of the California Supreme Court. Id. 8.548(b)(2); see also Frlekin v. Apple, Inc., 870 F.3d 867, 869 (9th Cir. 2017) (“[W]ith respect to a certified question, . . . the Ninth Circuit is bound by the California Supreme Court’s interpretation of California law.” (citation omitted)).

III. Statement of Facts

This case comes from a construction site at the California Flats Solar Project (“the Project”), a solar power facility in Monterey County, California, located on private property called Jack Ranch. The owner of the facility, First Solar Electric, Inc., retained CSI Electrical Contractors (“CSI”) for “procurement, installation, construction, and testing services on Phase 2 of the Project.”

Appellant George Huerta worked for CSI through the subcontractor Milco National Constructors, Inc. Two collective bargaining agreements (“CBAs”) governed his employment: the Operating Engineers Local Union No. 3 of the International Union of Operating Engineers, AFL-CIO’s CBA, and the Project Labor Agreement specific to the Project. HUERTA V. CSI ELEC. CONTRACTORS 7

For the Project, First Solar Electric was required to obtain and follow an Incidental Take Permit (“ITP”) from the California Department of Fish and Wildlife, which imposed specific rules regarding the presence of local endangered species. The CBA required workers to comply with the permit. The ITP imposed speed limits and other restrictions on the work site. A biologist also monitored the site to minimize disturbances to the species’ habitats and cleared the road each morning before anyone could enter.

Workers commuted to the site via personal vehicles, carpools, and buses. The Project had one entrance, requiring workers to first pass a guard shack at the entrance, and then to stop at the Security Gate several miles down the road. Sometimes workers waited outside the entrance before the sun rose or the road was cleared by the biologist.

After passing through the entrance, CSI workers stopped at the Security Gate miles down the road, where a guard scanned each worker’s badge and sometimes peered inside vehicles or truck beds. CSI told workers that the Security Gate was the first place they “were required to be at the beginning of the day in order to work.” The same badging- out process at the Security Gate was used to exit the site. Since many workers exited the Project around the same time each day, lines at the Security Gate often were five to twenty minutes long.

On their way to work, once through the Security Gate, employees drove ten to fifteen more minutes to the parking lots down the road.

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