Grande v. Eisenhower Medical Center

CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 30, 2022
DocketS261247
StatusPublished

This text of Grande v. Eisenhower Medical Center (Grande v. Eisenhower Medical Center) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grande v. Eisenhower Medical Center, (Cal. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF CALIFORNIA

LYNN GRANDE, Plaintiff and Respondent, v. EISENHOWER MEDICAL CENTER, Defendant; FLEXCARE LLC, Intervener and Appellant.

EISENHOWER MEDICAL CENTER, Petitioner, v. THE SUPERIOR COURT OF RIVERSIDE COUNTY, Respondent; LYNN GRANDE, Real Party in Interest.

S261247

Fourth Appellate District, Division Two E068730, E068751

Riverside County Superior Court RIC1514281

June 30, 2022 Chief Justice Cantil-Sakauye authored the opinion of the Court, in which Justices Corrigan, Liu, Kruger, Groban, Jenkins, and Guerrero concurred. GRANDE v. EISENHOWER MEDICAL CENTER S261247

Opinion of the Court by Cantil-Sakauye, C. J.

A staffing agency (FlexCare LLC) arranged for a nurse (Lynn Grande) to work at a hospital (Eisenhower Medical Center). The nurse sued the staffing agency for violating the Labor Code and the Unfair Competition Law. The parties settled and the court entered judgment upon the settlement. The hospital was not a party to that initial lawsuit and the settlement did not name the hospital as a released party. The nurse then sued the hospital based on the same alleged violations. The hospital argued that, because of the first judgment, claim preclusion foreclosed the nurse’s second suit. The Court of Appeal disagreed, criticizing the reasoning of a published opinion that found claim preclusion on similar facts. (Grande v. Eisenhower Medical Center (2020) 44 Cal.App.5th 1147, 1162–1163 (Grande), criticizing Castillo v. Glenair, Inc. (2018) 23 Cal.App.5th 252, 278–281 (Castillo).) We granted review to resolve this tension in the case law. The core of this dispute concerns privity. Judgments bind not only parties, but also “those persons ‘in privity with’ parties.” (Armstrong v. Armstrong (1976) 15 Cal.3d 942, 951.) Questions about privity typically arise when a litigant attempts to use a judgment against someone who was not party to that judgment. (See DKN Holdings LLC v. Faerber (2015) 61 Cal.4th 813, 826, fn. 9 (DKN Holdings).) This case does not present a typical privity question. Because the nurse was a party to the initial judgment, the GRANDE v. EISENHOWER MEDICAL CENTER Opinion of the Court by Cantil-Sakauye, C. J.

judgment can be used against her whether or not she was in privity with some other party. But for claim preclusion, the affirmative defense asserted by the hospital, that is not enough. Instead, we have frequently explained that claim preclusion can be asserted only by a party in the first action or someone in privity with a party in the first action. In this case, a nonparty (the hospital) argues that it is in privity with a party (the staffing agency) to benefit from the claim-preclusive effect of a judgment that undoubtedly binds an opposing party (the nurse). That argument is not persuasive. We recently explained that privity “requires the sharing of ‘an identity or community of interest,’ with ‘adequate representation’ of that interest in the first suit, and circumstances such that the nonparty ‘should reasonably have expected to be bound’ by the first suit.” (DKN Holdings, supra, 61 Cal.4th at p. 826.) There is no such privity here because of the hospital and staffing agency’s different legal interests. Nor can preclusion be based on a claimed indemnification or agency relationship between those litigants. We will thus affirm the judgment of the Court of Appeal. I. BACKGROUND Intervener FlexCare LLC is a temporary staffing agency. Plaintiff Lynn Grande is a nurse. FlexCare assigned Grande to work at defendant Eisenhower Medical Center, which she did for about a week in February 2012. Under the terms of an agreement between the staffing agency (FlexCare) and the hospital (Eisenhower), the staffing agency purportedly “retain[ed] . . . exclusive and total legal responsibility as the employer of Staff,” including “the obligation to ensure full compliance with and satisfaction of” wage and hour requirements. The hospital retained discretion to assign shifts.

2 GRANDE v. EISENHOWER MEDICAL CENTER Opinion of the Court by Cantil-Sakauye, C. J.

Nurses were to use the hospital’s time and attendance system. The staffing agency agreed to indemnify the hospital for certain obligations concerning this staffing arrangement. The two lawsuits relevant here, described below, relate to that arrangement. A. First Suit, Against the Staffing Agency A person not party to the case now before us filed a putative class action against the staffing agency and others in state court. The nurse who filed the present case (Grande) joined the prior action as a named plaintiff, alleging wage and hour violations during the time she worked at the hospital. Both plaintiffs sought to represent a class that included a broad group of the staffing agency’s employees, not merely nurses placed at Eisenhower. The hospital was not named as a defendant in this prior action and did not intervene in it. The parties to the first suit reached a stipulation and settlement agreement, with the staffing agency to pay no more than $750,000. The trial court approved the agreement and entered judgment. For purposes of the judgment, the court certified a class of “ ‘all persons who at any time from or after January 30, 2008 through April 8, 2014 were non-exempt nursing employees of [the staffing agency] employed in California.’ ” Contingent on payment of the amounts due, the court “barred and enjoined” all class members “from prosecuting” certain claims “against the Released Parties.” The term “Released Parties” was defined to include the staffing agency and its agents but did not mention the hospital by name. The court further ordered that “the Released Parties” could use records from the case “to support a defense of res judicata, collateral estoppel, release, waiver or other theory of claim

3 GRANDE v. EISENHOWER MEDICAL CENTER Opinion of the Court by Cantil-Sakauye, C. J.

preclusion, issue preclusion or similar defense.” By the time of judgment, the hospital had not communicated with the staffing agency regarding the settlement. There is no dispute that the staffing agency paid the amounts owed. B. Second Suit, Against the Hospital After the judgment in the first suit became final, the nurse filed this putative class action against the hospital. The suit is based on alleged wage and hour violations while the nurse worked there. The scope of the (putative) class at issue in this second action differs from the class at issue in the first. Unlike the first suit, which concerned nonexempt employees of the staffing agency placed throughout the state (not just at Eisenhower), this second suit concerns nonexempt employees of the hospital placed by any staffing agency (not just by FlexCare). The staffing agency (FlexCare) filed a complaint in intervention, seeking declaratory relief. The staffing agency and the hospital argued both that the hospital was entitled to the benefit of the earlier release, and that the first judgment precludes the nurse from bringing this second suit. The court held a bench trial on the release and preclusion issues. The court found that “the language in the release clause cannot reasonably be construed to extend to claims Plaintiff may have against [the hospital] in this case.” The court further concluded that because the hospital “is not in privity with [the staffing agency], as that term is understood for claim preclusion (res judicata) purposes, Plaintiff’s claim against [the hospital] in this case is not barred by the Final Judgment” in the first action. The court reasoned that “if Plaintiff were attempting to hold [the hospital] derivatively liable for [the staffing agency’s] violation of the Labor Code, one might be able to argue that claim

4 GRANDE v. EISENHOWER MEDICAL CENTER Opinion of the Court by Cantil-Sakauye, C. J.

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Grande v. Eisenhower Medical Center, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grande-v-eisenhower-medical-center-cal-2022.