Hummel, D. v. Walmart Stores, Inc, Aplt

106 A.3d 656, 630 Pa. 292
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 15, 2014
Docket32 EAP 2012 and 33 EAP 2012
StatusPublished
Cited by55 cases

This text of 106 A.3d 656 (Hummel, D. v. Walmart Stores, Inc, Aplt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hummel, D. v. Walmart Stores, Inc, Aplt, 106 A.3d 656, 630 Pa. 292 (Pa. 2014).

Opinions

[296]*296 OPINION

PER CURIAM.

This discretionary appeal concerns whether the class action proceedings in this case improperly subjected Appellants to a “trial by formula.” The trial court certified the class, a jury rendered a divided verdict, and the Superior Court affirmed in part and reversed in part. We now affirm.

Appellees brought various class action claims against their former employers, Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., and Sam’s Club (hereinafter “Wal-Mart”), based on policies and conduct pertaining to rest breaks and meal breaks. Appellees asserted that Wal-Mart had promised them paid rest and meal breaks, but then had forced them, in whole or in part, to miss breaks or work through breaks, and also to work “off-the-clock,” i.e., to work without pay, after a scheduled shift had concluded.1 The trial court certified a class consisting of “all current and former hourly employees of Wal-Mart in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania from March 19, 1998 to the present December 27, 2005.” See Order, 12/27/05, at 1. The class ultimately consisted of 187,979 members.

The jury trial of this class action alleging systemic wage and hour violations spanned six weeks, resulting in a voluminous record. Appellees called eighteen fact witnesses and three expert witnesses during their case-in-chief. The parties’ examinations of Appellees’ expert witnesses took six full days of trial (September 11, 12, 13, 19, 20, and 21). Additionally, lengthy arguments were conducted during trial but outside the hearing of the jury on Wal-Mart’s motions to strike portions of the testimony of Appellees’ experts. Ultimately, the jury rendered a verdict in favor of Wal-Mart on all claims relating to meal breaks but in favor of Appellees on all claims relating to rest breaks and off-the-clock work. The amount of the judgment ultimately entered on the verdict was $187,648,589.2 [297]*297Wal-Mart appealed the judgment, and the Superior Court affirmed in part and reversed in part in a published unanimous per curiam opinion, which corrected a patent mathematical error committed by the trial court,3 reversed the award of attorneys’ fees, and remanded to the trial court to recalculate the lodestar it had employed to determine the amount of attorneys’ fees. Braun v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., 24 A.3d 875 (Pa.Super.2011). This Court granted Wal-Mart’s request for discretionary review, limited to the following issue framed by Wal-Mart:

Whether, in a purported class action tried to verdict, it violates Pennsylvania law (including the Pennsylvania Rules of Civil Procedure) to subject Wal-Mart to a “Trial by Formula” that relieves Plaintiffs of their burden to produce class-wide “common” evidence on key elements of their claims.

Braun v. Wal-Mart Stores, 616 Pa. 354, 47 A.3d 1174 (2012).

The issue accepted for review requires this Court to address: (1) whether Wal-Mart was subjected to a “trial by formula”; and (2) whether Appellees were thereby improperly relieved of their burden to produce class-wide common evidence on key elements of their claims. Notwithstanding WalMart’s inclusion of the phrase “purported class action” in the issue presented for review, the propriety of the certification of the class in the first instance is not before the Court in this appeal. Notably, however, much of Wal-Mart’s challenge to the method of trial is premised upon its contention that the class never should have been certified because Appellees did [298]*298not present sufficient, class-wide “common” evidence of contract formation, breach, or unjust enrichment. Moreover, Wal-Mart asserts that the trial court’s class certification, the jury verdict, and the Superior Court affirmance all improperly relied upon “sham statistics and baseless extrapolations of [Appellees’] expert witnesses, Drs. Baggett and Shapiro[,]” regarding “Wal-Mart’s time clock and cash register records.” Appellants’ Brief at 27, 30. In short, Wal-Mart asserts that Appellees’ statistical and extrapolation evidence was flawed in that it failed to show “that class members, on a class-wide basis, missed breaks, took shortened breaks or worked off-the-clock.” Id. at 18-19.

More specifically, Wal-Mart claims that the time clock and cash register records did not show that employees had been forced to miss breaks or work off-the-clock, and that Appellees’ expert analysis reaching the opposite conclusion was based on faulty assumptions that failed to account for the actual practices of Wal-Mart and its employees. Specifically, Wal-Mart claims that the analysis regarding rest breaks failed to account for “voluntary” missed breaks, and that the analysis regarding off-the-clock work failed to account for the alleged fact that it was not uncommon for cashiers to log into and operate cash registers under another employee’s name. Thus, Wal-Mart asserts that the class was overbroad, that appellees had not shown proper proof of Wal-Mart’s liability as to each “purported” class member, and that Wal-Mart had been subject to a “trial by formula” that denied Wal-Mart its right to due process in violation of Pennsylvania law.4 Appellants’ Brief at 18-19. Specifically, Wal-Mart claims it was denied the right to defend inherently individual issues of liability. Id. at 22-24.

The Superior Court’s slip opinion in this case is 211 pages long, and thoroughly details the evidence presented at trial. We set forth here only those facts necessary for resolution of the single issue raised on appeal, in which Wal-Mart challenges the method by which the trial was conducted.

[299]*299Wal-Mart employees (characterized as “associates” in WalMart’s employee handbooks and other written policies) are required to “punch” time clocks. During orientation for new employees, employee handbooks are distributed that, among other things, inform employees that they are entitled to paid rest breaks and that they will be paid for all hours worked. Additionally, all employees are informed, through a variety of means, about Wal-Mart’s rest break policy, known as PD-07, and its off-the-clock work policy, known as PD-43. The rest break policy states that a paid, 15-minute break will be given to an employee who works between three and six hours, and that an additional paid, 15-minute break will be given to an employee who works more than six hours. The rest break policy requires that employees take full, uninterrupted breaks, and warns that disciplinary action may result if an employee misses breaks or takes breaks that are either too long or too short. Wal-Mart’s off-the-clock work policy provides that it is against company policy for any employee to perform work without being paid, and that employees will be compensated for all work performed.

Prior to February 10, 2001, Wal-Mart employees were required to clock out and clock back in for each rest break, ie., employees were required to “punch” or “swipe” a time clock at the beginning and end of every rest break. Beginning in 1999, Wal-Mart conducted approximately ten regional internal audits that indicated widespread rest break violations, such as missed breaks, breaks that were too long, or breaks that were too short.

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Bluebook (online)
106 A.3d 656, 630 Pa. 292, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hummel-d-v-walmart-stores-inc-aplt-pa-2014.