Lavitt v. Goodwill Retail Industries CA2/7

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 17, 2020
DocketB278675
StatusUnpublished

This text of Lavitt v. Goodwill Retail Industries CA2/7 (Lavitt v. Goodwill Retail Industries CA2/7) 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
Lavitt v. Goodwill Retail Industries CA2/7, (Cal. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Filed 8/17/20 Lavitt v. Goodwill Retail Industries CA2/7 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS

California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION SEVEN

BRENT LAVITT et al., B278675

Plaintiffs and Respondents, (Los Angeles County Super. Ct. No. BC537429) v.

GOODWILL RETAIL INDUSTRIES et al.,

Defendants and Respondents;

JUAN ARIAS et al.,

Interveners and Appellants.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County. Lisa Hart Cole, Judge. Affirmed. Matern Law Group, Matthew J. Matern, Joshua D. Boxer, Roy K. Suh, Kiran Prasad, and Tagore O. Subramaniam for Intervener and Appellant Juan Arias. David Yeremian & Associates and David Yeremian for Intervener and Appellant Maria Rina Clemente. RGLAWYERS, Solomon E. Gresen; Benedon & Serlin, Douglas G. Benedon, and Judith E. Posner for Plaintiffs and Respondents. Ogletree, Deakins, Nash, Smoak & Stewart, Catherine L. Hazany, and Lyne A. Richardson for Defendants and Respondents. _______________________

INTRODUCTION

Interveners Juan Arias and Maria Rina Clemente appeal from the judgment entered after the trial court approved a settlement resolving five wage and hour class actions against Goodwill Retail Services and Goodwill Industries of Southern California (collectively, Goodwill). We affirm.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

A. Goodwill Employees File Wage and Hour Class Actions Against Their Employer In 2013 and 2014 employees of Goodwill filed five subsequently related class actions alleging Goodwill committed various wage and hour violations. Two of those lawsuits, Diaz v. Goodwill Retail Services and Alvarado v. Goodwill Industries of Southern California, were on behalf of current store managers who alleged Goodwill had improperly classified them as exempt employees. Two of the other lawsuits, Clemente v. Goodwill Industries of Southern California and Arias v. Goodwill

2 Industries of Southern California, were on behalf of current and former nonexempt employees. This action, the fifth, by Brent Lavitt on behalf of exempt employees and Gamal Adams on behalf of nonexempt employees, sought damages, penalties under the Private Attorneys General Act (PAGA) (Lab. Code, § 2698 et seq.), and relief under the unfair competition law (Bus. & Prof. Code, § 17200). This action was the only one of the five lawsuits to assert claims on behalf of both exempt and nonexempt employees, and it was the only one asserting a claim for Goodwill’s alleged “‘failure to recalculate overtime and double time after nondiscretionary bonus’” payments.

B. The Court in the Alvarado Action Denies a Motion for Class Certification In August 2014 the plaintiffs in the Alvarado action moved to certify the action as a class action and sought to be the class representatives for several types of retail store managers whom Goodwill had allegedly misclassified as exempt employees. The court found that the proposed class included managers in various types of business environments with different job functions, that the plaintiffs failed to show the managers performed the same job tasks, and that the defendants showed there were significant differences in the positions, work environments, and tasks of the proposed class members. The court in the Alvarado action denied the motion for class certification, finding common questions of law or fact did not predominate.

3 C. The Parties in This Action Reach a Settlement and Move for Preliminary Approval In March 2015 Lavitt, Adams, and Goodwill jointly moved for an order preliminarily approving a proposed settlement of the class claims and conditionally certifying settlement classes. Under the proposed settlement, Goodwill agreed to pay $4,200,000 in cash and provide $300,000 in merchandise vouchers to all 10,588 California Goodwill hourly employees during the class period whom Goodwill had designated as nonexempt from payment for overtime (the nonexempt class) and to all 216 California employees whom Goodwill had designated as exempt from payment for overtime (the exempt class). The settlement consisted of $1,195,608 for nonexempt class members and $286,566 for exempt class members for alleged missed meal and rest breaks and associated unpaid or underpaid penalties; $1,858,406 for nonexempt class members and $402,849 for exempt class members for alleged underpayment of wages relating to overtime or “off the clock” work and associated unpaid or underpaid penalties; $6,507 for nonexempt class members for alleged improper rounding time entries; $190,597 for 1,127 nonexempt class members “who were paid nondiscretionary bonuses allegedly without recalculating overtime/double time”; $127,407 for 858 nonexempt class members and 147 exempt class members for an alleged specific sales bonus underpayment; $162,060 for members of both classes (at $15 each) for alleged nonpayment of job-related expenses; $294,003 in cash and $5,997 in merchandise vouchers for members of both classes for various penalties allegedly owed for Labor Code violations; and $10,000 in PAGA penalties.

4 Counsel for Lavitt and Adams submitted a declaration explaining that settlement negotiations began in early 2014 when counsel spoke about the possibility of mediation and Goodwill indicated it was willing to resolve the unpaid and underpaid bonus claims. The parties engaged in informal discovery, and counsel for Lavitt and Adams received more than 2,500 documents, including Goodwill’s policies, training manuals, internal memoranda, and retail store operational data, as well as the plaintiffs’ personnel files, pay stubs, and other records. Goodwill also produced spreadsheets of payroll registers that contained approximately 350,000 line items with over 17 million data points representing every wage payment to the nonexempt class members between February 25, 2010 and January 2015 and every wage payment to the exempt class members between July 25, 2009 and January 2015. The data corresponded to the individual components of each wage payment during the class period, similar to information on pay stubs, and included information about regular time, overtime, and bonus payments. Counsel for Lavitt and Adams determined from this information the size of the two putative classes, the average wage for each class, the number of current and former employees, and the number of full time equivalent positions during the class period (2,242 for the nonexempt class, 83 for the exempt class). Counsel for Lavitt and Adams also deposed two persons designated by Goodwill as most qualified to testify about the payment of overtime, the calculation and payment of bonuses, meal and rest break policies, efforts to provide meal and rest breaks, and other issues in the litigation. Counsel for Lavitt and Adams also interviewed putative class members, reviewed declarations of

5 putative class members, and investigated Goodwill’s financial, employment, and other publicly available information. The parties advised the court they participated in a mediation with a retired judge in January 2015 and, after Goodwill produced additional data, a second session of the mediation. The parties explained, “At that time, upon a realistic and good faith review of the voluminous documentary and other evidence in this case, each side recognized the substantial risk of an adverse result as to some of the claims, and based upon the risk . . .

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Lavitt v. Goodwill Retail Industries CA2/7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lavitt-v-goodwill-retail-industries-ca27-calctapp-2020.