Lawyers Title Wage and Hour Cases CA2/7

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 21, 2014
DocketB248633
StatusUnpublished

This text of Lawyers Title Wage and Hour Cases CA2/7 (Lawyers Title Wage and Hour Cases 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
Lawyers Title Wage and Hour Cases CA2/7, (Cal. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Filed 7/21/14 Lawyers Title Wage and Hour Cases CA2/7 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

LAWYERS TITLE WAGE AND HOUR B248633 CASES. ___________________________________ (JCCP004676; Los Angeles County Super. Ct. Nos. BC381693 & BRUCE HAY et al., BC382210; Orange County Super. Ct. No. 3020100418901) Plaintiffs and Appellants,

v.

LANDAMERICA FINANCIAL GROUP et al.,

Defendants and Respondents.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, Elihu M. Berle, Judge. Affirmed. Wagner, Jones, Kopfman & Artenian, Nicholas J.P. Wagner, Andrew P. Jones, Daniel M. Kopfman, Lawrence M. Artenian and Paul C. Mullen, for Plaintiffs and Appellants, Bruce Hay, Diane Hammer, Anita Walach and Melissa Werner. Littler Mendelson, Curtis A. Graham, Michelle L. Christian, for Defendants and Respondents, Lawyers Title Company, Lawyers Title Insurance Corporation, Commonwealth Land Title Insurance Company and Commonwealth Land Title Company. Bruce Hay, Diane Hammer, Anita Walach and Wanda “Melissa” Werner (collectively Hay/Hammer parties) appeal from the judgment entered after the trial court granted the motions for summary judgment filed by Lawyers Title Company, Lawyers Title Insurance Corporation, Commonwealth Land Title Insurance Company and Commonwealth Land Title Company (collectively Lawyers Title), ruling the Hay/Hammer parties’ wage and hour claims were barred by written severance and release agreements they had signed. The Hay/Hammer parties also appeal from the order denying their motion for class certification because there were no class representatives following the grant of summary judgment. We affirm. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND 1. The Parties Hay, Hammer, Walach and Werner are all former employees of LandAmerica Financial Group, Inc. or one of its affiliates or subsidiaries. Hay worked as an escrow officer; Hammer, Walach and Werner as title officers. Hay’s employment terminated on August 1, 2007; Hammer’s on September 4, 2007; Walach’s on November 2, 2007; and Werner’s on November 30, 2006. Each of them signed a severance agreement and release upon termination of employment that provided severance benefits (in addition to their final paycheck for work performed) in an amount based on longevity of service. The severance payments for these four individuals ranged from approximately $3,000 to more than $21,000. LandAmerica Financial Group, at one point one of the three largest title insurance groups in the United States, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in November 2008. The following month LandAmerica Financial Group’s subsidiaries Lawyers Title Company, Lawyers Title Insurance Corporation, Commonwealth Land Title Insurance Company and Commonwealth Land Title Company—the respondents here—were acquired by Fidelity National Financial, Inc. directly and through its underwriting subsidiaries.

2 2. The Class Actions Hammer, Walach and Werner were among the named plaintiffs who filed a wage and hour class action against LandAmerica Financial Group and affiliated entities on December 3, 2007 on behalf of themselves and all similarly situated title officers (known by the court and the parties as the Chaffin action). On December 12, 2007 Hay and others filed a wage and hour class action against the same defendants on behalf of themselves and all similarly situated escrow officers (known as the Hay action). A third class action (the Postema action) alleging substantially similar claims as the Chaffin and Hay actions was filed in October 2010. The three lawsuits alleged causes of action for failure to pay wages due for work in excess of eight hours in one work day or in excess of 40 hours in one work week; failure to pay wages due for work performed over prescribed periods without the statutorily required meal breaks; failure to provide itemized earnings statements; and unfair competition under Business and Professions Code section 17200 based on Labor Code violations. All three actions were deemed related and coordinated in the Los Angeles Superior Court before Judge Elihu M. Berle. Ultimately, as a result of the bankruptcy of LandAmerica Financial Group, the various Lawyers Title entities became defendants in the coordinated class actions. Settlement agreements were negotiated and approved in the Chaffin and Hay 1 actions in the first half of 2012. Each agreement, in identical language, excluded from the settlement class individuals who had signed a severance agreement: “Any person who previously settled or released the claims covered by this settlement shall not be a member of the plaintiff Class. Any person who signed a severance agreement with any of Defendants following employment in a position within the above class description during any part of the Class Period shall not be a member of the plaintiff Class.” Because

1 Because of the overlap in class definitions the two agreements included all named plaintiffs and settlement class members in the Postema action. 3 the Hay/Hammer parties had signed severance agreements on termination of their employment, they were expressly excluded from the settlement class. 3. The Motions for Class Certification and for Summary Judgment On August 30, 2012 the Hay/Hammer parties moved to certify a severance agreement class in the coordinated cases, consisting of the individual escrow officers and title officers who had signed severance agreements on termination of their employment and, therefore, had been excluded from the Chaffin and Hay settlements. While that motion was pending, Lawyers Title separately moved for summary judgment or, in the alternative, summary adjudication against each of the Hay/Hammer parties on the ground the claims asserted were barred as a matter of contract law by the general release language in the severance agreements each of them had signed. The substantively identical motions also asserted, contrary to the Hay/Hammer parties’ contention, the severance agreements and releases were not void under Labor Code section 206.5, which prohibits an employer from conditioning payment of wages due upon execution of a 2 release of claims. The Lawyers Title motions established that each of the Hay/Hammer parties had agreed to the same, apparently complete release in paragraph 3 of the severance agreement: “Employee agrees to release the Company, any related companies, and the employees and directors of any of them from all claims or demands Employee may have based on Employee’s employment with the Company or the termination of that employment. . . . This release covers both claims that Employee knows about and those about which Employee may not know. [¶] This release does not include, however, a release of Employee’s right, if any, to payments from the retirement plan, 401(k), or similar ERISA benefits under the Company’s standard retirement program and the right

2 Lawyers Title also argued the severance agreements and releases were not preempted or otherwise made unenforceable by the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA) (29 U.S.C. § 1001 et seq.).

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Lawyers Title Wage and Hour Cases CA2/7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lawyers-title-wage-and-hour-cases-ca27-calctapp-2014.