Levone Harris v. Km Industrial, Inc.

980 F.3d 694
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedNovember 13, 2020
Docket20-16767
StatusPublished
Cited by202 cases

This text of 980 F.3d 694 (Levone Harris v. Km Industrial, 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
Levone Harris v. Km Industrial, Inc., 980 F.3d 694 (9th Cir. 2020).

Opinion

FOR PUBLICATION FILED UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS NOV 13 2020 MOLLY C. DWYER, CLERK U.S. COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT

LEVONE HARRIS, on behalf of himself No. 20-16767 and all others similarly situated, D.C. No. 3:19-cv-07801-WHO Plaintiff-Appellee,

v. OPINION

KM INDUSTRIAL, INC., a Delaware corporation,

Defendant-Appellant.

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of California William Horsley Orrick, District Judge, Presiding

Argued and Submitted October 16, 2020 San Francisco, California

Before: Kim McLane Wardlaw and Daniel P. Collins, Circuit Judges, and Richard K. Eaton,* Judge Opinion by Judge Eaton; Dissent by Judge Collins

EATON, Judge:

In order to remove a case commenced as a class action in a state court, the

Class Action Fairness Act of 2005 (“CAFA”) requires that the removing defendant

* Richard K. Eaton, Judge of the United States Court of International Trade, sitting by designation. 1 allege that the amount in controversy exceeds $5 million. 28 U.S.C. § 1332(d)(2).

Here, the plaintiff factually attacked the defendant’s allegations regarding the

amount in controversy. After the parties had an opportunity to submit evidence, the

district court remanded the case to state court because it found that the defendant

based the claimed amount in controversy on unreasonable assumptions. We affirm.

I.

On October 24, 2019, Levone Harris filed a class action complaint in

California state court against his former employer KM Industrial, Inc. (“KMI”).

Harris alleged that KMI had violated several provisions of the California Labor Code

including failing to provide meal and rest breaks, pay overtime wages, furnish

compliant wage statements, indemnify expenditures and losses, and timely pay all

final wages.

Harris brought suit on behalf of several putative classes and subclasses of

employees for the “Relevant Time Period,” commencing “four years prior to the

filing of this action until judgment is entered.” The complaint contained a cause of

action for labor violations suffered by an “Hourly Employee Class,” described as

“[a]ll persons employed by [KMI] and/or any staffing agencies and/or any other third

parties in hourly or non-exempt positions in California during the Relevant Time

Period.” Harris also brought causes of action based on subclasses of the Hourly

2 Employee Class. Two of these subclasses are important here: (1) the “Meal Period

Sub-Class” and (2) the “Rest Period Sub-Class.”

In his complaint, Harris defined the Meal Period Sub-Class as “[a]ll Hourly

Employee Class members who worked a shift in excess of five hours during the

Relevant Time Period.” Harris alleged that KMI “maintained a policy or practice of

not providing [Harris] and members of the Meal Period Sub-Class with

uninterrupted, duty-free meal periods for at least thirty (30) minutes for each five (5)

hour work period, as required by Labor Code section 512 ad [sic] the applicable

Wage Order.” The Rest Period Sub-Class was defined as “[a]ll Hourly Employee

Class members who worked a shift of at least three and one-half (3.5) hours during

the Relevant Time Period.” Harris alleged that KMI “maintained a policy or practice

of not providing [Harris and] members of the Rest Period Sub-Class with net rest

period [sic] of at least ten minutes for each four hour work period, or major fraction

thereof, as required by the applicable Wage Order.”

KMI timely filed a notice of removal on November 27, 2019, asserting that

CAFA vested the federal district court with original subject matter jurisdiction

because the amount placed in controversy by the claims in Harris’s complaint

exceeded $5 million.1 28 U.S.C. § 1332(d)(2). KMI alleged that the amount in

1 Neither party contests the jurisdictional requirements of class numerosity or minimal diversity on appeal. Accordingly, the sole dispute is whether 3 controversy was $7,163,325, which it calculated by totaling the value it assigned to

five of the eight causes of action, plus attorney’s fees. KMI represented that this

calculation was based on the allegations set forth in the complaint, employee and

payroll data, and KMI’s own assumptions regarding the frequency of violations as

applied to the relevant class or subclass. To support its calculation, KMI also

submitted evidence in the form of a declaration by Julian Lopez (“First Lopez

Declaration”), the corporate human resources director for KMI’s parent company.2

In his declaration, Lopez estimated that, in the four-year period prior to the

filing of the complaint, KMI had “employed approximately 442 putative class

members” who “worked an aggregate of 39,834 workweeks.” He based the

declaration on his own personal knowledge and information taken from KMI’s

“computer system which, among other things, tracks certain personnel and payroll

information of [KMI’s] employees.” The First Lopez Declaration made no mention

of the number or length of shifts worked by the Hourly Employee Class members

the amount in controversy exceeds the $5 million jurisdictional threshold required under CAFA. 2 The First Lopez Declaration addressed four factual matters: (1) the Hourly Employee Class consists of approximately 442 putative class members; (2) of those 442 putative class members, 237 resigned or were terminated during the Relevant Time Period; (3) putative class members worked an aggregate of 39,834 workweeks; and (4) the median rate of pay for putative class members was $20.00 per hour. 4 during the 39,834 workweeks. Nor did it define the length of a workweek itself with

respect to what constituted a fulltime week or shift.

Importantly, KMI assumed, for purposes of calculating the amount in

controversy, that all of the individuals in the putative Hourly Employee

Class—442—were also all members of the Meal Period Sub-Class and the Rest

Period Sub-Class for the duration of the Relevant Time Period. Thus, for Harris’s

meal period claim, KMI assumed that the entire Hourly Employee Class of 442

employees missed one meal period per workweek across an aggregate of 39,834

workweeks. Similarly, for the rest period claim, KMI assumed that all 442 members

of the Hourly Employee Class were also members of the Rest Period Sub-Class and

had missed two rest periods per workweek across an aggregate of 39,834

workweeks. Thus, KMI assumed that the 442 Hourly Employee Class members

worked shifts long enough to qualify for one meal period and two rest periods during

each week of the 39,834 workweeks during the four-year Relevant Time Period.

Harris filed a motion to remand the case to state court on the grounds that the

district court lacked subject matter jurisdiction because KMI “ha[d] failed to

establish by a preponderance of the evidence that the amount in controversy exceeds

$5 million, as required under CAFA.” In his brief supporting his remand motion,

Harris contended that KMI’s calculations “improperly inflate the amount in

controversy” by relying on “unfounded assumptions.” Specifically, Harris objected

5 to KMI’s assumption that the violation rate of one missed meal period and two

missed rest periods, suffered by the Meal Period and Rest Period subclasses, was

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