Mainville v. College Town Pizza, Inc.

CourtDistrict Court, D. Minnesota
DecidedSeptember 19, 2022
Docket0:21-cv-02699
StatusUnknown

This text of Mainville v. College Town Pizza, Inc. (Mainville v. College Town Pizza, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mainville v. College Town Pizza, Inc., (mnd 2022).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF MINNESOTA

Nick Mainville, Case No. 21-cv-2699 (WMW/TNL)

Plaintiff, ORDER v.

College Town Pizza, Inc.; Route 41 Pizza, LLC; 5 Star Pizza, LLC; Two Ten Twenty Pizza, Inc.; Dough Management Inc.; Susan Graves; Dennis Denman; Doe Corporation 1–10; John Doe 1–10; and Dave Randall,

Defendants.

Before the Court are motions to compel arbitration and to transfer or change venue, filed by Defendants College Town Pizza, Inc.; Route 41 Pizza, LLC; 5 Star Pizza, LLC; Two Ten Twenty Pizza, Inc.; Dough Management Inc.; Susan Graves; Dennis Denman; and Dave Randall (Arbitration Defendants). (Dkts. 26, 36).1 Also before the Court is a motion to dismiss filed by Defendants College Town Pizza, Inc.; 5 Star Pizza, LLC; Two Ten Twenty Pizza, Inc.; Dough Management, Inc.; and Dennis Denman (Dismissal Defendants). (Dkt. 31.) Plaintiff Nick Mainville opposes Defendants’ motions. For the reasons addressed below, the Court grants Arbitration Defendants’ motion to compel

1 The Court refers to the separate groups of moving Defendants as Arbitration Defendants and Dismissal Defendants while acknowledging that, in addition to addressing dismissal in their motion to compel arbitration, Arbitration Defendants move to change venue in a separate motion. arbitration, dismisses the case without prejudice, and denies as moot Dismissal Defendants’ motion to dismiss and Arbitration Defendants’ motion to change venue.

BACKGROUND Mainville is a resident of Wisconsin and an employee of Route 41, a Domino’s pizza store in Appleton, Wisconsin. Defendants are corporations and individuals that own and operate 178 Domino’s Pizza stores in Wisconsin, Minnesota, West Virginia, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Kentucky, South Dakota, North Dakota, and Iowa. In this lawsuit on behalf of himself and other similarly situated delivery drivers, Mainville alleges that Defendants

violated the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) and Wisconsin wage-and-hour laws by failing to reimburse delivery drivers adequately for their delivery-related expenses and, thereby, failing to pay delivery drivers minimum wages. Mainville alleges that delivery drivers work two types of shifts. When stores receive delivery requests, delivery drivers complete deliveries and receive tips. When stores do

not receive delivery requests, delivery drivers work inside the stores folding boxes, washing dishes, stocking coolers, preparing food, cleaning the floors, and performing other duties as needed. Tip credits are subtracted from delivery drivers’ wages for hours worked “while on the road.” Delivery drivers are required to use their personal cars when delivering orders. Defendants require delivery drivers to pay for job-related expenses

including “automobile costs and depreciation, gasoline expenses, automobile maintenance and parts, insurance, financing charges, licensing and registration costs, cell phone costs, GPS charges, and other equipment necessary for delivery drivers to complete their job duties.” Delivery drivers receive a per-mile reimbursement that Mainville alleges is below the IRS standard business mileage rate and has no connection to the actual expenses delivery drivers incur. The stores do not collect receipts for expenses delivery drivers incur

for gas, car maintenance or insurance. In connection with his employment at Route 41, Mainville signed an Arbitration Agreement (the Agreement). The parties to the Agreement are “the Company” and the “Team Member.” The “Company” is defined as “Domino’s, and includes its parents, subsidiaries, affiliates, predecessors, successors and assigns, their (including the Company’s) respective owners, directors, officers, managers (both direct and indirect),

team members, vendors, and agents.” The “Team Member” is defined as “the individual whose signature and name appear on the last page of [the] Arbitration Agreement.” Pursuant to the Agreement, the Company and Mainville agreed “that any claim, dispute, and/or controversy that the Company or the Team Member may have against the other shall be submitted to and determined exclusively by binding arbitration under the Federal

Arbitration Act.” The Agreement includes a definition of a covered claim that provides, in relevant part: Covered claims include past, current and future disputes or controversies related to a Team Member’s job application, hiring, terms and conditions of employment, job assignments, payment of wages, benefits, forms of compensation, or termination from the Company. Covered claims include those brought pursuant to an alleged contract, in tort, pursuant to statute, regulation, or ordinance, or in equity or otherwise and include, but are not limited to, the following: . . . Any claim, dispute, and/or controversy under federal, state, or local laws regarding payment of wages, compensation practices, or benefit plans, including, but not limited to, claims for payment or demand for reimbursement of alleged expenses relating to employment with the Company. Said claims may arise under federal law, including but not limited to the Fair Labor Standards Act (“FLSA”), the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (“ERISA”), or any state wage payment laws . . . . The Agreement contains an express class action waiver that provides, in relevant part: The Team Member and the Company expressly waive any right to arbitrate as a class representative, as a class member, in a collective action, or in or pursuant to a private attorney general capacity, and there shall be no joinder or consolidation of parties. All arbitration shall be brought on a separate and individual basis. In the event an arbitrator or court determines an issue may be brought as a class or in a collective action, then this Agreement is void and null except for Section V., Waiver of Jury Trial, and such class or collective action must be brought in the appropriate court system and not in arbitration. The Agreement provides that if either party to the Agreement “pursues a covered claim against the other by any method other than the arbitration provided herein, and an exception does not apply, the responding party is entitled to a dismissal, stay and/or injunctive relief regarding such action, and the recovery of all damages in responding.” Finally, the Agreement includes an opt-out provision that states: The Team Member has the right to opt out of the obligation set forth herein to submit to binding arbitration. To opt out, the Team Member must send via electronic mail or first-class mail, within thirty (30) calendar days of signing this Arbitration Agreement, an email/letter addressed to Domino’s, P.O. Box 795, Willmar, MN 56201-0795 stating that the Team Member has elected to opt out of the Arbitration Agreement. The email/letter must clearly state the Team Member’s name and must be signed by the Team Member. Absent the proper and timely exercise of this opt-out right, the Team Member will be required to arbitrate all disputes covered by this Arbitration Agreement. Mainville electronically signed the Agreement on November 9, 2017. Mainville commenced this lawsuit on December 20, 2021, alleging that Defendants

violated the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) and Wisconsin wage-and-hour laws. Count I alleges that Defendants violated the FLSA by incorrectly computing tip credits and failing to properly reimburse delivery drivers for automobile and other job-related expenses. Count II alleges that Defendants violated Wisconsin’s minimum-wage law by failing to properly reimburse delivery drivers for automobile and other job-related expenses and by not paying delivery drivers at least minimum wages. Count III alleges that Defendants

violated Wisconsin’s wage-payment law by failing to pay delivery drivers unpaid wages and unreimbursed expenses within 31 days of the delivery drivers’ regularly scheduled payday.

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Mainville v. College Town Pizza, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mainville-v-college-town-pizza-inc-mnd-2022.