Shannon B. Jones Law Group v. Vella-Andrade CA1/1

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 18, 2025
DocketA169685
StatusUnpublished

This text of Shannon B. Jones Law Group v. Vella-Andrade CA1/1 (Shannon B. Jones Law Group v. Vella-Andrade CA1/1) 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
Shannon B. Jones Law Group v. Vella-Andrade CA1/1, (Cal. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Filed 12/18/25 Shannon B. Jones Law Group v. Vella-Andrade CA1/1 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION ONE

SHANNON B. JONES LAW GROUP et al., Cross-complainants and Appellants, A169685 v. (Contra Costa County SANDRA J. VELLA-ANDRADE, Super. Ct. No. MSC17- 01345) Cross-defendant and Respondent.

In her role as controller for a law firm, Sandra J. Vella-Andrade recorded employees’ work hours as submitted in their timesheets to payroll summaries. In so doing, she did not classify the hours an employee worked over eight hours in a day as overtime. When an employee sued Shannon B. Jones Law Group, Inc. (SBJLGI) and attorney Shannon B. Jones (collectively the Jones Parties) for underpayment, the Jones Parties filed a cross- complaint against Vella-Andrade for intentional misrepresentation and concealment based on the incorrect summaries. After the trial court granted Vella-Andrade’s summary judgment motion and denied SBJLGI leave to file a fourth amended complaint, the Jones Parties appealed. We affirm.

1 I. BACKGROUND This action arises from Vella-Andrade’s employment with SBJLGI. Vella-Andrade was hired by SBJLGI in July 2010 as an assistant bookkeeper and was promoted to controller about one month later. As controller, Vella- Andrade was responsible for, among various duties, SBJLGI’s payroll. She collected hourly employees’ timesheets for every bi-monthly pay period and entered the reported total hours onto a payroll summary. Vella-Andrade submitted the payroll summary, and occasionally the underlying timesheets, to Jones. Once Vella-Andrade received Jones’s approval, she would submit the payroll summary to Payroll Masters, SBJLGI’s payroll service provider, to process and issue the paychecks and paystubs to the employees. Jones trained Vella-Andrade on how to process payroll and on at least one occasion during Vella-Andrade’s approximately 5-year tenure as controller, Jones processed payroll herself. Vella-Andrade resigned on January 13, 2016. Another SBJLGI employee, part-time file clerk Christy Olson, regularly submitted timesheets reflecting work in excess of eight hours a day. Olson classified all her hours worked as regular hours and never reported the time in excess of eight hours as overtime. In preparing the payroll summary, Vella-Andrade also reported Olson’s hours as regular hours, recording the total hours Olson reported on her timesheet onto the payroll summary. Vella-Andrade did not identify any hours Olson worked over eight hours a day as overtime in the summary she submitted to Jones. Because Olson worked part-time, her hours as reported on the payroll summary never exceeded the number of full-time hours for the two-week pay period. Olson’s employment with SBJLGI was terminated in May 2017. In July 2017, Olson filed a complaint against the Jones Parties for wage and hour violations, including failure to pay overtime. In September

2 2017, the Jones Parties filed a cross-complaint against Olson and Payroll Masters. In May 2018, the Jones Parties filed a first amended cross- complaint adding Vella-Andrade as a cross-defendant. The first amended cross-complaint contained ten causes of action but only the ninth cause of action (breach of fiduciary duty/ the duty of loyalty) and tenth cause of action (conspiracy to misrepresent and conceal) were alleged against Vella-Andrade. In June 2018, Vella-Andrade demurred to the ninth and tenth causes of action in the first amended cross-complaint. In July 2018, the Jones Parties filed a second amended cross-complaint, which changed the tenth cause of action by removing the mention of conspiracy and included an eleventh cause of action against Vella-Andrade for implied and equitable indemnity. In August 2018, the trial court vacated the hearing on the demurrer to the first amended cross-complaint. That same month, Vella-Andrade again demurred, this time to the ninth, tenth, and eleventh causes of action in the second amended cross-complaint. The trial court sustained the demurrer to the ninth cause of action with leave to amend, finding SBJLGI failed to allege facts establishing the existence of a fiduciary relationship; sustained the demurrer to the eleventh cause of action, without prejudice, because it was added without leave to amend; and overruled the demurrer to the tenth cause of action. The Jones Parties did not seek leave to amend to add the eleventh cause of action at this point but subsequently filed a third amended cross- complaint in November 2018, realleging the ninth cause of action for breach of fiduciary duty and the tenth cause of action for misrepresentation and concealment against Vella-Andrade. After successfully demurring to this ninth cause of action, only the tenth cause of action for misrepresentation and concealment remained. As relevant here, the Jones Parties’ cause of

3 action for misrepresentation and concealment alleged that Vella-Andrade and Olson “actively concealed and misrepresented important information from and to SBJLG[I] including: the actual time Olson worked for SBJLG[I]; claimed overtime by Olson; and that [Vella-Andrade] increased Olson’s time on at least one time sheet to create overtime without SBJLG[I]’s permission or knowledge.” Over three years later, in January 2022, the trial court approved a stipulation submitted by the parties continuing the trial date in anticipation that a separate but related action by Vella-Andrade against the Jones Parties would be adjudicated prior to this action. 1 In November 2022, the parties stipulated to, and the court approved, a further continuance of the trial date until after the related Vella-Andrade action was decided and a waiver of the five-year statute of limitations to bring this case to trial. On March 1, 2023, Vella-Andrade filed a motion for summary judgment and set a hearing for June 8, 2023. On March 31, 2023, the Jones Parties proposed that the parties stipulate to the filing of a fourth amended cross complaint with two new causes of action against Vella-Andrade for (1) implied and equitable indemnity and (2) aiding and abetting. On June 6, 2023, the Jones Parties filed a motion for leave to amend after not hearing back from Vella-Andrade. The hearing on Vella-Andrade’s motion for

1 Vella-Andrade filed suit against SBJLGI for various employment

related claims. (Vella-Andrade v. Shannon B. Jones Law Group, Inc., et al., Contra Costa County Superior Court, Case No. MSC16-01673.) The trial court dismissed the Vella-Andrade case in January 2023 for failure to prosecute. Vella-Andrade appealed after dismissal of her case, which this court denied, and was followed by two petitions for writ of mandate, which were also denied. The trial court subsequently granted Vella-Andrade’s motion to reconsider, which SBJLGI appealed. On this appeal, we grant the Jones Parties’ unopposed motion for this court to take judicial notice of certain court orders from that action. (Evid. Code §§ 459, 452, subd. (d).) 4 summary judgment was continued and consolidated with the hearing on the Jones Parties’ motion for leave to amend. The hearing occurred on November 2, 2023, and the trial court subsequently entered orders granting Vella-Andrade’s motion for summary judgment on the misrepresentation and concealment cause of action and denying the Jones Parties’ motion for leave to amend. II. DISCUSSION A. Summary Judgment 1.

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Shannon B. Jones Law Group v. Vella-Andrade CA1/1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shannon-b-jones-law-group-v-vella-andrade-ca11-calctapp-2025.