Uribe v. Crown Building Maintenance Co.

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 26, 2021
DocketG057836
StatusPublished

This text of Uribe v. Crown Building Maintenance Co. (Uribe v. Crown Building Maintenance Co.) 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
Uribe v. Crown Building Maintenance Co., (Cal. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Filed 9/30/21; Modified and certified for pub. 10/26/21 (order attached)

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION THREE

JOSUE URIBE,

Plaintiff and Respondent, G057836

v. (Super. Ct. No. 30-2016-00839857)

CROWN BUILDING MAINTENANCE OPINION CO.,

Defendant and Respondent;

ISABEL GARIBAY,

Intervener and Appellant.

Appeal from a judgment of the Superior Court of Orange County, Glenda Sanders, Judge. Motion to dismiss denied. Request for judicial notice denied. Reversed and remanded. Hunter Pyle Law, Hunter Pyle, Katherine Fiester; Feingberg, Jackson, Worthman & Wasow, Todd Jackson and Genevieve Casey for Intervenor and Appellant. Outten & Golden, Jahan C. Sagafi, Rachel Williams Dempsey; Teukolsky Law and Lauren Teukolsky for California Employment Lawyers Association, as Amicus Curiae on behalf of Intervenor and Appellant. Alizadeh Employees Law and Arash N. Alizadeh for Plaintiff and Respondent. Ogletree, Deakins, Nash, Smoak & Stewart, Cody J. Cocanig, Jack Sholkoff and Douglas J. Farmer for Defendant and Respondent. Morgan, Lewis & Bockius, Max C. Fischer and Aimee Mackay for California Employment Law Council and Employers Group, as Amici Curiae on behalf of Defendant and Respondent. * * * Isabel Garibay, an intervenor in the action, appeals from the trial court’s entry of judgment confirming final approval of a class action settlement reached between Josue Uribe and Crown Building Maintenance Company (Crown). Uribe initially sued Crown as an individual regarding alleged Labor Code violations for failure to reimburse him for the cost of uniform cleaning and required footwear as a day porter doing janitorial-type work. Uribe’s suit also included a cause of action in a representative capacity for civil penalties and injunctive relief under the Labor Code Private Attorneys 1 General Act of 2004 (PAGA). (Lab. Code, § 2698 et seq.) Following stalled dispute resolution efforts, the parties reached a settlement after a daylong private mediation. The settlement was conditioned on Uribe filing an amended complaint converting his lawsuit into a class action on his Labor Code claims and including unreimbursed employee cell phone usage costs as an additional basis for both his Labor Code and PAGA causes of action.

1 All further undesignated statutory references are to the Labor Code.

2 Garibay, an unnamed member of the class once it was formed, had earlier filed in the Alameda County Superior Court a putative class action asserting Labor Code claims for unreimbursed cell phone use by Crown employees, together with a representative PAGA cause of action on that basis. Garibay filed her Alameda County action before Uribe filed his original complaint in the Orange County Superior Court. When Uribe and Crown sought preliminary approval of their agreement to settle Uribe’s Orange County lawsuit on a class-wide basis, including settling his representative PAGA claim, the trial court authorized Garibay to intervene as a named party in the lawsuit to oppose the settlement. The trial court later granted Uribe’s motion for preliminary approval of the settlement, and then Crown and Uribe’s subsequent joint motion for final approval. Meanwhile, the Judicial Council had referred Crown’s petition to coordinate Uribe’s and Garibay’s lawsuits to the presiding judge of the Alameda County Superior Court to appoint a judge to hear the petition; that appointment remained pending at the time the judgment in Orange County was entered. After the parties advised the trial court in this action that no stay had been entered in the coordination proceedings, the court subsequently entered judgment. Garibay now challenges the settlement after the trial court declined to rule on both Crown’s motion to dismiss Garibay’s complaint in intervention and Garibay’s motion to vacate the judgment. The parties raise a host of issues in this appeal. Garibay contends Uribe’s PAGA notice failed to reference unreimbursed cell phone expenses in any manner, thereby precluding litigation on that basis. Garibay also contends Uribe failed to provide the trial court with basic information necessary to approve the settlement, including a range of settlement values for each settled claim and a range of PAGA penalties on each claim. Garibay further argues the settlement was unfair, and the scope of the release Uribe and Crown negotiated was too broad and no presumption of fairness should apply to the settlement because Uribe’s trial counsel had no prior experience in class action

3 litigation; the settlement was not reached through arms-length bargaining and provided no range of settlement values for the trial court to consider; and Uribe was neither typical nor adequate to serve as class representative. Garibay also contends the trial court should have applied a heightened standard in evaluating the settlement to guard against a “reverse auction,” in which a defendant settles with the low bidder among two or more class representatives, to the 2 detriment of the class. Amici curiae, the California Employment Lawyers Association (CELA) and Employers Group, and the California Employment Law Council (CELC) debate on behalf of Garibay and Crown, respectively, whether a heightened standard is necessary or applicable here. For their part, Crown and Uribe defend the settlement and, as a preliminary matter, contest Garibay’s standing to appeal the judgment once she opted out of the class action component of Uribe’s lawsuit. As we explain, we need only address the standing issue and whether Uribe’s notice to the state PAGA administrator was adequate to encompass a PAGA claim for unreimbursed cell phone use. Because Garibay has the requisite “immediate, pecuniary, and substantial” interest in preserving and advancing her PAGA cause of action in her lawsuit, which would be extinguished by res judicata if the judgment confirming Uribe and Crown’s settlement were to be upheld, she has standing here at least to challenge the settlement’s PAGA component. On the merits, because the “plain meaning” of the stated “facts and theories” disclosed in Uribe’s PAGA notice did not encompass a claim for unreimbursed 2 One court has defined a “reverse auction” in the following manner: “A reverse auction is said to occur when ‘the defendant in a series of class actions picks the most ineffectual class lawyers to negotiate a settlement with in the hope that the district court will approve a weak settlement that will preclude other claims against the defendant.’ [Citation.] It has an odor of mendacity about it.” (Negrete v. Allianz Life Ins. Co. of North America (9th Cir. 2008) 523 F.3d 1091, 1099.)

4 cell phone expenses, the notice was inadequate to support Uribe’s PAGA cause of action on that theory in his lawsuit. And because Uribe and Crown’s agreement did not allow for severance of nonviable settlement terms—indeed, an express nullity provision provided otherwise—judicial approval of a settlement that includes Uribe’s PAGA cause of action cannot survive review. We therefore reverse the judgment.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND Garibay first became involved in litigation against Crown when she joined an action pending in the Alameda County Superior Court, Gama v. Able Services, et al., 2015, No. RG15773582 (Gama/Garibay or Garibay). The lawsuit, a proposed class action, had been filed in June 2015, and Garibay joined it as a named plaintiff in the first amended complaint filed in November of that year. The lawsuit asserted proposed class claims for reimbursement of employee cell phone expenses under section 2802, with a corresponding PAGA civil penalty claim.

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Bluebook (online)
Uribe v. Crown Building Maintenance Co., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/uribe-v-crown-building-maintenance-co-calctapp-2021.