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Date: 08-14-2020

Case Style:

Richard Robinson v. Southern Counties Oil Company

Case Number: A158791

Judge: Pollak, P.J.

Court: California Court of Appeals First Appellate District, Division Four on appeal from the Superior Court, County of Contra Costa

Plaintiff's Attorney: Jocelyn Burton

Defendant's Attorney: Amy R. Patton and Raymond J. Nhan

Description: Plaintiff Richard Robinson, on behalf of himself and other aggrieved employees,
appeals from the judgment entered in favor of his former employer defendant Southern
Counties Oil Company (Southern Counties). Robinson’s complaint seeks civil penalties
under the Labor Code Private Attorneys General Act of 2004 (PAGA) (Lab. Code,1
§ 2698 et seq.) based on Southern Counties’s alleged unlawful denial of meal and rest
breaks. Robinson contends the court erred in holding that he is barred by claim prelusion
from asserting certain of the Labor Code violations alleged in his complaint and that he
lacks standing with respect to the remaining alleged violations. We shall affirm.
Background
Robinson worked as a truck driver for Southern Counties from February 4, 2015
through June 14, 2017. In August 2018, after filing the required notice with the California
Labor Workforce Development Agency (LWDA), he filed the present PAGA action
1 All further statutory references are to the Labor Code unless otherwise noted.
2
against Southern Counties.2 His complaint alleges that Southern Counties denied
Robinson and other aggrieved employees meal and rest breaks in violation of sections
226.7 and 512. The complaint alleges that as a result of the unlawful denial of breaks,
Southern Counties failed to pay timely wages (§ 204), furnish complete and accurate
wage statements (§§ 226, subd. (a), 226.3), and pay all wages due upon termination
(§§ 201, 202).
In February 2019, the San Diego County Superior Court approved a settlement in
a class action that sought individual damages as well as civil penalties under PAGA for
the same alleged Labor Code violations. (Gutierrez v. Southern Counties Oil Co., case
No. 37-2017-00040850-CU-OE-CTL (Gutierrez).) The settlement covered all persons
employed by Southern Counties in certain job classifications between March 17, 2013
and January 26, 2018.
Robinson and three other employees opted out of the class settlement. Thereafter,
Robinson amended the allegations of his complaint to represent employees of Southern
Counties who opted out of the settlement in Gutierrez and persons who were employed
by Southern Counties from January 27, 2018 to the present.
In July 2019, the court sustained without leave to amend a demurrer to the
amended complaint. The court held that Robinson is barred from bringing a PAGA action
asserting the same claims that were settled in Gutierrez and that he lacks standing to
2
“Under PAGA, an ‘aggrieved employee,’ acting as a private attorney general,
may bring a civil action personally and on behalf of other current or former employees to
recover civil penalties for Labor Code violations. [Citation.] ‘The employee may not file
his or her PAGA claim for particular labor law violations until first giving [LWDA] the
opportunity to investigate and file the claim itself [citations] and, if [LWDA] elects not to
get involved, [it] is nevertheless legally bound by the outcome of the employeeprosecuted PAGA claim [citations].’ [Citation.] If the PAGA action results in penalties,
LWDA recovers 75 percent and the aggrieved employees recovers the remaining
25 percent of those penalties.” (Brooks v. AmeriHome Mortgage Co., LLC (2020) 47
Cal.App.5th 624, 628-629.)
3
bring a representative action on behalf of employees employed during the time period
when he was no longer employed by Southern County.
3
Following entry of the judgment, Robinson timely filed a notice of appeal.
Discussion
1. Standard of Review
“When a demurrer is sustained by the trial court, we review the complaint de novo
to determine whether, as a matter of law, the complaint states facts sufficient to constitute
a cause of action. [Citation.] Reading the complaint as a whole and giving it a reasonable
interpretation, we treat all material facts properly pleaded as true. [Citation.] The plaintiff
has the burden of showing that the facts pleaded are sufficient to establish every element
of the cause of action and overcoming all of the legal grounds on which the trial court
sustained the demurrer, and if the defendant negates any essential element, we will affirm
the order sustaining the demurrer as to the cause of action.” (Martin v. Bridgeport
Community Assn., Inc. (2009) 173 Cal.App.4th 1024, 1031.)
“The court may sustain a demurrer on claim preclusion grounds ‘[i]f all of the
facts necessary to show that the action is barred are within the complaint or subject to
judicial notice . . . .’ ” (Thompson v. Ioane (2017) 11 Cal.App.5th 1180, 1191.) “Standing
is the threshold element required to state a cause of action and, thus, lack of standing may
be raised by demurrer.” (Martin v. Bridgeport Community Assn., Inc., supra, 173
Cal.App.4th at p. 1031.)
3 Robinson’s first cause of action for unlawful denial of meal and rest breaks seeks
to recover “the wages, civil penalties, attorney’s fees and costs recoverable in a civil
action brought by an aggrieved employee on behalf of himself and, as a proxy for the
LWDA, on behalf of defendants’ other current and former employees.” The trial court
found that Robinson’s amended complaint alleges “the same four PAGA claims as the
original complaint, and no individual claims.” Robinson has not asserted either in the trial
court or before this court that the demurrer was improperly sustained as to any individual
claim he may have for lost wages or damages.
4
2. The doctrine of claim preclusion bars Robinson’s claims with respect to violations
settled in Gutierrez.
“The claim preclusion doctrine, formerly called res judicata, ‘prohibits a second
suit between the same parties on the same cause of action.’ [Citation.] ‘Claim preclusion
arises if a second suit involves (1) the same cause of action (2) between the same parties
(3) after a final judgment on the merits in the first suit.’ ” (Kim v. Reins International
California, Inc. (2020) 9 Cal.5th 73, 91; Villacres v. ABM Industries Inc. (2010) 189
Cal.App.4th 562, 575 [“ ‘Under the doctrine of [claim preclusion], a valid, final judgment
on the merits is a bar to a subsequent action by parties or their privies on the same cause
of action.’ ”].) The doctrine “ ‘ “rests upon the ground that the party to be affected, or
some other with whom he is in privity, has litigated, or had an opportunity to litigate the
same matter in a former action in a court of competent jurisdiction, and should not be
permitted to litigate it again to the harassment and vexation of his opponent. Public
policy and the interest of litigants alike require that there be an end to litigation.” ’ ”
(Villacres, supra, at p. 575.)
Here, there is no dispute that the present action and the Gutierrez action involve
PAGA claims based on the same alleged violations of the Labor Code. Robinson asserts
that because he opted out of the Gutierrez action, the doctrine of claim preclusion does
not apply. We disagree.
While Robison was free to, and did, opt out of the class settlement of any
individual claims he may have had, there is no mechanism for opting out of the judgment
entered on the PAGA claim. “Because an aggrieved employee’s action under [PAGA]
functions as a substitute for an action brought by the government itself, a judgment in that
action binds all those, including nonparty aggrieved employees, who would be bound by
a judgment in an action brought by the government. The act authorizes a representative
action only for the purpose of seeking statutory penalties for Labor Code violations
[citations], and an action to recover civil penalties ‘is fundamentally a law enforcement
action designed to protect the public and not to benefit private parties’ [citation]. When a
government agency is authorized to bring an action on behalf of an individual or in the
5
public interest, and a private person lacks an independent legal right to bring the action, a
person who is not a party but who is represented by the agency is bound by the judgment
as though the person were a party. [Citation.] Accordingly, with respect to the recovery
of civil penalties, nonparty employees as well as the government are bound by the
judgment in an action brought under the act.” (Arias v. Superior Court (2009) 46 Cal.4th
969, 986.)
In Kim v. Reins International California, Inc., supra, 9 Cal.5th at pages 86-87, the
court confirmed, “PAGA claims are different from conventional civil suits. The
Legislature’s sole purpose in enacting PAGA was ‘to augment the limited enforcement
capability of the [LWDA] by empowering employees to enforce the Labor Code as
representatives of the Agency.’ [Citations.] Accordingly, a PAGA claim is an
enforcement action between the LWDA and the employer, with the PAGA plaintiff
acting on behalf of the government. [Citation.] . . . [¶] Although representative in nature,
a PAGA claim is not simply a collection of individual claims for relief, and so is different
from a class action. The latter is a procedural device for aggregating claims ‘when the
parties are numerous, and it is impracticable to bring them all before the court.’
[Citation.] In a class action, the ‘representative plaintiff still possesses only a single claim
for relief—the plaintiff’s own.’ [Citation.] If a representative plaintiff voluntarily settles
her claim, she no longer has an interest in the class action and may lose the ability to
represent the class. [Citation.] ‘But a representative action under PAGA is not a class
action.’ [Citation.] There is no individual component to a PAGA action because ‘ “every
PAGA action . . . is a representative action on behalf of the state.” ’ [Citation.] Plaintiffs
may bring a PAGA claim only as the state’s designated proxy, suing on behalf of all
affected employees.” (See also Julian v. Glenair, Inc. (2017) 17 Cal.App.5th 853, 871-
872 [“A PAGA action is . . . ultimately founded on a right belonging to the state,
which—though not named in the action—is the real party in interest.”].)
The Gutierrez settlement and resulting judgment finally resolved the LWDA’s
claims with respect to the violations alleged in that action. Robinson cannot opt out of
that settlement and thereafter pursue civil penalties for the same violations again on
6
behalf of the LWDA. Accordingly, the doctrine of claim preclusion bars relitigation of
the claim for civil penalties based on the Labor Code violations resolved in Gutierrez.
(See Arias v. Superior Court, supra, 46 Cal.4th at p. 986 [“Because collateral estoppel
applies not only against a party to the prior action in which the issue was determined, but
also against those for whom the party acted as an agent or proxy [citations], a judgment
in an employee’s action under [PAGA] binds not only that employee but also the state
labor law enforcement agencies.”].)
3. Robinson lacks standing to bring a representative action for violations occurring
after January 27, 2018.
Section 2699, subdivision (a) authorizes an “aggrieved employee” to bring an
action “on behalf of himself or herself and other current or former employees.”
Section 2699, subdivision (c) defines an “aggrieved employee” as “any person who was
employed by the alleged violator and against whom one or more of the alleged violations
was committed.” The violations for which penalties are sought are determined by the
allegations of the complaint. (Huff v. Securitas Security Services USA, Inc. (2018) 23
Cal.App.5th 745, 754 [Under Section 2699, subdivision (c), “any Labor Code penalties
recoverable by state authorities may be recovered in a PAGA action by a person who was
employed by the alleged violator and affected by at least one of the violations alleged in
the complaint.” (Italics added.)]; Esparza v. Safeway, Inc. (2019) 36 Cal.App.5th 42, 60
[noting that plaintiff had narrowed her PAGA claim to rest on alleged violations
occurring before a certain date.].)
Here, Robinson purports to bring a representative action based on violations
alleged to have occurred after the period covered in Gutierrez⸺that is, after January 27,
2018. By then, however, Robinson was no longer employed by Southern Counties and
thus was not affected by any of the alleged violations. Robinson does not suggest that he
has standing to bring an action based solely on these violations, but contends that he had
standing at the time he filed his complaint and that he “did not lose his standing as an
aggrieved employee because of the Gutierrez settlement.” We disagree.
7
A change in facts or law can deprive a plaintiff of standing. (See, e.g.,
Californians for Disability Rights v. Mervyn’s, LLC (2006) 39 Cal.4th 223, 230-231
[change in law may limit plaintiff’s standing]; Grosset v. Wenaas (2008) 42 Cal.4th 1100,
1119 [a plaintiff in a shareholder’s derivative suit who ceases to be a stockholder may
lose standing to continue the litigation].) Here, the preclusion of Robinson’s claims for
the period during which he was employed by Southern County deprives him of standing
to assert claims arising exclusively after he was so employed. (See Shook v. Indian River
Transp. Co. (E.D. Cal. 2017) 236 F.Supp.3d 1165, 1175 [plaintiffs were deprived of
standing to pursue PAGA claims against employer after application of the safe harbor
provision (§ 226.2) reduced time period for actionable violations to 36 pay periods during
which plaintiffs were no longer employed].)
Contrary to Robinson’s argument, the Supreme Court’s recent decision in Kim v.
Reins International California, Inc., supra, 9 Cal.5th 73 does not compel a different
result. In Kim, the court rejected the employer’s argument that the plaintiff no longer had
standing as an “aggrieved employee” after he settled his individual claims with his
former employer. The court explained that “[t]he Legislature defined PAGA standing in
terms of violations, not injury” so that a person’s receipt of compensation for his injury
does not defeat his standing to assert a PAGA claim. (Id. at pp. 84-85, citing Kirby v.
Immoos Fire Protection, Inc. (2012) 53 Cal.4th 1244, 1256 [payment of statutory remedy
does not excuse Labor Code violation] & Raines v. Coastal Pacific Food Distributors,
Inc. (2018) 23 Cal.App.5th 667, 678-680 [plaintiff is not required to show a quantifiable
injury in PAGA action for civil penalties].) Kim does not support Robinson’s argument
that he has standing to pursue claims based solely on violations alleged to have occurred
after his termination.4
4
In light of these conclusions, we do not reach Southern Counties’s additional
arguments that the demurrer was properly sustained because Robinson failed to satisfy
the LWDA notice requirements or because his claims are preempted by two federal
regulatory orders governing interstate transportation carriers.

Outcome: The judgment is affirmed.

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