In 1997 thе City of Los Angeles adopted a living wage ordinance (LWO) prescribing a minimum level of compensation for employees of private firms who work on service contracts benefiting the city. (L.A. Admin. Code, § 10.37 et seq.) The ordinance provides an employee is eligible for LWO wages and benefits if he or she “expends any of his or her time” on a city service contract. (L.A. Admin. Code, § 10.37.1, subd. (f).) Former regulation No. 5 (Regulation 5), promulgated by the city agency entrusted with implementing the LWO, provided, prior to its rescission in 2006, if an employee of a private contractor works at least 20 hours during the month on a city service contract, he or she must be paid the appropriate wages mandated by the LWO for each hour worked on the subject agreement. If, however, the employee works less than 20 hours per month on a city service contrаct, he or she is not eligible for any LWO wages. Do Regulation 5’s 20-hour rule and hours-worked component limiting LWO wages to the time actually spent on a city service contract conflict with the LWO?
The plain language of the LWO, coupled with its legislative history, reflect an unmistakable intent to afford a living wage to employees of city service contractors who spend any time working on city service contracts, no matter how much or how little that participation may be. By limiting LWO eligibility to those who work 20 hours a month or more on city contracts and the amount of LWO wages to the hours actually spent on the city contract, Regulation 5 directly conflicts with the LWO’s articulated remedial purpose of raising wages for low wage service workers and ameliorating the burden placed on city social services caused by payment of inadequate compensation. Because the trial court erred in concluding Regulation 5 was a valid and enforceable clarification of the LWO, we grant the petition for writ of mandate filed in this class action lawsuit by Hermelinda Aguiar, Alicia Maria Aldrete, Aurora Banuelos, Maria Alicia Gonzalez and Josefina Contreras on behalf of themselves and all others similarly situated (collectively plaintiffs) and direct respondent Los Angeles Superior Court to vacate its order upholding Regulation 5 and to enter a new and different order invalidating Regulation 5 on the ground it conflicts with the LWO.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND 1
1. Cintas Corporation’s Contract with the City
Cintas Corporation No. 2 and Cintas Corporation No. 3 (collectively Cintas) lease and launder garments and other goods for their customers. In
2. The Class Action Lawsuit by Cintas ’s Employees
In 2004 a group of Cintas employees sued Cintas alleging it had failed to properly compensate them under the LWO and the Labor Code. The complaint was amended in March 2004 to name the current plaintiffs and include allegations that plaintiffs represented not only themselves individually, but also “a class of [Cintas’s] current and former employees [of its Whittier, Pico Rivera and Ontario facilities] who have worked at least 20 hours per month on [Cintas’s] contracts to provide rental, uniform and laundry services to the DWP.” On January 24, 2005 plaintiffs filed a second amended complaint in which they reiterated most of their class action allegations, but eliminated the allegation restricting the proposed class to workers who had spent at least 20 hours per month performing services on the DWP cоntracts. In conjunction with the second amended complaint, plaintiffs also filed a motion to certify the proposed class, consisting of more than 300 production and stockroom workers at Cintas’s Whittier, Pico Rivera and Ontario facilities during the period from May 1, 2000 (the effective date of Cintas’s original contract with the DWP) to January 29, 2004 (the date the city terminated its contract with Cintas).
The trial court agreed with Cintas and denied the motion, finding the proposed class was not ascertainable, the putative class members lacked a well-defined community of interest and class adjudication was not the superior means of resolving the litigation because plaintiffs’ evidence did not demonstrate substantial benefits would accrue to either the litigants or the court if the lawsuit were maintained as a class action.
3. The Appeal from the Denial of Class Certification
Plaintiffs appealed, contending the trial court had implicitly assumed the validity of Regulation 5’s 20-hour rule and then used it to determine class treatment was not the appropriate means to resolve the litigation. We reversed the order denying class certification in
Aguiar v. Cintas Corp. No. 2, supra,
4. Repeal of Regulation 5
In August 2006, shortly before our decision in
Aguiar I, supra,
Following our decision in
Aguiar I, supra,
On November 9, 2007 plaintiffs moved for summary judgment or, in the alternative, summary adjudication, seeking, among other things, a judicial declaration that Regulation 5 was invalid. Cintas opposed the motion and filed its own motion for summary judgment and/or summary adjudication. The court heard and denied both motions in January 2008. With respect to the declaratory relief claim, the court found therе were “factual issues that must be determined” before the validity of Regulation 5 could be resolved.
In February 2008 plaintiffs moved in limine to exclude Cintas from submitting any evidence or argument that Regulation 5 was enforceable or applicable. Cintas filed a cross-motion in limine to exclude plaintiffs from submitting any evidence or argument that the regulation was not enforceable. Both sides acknowledged the validity of the regulation was exclusively a legal issue for the court.
At a pretrial status conference the court agreed certain legal issues disputed by the parties could be resolved prior to trial, but suggested in limine motions were not the proper vehicle to present those issues. The parties then entered into a stipulation identifying the questions to be decided by the court on a jointly submitted record. Pursuant to the parties’ stipulation, the trial court vacated the February 25, 2008 trial date and scheduled a hearing to decide the legal issues identified in the stipulation, including the threshold issue of Regulation 5’s validity. 4
6. The Instant Petition for Writ of Mandate
On June 19, 2008 plaintiffs filed a petition for a writ of mandate seeking to vacate the trial court’s May 21, 2008 ruling that Regulation 5 was valid as a clarification of the LWO. On July 29, 2008 we issued an order to show cause why the trial court should not be compelled to vacate its May 21, 2008 order declaring Regulation 5 valid and enforceable in this case and ordered further proceedings in the trial court stayed pending further order of this court. On August 15, 2008 Cintas filed its return, and on August 29, 2008 рlaintiffs filed their reply in support of the petition.
DISCUSSION
1. The Los Angeles Living Wage Ordinance
The city adopted the LWO to assure a minimally adequate level of compensation for employees of service contractors who benefit from city contracts. According to the city council’s legislative findings, “Experience indicates that procurement by contract of services has all too often resulted in the payment by service contractors to their employees of wages at or slightly above the minimum required by federal and state minimum wage laws. Such minimal compensation tends to inhibit the quantity and quality of services rendered by such employees to the City and to the public. Underpaying employees in this way fosters high turnover, absenteeism, and lackluster performance. Conversely, adequate compensation promotes amelioration of these undesirable conditions. Through this article the City intends to require service contractors to provide a minimum level of compensation that will improve the level of services rendered to and for the City, [f] The inadequate compensation typically paid today also fails to provide service employees with resources sufficient to afford life in Los Angeles. It is unacceptable that contracting decisions involving the expenditure of City funds should foster conditions placing a burden on limited social services. The City, as a principal provider of social support services, has an interest in promoting an employment environment that protects such limited resources. In requiring the payment of a higher minimum level of compensation, this article benefits that interest.” (L.A. Admin. Code, § 10.37.)
2. Regulations Implementing the Living Wage Ordinance
At its inception the LWO required the Los Angeles City Council by resolution to designate a department or office (the “designated administrative agency”) to promulgate rules for its implementation and to otherwise coordinate administration of its requirements. (L.A. Admin. Code, § 10.37.7.) As the recipient of that designation, the Department of Public Works, Bureau of Contract Administration, Office of Contract Compliance promulgated “Rules and Regulations Implementing the Living Wage Ordinance.” Regulation 5, entitled “the 20-hour rule,” was one of those regulations.
By its terms, former Regulation 5 limits the situations in which an employee is entitled to the benefits of the LWO: “For purposes of the LWO and unless otherwise exempt, an employee of a service contractor . . . will be covered by the LWO if he or she works at least 20 hours during the month (a) on a service contract. ... [jt] If an employee has worked at least 20 hours on the subject agreement during the month, the employee must be paid the appropriate LWO wage rate for each hour worked on the subject agreement during that month. The employee must also accrue compensated and uncompensated time off during that month, [f] If the employee does not work at
3. Standard of Review
Neither party disputes the meaning of Regulation 5. The question presented is whether Regulation 5’s 20-hour rule or limitation of LWO wages to hours worked on city contracts conflicts with the LWO.
When a statute empowers an administrative agency to adopt regulations implementing the legislation, the agency acts in a “quasi-legislative” capacity, having been delegated the Legislature’s lawmaking power.
(Yamaha Corp. of America
v.
State Bd. of Equalization
(1998)
4. Regulation 5 Conflicts with the Living Wage Ordinance
In interpreting the LWO we are guided by well-established principles of statutory construction.
(Carson Harbor Village, Ltd. v. City of Carson Mobilehome Park Rental Review Bd.
(1999)
a. Regulation 5’s 20-hour rule is inconsistent with the LWO
By its terms the LWO requires employers who are recipients of a service contract with the city to pay covered “employees” LWO wages. (L.A. Admin. Code, §§ 10.37.2, subd. (a), 10.37.3.) An “employee” is defined as “any person — who is not a managerial, supervisory, or confidential employee and who is not required to possess an occupational license — who is employed fiD (1) as a service employee of a contractor or subcontractor on or under the authority of one or more service contracts and who expends any of his or her time thereon . . . .” (L.A. Admin. Code, § 10.37.1, subd. (f), italics added.)
The language of the ordinance is clear: Any employee of a city service contractor who spends “any time” at all working on a city service contract subject to the LWO is eligible for LWO wages. To find otherwise would ignore the use of the term “any,” resulting in a restriction not contemplated by the plain language of the ordinance. (See, e.g.,
Delaney v. Superior Court
(1990)
Cintas insists Regulation 5’s 20-hour rule does not conflict with the LWO, but merely serves as a “gap-filler” to “fill in the details” of the authorizing legislation. (See
Yamaha,
supra,
Our conclusion the LWO was intended to apply to any employee of a private company who works on city service contracts without regard to minimum time requirements is reinforced by the legislative history of the LWO. (See
California School Employees Assn. v. Governing Board
(1994)
The city council’s subsequent repeal of the 20-hour rule to, in its words, “reaffirm [the] Council’s intent to have a minimum living wage paid to all employees who work on City service contracts” is also powerful evidence of the city’s intent in adopting the LWO. (See
Eu
v.
Chacon
(1976)
Faced with the plain language and legislative history of the LWO, Cintas nonetheless contends interpreting the LWO to authorize a living wage to employees for “any time” spent on a city service contract would lead to absurd results. According to Cintas, “it would require a city contractor to pay employees higher hourly rates” even if they only “touched a DWP garment
b. The hours-worked component of Regulation 5 is not enforceable
Regulation 5 provides that, if the employee worked at least 20 hours on the subject agreement during the month, the employee must be paid the appropriate LWO wage rate for each hour worked on the agreement. Similarly, regulation No. 4, in language that was also deleted in August 2006, provided, “If an employee meets the conditions stated in Regulation # 5, the employer shall pay the employee the living wage rate for each hour the employee works on the City agreement.” Cintas argues that, regardless of the validity of the 20-hour rule, this contract-hours-wоrked aspect of Regulation 5 is fully consistent with the LWO and is severable from the 20-hour rule.
At the threshold, it is at best doubtful — and, indeed, neither party cites any case authority — that the severance doctrine is applicable to administrative regulations, as opposed to the legislation those regulations are intended to implement. (Cf.
Santa Barbara Sch. Dist. v. Superior Court
(1975)
In any event, even if the hours worked component of Regulation 5 could be severed from the regulation’s 20-hour rule, we would still find the former provision in conflict with the LWO itself. The LWO provides, “Employers shall pay employees a wage of no less than the hourly rates set [forth in] this article.” (L.A. Admin. Code, § 10.37.2, subd. (a).) This language imposes a minimum hourly wage for the hours worked by the employee, not one for each hour worked by the employee on the city contract. The same is true for other compensation benefits authorized by the LWO. For example, the LWO authorizes 12 compensated days off per year as part of the LWO benefits for any covered employee. It does not require that an employee spend full time working on a city service contract to earn the compensated day off and does not reduce the compensated days off to a percentage of the time spent on the city contract. It is the employee’s status as a covered employee that is determinative.
Cintas asserts, if the term “any of his or her time” in the section defining “employee” means anything, it must limit LWO payments to the amount of time spent on the city’s contract. Yet, as we have explained, the term “any of his or her time” definеs when an employee is LWO eligible, not the manner
Cintas made a similar argument in
Amaral, supra,
Unable to rely on the plain language of the LWO, Cintas once again raises its “gap filler” rationale in support of the now repealed hours-worked regulation. That is, Cintas asserts, absent any language in the LWO mandating a broad application of LWO wages as part of an employee’s overall compensation without regard to the hours spent on the city contract, the regulation limiting such wages to the actual hours worked is not in conflict with the ordinance, but rather fills in its details. (See, e.g.,
Ford Dealers Assn.
v.
Department of Motor Vehicles, supra,
32 Cal.3d at pp. 362-363.) Yet, the regulation cannot be justified as a gap-filler when limiting LWO wages to the hours spent on the city contract would conflict with the LWO’s articulated remedial purpose. (See
Day v. City of Fontana, supra,
In concluding the hours worked component of Regulation 5 conflicts with the LWO, we do not suggest that Cintas’s arguments that LWO wage payments be limited to those hours spent on the city contract is irrational, only that it is not consistent with the LWO’s language and articulated purpose and intent. Should the city council conclude Cintas has the better of the policy arguments, it will no doubt revise thе LWO to address those concerns. (See
In re Summer H.
(2006)
The petition is granted. Let a peremptory writ of mandate issue directing the trial court to vacate its order of May 21, 2008 ruling that Regulation 5 was a proper clarification of the LWO and enter a new and different order ruling that Regulation 5 is in conflict with the LWO and unenforceable in its entirety and to conduct any further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
Petitioners are to recover their costs in this writ proceeding.
Woods, J., and Jackson, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied February 19, 2009, and the opinion was modified to read as printed above.
Notes
This factual recitation borrows liberally from our prior published decision in
Aguiar
v.
Cintas Corp. No. 2
(2006)
By letter dated January 21, 2004 the city informed Cintas it was terminating the contract for cause as of January 28, 2004 because Cintas hаd failed to implement a system for the electronic tracking of garments and to provide fire-resistant shirts and coveralls as required by the agreement. The city subsequently sued Cintas for breach of contract and breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing, alleging that, in addition to its failure to implement the tracking system and to provide certain uniforms, Cintas had breached the agreement by “failing] to pay some or all of its employees in compliance with the [LWO] as it was obligated to do.” With no admission of wrongdoing, Cintas settled the matter with the city; the settlement released Cintas from any further liability to the city but provided the settlement would have no impact on the instant action. (See Aguiar v. Cintas Corp. No. 2, supra, 144 Cal.App.4th at p. 128, fn. 2.)
As the parties acknowledge, rescission of Regulation 5 does not render moot the question raised in this litigation, that is, whether the regulation was valid during the period from July 2003 (when it was promulgated) until August 2006 (when it was rescinded).
The parties’ February 25, 2008 joint stipulation identified the following legal issues to be decided on a jointly submitted record: (1) The constitutionality of the LWO when applied outside the Los Angeles city limits; (2) whether Regulation 5 is invalid or unenforceable, in whole or in part, because it contradicts or is inconsistent with the LWO; (3) whether the LWO is unconstitutionally vague as applied to Cintas’s business; (4) whether a defendant’s assertion of a good faith dispute with respect to willfulness may be based on a good faith dispute raised before or during trial, or whether it must be limited to disputes known to the employer at the time it acted; and (5) whether the burden of proof will shift to Cintas for any purpose, and, if so, the extent of such burden. The stipulation provided that the issues submitted “are legal issues which the parties agree do not require determination of any material factual disputes and which are appropriately resolved by pretrial motion” and identified plaintiffs as the moving parties on the motion addressing the validity of Regulation 5.
The LWO defines “service contract” as “a contract let to a contractor by the City primarily for the furnishing of services to or for the City (as opposed to the purchase of goods or other property or the leasing or renting of property) and that involves an expenditure in excess of twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000) and a contract term of at least three (3) months; but only where any of the following applies: ['][] (1) at least some of the services rendered are rendered by employees whose work site is on property owned by the City, [fj (2) the services could feasibly be performed by City employees if the awarding authority had the requisite financial and staffing resources, or [f] (3) the [designated administrative agency] has determined in writing that coverage would further the proprietary interests of the City.” (L.A. Admin. Code, § 10.37.1, subd. (j).)
The LWO defines “City financial assistance recipient” as “any person who receives from the City discrete financial assistance for economic development or job growth expressly articulated and identified by the City, as contrasted with generalized financial assistance such as through tax legislation . . . .” (L.A. Admin. Code, § 10.37.1, subd. (c).) The provision further provides the city financial assistance recipient’s term of compliance with the LWO is dictated by the amount of financial assistance received. (See ibid, [for example, assistance given in the amount of $1 million or more in any 12-month period requires compliance with the LWO for five years from the date such assistance reaches the $1 million threshold].)
Cintas correctly asserts the testimony of former City Councilmember Jackie Goldberg, who served on the city council from 1993 to 2000, is not admissible to show the intended meaning of the statute.
(Amaral, supra,
Cintas asserts the removal of the eligibility requirement that a service contractor employee spend at least 50 percent of his or her time on the contract is meaningless because it сould just as easily indicate an intent to impose a lower minimum eligibility requirement. However, the legislative materials make clear the 50 percent limitation was not just omitted, but expressly disapproved in favor of a provision that authorized LWO eligibility “any time” an employee worked on the contract.
The LWO provides, “If any provision of this article is declared legally invalid by any court of competent jurisdiction, the remaining provisions shall remain in full force and effect.” (L.A. Admin. Code, § 10.37.14.)
As described in Amaral, the Hayward living wage ordinance provided: “ ‘Service contractors subject to this Ordinance shall pay their employees a wage of no less than eight dollars ($8.00) per hour, if health benefits are paid to the employees, or nine dollars and twenty-five cents ($9.25) per hour if no such health benefits are paid.’ (Hayward Mun. Code, § 2-14.020, subd. (c).) For purposes of the ordinance, an employee is defined as ‘any individual employed by a service contractor on or under the authority of any contract for services with the City ....’” (Amaral, supra, 163 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1185-1186.)
