Opinion
This fourth appeal in a complex class action is confined to a single postjudgment order denying the defendant’s motion to modify the calculation of prejudgment interest in the judgment. We affirm.
PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
The plaintiffs are former or current claims representatives working for Farmers Insurance Exchange (hereafter FIE), who filed this action October 2, 1996, seeking unpaid overtime compensation under Labor Code section 1194. They alleged that FIE had wrongfully refused to pay overtime compensation for a period beginning on October 1, 1993. In a ruling on a motion for summary adjudication, the trial court upheld the plaintiffs’ contention that their employee class was subject to the overtime regulations of the Industrial Welfare Commission. We affirmed the trial court’s ruling in our decision in
Bell v. Farmers Ins. Exchange
(2001)
Following the adjudication of the plaintiffs’ nonexempt status, the trial court conducted a series of hearings on management of the damages phase of the trial and referred certain matters to a special master. The proceedings led to a brief jury trial in which expert witnesses presented testimony regarding the statistical determination of damages. On July 10, 2001, the jury returned a special verdict finding that unpaid time-and-a-half overtime compensation owed to the class was $88,798,871.12 and unpaid double-time compensation was $1,210,337. The trial court entered a judgment on the verdict, which incorporated by reference a plan of distribution of the damages submitted by the plaintiffs and an “order re plan of distribution” that modified the plan in certain respects. Pursuаnt to provisions in the plan of distribution, the judgment awarded prejudgment interest in the “maximum amount” of $32,303,048 based on a 10 percent interest rate provided in Civil Code
In a subsequent appeal, we affirmed the judgment in most respects, reversing only the judgment for unpaid double-time compensation and directing that the plan of distribution be modified to give the claims administrator more power to investigate possibly excessive claims.
(Bell
v.
Farmers Ins. Exchange
(2004)
DISCUSSION
FIE based its motion to amend the prejudgment interest provisions of the judgment on the contention that a 10 percent prejudgment interest rate was first authorized by the enactment of Labor Code section 218.6, effective January 1, 2001, which incorporated the interest rate provided by Civil Code section 3289 for breach of contract actions. Prior to this date, FIE maintains that the applicable prejudgment interest rate was the 7 percent rate provided by California Constitution, article XV, section 1, for forbearance in the payment of money, which, the parties agree, would apply in the absence of a legislative act specifying another rate.
(Michelson v. Hamada
(1994)
Plaintiffs opposed the motion on three separate procedural grounds. First, the trial court lacked jurisdiction to amend the judgment; second, the proposed amendment did not correct a clerical error; and, third, FIE waived its claim of error. Furthermore, plaintiffs argue that the prejudgment interest was properly calculated by using the 10 percent rate applying to breach of contract actions. They argue that the inclusive language of Labor Code section 218.6 would support a retroactive application of the statute, but the language actually reflects a legislative intent to clarify the law. Before section 218.6 expressly required the use of the breach-of-contract rate for prejudgment interest, this rate was still the appropriate rate for unpaid wage claims because оf the contractual nature of the employment relationship.
We will briefly discuss the procedural issues and then address on its merits the question of the appropriate prejudgment interest rate.
A. Jurisdiction Following Remand
FIE argues that the court retained jurisdiction to reconsider the prejudgment interest rate under the terms of the judgment in the case. It acknowledges the applicable rule: “When there has been a decision upon appeal, the trial court is reinvested with jurisdiction of the cause, but only such jurisdiction as is definеd
The record does not support this contention. The judgment filed September 24, 2001, adopted the plaintiffs’ plan of distribution except as modified in a separate order re plan of distribution. The plan of distribution provided that the claims administrator would separately calculate the prejudgment interest of each claimant, employing a 10 percent interest rate: “Once the class members’ backpay claims shares are calculated for each class member who submits a Claim Form, the Claims Administrator will add 10% periodic prejudgment interest through the date of judgment for each class member, to determine the prejudgment interest claim share for that class member.” The order re plan of distribution provided that the judgment “shall include prejudgment interest in the maximum amount of $32,303,048,” plus daily interest. Reflecting a recognition that the amount of interest would be contingent on the nature of the claims presented to the claims administrator, the order further provided: “If the total amount of prejudgment interest determined by the Claims Administrator as payable to all claiming class members under the Plan of Distribution is less than the total prejudgment interest awarded [$32,303,048] by the Court as set out in the preceding sеntence, however, Farmers may seek to amend the Judgment to allow it to recover the difference (if any) between the total amount awarded by the Court as prejudgment interest and the total lesser amount payable to claiming class members as determined by the Claims Administrator under the Plan of Distribution.” The judgment itself incorporated verbatim these provisions in the order re plan of distribution.
We see no ambiguity in this record. The trial court retained jurisdiction to amend the judgment only if the individual calculations of the сlaims administrator should fall short of the award of prejudgment interest in the maximum amount of $32,303,048. On appeal, we affirmed the judgment except for the portion awarding damages for unpaid double-time hours and remanded the order re plan of distribution for consideration of matters having no connection with the calculation of prejudgment interest. Our decision provided that “[i]n all other respects, the postjudgment orders subject to appeal are affirmed.”
(Bell
v.
Farmers Ins. Exchange, supra,
B. Clerical Error
We see no merit in FIE’s claim that the trial court possessed power to amend the prejudgment interest rate provided in the judgment as a clerical error. It is elementary that “[a] court can always correct a clerical, as distinguished from a judicial error which appears on the face of a decree by a
nunc pro tunc
order. [Citation.] It cannot, however, change an order which has become final even though mаde in error, if in fact the order made was that intended to be made.”
(Estate of Eckstrom
To determine the intentional nature of the judgment provisions regarding prejudgment interest, we need go no further than the hearing on August 13, 2001. In a dialogue with the court, both parties discussed the interest calculation in the judgment, referring to the prejudgment interest rate as 10 percent, and the court itself used this rate in posing hypotheticals to the parties. At the conclusion of the hearing, the trial court stated its intention as to the award of prejudgment interest: “I’m going to find that the interest in this case as an aggregate should not exceed $32,303,048. . . . But I’m going to reserve jurisdiction. Because if at the end of the distribution period the total is not claimed, then I don’t think it’s fair to charge interest on the money that went unclaimed. And so it would be my inclination to make an adjustment at that time.”
The judgment precisely carried out the intent of the trial court’s ruling by incorporating by reference the plan of distribution and order re plan of distribution. Since the record does not disclose an inadvertent error as was the case in
Pettigrew
v.
Grand Rent-A-Car
(1984)
C. Waiver
FIE does not seriously address the trial court’s finding that it waived any objection to the 10 percent interest rate of Labor Code section 218.6 and Civil Code section 3289. The record abundantly supports the finding of waiver. In April 2001, the trial court ordered the parties to address pending legal issues, including the prejudgment interest rate, in a conference before the special master. During the conference later that month, FIE’s cоunsel promised to inform plaintiffs counsel of FIE’s position regarding the prejudgment interest rate. In a letter to plaintiffs’ counsel dated April 16, 2001, FIE’s counsel agreed with plaintiffs’ contention that the breach-of-contract rate applied: “With regard to the issue of interest, we agree with you that interest should be calculated at a rate of 10% per year from the date any wages were due. Labor Code § 218.6; Civil Code § 3289.” The parties later acknowledged in status conference statements that the issue of the rate of prejudgment interest had been resolved, and plaintiffs’ counsel filed a copy of the letter dated April 16, 2001, in his motion for the prejudgment interest award.
Subsequent proceedings consistently reflect FIE’s acquiescence in the use of the 10 percent interest rate. The pretrial report of FIE’s expert witness on economics and financial matters used this interest rate. Following trial, FIE submitted a brief on prejudgment interest calculation that presupposed the application of thе 10 percent rate of Labor Code section 218.6. As noted
ante,
at the hearing on August
D. The Appropriate Prejudgment Interest Rate
While the trial court was obliged to deny FIE’s motion to amend the judgment on procedural grounds, we hold that the judgment was also correct on the merits of the legal issues. 2 The language of Labor Code section 218.6 has an inclusive breadth that supports its retroactive application. The statute provides: “In any action brought for the nonpayment of wages, the court shall award interest on all due and unpaid wages at the rate of interest specified in subdivision (b) of Section 3289 of the Civil Code, which shall accrue from the date that the wages were due and payable . . . .” We note that rather than stating a rule for the aсcrual of interest the statute directs “the court” to award interest on “all due and unpaid wages” at the contract rate of 10 percent specified by Civil Code section 3289, subdivision (b). The use of the word “all” and the form of the statute as a directive to the court appears to reflect a legislative intent that judicial awards of due and unpaid wages should bear the contract interest rate without exception and hence without regard to when the right to the award accrued.
The language is alsо compatible with the premise that the Legislature intended the statute to clarify existing law. If previous law called for application of the breach-of-contract interest rate, then the reference to Civil Code section 3289 would also apply to the accrual of prejudgment interest on all claims for unpaid wages without regard to the effective date of the statute. This interpretation avoids the issue of retroactivity. A statute has retroactive effect only when “it substantially changes the legal [consequences] of past events.”
(Kizer
v.
Hanna
(1989)
To decide this issue of statutory interpretation, it is enough to observe that strong and persuasive authority favored the application of Civil Code section 3289 even before it was expressly made applicable to unpaid wages with the enactment of Labor Code section 218.6. The legislative history and statutory language further support the conclusion that the Legislature intended the reference to Civil Code section 3289 in Labor Code section 218.6 solely as a clarification of existing law.
The plaintiffs’ argument for application of the breach-of-contract interest rate is based on the principle that the employment relationship is itself “ ‘fundamentally contractual’ ”
(Guz v. Bechtel National, Inc.
(2000)
In
Lockheed Aircraft Corp.
v.
Superior Court
(1946)
Two other pertinent decisions involve statutory obligations for the payment of wages. Thе issue in
Hays v. Bank of America
(1945)
A more recent Supreme Court decision,
Aubry
v.
Tri-City Hospital Dist.
(1992)
FIE’s arguments rely on the statutory origin of the duty to pay overtime. Most
We see no relevance, however, in the other authority that FIE cites. In particular,
Currie v. Workers’ Comp. Appeals Bd.
(2001)
Similarly,
Sanders
v.
City of Los Angeles
(1970)
On balance, we find the authority construing the employment contract as incorporating statutory duties more persuasive than the analogy to the choice of statute of limitations. At the very least, the argument for the application of the breach-of-contract prejudgment interest rate of Civil Code section 3289 carries sufficient logic to support the assumption that the Legislature regarded the reference to section 3289 in Labor Code section 218.6 as a clarification of existing law. This interpretation of legislative intent is confirmed by the legislative history and the statutory language.
The legislative history of Labor Code section 218.6 indicates that the statute was enacted as a housekeeping measure that was primarily directed at the prejudgment interest rate applying to administrative proceedings before the California Labor Commissioner. The interest rate applying to such administrative proceedings is governed by a separate statute, Labor Code section 98.1, which formerly referenced the “adjusted annual rate established pursuant
This statutory defect in Labor Code section 98.1 was addressed in Assembly Bill No. 2509, (Bill No. 2509) which comprehensively revised the state wage-and-hour law, with particular emphasis on procedural and enforcement provisions. In addition to enacting Labor Code section 218.6, Bill No. 2509 also amended Labor Code section 98.1, but instead of simply correcting the erroneous cross-reference, the amended statute provided that administrative awards would earn interest at the breach-of-contract rate provided by Civil Code section 3289. Since Labor Code section 218.6 expressly made this same rate applicable to civil actions, Bill No. 2509 achieved uniformity between the two statutory provisions.
The analysis of Bill No. 2509 by the Senate Committee on Industrial Relations indicates that the Legislature adopted the breach-of-contract rate for Labor Code section 98.1 because it regarded this rate as the existing rate for civil actions. The enactment of Labor Code section 218.6, which expressly cross-referenced this rate, represented a clarification of the legislative understanding of the law. A legislative analysis states: “The legal rate of interest on unpaid wages due pursuant to an award by the Labor Commissionеr is based on a statute which was repealed in 1993. Under breach of contract provisions of the Civil Code, courts may award interest on wages due at 10%. [f] This bill references the Civil Code section for 10% interest for Labor Commissioner awards.” (Sen. Com. on Industrial Relations, Analysis of Assem. Bill No. 2509 (1999-2000 Reg. Sess.) as amended June 26, 2000, p. 2, italics added.)
FIE points to two other documents in the legislative history that mention the proposed Labor Code section 218.6 in a list of changes or revisions to the law, 3 but we do not regard these legislative dоcuments as being inconsistent with the interpretation of the cross-reference to Civil Code section 3289 as a clarification of existing law. Legislative clarifications inevitably involve a revision or change in statutory language.
The language of Labor Code section 218.6 is particularly appropriate in light of this legislative background. If the statute served to clarify the law, it would apply to all awards of unpaid wages, as the statute plainly provided, but the Legislature would have no need to address the prospective or retroactive application of the statute, and the statutory language is in fact silent on this matter.
We conclude that the trial court properly applied the 10 percent prejudgment interest rate provided by Civil Code section 3289 to the accrual of unpaid wages. The enactment of Labor Code section 218.6 confirmed the propriety of this rate, which
DISPOSITION
The judgment is affirmed.
Marchiano, P. J., and Stein, J., concurred.
Notes
The issue of the rate of prejudgment interest was not raised in any prior appeal.
Although the trial court did not rule on the merits of the legal issue regarding the applicable rate of prejudgment interest, the parties have extensively argued the issue in their briefs.
See Assembly Committee on Labor and Employment, Third Reading Analysis of Assembly Bill No. 2509 (1999-2000 Reg. Sess.) April 12, 2000, at page 2; Senate Committee on the Judiciary, Analysis of Assembly Bill No. 2509 (1999-2000 Reg. Sess.) at pages 3-4. FIE also cites the Legislative Counsel’s Digest of Assembly Bill No. 2509 but misinterprets the document. Referring to administrative proceedings, the Legislative Counsel states that the bill “would instead” require use of the breach-of-contract rate. The text does not refer to the use of this rate in civil actions.
