I. Facts
In April 2010, defendants Grill Concepts Services, Inc. and Grill Concepts, Inc. (collectively, Grill Concepts) opened a Daily Grill restaurant (the restaurant) near the LAX Airport. From that date until June 2014, Grill Concepts employed approximately 200 people at the restaurant as servers, bussers, hosts, cooks, and in other non-managerial positions. By June 2014, 83 of those employees had quit or been fired.
The restaurant was located within the LAX Westin. During that time period, the LAX Westin was located within the Airport Hospitality Enhancement Zone (the Zone) designated by the City of Los Angeles.
The Los Angeles City Council had passed an ordinance creating the Zone in 2007 (the ordinance). (L.A. Ord. No. 178,432, codified at L.A. Mun. Code, §§ 104.101 et seq.) The ordinance defined the Zone to be geographically coextensive with the "Gateway to Los Angeles (Century Corridor) Property Business Improvement District." (L.A. Mun. Code, § 104.103.A.) The ordinance obligated the City to make efforts to promote the businesses within the Zone in a number of ways, including by marketing those business, by providing workforce training and development, by subsidizing power rates, and by improving the streets and waste management system. (Id. , § 104.103.B.) In exchange, the ordinance required "Hotel Employers" within the Zone to pay "Hotel Workers" a "living wage" that was higher than the minimum wage required by state law. (Id. , §§ 104.104, 104.106.)
When the restaurant first opened, the ordinance required hotel employers to make annual adjustments to the living wage on January 1 of each year that were keyed to the Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers in Los Angeles-Riverside Counties. (L.A. Mun. Code, §§ 104.104.A, 104.106.) On June 9, 2010, the City Council amended the ordinance, and that amendment took effect on July 24, 2010. The amendment required that the annual adjustments to the living wage be made on July 1 of each year, and that they be keyed to the annual increase in retirement benefits paid to members of the Los Angeles City Employees Retirement System that would be set forth in a bulletin promulgated each year by the City's Bureau of Contract Administration. (L.A. Mun. Code, §§ 104.104.A, 104.116,
Because the restaurant's employees were "hotel workers" within the meaning
As early as June 2010, Grill Concepts' human resources director suspected that Grill Concepts might be underpaying its employees. That month, the director saw a newspaper article reporting that the living wage within the Zone was higher than what Grill Concepts was paying. The director contacted Grill Concepts' outside counsel, who contacted the Los Angeles City Attorney's Office. A city attorney relayed that an amendment to the ordinance was "in process." Neither counsel nor the director followed up with the city attorney's office. Nor did the director or outside counsel ask any of the other hotel operators or restaurateurs in the Zone what living wage they were paying. Instead, the director continued doing what he had always done-namely, typing "Airport Hospitality Enhancement Zone Ordinance" into the search query on the City of Los Angeles's website to see if an amended ordinance came up.
In late March 2014, the attorney for two restaurant employees wrote to Grill Concepts, pointing out that Grill Concepts had not been paying the living wage mandated by the amended ordinance and demanding immediate reimbursement of the underpayment.
II. Procedural Background
In April 2014, three restaurant employees-plaintiffs Sandra Diaz, Alfredo Mejia, and Madecadel Goytia (collectively, plaintiffs)-sued Grill Concepts on behalf of a class of current and former restaurant employees for: (1) failing to pay the living wage required by the 2010 amendment to the ordinance, which (a) violated the ordinance (L.A. Mun. Code, § 104.109.A), and (b) constituted unfair competition ( Bus. & Prof. Code, § 17200 ); and (2) "waiting time" penalties, as to those class members who had quit or been fired while being underpaid ( Lab. Code, § 203 ). More specifically, plaintiffs sought (1) reimbursement for underpayment of the living wage (L.A. Mun. Code, § 104.109.A.1), (2) prejudgment interest on the underpayment ( Civ. Code, § 3287 ), (3) a penalty of three times the underpayment due to Grill Concepts' "deliberate[ ] fail[ure]" to pay the correct amount (L.A. Mun. Code, §§ 104.102.G, 104.109.A.4), and, as to former employees, (4) waiting time penalties ( Lab. Code, § 203 ).
After the trial court certified the proposed class, the parties then filed cross-motions for summary adjudication aimed at assessing whether Grill Concepts was liable for anything beyond reimbursement of the underpaid wages. Specifically, the motions addressed whether the ordinance was unconstitutionally vague and, if not, whether Grill Concepts (1) owed prejudgment interest on the underpaid wages, (2) owed treble damages under the ordinance, and (3) owed waiting time penalties.
The trial court partially granted and partially denied the cross-motions. The court ruled that the ordinance was not unconstitutionally vague. Although, in the court's view, the ordinance was "intricate and not user-friendly," the ordinance sufficiently advised hotel employers what was required of them, as shown by the fact that no "other employer had a problem" understanding the ordinance. The court next concluded that the amount of underpayment was "capable of being made certain by calculation," and thus subject to
The matter proceeded to trial. By the time of trial, however, the parties had stipulated that, based on the court's earlier rulings, Grill Concepts owed $31,992.60 in prejudgment interest and $268,758.71 in waiting time penalties. The only issue tried to the court was whether the court had the discretion to waive the waiting time penalties for equitable reasons. The trial court ruled that it did not, although it commented that it would have exercised that discretion if it existed.
After the trial court entered judgment, Grill Concepts filed this timely appeal.
DISCUSSION
Grill Concepts contests the trial court's award of waiting time penalties to those plaintiffs who were former employees, asserting that the trial court
Labor Code section 203 empowers a court to award "an employee who is discharged or who quits" a penalty equal to up to 30 days' worth of the employee's wages "[i]f an employer willfully fails to pay" the employee his full wages immediately (if discharged) or within 72 hours (if he or she quits). ( Lab. Code, § 203, italics added; see also Lab. Code, §§ 201, subd. (a), 202, subd. (a) ; Caliber Bodyworks, Inc. v. Superior Court (2005)
I. Did the Trial Court Err in Concluding that Grill Concepts Acted Willfully?
Grill Concepts contends that it did not act willfully in failing to pay those plaintiffs who quit or were fired before June 2014 the proper amount on their final paycheck because (1) Grill Concepts' underpayment was due to its inability to locate the amended ordinance (rather than a deliberate design to underpay its employees), and (2) even if Grill Concepts had located the amended ordinance, the living wage ordinance as a whole is so confusing to apply that its mistake was innocent (rather than willful).
Under Labor Code section 203, a "willful failure to pay wages ... occurs when an employer intentionally fails to pay wages to an employee when those wages are due." ( Cal. Code Regs., tit. 8, § 13520 ; see also Barnhill v. Robert Saunders & Co. (1981)
Under this definition, an employer's failure to pay is not willful if that failure is due to (1) uncertainty in the law ( Barnhill , supra ,
Does Grill Concepts' failure to find the amended ordinance mean that its failure to follow that ordinance in paying its employees is not willful? We conclude that the answer is "no."
Ignorance of the law is no excuse. This maxim is so long-standing and so well established that it is part of the very fabric of our legal system. ( Stark v. Superior Court (2011)
Here, Grill Concepts' ignorance of the amended ordinance was " 'coupled with [its] negligence in failing to look it up.' " ( Tammen , supra ,
B. Inability to understand the ordinance
Does Grill Concepts' purported failure to understand the ordinance in its amended form constitute a good faith dispute that means its failure to follow the ordinance was not willful? Because, as noted above, a good faith dispute is defined as the assertion of a defense that is either successful or, if ultimately unsuccessful, nonetheless supported by evidence, reasonable, and
1. Is the ordinance unconstitutionally vague?
Because the constitutional guarantee of due process generally secures the right to notice and the opportunity to be heard ( Dusenbery v. United States (2002)
This vagueness standard is hard to meet, and its stringency is not accidental. Language itself is notoriously imprecise. ( People v. Superior Court (Hartway) (1977)
A law is consequently vague only if it is impossible to give the law a " 'reasonable and practical construction.' " ( American Civil Liberties Union v. Board of Education (1963)
The amended living wage ordinance is not vague because it is possible to give it a " 'reasonable and practical construction.' " Los Angeles Municipal Code sections 104.104 and 104.106 together require that "Hotel Employers" "shall pay" "Hotel Workers" "no less than the hourly rates set under the authority of this article." (L.A. Mun. Code, §§ 104.104.A [so stating], 104.106.B ["On July 1, 2007, Hotel Workers shall be paid a living wage in its
First, Grill Concepts complains that the ordinance requires hoteliers to look to a bulletin "to be published somewhere at some time by some city agency." That a law points a person to an exterior source of information does not render that law unconstitutionally vague. As noted above, laws are to be evaluated against the backdrop of " 'other definable sources' " ( Personal Watercraft , supra , 100 Cal.App.4th at pp. 139-140,
Second, Grill Concepts contends that Los Angeles Administrative Code section 10.37.2(a) does not clearly point the reader to the annual adjustment rate used by LACERS. The text of that section provides that the LACERS adjustment rate applies to "[ (1) ] [t]he hourly rate with health benefits to be paid to all Employees and [ (2) ] the hourly rate without health benefits to be paid to Airport Employees." (L.A. Admin. Code, § 10.37.2(a).) Grill Concepts asserts that because its employees are not paid the "hourly rate with health benefits" (because they are paid the higher hourly rate for employees who do not receive health benefits) and are not
Third, Grill Concepts notes that the City Council's amendment left intact the initial version of section 104.106, and argues that this
Fourth, Grill Concepts points out that plaintiffs' lawyer, in its March 2014 demand letter, cited a living wage scale inapplicable to plaintiffs. Without knowing why the wrong wage scale was cited, we cannot and need not infer that it was due to a misunderstanding of the ordinance rather than a clerical error.
In sum, the amended ordinance is not unconstitutionally vague.
2. Even though unsuccessful, is the vagueness challenge to the ordinance supported by evidence, reasonable, and presented in good faith ?
Although we have no reason to question the trial court's finding that Grill Concepts asserted its vagueness challenge in good faith, its challenge is neither supported by the evidence nor reasonable. As explained above, we have determined that the amended ordinance is not vague, and our determination was not a close call. The unreasonableness of Grill Concepts' vagueness challenge is only confirmed by the absence of any evidence that any other hotelier or restauranteur had any problem reading the ordinance to pay its employees the proper living wage. ( Amaral , supra ,
Grill Concepts raises two further points in support of its position that its vagueness challenge constitutes a good faith dispute.
First, it trumpets the trial court's finding that it acted in good faith in asserting its vagueness challenge. This is true, but of no moment. A " 'good
Second, Grill Concepts criticizes the trial court for ruling or otherwise suggesting that (1) a good faith dispute is invalid unless raised contemporaneously with the underpayment of wages, (2) Grill Concepts' vagueness argument is "separate" from its argument that its conduct was not willful, and (3) whether Grill Concepts had a good faith dispute turns on whether its vagueness challenge defense was actually viable. Our analysis on appeal does not make any of these alleged errors. Because we review the trial court's ruling and not its reasoning ( People v. Chism (2014)
In sum, Grill Concepts' vagueness challenge does not qualify as a good faith dispute.
II. Did the Trial Court Err in Concluding that it Lacked Discretion to Waive the Waiting Time Penalties Under Labor Code section 203 ?
Grill Concepts argues that Labor Code section 203 confers upon trial courts the discretion to dispense with waiting time penalties for equitable reasons. This argument rests upon a question of statutory interpretation, so our review is de novo. ( Weatherford , supra ,
We conclude that Labor Code section 203 does not imbue trial courts with the discretion to waive or reduce waiting time penalties, and do so for two reasons.
First, the plain text of the statute says: "If an employer willfully fails to pay ... any wages of an employee who is discharged or who quits, the wages of the employee shall continue as a penalty" for up to 30 days. ( Lab. Code, § 203, italics added.) And the Labor Code elsewhere provides that, throughout that code, " '[s]hall' is mandatory ...." ( Lab. Code, § 15 ; accord, Tarrant Bell Property, LLC v. Superior Court (2011)
Second, the purpose of the waiting time penalty is "to compel the immediate payment of earned wages upon a discharge" by attaching a substantial penalty to any delay in cutting the final paycheck. ( Smith v. Superior Court (2006)
Grill Concepts notes that courts have fashioned equitable exceptions in other contexts, and urges us to do so here. Most of these cases have nothing to do with Labor Code section 203 or, if they do, are distinguishable. In Lusardi Construction Co. v. Aubry (1992)
DISPOSITION
The judgment is affirmed. Plaintiffs are entitled to their costs on appeal.
We concur:
LUI, P. J.
CHAVEZ, J.
Notes
In October 2014, the Los Angeles City Council enacted a Citywide Hotel Worker Minimum Wage Ordinance that extended the Zone's "living wage" law to all hotels throughout the City (See L.A. Ord. No. 183,241), thereby eclipsing the ordinance at issue in this appeal.
Thus, the definition of willful under Labor Code section 203 differs from the definition of willful under the ordinance because the latter defines the term as a "deliberate[ ] fail[ure] or refus[al] to comply." (L.A. Mun. Code, § 104.102.G.)
Although the amendment did not take effect until nearly a year later (and hence required employers to prospectively increase the living wage to account for annual adjustments made before the amendment was enacted), this does not affect the understandability of the ordinance on its face, and no one has challenged this quirk of the statute.
