¶ 1. Kathleen Hermanson, Ardyce We-ichbrod, and George Otradovec appeal, pursuant to our leave, a non-final order denying class certification under Wis. Stat. Rule 803.08. See Wis. Stat. § 808.03(2) (interlocutory appeals). We affirm.
¶ 2. The operative pleading in connection with this appeal is the plaintiffs' "second amended consolidated complaint." (Uppercasing omitted.) As material, it alleges that the named plaintiffs and other hourly Wisconsin employees of Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., were not paid what Wal-Mart should have paid them when they "worked through all or a portion of their meal and rest breaks." The complaint asserts that the proposed class is made up of "tens of thousands of presently and formerly employed hourly paid Wal-Mart employees" in Wisconsin, and that the alleged short-fall in proper compensation can be proved by Wal-Mart's "computer generated" payroll records. The trial court dеtermined that the proposed class should not be certified under Wis. Stat. Rule 803.08 because, among other reasons, the proposed class would be "unmanageable," recognizing that much of the pertinent Wal-Mart payrоll records were generated in the first instance by members of the
¶ 3. Wisconsin Stat. Rule 803.08 provides:
When the question before the court is one of a common or general interest of many persons or when the parties are very numerous and it may be impracticable to bring them all before the court, one or more may sue or defend for the benefit of the whole.
There are four prerequisites to class certification under this rule:
• "there must be a common or general interest shared by all members of the class";
• "the named parties must fairly represent the interest involved";
• "it must be impracticable to bring all interested parties before the court"; and
• the proposed class must be manageable.
Cruz v. All Saints Healthcare Sys., Inc.,
¶ 4. As the trial court recognized, the major thing that makes the proposed class unmanageable is thаt the statistics upon which the class must rely were generated in the first instance by the proposed class-members. As we have seen, plaintiffs contend that members of the proposed class were denied promised compensation for working when they were entitled to a break — either to eat or for rest. But whether an employee was on a break or working through, either wholly or partially, the break to which he or she was entitled was, before February of 2001, determined by that employee's own time-clock entries.
2
Wal-Mart contends, and the plaintiffs do not dispute, that not all
¶ 5. Although the plaintiffs attеmpt to characterize the trial court's "manageability" analysis as an inquiry into "why" an employee might have missed a break, the issue is not "why" but
whether
the employees' self-generating data accurately reflect that a break was missed at all. Moreover, plaintiffs do not dispute Wal-Mart's assertion in its brief on this appeal that "since February 2001, there are no records that reflect whether an [employee clocked-out] for a break, much lеss whether the [employee] actually took the break or voluntarily skipped all or part of it." They argue, rather, that they can make their class-action case through statistical analysis of Wal-Mart data, and they submittеd an affidavit by a professor in Emory University's Department of Psychology opining that he could combine and compare the multiple threads of Wal-Mart data in Wisconsin and other states, and that his "pre
The anticipated production by Wal-Mart of all of the fiеlds in the Point-of-Sale database and the other timestamped databases generated by each store's Telxon scanners and computer workstations will permit the comparison of a wide range of time-marked еmployee activities with the time-clock attendance and payroll records of a broad range of each store's employees from receiving, to inventorying to selling. All work times identified by time-marked employee actions recorded in any one of the numerous data collection systems operating in each store can be compared to the daily time-clock [check-outs or check-ins], edits and additions. All elеctronic database entries are both employee-number identified and time marked, thereby creating an electronic trail of much of the employee work activity. Therefor, [sic] instances of unpaid off-the-сlock work are readily distinguishable from paid work within the computer records.
The professor also indicated that for the time for which "complete electronic data no longer exist," he could develop "mоdels by which the results of the analyses may be extrapolated back to the earlier time periods." As to what he calls the "some off-the-clock work for which there is neither an electronic trail nor a papеr trail," he said he would use "questionnaires submitted to the current and former hourly employees to obtain their recollections of such additional unpaid work," and that in his "professional opinion . .. the recall of specific, well-defined events within one's personal experience are [sic] capable of reliable and trustworthy recollection."
• the records generated by the members of the proposed class that underlie many of the proposed-class's claims are aсcurate; and
• any extrapolation, as projected by the Emory psychology professor, is valid — not only with respect to the statistical methodology, but, also, and critically, the accuracy of what the profеssor calls in his affidavit "the recall" by Wal-Mart's "current and former hourly employees" of their employmentcheck-in and check-out times during their Wal-Mart careers, because, as the professor's affidavit concedes, any extrapolation depends on the employees' "reliable and trustworthy recollection."
Simply put, Wal-Mart is entitled to have the plaintiffs' statistical conclusions and all the underlying data tested by discovery and exаmination at trial. Although the Wal-Mart data would be admissible against Wal-Mart at any trial, either as a statement by a party opponent under Wis. Stat. Rule 908.01(4)(b)l-4,
see State ex rel. N/S Assocs. v. Board of Review,
By the Court. — Order affirmed.
Notes
The Honorable Lee E. Wells denied an initial motion to certify this case as a class action, but permitted those seeking class-action status to re-plead, which they did. Following Judge Wells's retirement, the Honorable Jeffrey A. Kremers entered the order from which this appeal is taken, and relied, in large measure, on Judge Wells's written decision.
In February of 2001, Wal-Mart employees were told thаt they were no longer "required to clock out or clock in from breaks."
Article I, section 5 of the Wisconsin Constitution reads in full:
The right of trial by jury shall remain inviolate, and shall extend to all cases at law without regard to the amount in сontroversy; but a jury trial may be waived by the parties in all cases in the manner prescribed by law. Provided, however, that the legislature may, from time to time, by statute provide that a valid verdict, in civil cases, may be based on the votes of a specified number of the jury, not less than five-sixths thereof.
The Seventh Amendment to the United States Constitution, which is similar, does not apply to the states.
Markweise v. Peck Foods Corp.,
