ORDER GRANTING IN PART AND DENYING IN PART DEFENDANTS’ MOTION TO COMPEL ARBITRATION
(Docket No. 39)
On February 27, 2014, Plaintiff Martina Hernandez filed a class action complaint
I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Ms. Hernandez has filed a class action complaint against DMSI and Ross. Docket No. 1-1. Ms. Hernandez initially brought suit in Alameda County Superior Court, but Defendants removed the case in April of 2014. Docket No. 1. Ms. Hernandez’s motion to remand was denied. Docket No. 38.
In her Complaint, Ms. Hernandez alleges she was jointly employed by DMSI and Ross to work in Ross’s warehouse as a non-exempt employee who was paid by the hour. Compl. ¶ 1, 5. DMSI is a temporary staffing company that provides temporary staffing to Ross, a retail apparel store. According to DMSI’s Administrative Director of Staffing Operations, Christine Harrison, Ms. Hernandez was hired by DMSI after DMSI replaced a staffing agency named MJO as Ross’s staffing partner. Ms. Hernandez had previously been staffed in a Ross warehouse through MJO. Docket No. 39-2, Harrison Decl. ¶¶ 5-6. When she began work with DMSI on March 26, 2012, Ms. Hernandez signed a Dispute Resolution Agreement (“DRA”). Docket No. 39-2. DMSI’s Dispute Resolution Agreement provides:
This Agreement sets forth the procedures to resolve any and all disputes arising out of or related to your employment with DMSI and/or termination thereof.... All such disputes will be resolved by an arbitrator through final and binding arbitration.... This Agreement is governed by the Federal Arbitration Act, 9 USC. See.l et seq. ... The arbitration shall be conducted with both parties having the right to conduct discovery and bring motions as provided for by the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. However, there will be no right for any dispute to be brought, heard, or arbitrated as a Class or Collective Action of any sort of nature.
Harrison Deck, Ex. 1. Ms. Hernandez also signed a copy of the DRA in Spanish. Id., Ex. 2.
According to Ross’s Human Resources Administrator for its Southwest Distribution Center, Tina Lobato, in September of 2012, Ms. Hernandez applied to and was hired directly by Ross. Docket No. 39-3 (“Lobato Deck”) at ¶¶ 2-4; Ex. 1. Ms. Lobato attests that she participated in the. orientations that were given to new employees like Ms. Hernandez. She states that the new hires were given a packet of Ross new hire documents, which were explained in both English and Spanish, depending on the mix of employees. Lobato Deck ¶ 4. The new hires received a copy of Ross’s employee handbook, called “Distribution & Transportation Associate Handbook.” Lobato Deck ¶ 6. The employee handbook contained an Arbitration Policy. Lobato Deck, Ex. 3. Ms. Hernandez signed an acknowledgment and agreement, recognizing that she “read, understood] and agree[d] to comply with the ..: Ross Arbitration Policy.” Lobato Deck, Ex. 2. The Ross Arbitration Policy laid out at page 44 of the employee handbook provides:
This Arbitration Policy (“Policy”) applies to any disputes, arising out of or relating to the employment relationship, between an associate and Ross or between anassociate and any of Ross’ agents or employees, whether initiated by an associate or by Ross. This policy requires all such disputes to be resolved only by an Arbitrator through final and binding arbitration.... This Policy is governed by the Federal Arbitration Act, 9 U.S.C. § 1 et seq. ... The parties will have the right to conduct civil - discovery and bring motions, as provided by the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and enforced by the Arbitrator. However, there will be no right or authority for any dispute to be brought, heard or arbitrated as a class action, private attorney general, or in a representative capacity on behalf of any person.
Lobato Decl., Ex. 3.
Ms. Hernandez alleges DMSI and Ross violated various provisions of California’s labor code as well as the Industrial Wage Commission’s (“IWC”) order, including failure to pay minimum wage (Cal. Lab. C. §§ 1194, 1194.2, 1197); failure to pay wages for all hours worked (Cal. Lab. C. § 204); failure to pay overtime (Cal. Lab. C. §§ 510, 1194); failure to pay timely wages owed upon termination or quitting (Cal. Lab. C. §§ 201-203); and failure to provide accurate and compliant wage statements (Cal. Lab. C. § 226). Ms. Hernandez alleges that, as a result of the labor code violations, the Defendants’ business practices violated the UCL. Ms. Hernandez also seeks remedies under PAGA (Cal. . Labor Code §§ 2698 and 2699).
Ms. Hernandez alleges six causes of action individually and on behalf of similarly-situated class members. Compl. at 1.' The seventh cause of action under PAGA is brought as a representative action. Id. at 13. The Class is defined as “[a]ll. current and former non-exempt, hourly paid California employees who worked through DMSO and who were assigned to any of Ross’s warehouse facilities in California for any period of time within four years prior to the initiation of this action through certification ... and whose work time was tracked by one or more time management systems.” Id. ¶ 9. Defendants have answered. Docket No. 6.
Plaintiff does not oppose arbitration of her labor code claims or her claim under the UCL. Solely at issue is Plaintiffs seventh cause of action, the representative claim under PAGA. Plaintiff contends that she has not waived and is not bound to arbitrate her PAGA claim. At the hearing on Defendants’ motion to compel, Plaintiff made an oral motion to amend her Complaint to dismiss without prejudice her PAGA claim. The Court gave leave for the parties to file supplemental briefing on whether Plaintiff should be permitted to amend her Complaint under Rule 15. For the reasons discussed below, the Court DENIES Plaintiffs motion to amend her Complaint, GRANTS Defendants’ motion to compel arbitration as to Plaintiffs first six causes of action, and DENIES in part and DEFERS in part Defendants’ motion to compel arbitration of Plaintiffs representative PAGA claim.
II. DISCUSSION
A. Rule 15
At the hearing on the motion to compel, Plaintiffs counsel made an oral motion to amend, which Defendants opposed. The Court gave the parties leave for supplemental briefing on whether to permit amendment.
In this case, Plaintiff seeks to amend by dismissing her PAGA causes of action, in part because she concedes her PAGA claim against DMSI is time-barred.
The Court agrees that there is evidence that Plaintiff has sought to amend in bad faith, and that prejudice would naturally follow from granting Plaintiffs motion. First, the facts suggest that Plaintiff has engaged in forum-shopping. For example, Ms. Hernandez appears to have filed a state court action in Riverside duplicating her PÁGA cause of action against Ross just one month after Defendants removed. Compare Docket No. 1, with Docket No. 46, Ex. B. Plaintiff offers no reason for filing the duplicate action, and it appears at least plausible that Plaintiff filed the state court action to hedge her bet on Plaintiffs (ultimately unsuccessful) motion to remand and ultimately allow her to manipulate the risk of compelled arbitration, which risk she may believe to depend on the forum. As discussed below, the California Supreme Court has enunciated a rule against waiver of PAGA claims, and it has concluded its rule is not preempted by the Federal Arbitration Act. Iskanian v. CLS Transp. Los Angeles, LLC,
The Court is also skeptical of the timing of Plaintiffs motion to amend. Ms. Hernandez appears to contend that she discovered that her claim was time-barred when she learned of her termination date in DMSI’s declaration in support of its motion to compel arbitration. See Docket No. 46 at 5. The Court finds this implausible. Ms. Hernandez presumably knew that she ceased working for DMSI in 2012. Correspondingly, she likely knew her claim was time-barred at multiple junctures of this litigation, including the inception of this action, the inception of the Riverside action in May of 2014 when she alleged only the timely PAGA claim against Ross
It appears that Plaintiff timed her motion to amend so that she could have the benefit of previewing Defendants’ motion to compel arbitration before deciding whether to abandon the federal case in favor of the parallel state case. Such a tactic is not countenanced by Rule 15, particularly where there is prejudice to Defendants resulting from potentially denying Defendants’ right to fully adjudicate their motion to compel arbitration while subjecting Defendants to incurring the expense of unnecessary motion practice so that Plaintiff can have a trial run. Plaintiffs motion to amend is therefore denied. See Acri,
B. Federal Arbitration Act (FAA)
Section 2 of the FAA provides:
A written provision in any maritime transaction or a contract evidencing a transaction involving commerce to settle by arbitration a controversy, thereafter arising out of such contract or transaction, or the refusal to perform the whole or any part thereof, or an agreement in writing to submit to arbitration an existing controversy arising out of such a contract, transaction, or refusal, shall be valid, irrevocable, and enforceable, save upon such grounds as exist at law or in equity for the revocation of any contract.
9 U.S.C. § 2. One purpose of the FAA “was to reverse the longstanding judicial hostility to arbitration agreements that had existed at English common law and had been adopted by American courts, and to place arbitration agreements upon the same footing as other contracts.” E.E.O.C. v. Waffle House, Inc.,
The savings clause of Section 2 permits arbitration agreements to be declared unenforceable by generally applicable contract defenses but not by “defenses that apply only to arbitration or that derive their meaning from the fact that an agreement to arbitrate is at issue.” AT & T Mobility LLC v. Concepcion,
The issue before this Court is whether the FAA preempts California law prohibiting waiver of PAGA representative claims.
C. PAGA Waiver Under California State Law
The specific question in this case is whether the putative waivers of class, collective, private attorney general, and representative actions in the DRA and the Ross Arbitration Policy bar Ms. Hernandez from pursuing her representative PAGA claim. The Ross Arbitration Policy clearly contains a waiver of Ms. Hernandez’s right to bring or arbitrate any dispute “as a class action, [as a] private attorney general, or in a representative capacity on behalf of any person.” Loba-to Decl., Ex. 3. As such, there is no question that the Ross arbitration clause purports to limit Ms. Hernandez’s right to bring a representative PAGA claim. Whether the clause in the DRA purports to address a representative PAGA claim is less clear. The DRA provides that “there will be no right for any dispute to be brought, heard, or arbitrated as a Class or Collective Action of any sort of nature.” Representative actions are not called out by this clause. Nonetheless, in this case, Ms. Hernandez does not argue that the DRA does not encompass a representative PAGA claim. Indeed, Ms. Hernandez appears to concede that the DRA and Ross Arbitration Policy both expressly forbid the PAGA claim herein. Docket No. 40, Opp. at 8.
Assuming that both clauses apply to preclude a PAGA representative claim, neither waiver is enforceable as a matter of California law. In Iskanian, the California Supreme Court ruled such a waiver is unenforceable as a matter of public policy. Id. at 382,
The Court found PAGA suits were enforcement actions in which the Labor and Workforce Development Agency (“LWDA”) is the real party in interest. Iskanian concluded that a PAGA representative claim was in essence a qui tam action. Id. at 382,
Thus, PAGA representative suits differ from class actions and other suits in which a private plaintiff seeks relief on behalf of the public. A PAGA claim “functions as a substitute for an action brought by the government itself,” and therefore any judgment binds the state labor law enforcement agencies. Arias,
Iskanian concluded that imposing on employees a waiver of representative claims “frustrates the PAGA’s objectives”—the punishment and deterrence of labor code violations. Iskanian,
D. California Law Prohibiting PAGA Waiver Is Not Preempted by The FAA
The interpretation of PAGA and Iskanian’s decision that waivers of PAGA claims are not enforceable are questions of California state law. See U.S. Fid. & Guar. Co. v. Lee Investments LLC,
Defendants contend that the Iskanian rule against waiver of PAGA representative claims is not materially different from the Discover Bank rule prohibiting waivers of class actions found preempted in Concepcion. The Court disagrees.
The reasoning of Concepcion does not extend to a PAGA representative action. The Supreme Court in Concepcion identified aspects of class procedures that it found to be inconsistent with the FAA, which do not apply to PAGA representative actions. For example, Concepcion focused on the complexity of class certification procedures — including the need to determine whether the class may be certified, whether the named parties are sufficiently representative and typical, and how class discovery should be conducted. Concepcion,
Defendants’ reliance on Ferguson v. Corinthian Colleges, Inc.,
For the reasons stated in Iskanian, however, the rationale for preemption of the Broughton-Cruz rule does not apply to PAGA claims. As noted above, a PAGA claim is a type of qui tam action. Iskanian,
To be sure, there are lower court cases extending ease law relating to the preemption of the Broughton-Cruz rule to waivers of PAGA claims. See, e.g., Morvant v. P.F. Chang’s China Bistro, Inc.,
Moreover, as noted in Iskanian, the public nature of PAGA is significant because the FAA was not originally intended to govern disputes between the government (acting in its law enforcement capacity) and private employers. See Waffle House,
Finally, the Court notes that federalism concerns further support the
[D]espite the variety of ... opportunities for federal preeminence, we have never assumed lightly that Congress has derogated state regulation, but instead have addressed claims of pre-emption with the starting presumption that Congress does not intend to supplant state law. Indeed, in cases like this one, where federal law is said to bar state action in fields of traditional state regulation, we have worked on the assumption that the historic police powers of the States were not to be superseded by the Federal Act unless that was the clear and manifest purpose of Congress.
New York State Conference of Blue Cross & Blue Shield Plans v. Travelers Ins. Co.,
Iskanian highlights the ways that California’s police powers would be adversely affected by FAA preemption. PAGA’s objectives — enhancing law enforcement and efficiently deploying resources to address a problem that costs California billions of dollars each year — squarely address issues of public concern. Iskanian,
The district court cases that have rejected Iskanian demonstrate that the risk to state sovereignty is not hypothetical. For example, Ortiz v. Hobby Lobby Stores, Inc., No. 2:13-CV-01619,
Absent Congress’s clear and manifest intent to disable the enforcement of one of California’s police powers traditionally held by the state, this Court is particularly reluctant to find FAA preemption of Iska-nian’s rule against PAGA waiver.
III. CONCLUSION
The Court concludes that barring the waiver of representative PAGA claims and requiring such claims to be arbitrated would not interfere with the fundamental attributes of arbitration. Cf. Concepcion,
The fact that the waiver provisions of the arbitration clauses at issue cannot be enforced to bar PAGA representative claims does not necessarily dictate which forum is proper for their adjudication. The arbitration clauses here are ambiguous, because while both provisions broadly extend arbitration to all disputes arising out of or related to Plaintiffs employment, the waivers suggest that the parties did not anticipate that PAGA representative claims would be arbitrated. See Iskanian,
The Court directs the parties to meet and confer regarding their views on how to proceed in light of the holdings of this order. The Court will address whether to bifurcate and stay the PAGA matter pursuant to 9 U.’S.C. § 3 at the next case management conference on March 26, 2015.
For the foregoing reasons, the Court DENIES Plaintiffs motion to amend the complaint, DENIES Defendants’ motion to enforce waiver of Plaintiffs PAGA representative claims, DEFERS decision on bifurcation and stay; and GRANTS Defendants’ uncontested motion to compel arbitration as to Ms. Hernandez’s first six causes of action.
This order disposes of Docket No. 39.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. The Court notes that the Plaintiff's oral motion and supplemental briefing do not comply with this Court’s local rules regarding moving to amend the pleadings. This Court's local rules require that a party moving to amend a pleading reproduce the entire proposed amended pleading. See Civ. L.R. 10-1
. Although Plaintiff asserts her PAGA claim against Ross as the joint employer of DMSI is likewise time barred, she does not appear to assert her claims arising out of her direct employment by Ross between September 2012 and September 2013 are time barred. The PAGA claim does not appear to be limited to those who were jointly employed by DMSI and Ross.
. Defendants cite to Kilgore v. KeyBank, N.A.,
. The California Legislature elected to deputize an aggrieved employee to bring a claim on behalf of the state instead of a stranger to the employment relationship to avoid “private plaintiff abuse.” Id. at 387,
. This Court also does not find the FAA sufficiently pervasive, dominant, or obstructed to conclude that the FAA is impliedly the “sole federal authority" as to adjudication of labor law enforcement actions belonging to the state. Cf. Lockheed Air Terminal, Inc. v. City of Burbank,
. The Court finds that 9 U.S.C. § 3 and not Cal. Civ. Proc. C. § 1281.2 applies to this case. See, e.g., Cronus Investments, Inc. v.
