Memorandum & Order
INTRODUCTION
Plаintiffs, on behalf of themselves and other employees of defendant, bring this action seeking to recover unpaid prevailing wages for their work on various public works projects. The parties have filed cross-motions for summary judgment. Plaintiffs have also moved for class certification pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23(b)(3). Finally, defendant has filed a Daubert motion seeking to exclude the testimony of plaintiffs’ expert.
FACTUAL BACKGROUND
Defendant SimplexGrinnell, formed in 2001, is a “leaderf ] in fire and life-safety systems” with offices throughout the United States, including New York. Zammitti Aff. ¶ 2, Docket Entry 111-4. More specifically, defendant manufactures, installs and services fire alarm and sprinkler systems and equipment. Zammitti Certification ¶ 2, Docket Entry 109-26; see also Hext 3/25/10 Aff. ¶ 2, Docket Entry 111-15 at 19-24. Over the years, defendant has entered into thousands of contracts with New York State and City agencies for installation, maintenance, repair and inspection of their safety systems. Zammitti Aff. ¶5.
Pursuant to New York law, public works contracts — i.e., contracts with state or local governmental agencies to perform construction, maintenance and repair of public buildings — must provide that all laborers will be paid prevailing wages. N.Y. Labor Law § 220(3). Plaintiffs are fifteen current and former employees of defendant who performed electrical and sprinkler work, including installation, maintenance, inspection, testing, repairs, and replacement of
STATUTORY BACKGROUND — NEW YORK LABOR LAW § 220
New York has a strong public policy of protecting its workers, rooted in a 1905 amendment to the state’s Constitution.
Labor of human beings is not a commodity nor an article of commerce and shall never be so considered or construed. No laborer, worker or mechanic ... engaged in the performance of any public work[ ] shall be ... paid less than the rate of wages prevailing in the same trade or occupation in the locality within the state where such public work is to be situated, erected or used.
N.Y. Const, art. I, § 17. Labor Law § 220, a codification of the Constitutional amendment, was enacted “to ensure that employees on public works projects are paid wages equivalent to the prevailing rate of similarly employed workers in the locality where the contract is to be performed.”
Beltrone Constr. Co. Inc. v. McGowan,
As noted above, under New York law, every public works contract must provide that all laborers employed on the public works project will be paid prevailing wages. N.Y. Labor Law § 220(3)(a). The Labor Law provides for administrative enforcement of its wage provisions.
Id.
§ 220(7)-(9).
See also Brown v. Tomcat Elec. Sec. Inc.,
DISCUSSION
The various pending motions were, for all practical purposes, brought simultaneously. Because a ruling on any of the pending motions would affect issues raised by the others, the first question that arises is the order in which the motions should be addressed. I begin by ruling on the class certification motion. I next consider defendant’s motion for summary judgment. I then turn to defendant’s
Daubert
motion
1. Class Certiñcation
Plaintiffs move for class certification of their prevailing wage claims pursuant to Rule 23(b)(3). Plaintiffs propose to certify a class defined as follows:
[A]ll laborers, workmen and mechanics who furnished labor to SimplexGrinnell on non-federal public works projects in the State of New York at any time from February 6, 2001[, or from July 14, 2001 for sprinkler work] until the final judgment in this matter, and who ... have not been paid prevailing wages and benefits as required by law. 1
PI. Mem. 18; 2 see also Am. Compl. ¶ 7.
Plaintiffs bear the burden of establishing, by a preponderance of the evidence, the four prerequisites of Rule 23(a): (1) numerosity, (2) commonality, (3) typicality, and (4) fairness and adequacy of representation. A plaintiff must also qualify under one of the subdivisions of Rule 23(b).
See Teamsters Local 445 Freight Div. Pension Fund v. Bombardier Inc.,
a. Numerosity
Plaintiffs must show that “the class is so numerous that joinder of all members is impracticable.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(a)(1). Courts in the Second Circuit presume numerosity when the putative class has at least forty members.
Gortat,
b. Commonality
Rule 23(a)(2) requires a showing that “there are questions of law or fact common to the class.” Fed. R. Crv. P. 23(a)(2). Commonality may be met even though individual circumstances differ, so long as class members’ “ ‘injuries derive from a unitary course of conduct.’ ”
Noble v. 93 Univ. Place Corp.,
Here, the requirement of commonality is satisfied. Plaintiffs’ claim — that they and the proposed class members were denied prevailing wages by defendant— raises common questions of law and fact. Employees from defendant’s various offices throughout New York have stated that, at least prior to 2007, they and their fellow SimplexGrinnell employees were paid the same wages for their work on public and private projects and did not receive prevailing wages for their work on public job sites. Ford Decl. ¶¶ 13-14, Pl. Ex. 13; Hobbs Decl. ¶ 5, Pl. Ex. 14; Kuhlman Decl. ¶ 8, Pl. Ex. 15; Mitchell Decl. ¶¶ 11-12, Pl. Ex. 17; Stickney Decl. ¶¶ 10-12, Pl. Ex. 18; Ward Decl. ¶¶ 10-11, Pl. Ex. 19; Ziolkowski Decl. ¶¶ 9, 10, 12, Pl. Ex. 21. Plaintiffs have also submitted evidence indicating that defendant’s payroll procedures were centralized. Bourgoin Dep. 59-61, Pl. Ex. 56; Love Dep. 105-09, Pl. Ex. 64.
Other evidence further demonstrates defendant’s practice, at least in some circumstances, of failing to pay prevailing wages. See, e.g., id. at 75-76 (noting that the Newburgh office failed to pay prevailing wages for certain work performed in Westchester County and that defendant then made back payments to its employees); id. at 221-27 (reviewing extracts from defendant’s computer records that indicate that various public projects were not “flagged” properly -to ensure that employees were paid prevailing wages); Pl. Ex. 36 (reflecting a finding by the New York State Department of Labor that defendant “failed to notify workers of prevailing rates and [prevailing wage] projects”); Pl. Ex. 47 (indicating that defendant failed to pay prevailing wages for labor performed in connection with certain public works projects in Suffolk County from 2003 through 2005); Hext Dep. 72 (testifying that defendant conducted a second audit and made additional back payments for Suffolk County work performed after 2005); Pl. Ex. 49 (2007 letter from defendant conceding that it failed to submit certified payroll records for its work on a particular public works project); Hext Dep. 20 (noting that defendant also had a prevailing wage suit pending against it in California); id. at 109 (testifying that defendant began testing a prevailing wage compliance program only in November, 2006).
Although not profferеd by plaintiffs for this proposition, the evidence before the Court also includes a concession by defendant that, from 2004 to 2008, payments of prevailing wages to its New York City employees could be made only by manually overriding defendant’s general payroll system. Hext 3/24/10 Aff. ¶ 11 (filed under seal as Docket Entry 110-4) (stating that “[e]xcept in rare circumstances, SimplexGrinnell’s New York City office used the manual override process as its
exclusive
means of paying prevailing wages during the period from at least April, 2004 through late-2008”);
see also
Pl. R.56.1 ¶ 25 (stating that defendant’s payroll process was uniform throughout New York);
According to defendant, its various offices used different procedures for paying prevailing wages. Defendant’s prevailing wage manager, hired in 2005, testified at her deposition that “some offices did and some offices did not” pay prevailing wages for service and maintenance work performed on public projects. Hext Dep. 47, PI Ex. 61. Defendant argues that its lack of uniform procedures defeats plaintiffs’ showing with respect to commonality. However, defendant’s various New York regional offices apparently did have one policy in common, at least according to plaintiffs’ allegations: a failure to adopt a regularly employed and reliable method of distinguishing covered work and ensuring that prevailing wages were paid to employees for covered work they performed. To the contrary, according to plaintiffs’ allegations, SimplexGrinnell’s various offices paid little or no heed to defendant’s obligation to pay prevailing wages for covered work. I therefore conclude that, while plaintiffs’ claims may raise individualized questions regarding the number of covered hours that a specific employee worked and the prevailing wage the employee was entitled to be paid, these questions “will not predominate over the questions of law and fact that are relevant to all members of the purported class.”
Gortat,
Indeed, and of significance with respect to commonality as well as each of the other Rule 23 requirements discussed below, claims by workers that their employers have unlawfully denied them wages to which they were legally entitled have repeatedly been held to meet the prerequisites for clаss certification.
See, e.g., Jankowski v. Castaldi,
[t]he class definitions at issue ... include all ... employees who allegedly ... were not paid prevailing wage[s] on state-funded contracts, ... which resulted from the implementation of allegedly unlawful policies by their common employer. The predominant question raised is whether such a policy existed, and not whether any individual suffered its consequences on a particular job.
See also Cuzco v. Orion Builders,
The Supreme Court’s decision in
Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. v. Dukes,
564 U.S. -,
Similarly, the cases cited by defendant holding that the commonality requirement was not met are distinguishable because in those cases liability was not susceptible to class-wide proof. Def. Opp. 20.
5
For example, in
Dobson v. Hartford Financial Services Group, Inc.,
c. Typicality
“Typicality ... requires that the claims of the class representatives be typical of those of the class, and ‘is satisfied when each class member’s claim arises from the same course of events, and each class member makes similar legal arguments to prove the defendant’s liability.’ ”
Marisol,
Named plaintiffs allege that they each performed similar work for defendant, were subject to the same payroll procedures of defendant, and, like other members of the class, were not paid prevailing wages to which they were entitled. PL R. 56.1 ¶¶ 12, 13, 16-28; PI. Mem. 22-23. Employees from defendant’s offices throughout the state make allegations similar to those of the named plaintiffs.
See
Ford Decl. ¶¶ 13-14, PI. Ex. 13; Hobbs Decl. ¶ 5, PI. Ex. 14; Kuhlman Decl. ¶ 8, PI. Ex. 15; Mitchell Decl. ¶¶ 11-12, PI. Ex. 17; Stickney Decl. ¶¶ 10-12, PI. Ex. 18; Ward Decl. ¶¶ 10-11, PI. Ex. 19; Ziolkowski Decl. ¶¶ 9, 10, 12, PI. Ex. 21. Defendant does not assert that any of the named plaintiffs are subject to unique defenses that would destroy typicality. Def. Opp. 16-37;
cf. Noble,
Although named plaintiffs and putative class members may differ with respect to job classification, office location, and the amount of testing and inspection work each performed, these differences do not destroy typicality. Defendant notes that all of the named plaintiffs work out of its New York City office, and that as a result there are no representatives from upstate New York or Long Island. Def. R.56.1 ¶ 4, Docket Entry 111-5. These differences — job classification and locality — are not sufficiently significant to plaintiffs’ claims to undermine typicality, particularly because plaintiffs challenge payroll practices defendant employed throughout the state. Indeed, as will be discussed below in connection with defendant’s Daubert motion, defendant’s alleged liability to the members of the class may be determined by examining the same electronic databases. I therefore find that the named plaintiffs’ claims are sufficiently typical of those of putative class members to satisfy Rule 23(a)(3), with the exception discussed below of any named plaintiff who is not owed any prevailing wages.
d. Adequate Representation
Rule 23(a)(4) requires named plaintiffs to demonstrate that they will fairly and adequately protect the interests of the class. Here, with the exception noted below, the interests of the named plaintiffs are aligned with those of the proposed class members, and there is no reason they could not serve as adequate class representatives.
See Gortat, 257
F.R.D. at 365. Defendant’s argument that
I now turn to the adequacy of class counsel. At the time that plaintiffs filed their motion, they were represented by law firms Constantine Cannon and Beranbaum Menken. In October, 2010, I granted Constantine Cannon’s motion to be relieved. Plaintiffs continue to be represented by Raymond Fay, formerly of Constantine Cannon and now of Mehri & Skalet. Accordingly, plaintiffs seek to have Beranbaum Menken and Mehri & Skalet appointed as co-lead class counsel pursuant to Rule 23(g). PI. Mem. 27 n. 22. It appears that defendant does not challenge the appointment of Beranbaum Menken and Raymond Fay as counsel for the class. Def. Opp. 36-37. Plaintiffs, however, have not presented any information about Mehri & Skalet or whether its qualifications meet Rule 23(g). Nonetheless, I take judicial notice of the public information filed on the firm’s website, http://www.findjustice.com.
When determining whether proposed counsel should be appointed to represent the class, a court must consider
(i) the work counsel has done in identifying or investigating potential claims in the action;
(ii) counsel’s exрerience in handling class actions, other complex litigation, and the types of claims asserted in the action;
(iii) counsel’s knowledge of the applicable law; and the resources that counsel will commit to representing the class.
Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(g)(1)(A).
Beranbaum Menken and Mehri & Skalet have extensive class action and labor law experience. PI. Ex. 31; http://www. fmdjustice.com. Beranbaum Menken has represented the plaintiffs since it filed this action in February of 2007 and has thus invested a substantial amount of time and effort investigating and prosecuting plaintiffs’ claims. See Docket Entry 1. Both of the lead attorneys, Bruce Menken of Beranbaum Menken and Raymond Fay of Mehri & Skalet, have more than twenty years of legal experience and are more than capable of representing the class. PL Exs. 31, 32; see also http://www. findjustiee.com. Accordingly, Beranbaum Menken and Mehri & Skalet are appointed class counsel pursuant to Rule 23(g).
Plaintiffs seek certification under Rule 23(b)(3), which requires a demonstration that “questions of law or fact common to class members predominate” over questions affecting only individual class members. The “Rule 23(b)(3) predominance inquiry tests whether proposed classes are sufficiently cohesive to warrant adjudication by representation.”
Amchem Prods. Inc. v. Windsor,
Here, common questions of law and fact relevant to all class members predominate over individualized issues. True, the putative class members earned prevailing wages at different rates, some worked more hours than others, and some are electricians and others are sprinkler fitters. However, these differences do not predominate over the main issue: whether defendant systematically failed to pay its employees the prevailing wages due them. As discussed above, defendant failed to implement any routine or automated system for paying prevailing wages, instead relying on manual overrides, particularly prior to 2007. Accordingly, I find that plaintiffs have shown that common questions of law or fact predominate over any individualized issues.
See Bolanos,
In fact, and also as discussed above, numerous courts have found that wage claims are especially suited to class litigation — perhaps “the most perfect questions for class treatment” — despite differences in hours worked, wages paid, and wages due.
Iglesias-Mendoza v. La Belle Farm, Inc.,
Defendant relies on various cases holding that class certification should be denied unless plaintiffs can establish liability on a class-wide basis using common proof. Def. Opp. 22 n. 19. While this general proposition may be correct, the facts of the cases defendant cites are readily distinguished from those presented here. For example, in
Deiter v. Microsoft Corp.,
Rule 23(b)(3) also requires a finding that a class action is superior to other means of adjudication. As noted above, questions that are relevant to all members of the class predominate over individualized issues, supporting the efficiency of proceeding in this case in the form of a class action. Moreover, a class action is the most efficient way to resolve the claims at issue here; although defendant has raised questions about the reliability of plaintiffs’ expert’s report, it appears that plaintiffs may calculate class damages by applying a common formula to data culled from defendant’s electronic records.
See
Defendant contends that many putative class members are allegedly owed significant damages, at least according to plaintiffs’ expert’s calculations, and that “courts regularly deny certification” when individual claims are relatively large. Def. Opp. 34. The court is not aware of any precedent instructing that a class should not be certified on the sole ground that some of the class members’ claims are substantial. In the cases that defendant cites, Def. Opp. 34, the courts denied certification on various grounds — for lack of commonality and typicality, and “overwhelming” individual issues — and
one
factor in the decision was the fact that individual claims had a significant dollar value.
See Smith v. Texaco, Inc.,
Finally, some of the claims of absent class members are small, and some of the absent class members are currently employed by the defendant. These facts support class certification as well. For these reasons, I conclude that a class action is a superior method for litigation of these claims. Accordingly, plaintiffs’ motion for class certification of their prevailing wage claims pursuant to Rule 23(b)(3) is granted.
2. Defendant’s Motion for Summary Judgment
Defendant moves for summary judgment on essentially seven grounds: 1) on all breach of contract claims other than those claims that rely on the twenty-nine contracts that plaintiffs have identified, 2) on claims for time spent testing and inspecting, 3) on claims for which plaintiffs’ expert calculated zero damages, 4) on all New York City and Long Island claims, 5) on claims for work in certain counties on the ground that the National Labor Relations Act preempts those claims, 6) on plaintiffs’ claims for quantum meruit and unjust enrichment, 7) on plaintiffs’ overtime claims, and 8) on plaintiffs’ fifth cause of action.
Standard
Summary judgment is appropriate where “there is no genuine issue as to any material fact.” Fed. R. Crv. P. 56(c). An issue of fact is material if it “might affect the оutcome of the suit under the governing law,” and genuine “if the evidence is such that a reasonable jury could return a verdict for the nonmoving party.”
Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477
U.S. 242, 248,
a. Breach of Contract
Plaintiffs, as third party beneficiaries of defendant’s public works contracts, allege that defendant breached thousands of public works contracts when it failed to pay its employees prevailing wages. See Am. Compl. ¶ 24; Table of SimplexGrinnell Public Works Projects (“Table”), Docket Entries 109-4, 109-5, 109-6, 109-7 (identifying 13,409 public works projects entered into by defendant during the relevant time period). In the course of discovery, though, plaintiffs obtained only twenty-nine actionable public works contracts from defendant. 9 Defendant contends that plaintiffs may not maintain their breach of contract claims without submitting the contracts in evidence. Def. SJ Mem. 18-21. Plaintiffs respond that the thousands of actual contracts are not needed because New York state law requires that all public works contracts contain a prevailing wage provision. PI. Opp. 6-13. 10 With respect to the projects for which they do not have contracts, plaintiffs intend to rely primarily upon this statutory requirement to prove their contractual entitlement to prevailing wages. PI. Mem. 39-41; PL Reply 25-27. 11
In light of the particular circumstances of this case, I conclude that defendant may not obtain summary judgment on plaintiffs’ third-party beneficiary claims on the grounds that plaintiffs will not be offering the underlying contracts in evidence. I reach this decision for the reasons set forth below, and primarily because defendant was required by law to include a prevailing wage provision in each of its public works contracts.
I begin from the premise that New York Labor Law explicitly provides that all construction contracts entered into by a public entity, including those for maintenance and repair of public buildings, “shall contain a provision that each laborer, workman or mechanic, employed by such contractor, subcontractor or other person about or upon such public work, shall be paid the wages herein provided.” N.Y. Labor Law § 220(3)(a). In short, the law mandates that defendant’s public works contracts contain prevailing wage provisions.
When parties enter into a contract, they are “presumed or deemed to have contracted with reference to” applicable existing laws. 11 Williston on Contracts § 30:19 (4th ed.).
See also Resolution Trust Corp. v. Diamond,
Moreover, the Federal Rules of Evidence provide that plaintiffs may rely on evidence other than the cоntracts themselves to establish their contents. Federal Rule of Evidence 1004 provides that secondary evidence may be admitted to establish the contents of a contract. Although Rule 1002 generally limits proof of the contents of a document to the “original writing,” Rule 1004 permits other evidence, at least in certain circumstances, to establish the document’s contents. Plaintiffs rely on subdivision 3 of Rule 1004, which permits a party to rely upon evidence other than a document itself to prove its contents when the original document is in the possession of the party’s opponent. Here, defendant has, or should have, access to the public works contracts at issue, or at least copies of them, and plaintiffs have alerted defendant that they intend to prove that the contracts call for payment of prevailing wages by pointing out that § 220 requires that they do. Pis. 6/22/10 Ltr., Docket Entry 136, at 3.
Secondary evidence of a document’s contents may be admitted even when the original is not in the possession of an adversary; “if failure to produce the original is
Rule 1004 also permits a party to establish the contents of a writing with secondary evidence where the document relates only to a collateral matter. Fed.R.Evid. 1004(4). Courts have applied this provision “when trouble, expense or tediousness of adducing primary documentary evidence outbalances its significance in the case.” Evidence 227 (citing cases). See also Weinstein’S Federal Evidence § 1004.41 (2d ed.) (noting that the Rule permits the “exercise of common sense” and that “as a matter of practical judicial administration, the court is justified in weighing the cost of production of an original against its importance and the litigant’s financial capacity”).
In this case, the burden of production substantially outweighs the significance of the contracts. When deciding whether or not a document is collateral, courts consider “the centrality of the document to the principal issues of the litigation; the complexity of the relevant features of the document; and the existence of [a] genuine dispute as to its contents.” Kenneth S. Broun et al, Mccormick On Evidence § 239 (6th ed. 2006). At first blush, it may seem anomalous to say that the contracts are collateral in a case where plaintiffs’ claims rest on the contention that they were breached. Here, though, the central issue is the amount of wages that plaintiffs and putative class members were paid and how much they should have been paid in prevailing wages. The contracts are essentially necessary only to establish for which projects, and thus which hours, the class should be paid prevailing wages. To that end, defendant does not dispute that the 13,409 projects identified in the Table are public works projects, nor does defendant contend — at least for purposes of the present motions — that it was not obligated to pay prevailing wages for at least some of the work done on those projects. See Def. Response ¶ 64, Docket Entry 115-2. The contracts are not even needed to determine the prevailing wage rates. Pursuant to § 220, the “fiscal officer” — either the Commissioner of Labor or the Comptroller for the City of New York — annually sets the prevailing wage rates for the state or the city, respectively. N.Y. Labor Law § 220(5)(a). 12
Finally, the prevailing wage provision is not complex or difficult to understand; in fact, the provisions in the exemplars that plaintiffs provided are substantially similar and straightforward.
See, e.g.,
Manhattan and Bronx Apple contract ¶ 8.5, PI. Ex. 6 (requiring that the contractor pay prevailing wages, if applicable); Brooklyn Apple contract ¶ 8.05, PL Ex. 7 (same); Cayuga
In short, although defendant does not admit that all of its public works contracts contain the mandatory prevailing wage provision, there is no real dispute as to the contents of the contracts or the specific language of the prevailing wage provisions. There is no need to parse the particular language of any one contract’s prevailing wage terms to determine whether defendant breached it; the provision is either present or not. There is no need to refer to the contract to determine the wage rate to be paid; that amount is published by the Commissioner or Comptroller. Accordingly, the contracts are collateral, and therefore secondary evidence — i.e., evidence of the statutory mandate that prevailing wages be paid on public construction projects — may be admitted to support the inference that all of defendant’s public works contracts contain prevailing wage provisions. Defendant, of course, is free to challenge whether the class is entitled to prevailing wages on any particular project by submitting any contracts that it contends provide that prevailing wages need not be paid.
Plaintiffs’ contention that the contracts need not be produced because the law mandates that they contain prevailing wage provisions does appear to raise a question of first impression. There does not seem to be any case law supporting a plaintiffs right to proceed on a breach of a public works contract as a third-party beneficiary without offering the contract in evidence. Rather, it seems that plaintiffs asserting their rights to prevailing wages as third-party beneficiaries have typically submitted the underlying contracts to the courts hearing their claims.
See, e.g., Samborski v. Linear Abatement Corp.,
In fact, some courts have dismissed breach of contract wage claims for failing to attach the contract or at least identifying the breached contractual provision.
See Winsch v. Esposito Bldg. Specialty,
In any event, it is clear that New York law requires public works contracts like those at issue here to include prevailing wage provisions. It is equally clear that plaintiffs and the putative class are the intended third-party beneficiaries of these prevailing wage provisions.
See Fata,
For all these reasons, defendant’s motion for summary judgment on the grounds that plaintiffs have failed to submit the intended public works contracts underlying their claims is denied. This ruling does not preclude defendant from submitting the contracts or other proof in evidence in an effort to establish that the contracts are not public works contracts, that they do not provide for payment of prevailing wages, or that they are otherwise not actionable.
Next, defendant moves for summary judgment on its liability with respect to plaintiffs’ claims for testing and inspection work. New York’s prevailing wage requirement applies only to work performed in the construction, maintenance, and repair of public buildings. Defendant argues that testing and inspection is not construction, maintenance, or repair work and are — or at least were during the time relevant to plaintiffs’ complaint — outside the parameters of work covered under § 220.
Beginning in January 2008, defendant met with officials in the Department of Labor (“DOL”) concerning whether fire alarm testing and inspection (“TI”) work is covered under prevailing wage laws. Def. R.56.1 ¶ 37. On December 31, 2009, the Department of Labor issued an official opinion letter (“DOL Opinion Letter”) stating that testing and inspection falls within the coverage of prevailing wage laws. PI. Ex. 3. The DOL Opinion Letter, however, further states that “because there has been much confusion in the past about the Departments [sic] position as to the applicability of the prevailing wage law to this work, this opinion shall be applied prospectively to contracts that are put out for bid after January 1, 2010, unless a previous contract actually required the payment of prevailing wages for this work.” Id. at 3.
Defendant contends that the language in the DOL Opinion Letter limiting its application to contracts put out for bid after January 1, 2010, precludes plaintiffs’ claims for unpaid prevailing wages for testing and inspection work, all of which are based upon labor performed before that date. 14 Def. SJ Mem. 26-28. Plaintiffs respond that the DOL Opinion Letter is not entitled to the deference normally attributed to agency interpretations because the DOL does not possess “any particular authority to decide who is a ‘laborer, workman or mechanic.’ ” PI. Opp. 14-15; see also id. at 16-18. Moreover, according to plaintiffs, testing and inspection work has always been covered under prevailing wage laws, and thus defendant had a statutory and contractual duty to pay prevailing wages at the time the contracts at issue were made. Plaintiffs suggest that the DOL’s decision to apply its ruling only prospectively was the result of defendant’s lobbying efforts, and should be given little or no weight. PI. Opp. 14-18.
The New York Court of Appeals has repeatedly held that agency interpretations, including formal and informal opinions, are entitled to deference unless they are irrational, unreasonable, or go against the plain meaning of the relevant statute.
15
Samiento v. World Yacht Inc.,
There was nothing irrational or unreasonable about the Commissioner’s decision to classify TI work as covered but to require that prevailing wages be paid only prospectively. The Commissioner explains in her letter that the DOL had failed to make its position on testing and inspection work clear, and the decision to require that prevailing wages be paid only on contracts bid upon after clarification seems logical and fair. Although plaintiffs argue that testing and inspection work has always been covered, PL Opp. 16, the DOL is in the best position to evaluate the extent of any pre-existing ambiguity surrounding the application of prevailing wage laws to TI work.
Moreover, the ambiguity acknowledged by the Commissioner undermines plaintiffs’ effort to impute an obligation to pay prevailing wages for testing and inspection work as a matter of law. As discussed above, I have concluded that plaintiffs are not required to present the underlying public works contracts in order to proceed with their third-party beneficiary claims. I based this ruling on the ground that the obligation to pay prevailing wages was not seriously disputed; plaintiffs and defendant agree that the law requires prevailing wages be paid for covered work. Thus, when SimplexGrinnell took on public works projects, it knew it would be required to pay prevailing wage rates, and it at least implicitly agreed to do so when it entered into a contract to perform work at a public site. According to the DOL, though, SimplexGrinnell did not have reason to believe it would be required to pay prevailing wages for testing and inspection work it contracted to perform. Thus, absent a provision in a particular contract explicitly requiring that testing and inspection work be compensated at prevailing wages, there simply is no basis for concluding that SimplexGrinnell agreed to pay prevailing wages for such work. I therefore conclude that defendant may not be held liable for any unpaid prevailing wages for TI work. This aspect of defendant’s summary judgment motion is therefore granted.
In his report, plaintiffs’ expert concludes that TI work performed in New York City (“NYC TI”) should be included in the non-TI category, as work that should be paid at prevailing wage rates, even if the DOL Commissioner’s prospective-only ruling is applied.
See
Crawford Rpt. ¶ 16. Plaintiffs explain that NYC TI was included in non-TI hours because “testing and inspection was explicitly covered in the prevailing wage schedules for work for New York City government customers.” PL D. Opp. 33 n. 12.
16
See also
PL 7/29/10 Letter, Docket Entry 146. To support this assertion, plaintiffs rely on § 230 wage schedules for alarm technicians that define the scope of covered work as specifically including testing and inspection.
See
Pl. Ex. 103. Plaintiffs’ claims, however, invoke § 220 of the Labor Law; indeed, in their motion for class certification, plaintiffs describe the class they seek to represent as
c. Experts’Zero Damages
Defendant seeks summary judgment on those claims of putative class members for whom plaintiffs’ expert calculated zero damages. As plaintiffs point out, however, defendant may be required to supplement the data it has already provided, and it is possible that absent class members who do not have claims for damages now may be able to demonstrate damages in the future. PI. Opp. 21. Moreover, Dr. Crawford’s report will have to be modified to conform with my rulings herein. Therefore, this aspect of defendant’s motion is denied.
d. NYC and Long Island Work
Defendant seeks dismissal of all claims by New York City and Long Island employees subject to a higher prevailing wage rate than plaintiffs’ expert employed in his damages calculations. Def. SJ Mem. 32. Defendant contends that New York City and Long Island have multiple prevailing wage rates for the same job classification and acknowledges that plaintiffs’ expert “always used the lowest rate available.” Id. Essentially, defendant complains that plaintiffs’ expert was too conservative and that some putative class members might be entitled to greater damages based on a higher prevailing wage rate. As discussed below in connection with defendant’s Daubert motion, the damages calculations of plaintiffs’ expert should not be rejected because they are based on conservative assumptions that inured to defendant’s benefit. It is also not a reason to dismiss claims by these employees. Accordingly, this aspect of defendant’s motion for summary judgment is denied as well.
e.Preemption
Defendant contends that the Labor-Management Relations Act (“LMRA”), 29 U.S.C. § 141
et seq.,
preempts all of plaintiffs’ claims for work in counties with multiple prevailing wage rates. Def. SJ Mem. 34-36. The LMRA preempts any claim that is “substantially dependent on analysis of a collective bargaining agreement.”
Caterpillar Inc. v. Williams,
New York Labor Law defines the prеvailing wage rate as “the rate of wage paid in the locality ... by virtue of collective bargaining agreements.” N.Y. Labor Law § 220(5)(a). The statute, however, further provides that “[t]he prevailing rate of wage shall be annually determined in accordance herewith by the fiscal officer.”
Id. See also supra
n. 12 (providing the websites for the prevailing wage schedules). Accordingly, there is no need for the court to interpret the CBAs to determine the prevailing wage rates as the rates are set by the fiscal officer—the
It is, accordingly, not clear that the court needs to undertake any review of the CBAs in this case. First, plaintiffs’ expert has reviewed the wage schedules and applied an appropriate rate, apparently without interpreting the CBAs. To the extent that the fiscal officer provides multiple rates for a particular job classification, plaintiffs’ expert utilized the lower rate. In addition, even if the court must review the CBAs to determine an appropriate rate, that would not require the level of analysis or interpretation of a CBA that results in preemption. “[N]ot every dispute ... tangentially involving a provision of a collective-bargaining agreement[] is pre-empted.”
Allis-Chalmers Corp. v. Lueck,
f. Equitable Claims
Defendant contends that plaintiffs’ equitable claims for quantum meruit and unjust enrichment fail as a matter of law because plaintiffs’ claims are governed by contracts. Where a matter is governed by contract, such as here, plaintiffs cannot recover in quasi-contract, including claims for quantum meruit and unjust enrichment.
Cox,
g. Overtime Claims
Defendant seeks summary judgment on plaintiffs’ overtime claims on two grounds. First, defendant contends that plaintiffs cannot bring an overtime prevailing wage claim without exhausting the administrative remedy in § 220. Def. SJ Mem. 40-41. Second, defendant argues that plaintiffs cannot establish the prevailing wage hours for which they are due overtime. Id. at 41-42.
With respect to its first argument — overtime prevailing wage claims must be brought pursuant to the administrative remedy outlined in § 220 — case law does not support defendant’s contention. Indeed, the very argument plaintiffs make here — that they are entitled to overtime pay based upon their § 220 prevailing wages — was accepted in
Sobczak v. AWL Industries, Inc.,
Defendant’s second argument is simply that plaintiffs failed to establish which, if any, overtime hours resulted in unpaid prevailing wages. Def. SJ Mem. 42. For the reasons discussed below with respect to defendant’s Daubert motion, I find that Dr. Crawford has reasonably established the overtime hours subject to prevailing wages and reasonably calculated any unpaid overtime prevailing wages. Therefore, this aspect of defendant’s motion is denied.
h. Plaintiffs’ Fifth Cause of Action
Finally, defendant moves for summary judgment on plaintiffs’ fifth cause of action, a statutory “failure to pay wages,” Am. Compl. ¶¶ 38-43, contending that plaintiffs improperly seek liquidated damages and attorneys’ fees “by recasting” their third-party beneficiary § 220 claims “as statutory wage claims enforceable under Article 6 (§§ 190-198) of the Labor Law.” Def. SJ Mem. 42-43. Plaintiffs do not address defendant’s argument in their opposition. This alone would be a basis to grant this aspect of defendant’s motion. In their complaint, plaintiffs allege that defendant violated § 191 by failing to pay plaintiffs within the time requirements provided by § 191. Am. Compl. ¶40. Other than the fact that plаintiffs may be owed unpaid prevailing wages, there is no evidence that defendant failed to comply with § 191, which requires that manual workers be paid weekly. N.Y. Labor Law § 191(l)(a). Plaintiffs also allege that defendant violated § 198-c. Am. Compl. ¶ 41. The statutory language of § 198-c, however, imposes criminal, not civil, liability on an employer for failing to pay benefits and supplements; although some courts have held otherwise, the weight of authority holds that there is no private right of action under this section. N.Y. Labor Law § 198-c;
Moran v. GTL Const., LLC,
For the reasons discussed above, defendant’s motion for summary judgment is granted in part and denied in part. More specifically, defendant’s motion is granted with respect to plaintiffs’ claim for prevailing wages for TI work, including New
3. Daubert
In the third of the pending motions, defendant seeks to strike the report of David L. Crawford, Ph. D., plaintiffs’ expert. Def. D. Mem.
17
Trial courts serve as “gatekeepers,” responsible for “ensuring that an expert’s testimony both rests on a reliable foundation and is relevant to the task at hand.”
Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharms., Inc.,
The admissibility of expert testimony is governed by Federal Rule of Evidence 702, which imposes two basic prerequisites for admitting expert testimony at trial. First, the witness must be properly qualified as an expert to testify on scientific, technical, or specialized matters.
See Stagl v. Delta Air Lines, Inc.,
should undertake a rigorous examination of the facts on which the expert relies, the method by which the expert draws an opinion from those facts, and how the expert applies the facts and methods to the case at hand. A minor flaw in an expert’s reasoning or a slight modification of an otherwise reliable method will not render an expert’s opinion per se inadmissible. “The judge should only exclude the evidence if the flaw is large enough that the expert lacks ‘good grounds’ for his or her conclusions.”
Amorgianos v. Nat’l R.R. Passenger Corp.,
When considering whether to admit expert testimony, “[t]he focus, of course, must be solely on principles and methodology, not on the conclusions that they generate.”
Daubert,
Plaintiffs seek to admit Dr. Crаwford’s report to establish the amounts due to the members of the plaintiff class as damages.
Dr. Crawford holds a Ph.D. in Economics and is the president and founder of E consult, an economics and statistics consulting firm. Crawford Rpt. ¶¶ 1, 5. He also serves as an adjunct professor at the Wharton School, where he has won several awards for his teaching, and has been qualified as an expert and testified in numerous cases over the past five years.
Id.
¶¶ 4, 6 and Ex. 1.
See also, e.g., Duling v. Gristede’s Operating Corp.,
As set forth in detail in his report, Dr. Crawford determined the number of hours worked by plaintiffs and the hourly wage and benefit rates plaintiffs were paid primarily by analyzing data culled from defendant’s “Time Entry” system. Crawford Rpt. ¶ 14. To determine how many of those hours of labor constituted “covered work” subject to prevailing wage law requirements, Dr. Crawford also reviewed data from electronic files referrеd to by defendant as its “Project Data” and computerized lists provided by defendant of public sector jobs it completed. Crawford Rpt. ¶ 15; Crawford Deck ¶ 6, Docket Entry 109-2. Finally, Dr. Crawford relied upon New York State and City Prevailing Wage Schedules for fire alarm and sprinkler work to determine the applicable prevailing wage and benefit rates plaintiffs were entitled to be paid for covered work. Plaintiffs assert that, armed with these electronic files produced by defendant and the relevant prevailing wage schedules, Dr. Crawford was able to calculate the number of hours worked by each class member on prevailing wage jobs as well as the number of hours of labor for which each class member was paid the proper prevailing wages and benefits. According to Dr. Crawford, many of defendant’s employees worked more hours that should have been paid at prevailing wage rates than in fact were. Dr. Crawford calculated damages based upon the difference between hours of covered work plaintiffs performed and those for which they were paid at applicable prevailing wage and benefit rates.
Dr. Crawford, however, was unable to tie all hours of labor reflected in defendant’s Time Entry database to those derived from defendant’s Project Data. This problem arose because data reflecting work performed in the Project Data indicated only the date the data was entered and not the date the work itself was actually performed. Crawford Deck ¶ 9; Def. D. Mem. 17-18. As a result, Dr. Crawford was unable to link Time Entry data for a particular week to Project Data information for the same week. More specifically, while Dr. Crawford was able to determine from the Time Entry data how many hours a class member worked during a particular week and how much the class member was paid, he was not able to determine accurately from defendant’s Project Data
Defendant’s motion focuses primarily upon what appear to be crude errors in Dr. Crawford’s report but in fact, it seems, result only from Dr. Crawford’s inability to match up weekly Time Entry and Project Data. For example, defendant points to Dr. Crawford’s claim that one plaintiff is owed prevailing wages for 36 hours of work performed during a week when the plaintiff was on jury duty, and another for work done when he was in fact attending a training session in California. Def. D. Mem. 22-23. Plaintiffs have logically explained, however, that these apparent errors result from the lack of accurate information in defendant’s Project Data about when labor was performed. Therefore, as plaintiffs also explain, what appear to be “errors” — which in fact arise only because hours in the Time Entry and Project Data cannot be matched — cancel out when the total number of covered hours worked and the hours of prevailing wages paid are compared. In other words, while there may be weeks when Dr. Crawford claims prevailing wage work was performed when in fact it was not, there will necessarily, as a matter of logic, be other weeks when an equal amount of prevailing wage work was performed but none is reflected in Dr. Crawfоrd’s calculations. Indeed, defendant acknowledges that “[f]or many weeks ... Dr. Crawford found hours paid at prevailing wage according to the timekeeping data, but he found no corresponding prevailing wage work in the project billing data.” Def. D. Mem. 3; see also id. at 26. Put simply, when considered in their entirety rather than on a week-by-week basis, the Time Entry data will reflect the number of hours for which any class member was paid prevailing wages and the Project Data set will reflect the number of hours of prevailing wage work performed. PI. D. Opp. 15. It therefore follows that, when totals are calculated for the time period relevant to the lawsuit, any week-by-week discrepancies or variations are rendered irrelevant.
Defendant contends that even the week-by-week errors or discrepancies described above could have been avoided, and a more reliable result obtained, had Dr. Crawford relied on defendant’s paper records rather than its electronic files. I reject this argument for several reasons. First, as indicated above, plaintiff has explained the apparent errors in Dr. Crawford’s week-by-week calculations, and demonstrated— sufficiently, at least, for purposes of admissibility — that they do not undermine the reliability of Dr. Crawford’s results. Moreover, defendant has not demonstrated that calculations based on its paper records would be more accurate than those based on its electronic data. Finally, as defendant has acknowledged, its paper records number more than one million documents, and are located at various offices throughout New York State. Def. D. Mem. 12-13. In light of these circumstances, it was reasonable for Dr. Crawford to rely upon defendаnt’s electronic files.
In a related argument, defendant contends that the reliability of Dr. Crawford’s report is undermined by its failure to account for data in defendant’s “PeopleSoft” database. Defendant points out that PeopleSoft includes data reflecting payments of prevailing wages by means of manual overrides. Def. D. Mem. 27-31. As plaintiffs state in response, however, it appears that Dr. Crawford’s calculations reveal that his decision not to rely on PeopleSoft had little impact on his final results. In
Defendant challenges other aspects of Dr. Crawford’s analysis as well. For example, defendant argues that Dr. Crawford did not reliably allocate time as TI or non-TI. If so, this would be particularly significant in light of my ruling that plaintiffs are not entitled to prevailing wages for TI work.
According to Dr. Crawford, he determined whether hours of work were TI or non-TI hours based upon certain codes in defendant’s Project Data. Crawford 7/13/10 Decl. ¶ 2, Docket Entry 140-1. Defendant contends that Dr. Crawford erred in his allocation of TI and non-TI hours and failed to capture some TI hours at all. Def. D. Mem. 32-33, 35-36, 38-39. For example, defendant notes that its paper records indicate that named plaintiffs Oyarvide and Ramos performed many hours of TI work in 2004 and 2005 that are not reflected in Dr. Crawford’s Report. Def. D. Mem. 35-36. Defendant also asserts that Dr. Crawford failed to identify all codes reflecting testing and inspection work in defendant’s Time Entry datаbase. Def. Letter dated Aug. 17, 2010, Docket Entry 148. It does not follow, however, that the alleged discrepancies that defendant cites result from flaws in Dr. Crawford’s methodology. If Dr. Crawford failed to identify accurately those codes that indicate TI work and those that do not, the problem would be in the factual assumptions Dr. Crawford made and not in his methodology, and a ruling striking Dr. Crawford’s report would be unwarranted. Moreover, after oral argument on the motions, Dr. Crawford recalculated his allocation of TI and non-TI hours worked by plaintiffs, taking some of defendant’s contentions into account and — for what seem to be logical reasons — declining to adopt others. Crawford 7/13/10 Deck; see also Crawford 8/24/10 Deck, Docket Entry 149-1 (revising again his allocation of TI and non-TI hours). I find the explanations offered by Dr. Crawford with respect to the steps he took after the oral argument to be clear and the steps themselves reasonable and likely to have yielded sufficiently reliable results to support the admission of Dr. Crawford’s report at trial.
Emphasizing yet another apparent anomaly in Dr. Crawford’s results, defendant points out that Dr. Crawford’s report concludes that some plaintiffs are owed zero damages.
18
Plaintiffs, however, have logically explained that SimplexGrinnell paid some employees a regular wage that was greater than or equal to the prevailing wage rate, without regard to whether the employee was working at a public site subject to prevailing wage laws. Tr. 66-67. Under that circumstance, the employee would have no claim for prevailing wages even if defendant never differentiated between work on private and public sector jobs. Dr. Crawford further explained that the data provided by defеndant included entries for some employees with job titles indicating an exemption from prevailing wage requirements, and that he therefore attributed zero damages
Defendant next cites to several conservative assumptions made by Dr. Crawford and argues that the resulting inaccuracies in Dr. Crawford’s report should preclude its admission at trial. For example, where more than one prevailing wage and benefit rate was arguably applicable, Dr. Crawford based his damages computation on the lowest potentially applicable rate. Def. D. Mem. 39-42. Similarly, when Dr. Crawford realized that defendant’s Time Entry data, while indicating whether prevailing wages were paid or not, did not reveal whether prevailing wages were paid for TI or non-TI work, he allocated all paid hours first to offset non-TI hours earned, then any remainder to offset TI hours earned; if any hours paid still remained, Dr. Crawford allocated them as non-TI hours paid. Crawford Rpt. 8 n. 3;
see also
Crawford Dep. 411-13; Crawford 6/22/10 Decl. ¶ 5, Docket Entry 136-2. Defendant is correct to say that, if Dr. Crawford had obtained more precise information about which rate applied, or whether prevailing wages were paid for TI on non-TI work, he no doubt could have produced a report that was both more accurate and more beneficial to the class. Clearly, however, defendant will suffer no prejudice as a result of Dr. Crawford’s conservative assumptions, and those assumptions are not a basis for excluding Dr. Crawford’s testimony.
See Floorgraphics, Inc. v. News Am. Mktg. In-Store Servs., Inc.,
I have considered each of defendant’s contentions and, as indicated above, I do not find them to be sufficient to warrant exclusion of Dr. Crawford’s testimony or report at trial. Most of defendant’s arguments concern Dr. Crawford’s results and not his methodology, and are therefore not a proper basis for exclusion.
See, e.g., Daubert,
Finally, to the extent that Dr. Crawford approximated damages owed rather than calculating them precisely, this is not fatal to the admissibility of either his testimony or the conclusions in his report. Under New York lаw, it is “well established” that “ ‘[t]he rule of certainty as applied to the recovery of damages does not require mathematical accuracy or absolute certainty or exactness, but only that the loss or damage be capable of ascertainment with reasonable certainty.’ ”
Okraynets v. Metro. Transp. Auth.,
For all these reasons, defendant’s motion to strike the report and testimony of plaintiffs’ expert is denied.
4. Plaintiffs’ Summary Judgment Motion
Plaintiffs move for summary judgment on both liability and damages, relying extensively on Dr. Crawford’s Report. As discussed above when addressing defendant’s Daubert motion, defendant has raised material questions of fact about the accuracy of Dr. Crawford’s calculations. For example, defendant has pointed to paper time records of individual employees that seem to be inconsistent with Dr. Crawford’s calculations with respect to those employees. See, e.g., Def. SJ Opp. 6, Docket Entry 115. Defendant has also raised a question of fact with respect to whether Dr. Crawford accurately distinguished TI and non-TI hours of labor. Docket Entry 148. Finally, the court assumes that Dr. Crawford will be required to further refine his calculations in light of the holdings set forth above. For all these reasons, plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment is denied.
CONCLUSION
Plaintiffs’ motion for class certification is granted. Defendant’s motion for summary judgment is granted with respect to TI work and plaintiffs’ fifth cause of action and denied in all other respects. Defen
SO ORDERED.
Notes
.In their motion papers, plaintiffs propose a class of employees who "claim” they were not paid prevailing wages. PI. Mem. 18. At oral argument, however, plaintiffs' counsel described the putative class as one that would "only include employees "who have not been paid prevailing wages due.” Transcript of 6/28/10 Oral Argument ("Tr.”) 5, Docket Entry 139.
. "PL Mem.” refers to Plaintiffs’ Memorandum of Law in Support of Motions for Class Certification and Summary Judgment, Docket Entry 109.
. “Pl. R.56.1” refers to Plaintiffs’ Local Rule 56.1 Statement of Undisputed Facts, Docket Entry 109-85. Plaintiffs exhibits 1-78 are found at Docket Entry 109, and plaintiffs’ exhibits 79-108 are found at Docket Entry 118.
. The parties also dispute whether pay stubs properly noted the payment of prevailing wages. See Pl. R.56.1 ¶ 27; Def. Response ¶ 27.
. "Def. Opp.” refers to Defendant's Memorandum of Law in Opposition to Plaintiffs' Motions for Class Certification and Summary Judgment, Docket Entry 115.
. For example, according to Dr. Crawford’s most recent damages cаlculations, class representatives Ramos and Rodriguez claim substantial non-testing and inspection damages, while named plaintiffs Smith and Estrella each have less than one thousand dollars in damages, after accounting for the self-audit payments defendant has already made. Docket Entry 149-2.
. I defer any determination as to which specific plaintiffs’ claims are not typical until after Dr. Crawford revises his report in accordance with my rulings made herein.
. "Crawford Rpt.” refers to the Third Revised Expert Report of David L. Crawford, PhD, Docket Entry 109-3.
.Plaintiffs obtained thirty-nine contracts but defendant states that ten of them are "not actionable” for various reasons. SimplexGrinnell’s Memorandum of Law in Support of its Motion for Summary Judgment ("Def. SJ Mem.”) 9, Docket Entry 111; Capozzola Aff. ¶ 14, Docket Entry 111-6. For example, three of the documents were bid documents; one contract predated the actionable period in this suit; one was a federal contract; and one contract was with an entity other than defendant. Capozzola Aff. ¶¶ 14-21.
. "PL Opp.” refers to Plaintiffs’ Memorandum of Law in Opposition to Defendant's Motion for Summary Judgment, Docket Entry 119.
. "PL Reply” refers to Plaintiffs' Reply Memorandum in Support of Motions for Class Certification and Summary Judgment, Docket Entry 126.
. The wage rate schedules referred to in the text are published on the state’s and city’s websites. See http://www.labor.ny.gov/worker protection/publicwork/PWContents.shtm (providing links to current and past prevailing wage schedules); http:llwww.comptroller.nyc. gov/bureaus/bll/schedules.shtm (same).
. Moreover, language in
Fata,
the seminal Court of Appeals case permitting prevailing wages to be sought by workers as third-party beneficiaries, suggests that the contract must contain the prevailing wage provision before a breach of contract claim may be brought: '‘[W]e assume,
arguendo,
that if the obligation of the defendant to pay wages not less than the prevailing rate’ existed only by fiat of the Legislature, the remedy provided by the Legislature for violation of the obligation it has created would be exclusive.”
. According to defendant, none of the twenty-nine contracts that plaintiffs identified during discovery contain an explicit provision for the payment of prevailing wages for testing and inspection. Capozzola Aff. ¶ 22.
. Under federal law, agency interpretations that "lack the force of law,” such as opinion letters, are “entitled to respect but only to the extent those interpretations have the power to persuade.”
Catskill Mountains Chapter of Trout Unlimited, Inc. v. City of New York,
. "PL D. Opp.” refers to Plaintiffs' Opposition to Defendant's Daubert Motion to Ex-elude the Testimony of David L. Crawford, Ph.D, Docket Entry 116.
. “Def. D. Mem.” refers to defendant’s Memorandum of Law in Support of its Daubert Motion, Docket Entry 110-1. Dr. Crawford's Report ("Crawford Rpt.”) may be found at Plaintiffs’ Exhibit 1, Docket Entry 109-3, to their motion for class certification and summary judgment.
. Defendant also notes that Dr. Crawford calculates some class members as having negative damages, i.e., defendant overpaid them. Def. D. Mem. 25-27. Some of these anomalies may be due to the inability to match Time Entry and Project Data, or because Dr. Crawford made some conservative assumptions, as discussed in the text. In any event, these negative damage calculations do not support barring Dr. Crawford's report.
. Although I have not yet heard from the parties on this subject, I suggest that the class notice include a means of gaining access to Dr. Crawford’s report — perhaps by providing a website where it may be viewed — so that a potential class member can learn the amount of damages calculated by Dr. Crawford on his or her behalf before deciding whether to participate in the class action.
