EDWARD M. CHEN, District Judge.
Plaintiffs Douglas O'Connor, Thomas Colopy, Matthew Manahan, and Elie Gurfinkel brought the instant class action against Defendant Uber Technologies, Inc., alleging that Uber misclassifies drivers as independent contractors rather than employees. Docket No. 330 (Second Amended Complaint) (SAC) at ¶ 3. The Court has certified the class action to bring two claims: (1) a tips claim, in which Plaintiffs allege that Uber represented that tips are included in the fare but do not give the total amount of the tip to the drivers, and (2) an expense reimbursement claim, in which Plaintiffs allege that Uber does not pay vehicle-related and phone expenses that employees are entitled to. See Docket No. 342 at 60; Docket No. 395 at 31.
Uber now brings a motion for summary judgment on Plaintiffs' tips claim. Docket No. 479 (Mot.). Uber contends that Plaintiffs' tips claim is fundamentally based on an "Uber's alleged misrepresentations to riders that a `tip is included' in the fare." Id. at 1. Thus, Uber argues that Plaintiffs' tips claim fails because: (1) Plaintiffs cannot prove first-person reliance, as required by the UCL; (2) the named Plaintiffs lack standing because they cannot prove that they ever had a rider who saw Uber's alleged misrepresentation; (3) riders' alleged classwide exposure to the alleged misrepresentation was de minimis; and (4) no rider who used the Uber app since November 10, 2014 could reasonably believe a gratuity is included because Uber's rider agreements state that the fare does not include gratuity. Id. at 1-2. In the alternative, Uber argues that decertification is appropriate because there is no ascertainability, commonality, predominance, or superiority. Id. at 2.
Uber's motion for summary judgment or decertification came on for hearing before the Court on March 24, 2016. For the reasons stated on the record and below, the Court
To the extent that Uber relies on the effect of its statement in its rider agreements since November 2014 that tip is not being charged, this goes to the ultimate question of whether or not the jury can find that tip is included in every fare charged by Uber.
For these reasons, the Court
This order disposes of Docket Nos. 479 and 493.
In short, in each of the three cases, the disclaimer at issue was located right next to the allegedly deceptive statement. By contrast, in the instant case, the disclaimer in the rider agreement is on page five of an eight-page document, and does not immediately follow any of Uber's alleged representations that tip is included. Cf. Baxter, 2010 WL 3791487, at *4 ("A consumer cannot decline to read clear and easily understandable terms that are provided on the same webpage in close proximity to the location where the consumer indicates his agreement to those terms and then claim that the webpage, which the consumer failed to read, is deceptive.") (internal quotation omitted).