M. JAMES LORENZ, District Judge.
Pending before the Court in this putative class action is Revised Joint Motion to Dismiss Claims Under the Private Attorneys General Act of 2004 ("PAGA" and "Revised Joint Motion"). For the reasons which follow, the Revised Joint Motion is DENIED.
The operative Second Amended Class Action Complaint ("SAC") alleges several California Labor Code violations, including failure to provide meal periods, rest breaks, properly itemized wage statements, and wages upon termination. The complaint also includes an unfair competition claim under California Business and Professions Code Section 17200, and a claim for PAGA penalties.
Plaintiff asserts that the putative class action is filed pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23, and alleges on behalf of "hundreds of employees . . . in non-exempt positions" that "[f]or at least four years prior to filing of this action through the present, Defendants consistently maintained and enforced . . . unlawful practices and policies" of requiring the class members to work without the meal and rest periods they were entitled to and without compensating them for the missed meal and rest periods as required by the California Labor Code. (SAC at 2, 7, 5-6.) Plaintiff asserted that "the amount of the aggregate claim of all Class Members is likely over the $5,000,000 threshold of the Class Action Fairness Act." (Id. at 3-4.) Defendant strenuously denies the allegations.
The parties propose to settle the PAGA claim for a total of $7,500, of which $1,875 would be distributed to the class members, and $5,625 would be distributed to the California Labor & Workforce Development Agency. They seek dismissal of the complaint in its entirety as follows: the sixth cause of action for PAGA violations would be dismissed with prejudice, and the remaining causes of action would be dismissed with prejudice as to the named Plaintiff only, and without prejudice as to the putative class. The parties also request the Court to incorporate by reference the terms of the Settlement Agreement and Release of PAGA Claims ("Agreement").
The release provisions of the Agreement do not necessarily support the parties' representation that, based on the dismissal without prejudice, the putative class members would remain free to assert their individual claims under California Labor Code. (See Revised Joint Motion at 1&4.) The Agreement defines Released Claims:
(Agreement ¶ I.L. (emphasis added).) The definition is ambiguous regarding the scope of the release. Although it clearly applies to the putative class members,
This ambiguity is not entirely resolved by the separate substantive release provision, which states:
(Agreement ¶VI.A.)
The release provisions do not leave the putative class members with a clear path to asserting their non-PAGA claims. They give them a basis for an argument, which they may win or lose, that the parties did not intend to release the class members' non-PAGA claims.
The parties seek approval of the settlement pursuant to California Labor Code Section 2699.3(b)(4) "to ensure that the settlement provisions are at least as effective as the protections or remedies provided by state and federal law or regulation for the alleged violation." The release provisions preclude a finding that the settlement complies with section 2699.3(b)(4). The Revised Joint Motion is therefore DENIED.
The Revised Joint Motion is DENIED on the alternative ground that it does not comply with this Court's Standing Orders for Civil Cases relating to Settlement and Dismissal.
IT IS SO ORDERED.