JOSEPH E. IRENAS, District Judge.
Plaintiffs, service technicians working for the General Electric Company ("GE" or "Defendant"), brought this putative collective action pursuant to § 216(b) of the Fair Labor Standards Act ("FLSA") to recover allegedly unpaid overtime compensation from Defendant.
Pending before the Court is Plaintiffs' Letter Brief Seeking to Facilitate Curative Notice and Enjoin Defendants from Further Interfering with Court-Facilitated Notice. (Docket No. 113) For the reasons explained herein, Plaintiffs' request is
This putative collective action rests on Plaintiffs' allegations that service technicians in GE's Appliances Division routinely, and with Defendant's knowledge, performed work "off the clock" in order to satisfy daily revenue requirements. As one of their principal claims, Plaintiffs assert that service technicians, at Defendant's direction, must log into their computers each morning to obtain their first customer calls and prepare for the day, but that Defendant has not compensated Plaintiffs for such work.
The Court preliminarily certified this matter as a collective action on November 14, 2014, and, following the provision of court-facilitated notice to all putative class members, a ninety-day opt-in period began on January 28, 2015.
Less than one month later, on February 23, 2015, Customer Service Manager ("CSM") Vince Guida, who supervises Southern California Region service technicians, sent an email to his technicians with the subject heading "Time worked and time reporting — MUST READ." (Ex. 1-C to Pls.' Ltr.) The message states, in relevant part,
(Id.)
Defendant claims that Mr. Guida sent this email as part of the ordinary course of business following annual "Fast Start" presentations held less than two weeks earlier during which he reviewed timekeeping policies and procedures. (Def.'s Opp. at 1) In a Declaration submitted on behalf of Defendant, Mr. Guida states that he often sends "various follow up emails after the Fast Start meetings regarding relevant rules, policies and procedure." (Guida Decl., Ex. 1 to Def.'s Opp., at ¶ 5) Mr. Guida attaches a virtually identical May 13, 2014, email from which he cut and pasted the majority of the February 23, 2015, email. (5/13/2014 email, Ex. 1-A to Def.'s Opp.) Mr. Guida refers to the February 2015 and May 2014 communications as "reminder emails." (Guida Decl. ¶¶ 6-9)
Plaintiffs submitted a letter brief to the Court on March 4, 2015, arguing that Mr. Guida's February 2015 email constitutes an "improper and coercive" communication meant to deter participation in the pending lawsuit. As a remedy, Plaintiffs ask the Court for an order (1) requiring Defendant to send a curative notice to all service technicians, and (2) prohibiting Defendant and its managers from sending similar mass communications concerning timekeeping to putative class members for the duration of the opt-in period. Defendant filed its opposition to Plaintiffs' request and the Court held oral argument on March 17, 2015.
Federal courts have generally held that defendants in § 216(b) actions are not barred from communicating with prospective opt-in plaintiffs. See Bobryk v. Durand Glass Mfg. Co., Inc., No. 12-CV-5360 (NLH/JS), 2013 WL 5574504, at *4 (Oct. 9, 2013) ("[T]here is no bright-line rule barring a defendant from speaking with putative class members."); Longcrier v. HL-A Co., Inc., 595 F.Supp.2d 1218, 1225 (S.D. Ala. 2008) ("As a general matter, employers are free to communicate with unrepresented prospective class members about the lawsuit and even to solicit affidavits from them concerning the subject matter of the suit"); Parks v. Eastwood Ins. Servs., Inc., 235 F.Supp.2d 1082, 1084 (C.D. Cal. 2002) ("The law is not settled on this issue, but the majority view seems to be against a ban on pre-certification communication between Defendant and potential class members.").
However, district courts have the authority to limit communications between parties and prospective class members. See Gulf Oil, Co. v. Bernard, 452 U.S. 89 (1981). In Gulf Oil, the Supreme Court held that "an order limiting communications between parties and potential class members should be based on a clear record and specific findings that reflect a weighing of the need for a limitation and the potential interference with the rights of the parties."
"Courts have ordered a variety of remedial measures for misleading and improper communications, including prohibiting further ex parte communications, issuing corrective notices, [and] extending the opt-in period." Stransky v. HealthONE of Denver, Inc., 929 F.Supp.2d 1100, 1109 (D. Colo. 2013).
The Court will grant Plaintiffs' request for an order requiring curative notice, limited to Southern California service technicians, because the February 23, 2015, email (1) takes a legal position on the definition of compensable "work," and (2) threatens discipline, up to and including termination, for the activity to which GE's service technicians would necessarily admit by joining the collective action. However, the Court will not prohibit Defendant from communicating with putative class members for the duration of the opt-in period.
Defendant emphasizes that Mr. Guida's email does not mention the instant litigation and that there is no evidence that Mr. Guida sent the email with the purpose of deterring his technicians from opting into the lawsuit. Pointing to Mr. Guida's May 2014 and August/September 2013 emails to service technicians concerning timekeeping policies and procedures, Defendant portrays the February 2015 email as part of the regular course of business.
Plaintiffs concede that the email does not reference the litigation specifically, but argue that the email's timing demonstrates an aim to scare putative class members and reduce participation in the suit. During oral argument, Plaintiffs stated that they would not have taken issue with the email had Defendant sent it in May, just like Mr. Guida's virtually identical 2014 "reminder email." However, the fact that Mr. Guida sent the email between the initial notice and the reminder notice, scheduled for March 13, 2015, suggests that this litigation acted as the catalyst for that communication.
The opt-in period is a sensitive time in a FLSA litigation. Although the coercive nature of the employment relationship is insufficient on its own to warrant a limitation on an employer's ability to communicate directly with putative class members, courts should intervene when those communications address the particular employment issues implicated in the pending lawsuit in a misleading manner that would discourage a reasonable employee from opting into the litigation. Here, Mr. Guida's email categorically defines the kind of activity for which Plaintiffs seek compensation in this litigation as noncompensable. A lay reader would interpret the email's language regarding discipline for "off the clock" work, though framed in the future tense ("failure to abide by these instructions will be considered insubordination"), as applying to past "off the clock" work as well. For these reasons, service technicians who received this email would reasonably believe that opting into the litigation was pointless based on the definition of "work," or, worse, that they would risk their jobs by admitting to that kind of activity, a necessary consequence of opting-in.
Mr. Guida's email may mirror earlier messages to service technicians about timekeeping and address some topics not at issue in this case, but these facts do not necessarily foreclose a finding that the email, when Mr. Guida sent it, threatened the proper functioning of the litigation. Further, Defendant does not explain why Mr. Guida sent the similar 2014 email in May, but the 2015 email three months earlier.
In order to correct any potential confusion as to the viability of the claims in this litigation and the consequences of opting-in, the Court will grant Plaintiffs' request for an order requiring Defendant to send a curative notice, but limits the notice to the Southern California Region service technicians who received Mr. Guida's February 23, 2015 email. The notice shall state, in part, that no service technicians will be subject to discipline if they opt into the lawsuit for working "off the clock" during this case's class period.
Importantly, the Court does not hold that Defendant cannot communicate with its employees about timekeeping. The Court recognizes the First Amendment concerns raised in limiting an employer's ability to communicate with its employees and has tailored the above-described remedy so as to avoid placing a prior restraint on Defendant's speech. This decision merely requires Defendant to account for a particularly problematic email and creates a monitoring system for the remainder of the opt-in period.
For the reasons set forth above and in the manner described herein, the Court will