California Courts Address Employment Arbitration Agreements

Recent opinions by the California Courts of Appeal should encourage employers to review and assess the enforceability of their arbitration and related employment agreements.

Court Refuses to Enforce Agreement to Shorten Limitations Period on Wage and Hour Claims

In Pellegrino v. Robert Half International, the Court of Appeal found that an agreement to shorten or waive the applicable statute of limitations on wage and hour claims was unenforceable. Plaintiffs, all of whom were classified as exempt administrative employees, worked as account executives for temporary staffing firm Robert Half International (“RHI”). Each employee signed an agreement barring claims made more than six months after termination of employment, and waiving any statute of limitations to the contrary.[1]

More than six months after leaving RHI, the plaintiffs filed suit, alleging that RHI had improperly classified them as exempt employees and seeking damages for California Labor Code violations related to overtime, meal and rest breaks, untimely payment of wages, and itemized wage statements. RHI argued that the plaintiffs’ wage claims were barred by the six-month limitations period in the agreements they had signed. It also asserted that the employees were covered by the administrative exemption.

The court found RHI’s arguments unpersuasive. It held that the agreement shortening the applicable wage and hour statute of limitations unlawfully restricted the plaintiffs’ ability to vindicate their claims. It noted the state’s strong public policy in ensuring that non-exempt employees receive overtime compensation and commissions, meal and rest breaks, itemized wage statements, and timely payment of wages. On public policy grounds, plaintiffs’ statutory rights could not be waived through private agreements. The court also relied on Labor Code section 219, which provides that the type of wage claims at issue in Pellegrino could not “in any way be contravened or set aside by a private agreement, whether written, oral, or implied.” The court thus concluded that enforcing the shorter limitations period found in RHI’s agreements would “result in barring legitimate, unwaivable statutory wage and hour claims asserted by misclassified employees who were unable to discover their employer’s classification error and assert appropriate claims.”

The court also rejected RHI’s position that it had properly classified the plaintiffs as exempt administrative employees. The court focused on evidence that the plaintiffs had presented a showing that their duties as account executives did not directly relate to RHI’s management policies or general business operations. Rather, the plaintiffs placed candidates with clients, pitched RHI’s services, and engaged in other sales activities, and did not supervise other employees. Based on these facts, the court found that RHI had misclassified plaintiffs as exempt from overtime.

Arbitration Agreements Providing for Minimally Sufficient Discovery Are Enforceable

In Dotson v. Amgen, Inc., the Court of Appeal upheld the enforceability of an arbitration agreement that limited each party to one non-expert deposition, unless the party could demonstrate a need for additional depositions. 

After Amgen terminated Dotson, an in-house attorney, after four years of employment, he filed suit in the Superior Court for the County of Ventura, alleging wrongful termination. Amgen moved to compel arbitration, but Dotson opposed the motion on the grounds that the arbitration agreement was unconscionable because, among other things, it allowed him to take only one non-expert deposition. 

The court rejected Dotson’s position, finding that the limit on depositions was not substantively unconscionable. The court reasoned that arbitration is principally designed to streamline litigation, and that discovery limitations, such as restricting the number of depositions, represent one way to further that goal. Although Amgen’s agreement purported to restrict discovery, it did so in a way that ensured each party could conduct adequate discovery to prove its claims or defenses. The arbitrator, after all, retained “broad discretion … to order the discovery needed to sufficiently litigate the parties’ claims.” Because Amgen’s agreement differed from agreements to arbitrate that granted additional discovery only on a demonstration of a “substantial” or “compelling” need, it was not unconscionable.



[1] Similar provisions to RHI’s “Limitation on Claims” have also been found in some arbitration agreements.

President Obama Signs Ledbetter Fair Pay Act, Placing New Burdens on Employers

Acting swiftly on one of his campaign promises, President Obama today signed the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act (S. 181). The new law will increase the number of pay discrimination claims, make them much more difficult to defend, and force employers to retain records relating to compensation decisions far longer than they have in the past. In addition, the Act creates a strong incentive for management to review any current disparities in pay or benefits between two employees who hold similar jobs, to be confident that such differences were and are based on legitimate factors rather than a discriminatory decision that may have occurred years ago.

Federal discrimination laws generally require employees to file charges of discrimination with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (“EEOC”) within 180 or 300 days after the alleged discrimination occurs. That deadline allows such claims to be resolved relatively quickly, while the evidence is fresh and witnesses are available. In Ledbetter v. Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. (2007), the U.S. Supreme Court, emphasizing the importance of the deadline, held that the period for challenging pay discrimination starts to run when an employer first makes the allegedly discriminatory decision, not each and every time that the employee later feels the effect of such a decision by receiving a paycheck.

The Ledbetter Act overturns that approach. The period for filing a charge now starts to run not only when an allegedly discriminatory compensation decision or practice is first adopted, but also each time that an individual becomes subject to or affected by application of such a decision or practice, “including each time wages, benefits, or other compensation is paid, resulting in whole or in part from such a decision or practice.” The new law, which takes effect today and retroactively applies to any claim filed since the Ledbetter case was decided, amends Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, the Age Discrimination in Employment Act, the Americans with Disabilities Act, and the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, and thus applies to compensation discrimination based on sex, race, national origin, color, religion, age, and disability.

The new law creates substantial challenges for employers, in that they will now be forced to reconstruct and defend compensation decisions made years ago by persons likely to have forgotten what happened – even assuming that such witnesses are still alive and can be found. For that reason, employers now have a strong incentive to document any and all decisions that may affect compensation – such as why they paid a new employee more than an existing one, or why a supervisor gave one employee a better review than another – and to retain all such records much longer than is legally required. Finally, employers may want to evaluate any current disparities in pay and compensation between employees who hold the same job in order to be able to defend such differences as legitimate.

Congress is soon expected to place even greater emphasis on pay discrimination by passing the Paycheck Fairness Act, which was approved by the House of Representatives earlier this month but has not yet been voted on in the Senate. That law would allow plaintiffs bringing Equal Pay Act claims to recover unlimited compensatory and punitive damages, make it far easier for them to bring class actions, and prohibit employers from taking action against most employees because they have asked about, discussed, or disclosed any employee’s wages.

U.S. House Passes Pay Discrimination Legislation Supported by Obama; Senate Poised to Act

Just a few days after starting its new session, Congress has moved to substantially expand employees’ rights and remedies in pay discrimination cases. On Jan. 9, 2009, the U.S. House of Representatives passed the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act (H.R. 11) and the Paycheck Fairness Act (H.R. 12), largely along party lines, and then combined them into a single piece of legislation (H.R. 11). Identical bills have been introduced in the Senate, and a vote there is expected later this month. Taken together, the bills would make it easier for plaintiffs to establish pay discrimination, significantly expand the number and size of class actions in such cases, and expose employers to unlimited compensatory and punitive damages even if they never intended to discriminate. President-elect Obama supports the legislation.

Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act

Federal discrimination laws generally require employees to file charges of discrimination with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (“EEOC”) within 180 or 300 days after the alleged discrimination occurs. That deadline allows such claims to be resolved relatively quickly, while the evidence is fresh and witnesses are available.

In Ledbetter v. Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. (2007), the U.S. Supreme Court held that the period for challenging pay discrimination starts to run when an employer first makes the allegedly discriminatory pay decision, not each and every time an employee later receives a paycheck reflecting that decision. The Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act (H.R. 11; S. 181) would overturn that holding. The proposed law says that the period for filing an EEOC charge would begin each time an employer adopts a discriminatory compensation decision or practice, each time an individual becomes subject to such a decision or practice, or each time an individual is affected by its application. The law would apply to claims of compensation discrimination based on sex, race, national origin, color, religion, age, and disability, and would retroactively apply to any claim filed since the Ledbetter case was decided.

An identical bill passed in the House in 2007, but was blocked by Senate Republicans and faced a threatened veto by President Bush. This year, however, the bill has 53 co-sponsors, there are only 41 Republicans in the Senate (at least one of whom supports the bill), and President-elect Obama ran a commercial starring Lilly Ledbetter herself. Employers, therefore, may soon find themselves trying to reconstruct and defend compensation decisions made long ago by persons who may well have forgotten the relevant facts – even assuming they are still alive and can be found.

Paycheck Fairness Act

On Jan. 9, the House of Representatives also passed the Paycheck Fairness Act (H.R. 12) by a wide margin. The Act would amend key parts of the Equal Pay Act of 1963 (“EPA”), which forms part of the Fair Labor Standards Act (“FLSA”). The EPA prohibits employers from paying women less than men for performing the same or “substantially equal” work in the same workplace, regardless of whether the employer intended to discriminate.

Among other things, the Act would:

  • Allow EPA plaintiffs to compare themselves not just to persons in the same workplace, but also to those who work for their employer anywhere in the same county or similar political subdivision.
  • Narrow one of employers’ key defenses to equal pay claims. Employers can now defeat such a claim by showing that a pay difference between a man and a woman in substantially equal jobs was based on “any factor other than sex.” Under the new law, employers would instead be required to prove that such a difference was based on “a bona fide factor other than sex, such as education, training or experience,” and that the factor is job-related, “consistent with business necessity,” and not based on or derived from any sex-based pay disparity. Even then, the plaintiff could prevail by showing that the employer refused to adopt an alternative employment practice that would serve its business purpose without producing such a pay difference.
  • Prohibit taking action against an employee because he or she has asked about, discussed, or disclosed his or her own wages or the wages of any other employee. The only exception would be for employees whose essential job functions give them access to such information and share it with someone who lacks such access.
  • Broaden the EPA’s protection against retaliation by protecting anyone who: (1) has filed a charge or complaint, or instituted an investigation, proceeding, hearing or action under or related to the EPA or FLSA; or (2) has testified or is planning to testify in any such investigation, proceeding, hearing or action.
  • Make it easier for employees to become parties to class actions by treating EPA cases as subject to the “opt-out” procedures under Rule 23 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, rather than the “opt-in” procedures that apply to federal overtime claims. Plaintiffs’ attorneys will thus be able to bring such suits on behalf of large numbers of current or former employees who allegedly received unequal pay, all of whom will be eligible to recover damages unless they affirmatively choose not to participate in the case.
  • Allow EPA plaintiffs to recover compensatory and punitive damages and expert witness fees, on top of the double damages and attorney’s fees already allowed under the law.
  • Require the EEOC to collect information from employers showing what their employees are paid, categorized by sex, race, and national origin, in order to enhance the enforcement of pay discrimination laws.

Sen. Clinton (D–N.Y.) has introduced the Paycheck Fairness Act with 25 co-sponsors, and there is some indication that the Senate will likewise combine this bill and the Ledbetter Act into a single piece of legislation, forcing an up-or-down vote on the entire package later this month. If these laws pass, American employers should prepare to face many more pay discrimination claims, each much tougher to defend and exposing an employer to a significantly greater financial risk.

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If you have any questions about this pending legislation or how it will affect your business, please contact the author or the Reed Smith attorney with whom you regularly work.