Archive for July, 2010

U.S. Judge Allows Restaurant Workers to Pursue Class Action for Unpaid Overtime

Thursday, July 29th, 2010

On July 26, 2010, the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois granted restaurant workers’ motion that allows them to pursue a class action lawsuit against their employer, The Smith & Wollensky Restaurant Group Inc.  The restaurant workers allege that Smith & Wollensky, which owns the steakhouse chain with the same name, violated the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) and Illinois wage law by illegally requiring workers to pool tips with nontipped employees and by failing to pay them required overtime and minimum wages.  Click here for the court’s full opinion.

The employment attorneys at The Employment Law Group® law firm have extensive experience recouping unpaid wages and fighting for employees who are misclassified as exempt from overtime.  To learn more about the firm’s Unpaid Wages and Overtime Practice, click here.

9th Circuit Rules that California Law Determines Workers’ Classification Instead of Choice-of-Law

Wednesday, July 21st, 2010

In a unanimous decision, the 9th circuit ruled in the case of Narayan v. EGL, Inc. that California law determines the classification of a worker employed in California even when the worker’s contract contains a choice-of-law provision.  Workers’ rights and benefits often vary depending on the worker’s classification as either an employee or an independent contractor.  The plaintiffs were truck drivers in California who signed an agreement with EGL, Inc. containing a choice-of-law provision.  The provision states that the truck drivers would be subject to the labor laws of Texas.  However, the 9th Circuit held that a choice-of-law provision does not determine which state’s law is used to classify a worker when that worker’s claim arises outside the contract.  In this case, the claim arises not from the contract itself, but from the California Labor Code which guarantees the following benefits for employees: overtime compensation, reimbursement for business expenses, and off-duty meal periods.  The court’s full opinion is here.

The employment attorneys at The Employment Law Group® law firm have extensive experience recouping unpaid wages and fighting for employees who are misclassified as exempt from overtime.  To learn more about the firm’s Unpaid Wages and Overtime Practice, click here.

Second Circuit Overturns Summary Judgment in Novartis Overtime Suit

Thursday, July 8th, 2010

On July 6, 2010, a three judge panel of the Second Circuit overturned a district court’s finding that pharmaceutical sales representatives fall into the outside sales and administrative employee exemptions to the overtime provisions of the Fair Labor Standards Act.  The opinion narrows the definition of a “sale” and refines what it means to exercise discretion and independent judgment.

According to the Second Circuit, “where the employee promotes a pharmaceutical product to a physician but can transfer to the physician nothing more than free samples and cannot lawfully transfer ownership of any quantity of the drug in exchange for anything of value, cannot lawfully take an order for its purchase, and cannot lawfully even obtain from the physician a binding commitment to prescribe it, we conclude that it is not plainly erroneous to conclude that the employee has not in any sense, within the meaning of the statute or regulations, made a sale.”  In comparison, the district court opined that while the plaintiffs may not “sell” in a technical sense, holding them exempt is within “the Act’s spirit, purpose, and goals.” 

Regarding the administrative exemption, the court noted the absence of any “evidence . . . that the Reps have any authority to formulate, affect, interpret, or implement Novartis’s management policies or its operating practices, or that they are involved in planning Novartis’s long-term or short-term business objectives, or that they carry out major assignments in conducting the operations of Novartis’s business, or that they have any authority to commit Novartis in matters that have significant financial impact.”  The court also discounted the importance of contracts made between the plaintiffs and hotels and convention centers, observing that all contracts are subject to predetermined budgets. 

The court relied heavily upon an amicus curiae brief filed by the Department of Labor in support of the approximately 2,500 plaintiffs in the case.  We blogged about the DOL’s brief here.  The case is In re Novartis Wage and Hour Litigation, and a copy of the court’s opinion is available here.

The employment attorneys at The Employment Law Group® law group have extensive experience recouping unpaid wages and fighting for employees who are misclassified as exempt from overtime.  To learn more about the firm’s Unpaid Wages and Overtime Practice, click here.

Class Action Status Granted in Donning and Doffing Suit Against Cargill Meats

Friday, July 2nd, 2010

Judge Lynn Adelman of the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Wisconsin has granted conditional class certification in a suit against Cargill Meats alleging that the company violated the Fair Labor Standards Act.  The suit seeks payment for time spent donning and doffing protective gear by production line employees paid using modified “gang time.”

Last month, Tyson Foods settled a donning and doffing suit for $500,000.  Information on the Tyson Foods settlement is available here.

The employment attorneys at The Employment Law Group® law firm have extensive experience recouping unpaid wages and fighting for employees who are misclassified as exempt from overtime.  To learn more about the firm’s Unpaid Wages and Overtime Practice, click here.