Wesson v. Staples the Office Superstore, LLC ( 2021 )


Menu:
  • Filed 9/9/21
    CERTIFIED FOR PARTIAL PUBLICATION*
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF
    CALIFORNIA
    SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION FOUR
    FRED WESSON,                             B302988
    Plaintiff and Appellant,           (Los Angeles County
    Super. Ct. No. BC593889)
    v.
    STAPLES THE OFFICE
    SUPERSTORE, LLC,
    Defendant and Respondent.
    APPEAL from orders of the Superior Court of Los
    Angeles County, Carolyn B. Kuhl, Judge. Affirmed.
    *     Pursuant to California Rules of Court, rules 8.1100 and
    8.1110, this opinion is certified for publication with the exception
    of part B of the Discussion.
    Schneider Wallace Cottrell Konecky, Todd M.
    Schneider, Carolyn H. Cottrell and David C. Leimbach;
    Boucher, Raymond P. Boucher and Maria L. Weitz, for
    Plaintiff and Appellant.
    Morrison & Foerster, Tritia M. Murata, David P. Zins
    and Maya Harel, Karen J. Kubin and James R. Sigel, for
    Defendant and Respondent.
    _________________________________________
    INTRODUCTION
    This appeal raises a question of first impression:
    whether trial courts have inherent authority to ensure that
    PAGA claims will be manageable at trial, and to strike such
    claims if they cannot be managed. We hold that courts
    possess this authority.
    Appellant Fred Wesson worked for respondent Staples
    the Office Superstore, LLC (Staples) as a store general
    manager (GM). He brought this action against Staples,
    asserting, among other things, a representative claim under
    the Private Attorneys General Act of 2004 (PAGA) (Lab.
    Code, § 2698 et seq.) on behalf of himself and 345 other
    current and former Staples GMs in California. In his PAGA
    claim, Wesson sought almost $36 million in civil penalties
    for alleged Labor Code violations, all premised on the theory
    that Staples had misclassified its GMs as exempt executives.
    Staples moved to strike Wesson’s PAGA claim, arguing
    that given the number of employees it covered and the
    2
    nature of his allegations, the action would be
    “unmanageable” and would violate Staples’s due process
    rights. It contended that its intended affirmative defense --
    that it properly classified its GMs as exempt and thus
    committed no Labor Code violations -- would require
    individualized proof as to each GM, and thus that the claim
    could not be fairly and efficiently litigated. In his opposition,
    Wesson contended that the trial court lacked authority to
    ensure that PAGA actions are manageable, and argued that
    even if the court had such authority, it was sufficient that
    his prima facie case was manageable; whether Staples’s
    affirmative defense could be managed at trial, Wesson
    contended, was irrelevant. While Staples’s motion was
    pending, Wesson moved for summary adjudication of his
    PAGA claim.
    The trial court invited Wesson to submit a trial plan
    showing that his PAGA action would be manageable at trial.
    In response, Wesson continued to insist that the court lacked
    authority to require that his claim be manageable, and laid
    out his plan to prove his prima facie case using common
    proof, but declined to address how the parties could litigate
    Staples’s affirmative defense. Following this response, the
    court concluded that the PAGA claim could not be managed
    at trial and granted Staples’s motion to strike it. Given this
    ruling, the court found no need to consider Wesson’s motion
    for summary adjudication as to his PAGA claim and denied
    the motion.
    3
    Wesson challenges both rulings on appeal. He claims
    the court erred in failing to consider his motion for summary
    adjudication, as it had the potential to narrow the issues and
    make the action more manageable. He contends the court
    should have granted his motion because Staples had failed to
    provide individualized evidence in support of its exemption
    defense, at least as to some GMs. As to Staples’s motion to
    strike, Wesson repeats his arguments that the court had no
    authority to strike his PAGA claim as unmanageable, and
    that any manageability assessment need not have
    considered Staples’s affirmative defense. He adds that
    Staples had no due process right to present individualized
    evidence in support of its defense.
    In the unpublished portion of this opinion, we conclude
    that Wesson was not entitled to summary adjudication, as
    Staples presented sufficient evidence to support its
    exemption defense as to all GMs. In the published portion,
    we draw on established principles of the courts’ inherent
    authority to manage litigation, including ensuring the
    manageability of representative claims, and conclude that:
    (1) courts have inherent authority to ensure that PAGA
    claims can be fairly and efficiently tried and, if necessary,
    may strike claims that cannot be rendered manageable; (2)
    as a matter of due process, defendants are entitled to a fair
    opportunity to litigate available affirmative defenses, and a
    court’s manageability assessment should account for them;
    and (3) given the state of the record and Wesson’s lack of
    cooperation with the trial court’s manageability inquiry, the
    4
    court did not abuse its discretion in striking his PAGA claim
    as unmanageable. We therefore affirm.
    BACKGROUND
    A. Wesson’s Action and the Denial of Class Certification
    Staples is a global provider of office products and
    services to individuals and businesses. As of 2019, it
    operated about 150 big-box stores in California. Each
    Staples store is managed by a GM. Wesson was the GM of
    various Staples stores in Los Angeles County between 2006
    and 2016.
    In 2015, Wesson brought this action against Staples,
    alleging causes of action for, inter alia, unpaid overtime and
    failure to provide rest and meal periods. He later amended
    his complaint to add a cause of action seeking civil penalties
    under PAGA. Wesson’s PAGA claim covered 346 Staples
    GMs, including Wesson, and sought almost $36 million in
    civil penalties under the Labor Code. Each of Wesson’s
    claims was premised on the theory that Staples had
    misclassified its California GMs as exempt executives (who
    are not entitled to overtime pay and off-duty meal and rest
    periods), when in fact they should have been classified as
    non-exempt, hourly employees.
    Wesson moved to certify a class of Staples California
    GMs, but the trial court denied the motion, concluding he
    had not demonstrated that his claims were susceptible to
    common proof. The court found that important factual
    questions relating to whether GMs spent most of their
    5
    worktime doing exempt, managerial tasks could not be
    resolved on a classwide basis.1 It reasoned that there was
    too much variation in how Staples GMs performed their jobs
    and the extent to which they performed non-managerial
    tasks. Wesson does not challenge this ruling on appeal.
    B. Staples’s Motion to Strike the PAGA Claim as
    Unmanageable
    Following the court’s denial of class certification,
    Staples moved to strike Wesson’s PAGA claim, invoking the
    court’s inherent authority to manage complex litigation. It
    argued the claim would be unmanageable at trial and would
    violate Staples’s due process rights. In support, Staples
    pointed to evidence that the GM position was not
    standardized, and that there was great variation in how
    Staples GMs performed their jobs and the extent to which
    they performed non-exempt tasks. According to Staples’s
    evidence, Staples stores varied widely in size, sales volume,
    staffing levels, labor budgets, store hours, customer-traffic
    levels, products and services offered for sale, and many other
    variables, all of which affected GMs’ work experience.
    Staples’s evidence also tended to show that how GMs spent
    their time depended on their experience, aptitude, and
    1     As explained below, the executive exemption generally
    requires that the employee spend the majority of his or her time
    doing exempt work, meaning managerial tasks and other closely
    related functions. (See Safeway Wage & Hour Cases (2019) 
    43 Cal.App.5th 665
    , 676-678 (Safeway).)
    6
    managerial approaches, as well as the size and composition
    of their management teams. Relying on this evidence and on
    the trial court’s findings in denying class certification,
    Staples argued that Wesson’s claims would require
    individualized assessments of each GM’s classification, and
    would lead to “an unmanageable mess” that “would waste
    the time and resources of the Court and the parties.”
    In his opposition, Wesson contended that the trial
    court lacked authority to ensure that PAGA actions are
    manageable. He argued that imposing a manageability
    requirement would immunize employers from liability and
    defeat PAGA’s purpose. Alternatively, Wesson claimed that
    even if the court could require that a PAGA claim be
    manageable, it should consider only the ability to try
    plaintiff’s prima facie case, not the manageability of any
    affirmative defense.
    Before ruling on the merits of Staples’s motion, the
    trial court concluded it had inherent power to strike an
    unmanageable PAGA claim. It then invited Wesson to
    submit a trial plan showing that his claim would be
    manageable, and permitted him to file a supplemental brief
    in opposition to Staples’s motion.
    C. Wesson’s Motion for Summary Adjudication
    Shortly before Wesson was to submit his trial plan, he
    moved for summary judgment or, in the alternative,
    summary adjudication on his PAGA claim. We discuss the
    parties’ respective evidence relating to Wesson’s motion in
    7
    the unpublished portion of this opinion addressing his
    challenge to the court’s ruling on his motion.
    D. Wesson’s Trial Plan and Supplemental Opposition to
    Staples’s Motion to Strike
    In his supplemental opposition to Staples’s motion to
    strike his PAGA claim, Wesson reiterated his position that
    the court lacked authority to ensure the manageability of his
    claim. He also repeated his argument that any
    manageability assessment should not consider Staples’s
    affirmative defense. Wesson agreed that to litigate its
    exemption defense, “Staples [would] need to proffer ‘a GM-
    by-GM, week-by-week analysis’ throughout the entire
    relevant time period that all of the GMs were properly
    classified as exempt executives.” But he asserted that “a
    manager misclassification PAGA claim is ‘manageable’ so
    long as [the] plaintiff’s prima facie case, concerning each
    aggrieved employee at issue, is provable by resort to common
    evidence.”
    In his trial plan, Wesson explained he intended to
    prove up his prima facie case using common proof,
    establishing that GMs did not receive off-duty meal and rest
    breaks and worked overtime without receiving overtime pay.
    However, he did not attempt to address how the parties
    could litigate Staples’s exemption defense. He stated that it
    would be improper for him to “dictate how Staples should go
    about proving its exemption defense,” and that he would not
    attempt to prevent Staples from proving its affirmative
    8
    defense as it saw fit. According to Wesson’s trial plan,
    Staples would “be permitted to present whatever evidence it
    want[ed], be it testimony of GMs, supervisors, corporate
    representatives, documentary evidence of Staples’ policies,
    procedures, and expectations, or any other evidence Staples
    deem[ed] necessary.” At a subsequent hearing on Staples’s
    motion, the parties estimated they would need a total of six
    trial days per GM to litigate GMs’ classification as exempt
    executives on an individual basis. Based on that estimate,
    the trial would have lasted eight years.
    E. The Trial Court’s Rulings
    The trial court ultimately granted Staples’s motion to
    strike Wesson’s PAGA claim. The court reiterated its
    conclusion that it had authority to ensure the manageability
    of a PAGA claim, reasoning that courts have inherent
    powers to control litigation before them and that PAGA was
    a procedural vehicle, rather than a substantive claim. It
    found additional support for its conclusion in the courts’
    imposition of judicially created manageability requirements
    in the context of class actions and representative Unfair
    Competition Law (UCL) claims.
    The court then proceeded to find Wesson’s PAGA claim
    unmanageable. It emphasized that Wesson’s trial plan did
    not address how the parties might litigate Staples’s
    affirmative defense, and noted its prior findings, in denying
    class certification, regarding the great variation in how
    Staples GMs performed their jobs and the extent to which
    9
    they perform non-managerial tasks. The trial court found no
    evidence that Staples’s defense could be litigated through
    common proof. Noting the parties’ estimates of the time they
    would need to litigate the exemption defense, the court
    stated that even cutting those estimates in half would result
    in a trial lasting more than four years. The court thus
    concluded, “A four-year trial involving witnesses and
    documents individually pertaining to each of 346 General
    Managers does not meet any definition of manageability.”
    In a separate order, the trial court denied Wesson’s
    motion for summary judgment or summary adjudication. As
    to Wesson’s PAGA claim, the court concluded that because it
    decided to strike the claim, there was no need to address it.
    Wesson timely appealed, challenging the court’s striking of
    his PAGA claim and its denial of his motion for summary
    adjudication.
    DISCUSSION
    A. Legal Background
    1. PAGA
    “‘The State’s labor law enforcement agencies -- the
    Labor and Workforce Development Agency (LWDA) and its
    constituent departments and divisions -- are authorized to
    assess and collect civil penalties for specified violations of
    the Labor Code committed by an employer.’” (Raines v.
    Coastal Pacific Food Distributors, Inc. (2018) 
    23 Cal.App.5th 667
    , 673.) In 2003, citing inadequate funding for
    10
    enforcement of labor laws, the Legislature enacted PAGA to
    “authorize[] an employee to bring an action for civil penalties
    on behalf of the state against his or her employer for Labor
    Code violations committed against the employee and fellow
    employees, with most of the proceeds of that litigation going
    to the state.” (Iskanian v. CLS Transportation Los Angeles,
    LLC (2014) 
    59 Cal.4th 348
    , 360.) The statute was intended
    “‘to punish and deter employer practices that violate the
    rights of numerous employees under the Labor Code.’” (Id.
    at 384.) Thus, a PAGA action “‘“is fundamentally a law
    enforcement action”’ that ‘substitute[s] for an action brought
    by the government itself.’” (Iskanian v. CLS Transportation
    Los Angeles, LLC, supra, at 394, quoting Arias v. Superior
    Court (2009) 
    46 Cal.4th 969
    , 986 (Arias).) A PAGA plaintiff
    acts “as the proxy or agent of the state’s labor law
    enforcement agencies.” (Arias, 
    supra, at 986
    .) In other
    words, PAGA is “simply a procedural statute allowing an
    aggrieved employee to recover civil penalties . . . that
    otherwise would be sought by state labor law enforcement
    agencies.” (Amalgamated Transit Union, Local 1756,
    AFL-CIO v. Superior Court (2009) 
    46 Cal.4th 993
    , 1003
    (Amalgamated Transit Union).)
    2. The Executive Exemption
    Among the Labor Code provisions a PAGA plaintiff
    may seek to enforce are those imposing overtime and rest
    and meal period requirements. (See Lab. Code, §§ 226.7,
    510-512, 1194, 2699.) As relevant here, California Industrial
    11
    Welfare Commission (IWC) Wage Order No. 7-2001, which
    governs employees of the mercantile industry and is codified
    in the California Code of Regulations, largely exempts
    “executive” employees from these requirements.2 (IWC,
    Wage Order No. 7-2001 (Jan. 1, 2001), Cal. Code Regs., tit. 8,
    § 11070, subd. 1(A).) This exemption is an affirmative
    defense that the employer has the burden to prove.
    (Safeway, supra, 43 Cal.App.5th at 671.)
    To be an exempt executive, an employee must: (1) earn
    a salary of at least twice the minimum wage for full-time
    employment; (2) be involved in managing the enterprise or a
    relevant department; (3) customarily and regularly direct
    the work of two or more employees; (4) have the authority to
    hire or fire, or have recommendations regarding such
    matters receive particular weight; (5) customarily and
    regularly exercise discretion and independent judgment; and
    (6) be “primarily engaged in duties which meet the test of
    the exemption.”3 (Cal. Code Regs., tit. 8, § 11070, subd.
    2      It is undisputed that Staples is in the mercantile industry.
    The IWC was defunded in 2004, but its wage orders remain in
    effect. (Batze v. Safeway, Inc., (2017) 
    10 Cal.App.5th 440
    , 471, fn.
    34.) The California Supreme Court has instructed that “[t]he
    IWC’s wage orders are to be accorded the same dignity as
    statutes.” (Brinker Restaurant Corp. v. Superior Court (2012) 
    53 Cal.4th 1004
    , 1027.)
    3     For purposes of the wage order, “‘[p]rimarily’” means “more
    than one-half the employee’s work time.” (Cal. Code Regs., tit. 8,
    § 11070, subd. 2(K).) Other exemptions include a similar
    requirement that employees spend most of their time on
    (Fn. is continued on the next page.)
    12
    1(A)(1).) The wage order defines the “duties which meet the
    test of the exemption” by reference to corresponding federal
    regulations. (Id., § 11070, subd. (1)(A)(1)(e) [referring to 29
    C.F.R. §§ 541.102, 541.104-111 & 541.115-116 (2001)].)
    Under the relevant federal regulations, managerial
    and supervisory tasks within the scope of the exemption are
    generally “‘easily recognized’” and include such tasks as:
    “‘[i]nterviewing, selecting, and training of employees; setting
    and adjusting their rates of pay and hours of work; directing
    their work; maintaining their production or sales records for
    use in supervision or control; appraising their productivity
    and efficiency for the purpose of recommending promotions
    or other changes in their status; handling their complaints
    and grievances and disciplining them when necessary;
    planning the work; determining the techniques to be used;
    [and] apportioning the work among the workers . . . .’”
    (Safeway, supra, 43 Cal.App.5th at 676-677, quoting 29
    C.F.R. §§ 541.102(a) & (b) (2001).) The federal regulations
    also recognize a category of exempt tasks that may not be so
    easily identifiable as exempt: tasks that are not inherently
    managerial or supervisory but are “‘directly and closely
    appropriate duties under the relevant exemption. (See, e.g., id.,
    § 11070, subds. 1(A)(2)(f) [administrative exemption], 1(A)(3)(b)
    [professional exemption], (2)(J) [outside salesperson exemption].)
    13
    related’” to those functions.4 (Safeway at 677, quoting
    § 541.108 (2001).)
    By contrast, non-exempt work includes all work that is
    neither management or supervision nor directly and closely
    related to those functions. (Safeway, supra, 43 Cal.App.5th
    at 678.) “‘[I]n the usual case, it consists of work of the same
    nature as that performed by the nonexempt subordinates of
    the “executive.”’” (Ibid., quoting 29 C.F.R. § 541.111(b)
    (2001).)
    4     The regulations provide examples of tasks that may be
    “directly and closely related” to managerial or supervisory
    functions:
    “(b) Keeping basic records of working time . . . is frequently
    performed by a timekeeper employed for that purpose. In such
    cases the work is clearly not exempt in nature. In other
    establishments which are not large enough to employ a
    timekeeper, or in which the timekeeping function has been
    decentralized, the supervisor of each department keeps the basic
    time records of his own subordinates. In these instances, . . . the
    timekeeping is directly related to the function of managing the
    particular department and supervising its employees. . . .
    “(c) Another example of work which may be directly and closely
    related to the performance of management duties is the
    distribution of materials or merchandise and supplies. . . . In
    [some] establishments it is not uncommon to leave the actual
    distribution of materials and supplies in the hands of the
    supervisor. In such cases it is exempt work since it is directly
    and closely related to the managerial responsibility of
    maintaining the flow of materials. . . .” (29 C.F.R. § 541.108
    (2001).)
    14
    In determining whether an employee is “primarily
    engaged” in exempt duties under the IWC wage order, the
    “first and foremost” consideration is the “work actually
    performed by the employee during the course of the
    workweek . . . .” (Cal. Code Regs., tit. 8, § 11070, subd.
    1(A)(1)(e).) However, a factfinder must also consider “the
    employer’s realistic expectations and the realistic
    requirements of the job . . . .” (Ibid.) As our Supreme Court
    has explained in discussing the analogous “outside
    salesperson” exemption, “an employee who is supposed to be
    engaged in [exempt tasks] during most of his [or her]
    working hours and falls below the 50 percent mark due to
    his [or her] own substandard performance should not
    thereby be able to evade a valid exemption.” (Ramirez v.
    Yosemite Water Co. (1999) 
    20 Cal.4th 785
    , 802 (Ramirez).) A
    factfinder should therefore “consider whether the employee’s
    practice diverges from the employer’s realistic expectations,
    whether there was any concrete expression of employer
    displeasure over an employee’s substandard performance,
    and whether these expressions were themselves realistic
    given the actual overall requirements of the job.” (Ibid.)
    B. Wesson’s Motion for Summary Adjudication
    Wesson argues the trial court erred in denying his
    summary adjudication motion without considering it. He
    contends that because ruling on his motion could have
    obviated or altered the court’s manageability assessment,
    the court was required to consider it before reaching
    15
    Staples’s motion to strike his PAGA claim. Assuming
    arguendo that the trial court erred in failing to consider
    Wesson’s summary adjudication motion as to the PAGA
    claim, we conclude the motion failed on the merits.
    1. Factual Background
    In support of summary adjudication on his PAGA
    claim, Wesson provided GMs’ work schedules, Staples policy
    documents, and deposition testimony by Staples’s corporate
    designee to prove that all 346 GMs worked overtime but
    received no overtime pay and no off-duty meal and rest
    periods. He also offered the declarations of 31 current and
    former Staples GMs, in addition to his own declaration.5
    Wesson and the other declarants all stated, inter alia, that
    they spent most of their worktime as GMs doing the same
    non-managerial work their non-exempt subordinates did and
    could not realistically do their job any other way due to
    Staples’s rigid limitations on hiring hourly employees and
    tight labor budgets.
    In opposition, Staples submitted declarations from two
    of its regional vice presidents, Laurence Newell, Jr. and
    Timothy Bernicke, whose combined regions included almost
    250 Staples stores. The two regional vice presidents
    described Staples stores as large-scale and complex
    5     It is undisputed that of the 31 GMs who provided
    declarations in support of Wesson’s action, 19 had left Staples
    before the period relevant to his PAGA claim.
    16
    operations with multiple departments who all reported to
    the GM. Newell noted that stores had anywhere between
    “around 10 to 12 Associates on the low end” and “around 40
    Associates on the high end . . . .” According to both
    declarants, the GM was the only exempt employee in any
    given store. As to GMs’ salaries, Newell testified they were
    paid $50,000-$100,000, plus bonuses.
    Newell and Bernicke provided extensive descriptions of
    GMs’ job responsibilities, which included numerous
    inherently managerial functions. Both testified that GMs
    were ultimately responsible for all aspects of their stores’
    operations: they were required to assess the stores’ financial
    performance and develop strategies to maximize
    profitability. GMs developed their own strategies regarding
    such issues as product placement, marketing and
    networking, and response to competition. GMs were also
    responsible for hiring, training, and coaching staff,
    scheduling and assigning work, promoting employees, and
    disciplining (including recommending termination), as
    necessary.
    According to Newell and Bernicke, there was great
    variation in the way GMs performed their jobs and managed
    their stores, as every store was different, every GM had his
    or her own management style and strategic vision, and GMs
    had complete discretion in deciding how to spend their time.
    However, both asserted that Staples expected GMs to spend
    most of their time managing their stores, and that those who
    spent too much of their time doing non-managerial work
    17
    were counseled accordingly. They explained that each
    Staples store had a customized labor budget, which GMs’
    managerial decisions could impact. The labor budget was
    designed to provide sufficient labor, so that hourly
    employees would perform hourly work and GMs would
    remain free to manage the stores.
    Staples also provided declarations from 31 GMs,
    including the GM who took over Wesson’s former store.
    Consistent with the declarations of Newell and Bernicke,
    these GMs testified that they spent the vast majority of their
    time doing managerial work, that their labor budgets were
    sufficient and did not require them to do a significant
    amount of hourly work, and that Staples did not expect them
    to do hourly work. Some of these declarants opined that if a
    GM did too much hourly work, it was because he or she was
    mismanaging the store and accepting low-quality work from
    subordinates. As noted, after deciding to strike his PAGA
    claim, the trial court denied Wesson’s motion as it pertained
    to that claim without considering it.
    2. Governing Principles
    “‘A summary adjudication motion is subject to the same
    rules and procedures as a summary judgment motion.’”
    (Case v. State Farm Mutual Automobile Ins. Co., Inc. (2018)
    
    30 Cal.App.5th 397
    , 401.) “Summary judgment is
    appropriate only ‘where no triable issue of material fact
    exists and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a
    matter of law.’” (Regents of University of California v.
    18
    Superior Court (2018) 
    4 Cal.5th 607
    , 618.) The moving party
    bears the burden of persuasion that there is no triable issue
    of material fact. (Aguilar v. Atlantic Richfield Co. (2001) 
    25 Cal.4th 826
    , 850.) We liberally construe the evidence in
    support of the non-moving party and resolve evidentiary
    doubts in its favor. (Hampton v. County of San Diego (2015)
    
    62 Cal.4th 340
    , 347.)
    We review the denial of summary adjudication de novo.
    (Advanced-Tech Security Services, Inc. v. Superior Court
    (2008) 
    163 Cal.App.4th 700
    , 705.) We will affirm the ruling
    if it is correct based on any applicable theory. (See Capra v.
    Capra (2020) 
    58 Cal.App.5th 1072
    , 1094 [“‘[A] ruling or
    decision, itself correct in law, will not be disturbed on appeal
    merely because given for a wrong reason’”].)
    3. Analysis
    Wesson was not entitled to summary adjudication
    because Staples’s evidence created a triable issue as to each
    GM’s proper classification as an exempt executive.6 The
    declarations of Staples’s regional vice presidents, Newell and
    Bernicke, evidenced that GMs (1) earned more than the
    6     Given our conclusion, we need not address Staples’s
    additional arguments that Wesson failed to establish his
    standing to bring his PAGA claim as matter of law and that he
    could not obtain summary adjudication as to only some GMs.
    19
    required salary ($50,000-$100,000, by Newell’s account),7
    (2) managed their respective stores, (3) regularly directed
    the work of two or more employees (between 10 and 40,
    according to Newell), (4) had the authority to hire and
    recommend termination,8 and (5) regularly exercised
    discretion and independent judgment in managing their
    stores (e.g., when hiring, training, and coaching staff,
    scheduling and assigning work, and developing strategies
    regarding product placement and marketing). (See Cal.
    Code Regs., tit. 8, § 11070, subd. 1(A)(1).) This evidence
    created triable issues on five of the exemption’s six elements.
    Wesson’s sole contention to the contrary is that to
    defeat summary adjudication, Staples was required to
    provide evidence specific to each of the 346 relevant GMs.
    However, he offers neither argument nor authority in
    support of this proposition, and has therefore forfeited the
    contention. (See Mansell v. Board of Administration (1994)
    
    30 Cal.App.4th 539
    , 545 [“‘an appellate brief “should contain
    a legal argument with citation of authorities on the points
    made. If none is furnished on a particular point, the court
    may treat it as waived, and pass it without consideration”’”].)
    In any case, we see no reason why knowledgeable members
    of a company’s senior management cannot testify about the
    7     Wesson does not dispute that these amounts were more
    than twice the minimum wage for full-time employment during
    the relevant period.
    8     Wesson also does not dispute that GMs’ recommendations
    on termination decisions were entitled to particular weight.
    20
    characteristics of a certain class of employees, including
    their salary, authority, responsibilities, and typical duties.
    As to the remaining element of the exemption, Staples
    provided sufficient evidence to show that under its realistic
    expectations and the realistic requirements of the job, GMs
    were to spend most their time on managerial tasks. In their
    declarations, Newell and Bernicke extensively discussed
    GMs’ managerial job duties and explained that GMs were
    responsible for all aspects of their stores’ operations. They
    testified that Staples expected GMs to spend most of their
    time managing their stores, that the stores’ labor budgets
    were designed to provide sufficient labor and allow GMs to
    spend their time doing managerial work, and that those who
    spent too much of their time doing non-managerial work
    were counseled accordingly.
    The declarations Staples provided from 31 GMs further
    evidenced that Staples expected GMs to spend their time on
    managerial tasks and that its expectation was realistic.
    These GMs all testified that they spent the vast majority of
    their time on managerial work, that this was consistent with
    Staples’s expectations, and that their labor budgets were
    sufficient and did not require them to spend much time on
    hourly work. Some of these Staples GMs opined that
    excessive hourly work by a GM signified that the GM was
    mismanaging the store and its employees.
    The evidence therefore tended to show that Staples
    expected its GMs to spend most of their time managing their
    stores, that this expectation was realistic, that any GM who
    21
    failed to meet this expectation did so due to his or her own
    substandard performance, and that Staples would express
    its displeasure over such performance. On this showing, a
    reasonable factfinder could conclude that Staples properly
    treated all its GMs as exempt executives based on its
    “realistic expectations and the realistic requirements of the
    job . . . .” (Cal. Code Regs., tit. 8, § 11070, subd. 1(A)(1)(e);
    accord, Ramirez, 
    supra,
     
    20 Cal.4th at 802
    .)
    Wesson argues that Staples was required to provide
    individualized evidence as to how each of the 346 GMs
    actually spent their time, the “first and foremost”
    consideration under the IWC’s wage order. (Cal. Code Regs.,
    tit. 8, § 11070, subd. 1(A)(1)(e).) Yet our Supreme Court has
    made clear that this consideration is not dispositive,
    explaining that employees who are supposed to spend most
    of their time on exempt tasks, but do not do so due to their
    own “substandard performance,” should not be able to evade
    a valid exemption.9 (Ramirez, supra, 
    20 Cal.4th at 802
    .) As
    9      We reject Wesson’s suggestion that Duran v. U.S. Bank
    National Assn. (2014) 
    59 Cal.4th 1
    , 26 (Duran) supports his
    position, as that case did not address the parties’ respective
    burdens of production on summary adjudication, let alone hold
    that to avoid summary adjudication, an employer must provide
    proof of how each of hundreds of individual employees actually
    spent his or her time. As explained, Ramirez establishes that an
    employee’s work habits are not dispositive. Indeed, Justice Liu’s
    special concurrence in Duran, which joined the court’s opinion in
    full, stated that “‘the employer’s realistic expectations’ or ‘the
    (Fn. is continued on the next page.)
    22
    discussed, Staples provided evidence that it realistically
    expected all its GMs to spend most of their time on
    managerial tasks, and that to the extent any GMs failed to
    do so, it was due to their own substandard performance. In
    short, Wesson was not entitled to summary adjudication on
    his PAGA claim.
    C. Staples’s Motion to Strike Wesson’s PAGA Claim
    Wesson claims the trial court erred in striking his
    claim as unmanageable. He asserts that the court lacked
    authority to ensure the manageability of a PAGA action
    because, inter alia, a manageability assessment would
    violate PAGA’s procedures, conflict with California Supreme
    Court precedent, and undermine PAGA’s objectives.
    Alternatively, Wesson contends that the court erred in
    determining that his claim was unmanageable.
    No published California decision has considered trial
    courts’ power to ensure the manageability of PAGA claims.10
    realistic requirements of the job’” were “the ultimate issue” in
    assessing the exemption’s applicability. (Duran, supra, at 53.)
    10    Federal district courts applying California law have split on
    whether courts possess inherent authority to strike PAGA claims
    as unmanageable. (Compare, e.g., Salazar v. McDonald’s Corp.
    (N.D.Cal., Jan. 5, 2017, No. 14-cv-02096-RS) 2017
    U.S.Dist.LEXIS 9641, at *26 [relying on California cases
    involving representative UCL claims in concluding that
    California courts would exercise inherent power to strike
    unmanageable PAGA claims]; Ortiz v. CVS Caremark Corp.
    (Fn. is continued on the next page.)
    23
    We conclude that courts have inherent authority to ensure
    that a PAGA claim will be manageable at trial -- including
    the power to strike the claim, if necessary -- and that this
    authority is not inconsistent with PAGA’s procedures and
    objectives, or with applicable precedent. Moreover, on the
    record before us, we conclude the trial court did not abuse its
    discretion in striking Wesson’s claim as unmanageable.
    (N.D.Cal., May 30, 2014, No. C -12-05859 EDL) 2014
    U.S.Dist.LEXIS 198344, at *7 [striking PAGA claim based on
    court’s “inherent authority to control its cases”]; and Raphael v.
    Tesoro Refining & Marketing Co. LLC (C.D.Cal., Sept. 25, 2015,
    Case No. 2:15-cv-02862-ODW) 2015 U.S.Dist. Lexis 130532, at
    *6-*7 [striking PAGA claim as unmanageable where court “would
    have to engage in a multitude of individualized inquiries” to
    assess alleged violations as to thousands of employees]; with, e.g.,
    Plaisted v. Dress Barn, Inc. (C.D.Cal., Sep. 20, 2012, Case No.
    2:12-cv-01679-ODW (SHx)) 2012 U.S.Dist. LEXIS 135599, at
    *9-*10 [manageability requirement would obliterate PAGA’s
    purpose]; Zackaria v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. (C.D.Cal. 2015) 
    142 F. Supp. 3d 949
    , 959 manageability requirement is “inconsistent
    with PAGA’s purpose and statutory scheme”]; and Zayers v.
    Kiewit Infrastructure W. Co. (C.D.Cal., Nov. 9, 2017, No.
    16-CV-06405 PSG (PJW)) 2017 U.S.Dist. LEXIS 216715, at *29
    [same].) Cases finding courts lack inherent authority have
    generally concluded that a manageability requirement would be
    inconsistent with PAGA’s purposes. (See, e.g., Zackaria v.
    Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., supra, at 959.) We discuss below why we
    find this reasoning unpersuasive.
    24
    1. Legal Background
    a. Courts Have Inherent Authority to
    Manage Proceedings Before Them
    “From their creation by article VI, section 1 of the
    California Constitution, California courts received broad
    inherent power . . . .” (Stephen Slesinger, Inc. v. Walt Disney
    Co. (2007) 
    155 Cal.App.4th 736
    , 758 (Slesinger).) “This
    inherent power includes ‘fundamental inherent equity,
    supervisory, and administrative powers, as well as inherent
    power to control litigation.’” (Ibid., quoting Rutherford v.
    Owens-Illinois, Inc. (1997) 
    16 Cal.4th 953
    , 967.)
    The courts’ inherent authority “‘“arises from necessity
    where, in the absence of any previously established
    procedural rule, rights would be lost or the court would be
    unable to function.”’” (Weiss v. People ex rel. Dept. of
    Transportation (2020) 
    9 Cal.5th 840
    , 863 (Weiss).) Thus,
    California courts have recognized that “‘“‘judges must be
    permitted to bring management power to bear upon massive
    and complex litigation to prevent it from monopolizing the
    services of the court to the exclusion of other litigants.’”’”
    (Cohn v. Corinthian Colleges, Inc. (2008) 
    169 Cal.App.4th 523
    , 531 (Cohn); accord, First State Insurance Co. v. Superior
    Court (2000) 
    79 Cal.App.4th 324
    , 334.) Similarly, courts
    may exercise their inherent authority to fashion procedures
    and remedies as necessary to protect litigants’ rights and the
    fairness of trial, including by terminating the litigation. (See
    Slesinger, supra, 155 Cal.App.4th at 740, 762 [absent
    alternative that would ensure fair trial, courts have inherent
    25
    power to impose terminating sanction for egregious
    misconduct].) The courts’ inherent authority is not
    boundless, of course, and may be exercised only to the extent
    it is not inconsistent with the federal or state constitutions,
    or California statutory law. (Ibid.)
    b. Courts Have Exercised Their Authority
    to Ensure the Manageability of
    Representative Actions
    California courts have exercised their inherent powers
    to preclude representative claims where a trial of those
    claims would be unmanageable. In the class action context,
    the courts have required class action proponents to
    demonstrate that “litigation of individual issues, including
    those arising from affirmative defenses, can be managed
    fairly and efficiently.” (Duran, supra, 59 Cal.4th at 28-29;
    accord, Washington Mutual Bank v. Superior Court (2001)
    
    24 Cal.4th 906
    , 922 (Washington Mutual) [class action
    proponent must demonstrate manageability], citing, e.g.,
    Canon U.S.A., Inc. v. Superior Court (1998) 
    68 Cal.App.4th 1
    , 5 (Canon) and Rose v. Medtronics, Inc. (1980) 
    107 Cal.App.3d 150
    , 157 (Rose).) The statutory provision that
    authorizes class actions, Code of Civil Procedure section 382,
    contains no such requirement.11
    11    Code of Civil Procedure section 382 provides: “[W]hen the
    question is one of a common or general interest, of many persons,
    or when the parties are numerous, and it is impracticable to
    (Fn. is continued on the next page.)
    26
    Similarly, at least one Court of Appeal approved a trial
    court’s use of its inherent authority to bar a representative
    pre-2004 UCL claim as unmanageable.12 In South Bay
    Chevrolet v. General Motors Acceptance Corp. (1999) 
    72 Cal.App.4th 861
     (South Bay Chevrolet), the plaintiff sought
    to advance a representative UCL claim on behalf of a certain
    class of California automotive dealers. (South Bay
    Chevrolet, supra, at 869.) After the plaintiff presented its
    bring them all before the court, one or more may sue or defend for
    the benefit of all.” The courts have developed other class action
    requirements that find no mention in this provision, including
    “the typicality of claims, the ability of the named plaintiff to
    provide fair and adequate representation, the superiority of a
    class action over other methods of adjudication, . . . and the
    requirement of notice.” (Arias, 
    supra,
     46 Cal.4th at 989, fn. 3
    (conc. opn. of Werdegar, J.).)
    Wesson argues that the courts’ power to require
    manageability in class actions derives from California Rule of
    Court 3.767 -- which empowers them to strike allegations as to
    representation of absent persons in class action pleadings --
    rather than from their inherent authority. However, this rule
    was adopted only in 2002, long after California courts began
    requiring putative class action plaintiffs to demonstrate their
    actions would be manageable at trial. (See, e.g., Canon, supra, 68
    Cal.App.4th at 5; Rose, supra, 107 Cal.App.3d at 157.)
    Demonstrably, the courts’ authority did not stem from this rule.
    12    Before 2004, any person could assert representative UCL
    claims, including for restitution, without satisfying class action
    requirements. (See former Bus. & Prof. Code, §§ 17203, 17204;
    Arias, 
    supra,
     46 Cal.4th at 977.) In 2004, Proposition 64
    amended the UCL to require that representative actions comply
    with class action requirements. (Arias, supra, at 977.)
    27
    case at trial, the trial court granted the defendant’s motion
    for judgment under Code of Civil Procedure section 631.8,
    finding that the plaintiff offered no evidence that the
    dealerships were similarly situated, and thus that due to
    uniquely individual questions of fact, minitrials would be
    necessary with respect to each dealership. (South Bay
    Chevrolet, supra, at 869, 891.) Although the statutory
    provision that authorized representative UCL suits included
    no manageability requirement (see former Bus. & Prof.
    Code, § 17204), the court concluded that the plaintiff’s
    representative action “‘could not be efficiently tried’” and
    was therefore “‘not appropriate’” (South Bay Chevrolet, at
    891). The Court of Appeal affirmed, holding that the trial
    court had “acted within its discretion” because the evidence
    was “not sufficiently uniform to allow representative
    treatment . . . .”13 (Id. at 897.)
    13    Wesson contends that UCL precedents involving
    manageability requirements are not instructive in determining
    courts’ authority in PAGA actions. He argues pre-2004
    representative UCL claims were equitable in nature, and thus
    that courts weighed equitable considerations in deciding if they
    should proceed, and did so only in addressing the scope of
    restitutionary relief. He also claims that unlike PAGA claims,
    those UCL actions implicated the due process rights of
    non-parties, whose interests were to be adjudicated.
    In so arguing, Wesson fails to address South Bay Chevrolet,
    despite the trial court’s reliance on it below and Staples’s reliance
    on it on appeal. There, the trial court and the Court of Appeal
    relied on neither uniquely equitable considerations, nor special
    (Fn. is continued on the next page.)
    28
    Notably, in both the class action and the representative
    UCL claim context, barring a claim as unmanageable does
    not affect the parties’ substantive rights. Instead, this
    remedy precludes the plaintiffs’ particular use of an
    aggregation procedure, leaving in place any substantive
    claim by an absent class member or UCL claimant. (See
    Duran, supra, 59 Cal.4th at 29 [court considers “whether a
    class action is a superior device for resolving a controversy”];
    South Bay Chevrolet, supra, 72 Cal.App.4th at 897 [evidence
    did not allow “representative treatment” of UCL claim].)
    2. Trial Courts Have Inherent Authority to
    Ensure that PAGA Claims Will Be Manageable
    at Trial
    Drawing on these principles of the courts’ inherent
    authority to manage litigation, including ensuring the
    manageability of representative claims, we conclude that
    courts have inherent authority to ensure that PAGA claims
    can be fairly and efficiently tried and, if necessary, may
    strike a claim that cannot be rendered manageable. The
    same concerns attendant to the fair and efficient trial of
    representative claims apply in the context of PAGA actions.
    characteristics of restitutionary relief, nor the due process rights
    of non-parties. Rather, the courts cited the need for efficient trial
    of the claims (South Bay Chevrolet, supra, 72 Cal.App.4th at 891,
    897), a matter firmly within the courts’ generally applicable
    inherent authority (see Weiss, supra, 9 Cal.5th at 863; Cohn,
    supra, 169 Cal.App.4th at 531).
    29
    Under PAGA, an aggrieved employee may recover civil
    penalties for Labor Code violations “on behalf of himself or
    herself and other current or former employees . . . .” (Lab.
    Code, § 2699, subd. (a).) A PAGA action may thus cover a
    vast number of employees, each of whom may have markedly
    different experiences relevant to the alleged violations.
    Under those circumstances, determining whether the
    employer committed Labor Code violations with respect to
    each employee may raise practical difficulties and may prove
    to be unmanageable.
    Indeed, PAGA claims may well present more
    significant manageability concerns than those involved in
    class actions. By its terms, PAGA includes no general
    requirement similar to the requirement in the class action
    context, that the plaintiff establish a well-defined
    community of interest, encompassing a showing that
    common questions predominate over individual ones. (See
    Washington Mutual, 
    supra,
     
    24 Cal.4th at 913
     [discussing
    class action requirements]; Williams v. Superior Court
    (2017) 
    3 Cal.5th 531
    , 559 (Williams) [PAGA actions do not
    require showing of uniform policy because “recovery on
    behalf of the state and aggrieved employees may be had for
    each violation, whether pursuant to a uniform policy or
    not”].) Thus, a PAGA claim can cover disparate groups of
    employees and involve different kinds of violations raising
    distinct questions.
    Although not addressing the question before us, the
    California Supreme Court has acknowledged the potential
    30
    for manageability difficulties in PAGA actions. In Williams,
    while rejecting a lower court’s suggestion that discovery in a
    PAGA action could be made contingent on the plaintiff’s
    ability to establish a uniform companywide policy, our
    Supreme Court noted that uniform policies may play a role
    in PAGA cases, explaining that “proof of a uniform policy is
    one way a plaintiff might seek to render trial of the action
    manageable.” (Williams, supra, 3 Cal.5th at 559.)
    We do not believe a court is powerless to address the
    challenges presented by large and complex PAGA actions
    and is bound to hold dozens, hundreds, or thousands of
    minitrials involving diverse questions, depending on the
    breadth of the plaintiff’s claims. As explained above, courts
    have inherent authority to manage litigation with the aim of
    protecting the parties’ rights and the courts’ ability to
    function. (See Weiss, supra, 9 Cal.5th at 863; Cohn, supra,
    169 Cal.App.4th at 531.) Equipped with this tool, courts
    dealing with representative claims pay close attention to
    manageability issues and intervene to ensure that the claims
    can be managed fairly and efficiently at trial. (See Duran,
    supra, 59 Cal.4th at 28-29; South Bay Chevrolet, supra, 72
    Cal.App.4th at 869.) If they cannot, the courts preclude
    these aggregation procedures. (See Duran, at 28-29; South
    Bay Chevrolet, at 869.) Given that PAGA actions involve
    comparable or greater manageability concerns than other
    representative claims, we hold that trial courts may
    similarly exercise their inherent authority to ensure the
    31
    manageability of PAGA claims and, if necessary, may
    preclude the use of this procedural device.14
    3. Wesson’s Arguments to the Contrary Are
    Unpersuasive
    In support of his position that courts may not require
    that PAGA claims be manageable at trial and may not strike
    an unmanageable claim, Wesson contends: (1) Arias
    precludes any manageability requirement in PAGA cases; (2)
    existing PAGA procedures preclude judicial creation of
    additional procedures, including a manageability
    requirement; (3) a manageability assessment is inconsistent
    with PAGA’s purposes; and (4) the state would not be subject
    to a manageability requirement and thus PAGA plaintiffs,
    acting as the state’s agents, should likewise be free from this
    requirement. As discussed below, we find none of these
    contentions convincing.
    14     Wesson argues that a PAGA action is “a substantive claim
    for civil penalties, owned by the State of California” and thus that
    a PAGA claim “extinguishe[s] the State of California’s property
    interests . . . .” (Italics omitted.) He is mistaken. As our
    Supreme Court explained, PAGA is “simply a procedural statute
    allowing an aggrieved employee to recover civil penalties . . . that
    otherwise would be sought by state labor law enforcement
    agencies.” (Amalgamated Transit Union, supra, 46 Cal.4th at
    1003.) Preventing a plaintiff from using this procedure has no
    effect on the state’s property rights; the state remains entitled to
    recover civil penalties for any Labor Code violations by the
    employer, subject to the applicable statute of limitations.
    32
    First, Wesson argues that requiring manageability in
    PAGA cases would run afoul of the California Supreme
    Court’s holding in Arias, supra, 46 Cal.4th at 975 that class
    action requirements do not apply to PAGA actions. Not so.
    In Arias, the trial court granted the defendants’ motion to
    strike the plaintiff’s PAGA claim on the ground that he had
    failed to comply with class action pleading requirements.
    (Arias, supra, at 976.) After the Court of Appeal reversed
    this ruling, the defendant urged our Supreme Court to
    construe PAGA “as requiring that all actions under that act
    be brought as class actions.” (Arias, at 984.) The high court
    declined, holding that PAGA claims need not satisfy class
    action requirements. (Arias, at 975.) In so doing, the court
    noted that PAGA actions may be brought as class actions but
    explained that at issue was “whether such actions must be
    brought as class actions.” (Arias, at 992, fn. 5.) Thus, Arias
    stands for the proposition that PAGA claims need not qualify
    as class actions. Arias did not hold that any consideration
    relevant to class action certification is necessarily irrelevant
    in the context of PAGA. And nowhere did the court suggest
    that trial courts could not limit or preclude an
    unmanageable PAGA action, if necessary.
    Second, Wesson contends that existing PAGA statutory
    procedures preclude the judicial imposition of a
    manageability requirement. Relying on In re Marriage of
    Woolsey (2013) 
    220 Cal.App.4th 881
     (Woolsey), he argues
    that where a statute provides certain procedures, courts may
    not add to them. Wesson notes that the sole provision
    33
    supplying procedural requirements for PAGA actions,
    section 2699.3, requires only that a prospective PAGA
    plaintiff inform the LWDA and the employer of the alleged
    violations, pay the agency a filing fee, if applicable, and
    await its decision on whether it will investigate the matter.
    (See § 2699.3.) Yet it is the narrow scope of section 2699.3’s
    requirements that defeats Wesson’s contention.
    In Woolsey, the Court of Appeal held that courts could
    not impose additional procedural requirements on marriage
    settlements because the Legislature had already “imposed
    specific requirements for settlement agreements and
    provided an expedient method of enforcing them.” (Woolsey,
    supra, 220 Cal.App.4th at 899.) According to the court, a
    trial court’s refusal to enforce an agreement that complied
    with these requirements would thwart the Legislature’s
    intent. (Id. at 900.) By contrast, section 2699.3 imposes only
    procedural preconditions to filing a PAGA suit, intended to
    afford the LWDA an “opportunity to decide whether to
    allocate scarce resources to an investigation . . . .” (Williams,
    supra, 3 Cal.5th at 546.) This provision includes no
    instruction relevant to the management of ongoing PAGA
    litigation and reveals no legislative intent that would
    preclude a court’s exercise of its authority in this area.
    Third, Wesson asserts that assessing PAGA actions for
    manageability would “‘obliterate’” their purpose. He argues
    that PAGA’s punitive and deterrent objectives “cannot be
    accomplished if the State’s claims are cast aside whenever
    an employer complains that its uniform employment
    34
    decisions cannot be justified absent a burdensome
    evidentiary showing.” We are unpersuaded.
    Contrary to Wesson’s suggestion, ensuring the
    manageability of claims is not tantamount to discarding
    them on an employer’s mere objection. His argument
    wrongly assumes that trial courts will be quick to deem
    every PAGA claim hopelessly unmanageable. (See Mays v.
    Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. (C.D.Cal., Nov. 1, 2018, Case No. CV
    18-02318-AB (KKx)) 2018 U.S.Dist. LEXIS 223886, at *4,
    *13-*23 [concluding court had authority to strike
    unmanageable PAGA claims, but finding plaintiff’s claim
    was manageable]; Brown v. Am. Airlines, Inc. (C.D.Cal., Oct.
    5, 2015, CV 10-8431-AG (PJWx)) 2015 U.S.Dist. LEXIS
    150672, at *10-11 [striking PAGA action only in part, after
    finding that although some claims were not manageable,
    claims relating to improper wage statements were
    manageable].) As discussed below, trial courts have
    discretion in assessing claims’ manageability at trial but
    should not lightly strike even procedurally challenging
    claims. And many PAGA actions will raise no substantial
    manageability concerns, because of the number of employees
    involved, the nature of contested issues, or other factors.
    (Cf., e.g., Gonzalez v. Millard Mall Servs. (S.D.Cal., Aug. 21,
    2012, Civil No. 09cv2076-AJB (WVG)) 2012 U.S.Dist. LEXIS
    118133, at *2 [PAGA claim alleged defendants improperly
    issued employees out-of-state paychecks]; Decker v. Allstates
    Consulting Servs. (E.D.Cal., Dec. 30, 2020, No. 2:18-cv-
    03216-KJM-DB) 2020 U.S.Dist. LEXIS 244823, at *2, *8
    35
    [PAGA claim alleged failure to pay wages in timely manner,
    and failure to provide accurate itemized wage statements, as
    to about 16 employees]; Mireles v. Paragon Sys. (S.D.Cal.,
    Feb. 9, 2016, Case No. 13-cv-00122-L-BGS) 2016 U.S.Dist.
    LEXIS 181284, at *11-*12 [PAGA notice alleged violations of
    overtime and rest- and meal-period requirements as to 13
    hourly employees].) That some claims may not be able to
    proceed without limitation will not nullify PAGA’s objectives.
    Finally, Wesson asserts that state agencies’ right to
    maintain Labor Code enforcement proceedings cannot be
    conditioned on manageability. Based on this premise, he
    argues that because PAGA plaintiffs act as agents of the
    state, they too should be free to maintain claims regardless
    of manageability considerations. However, Wesson cites no
    authority, and we are aware of none, privileging the state
    above other civil litigants and exempting it from the courts’
    inherent authority to manage the proceedings and ensure
    fair and efficient administration of justice.15 While we think
    it unlikely that the state, in exercising its prosecutorial
    discretion, would choose to bring an unmanageable action
    requiring individualized determinations as to hundreds or
    thousands of differently situated employees, requiring years
    15     Wesson discusses state agencies’ plenary power to
    investigate Labor Code violations and asserts that they are not
    subject to manageability criteria when “assesses[ing] whether an
    employer violated the Labor Code . . . .” These matters are
    irrelevant to the courts’ authority to ensure the manageability of
    a trial.
    36
    of trial court time, we see no reason the court would not be
    authorized to intervene should that occur.
    As we conclude that courts possess the power to ensure
    the manageability of PAGA claims at trial, including the
    power to strike claims, if necessary, we turn to consider the
    trial court’s decision to strike Wesson’s claim.
    4. The Trial Court Did Not Abuse its Discretion
    in Striking Wesson’s Claims as Unmanageable
    a. Governing Principles
    A court’s exercise of its inherent power to control the
    proceedings before it, its assessment of manageability issues,
    and its ruling on a motion to strike are all reviewed for
    abuse of discretion. (San Francisco Unified School Dist. ex
    rel. Contreras v. First Student, Inc. (2013) 
    213 Cal.App.4th 1212
    , 1227 [exercise of inherent power]; Duran, supra, 59
    Cal.4th at 25 [manageability issues]; Brandwein v. Butler
    (2013) 
    218 Cal.App.4th 1485
    , 1497 [motion to strike].) A
    ruling constitutes an abuse of discretion when it is “‘so
    irrational or arbitrary that no reasonable person could agree
    with it.’” (Sargon Enterprises, Inc. v. University of Southern
    California (2012) 
    55 Cal.4th 747
    , 773.)
    As in other contexts, manageability in the context of
    PAGA requires that individual issues can be tried fairly and
    efficiently. (Cf. Duran, supra, 59 Cal.4th at 28-29; South
    Bay Chevrolet, supra, 72 Cal.App.4th at 891, 897.) This
    assessment will depend on the circumstances of the case,
    and we do not believe any rigid rule can govern the court’s
    37
    assessment. In general, however, a need for individualized
    proof pertaining to a very large number of employees will
    raise manageability concerns. (See, e.g., Lopez v. Liberty
    Mut. Ins. Co. (C.D.Cal., Feb. 11, 2020, Case No. 2:14-cv-
    05576-AB-JCx) 2020 U.S.Dist. LEXIS 45634, at *15 [striking
    PAGA claim as unmanageable because it “would require a
    multitude of individualized assessments”]; Amiri v. Cox
    Communs. Cal., LLC (C.D.Cal. 2017) 
    272 F.Supp.3d 1187
    ,
    1193 [PAGA claim may be unmanageable if it would require
    “numerous individualized determinations”].)
    In considering manageability issues, courts should
    account for a defendant’s affirmative defenses. (Cf. Duran,
    supra, 59 Cal.4th at 28-29 [“In certifying a class action, the
    court must also conclude that litigation of individual issues,
    including those arising from affirmative defenses, can be
    managed fairly and efficiently”].) While trial courts “enjoy
    great latitude in structuring trials,” a trial management
    plan must allow the defendant a fair opportunity to present
    a defense. (Id. at 33; accord, Philip Morris USA v. Williams
    (2007) 
    549 U.S. 346
    , 353 [“the Due Process Clause prohibits
    a State from punishing an individual without first providing
    that individual with ‘an opportunity to present every
    available defense’”].) In Duran, a putative class action
    alleged that the defendant had improperly classified
    employees as exempt outside salespersons, denying them
    overtime pay in violation of the Labor Code. (Duran, supra,
    at 12.) The trial court certified a class of 260 plaintiffs and
    adopted a plan to determine the extent of the defendant’s
    38
    liability by extrapolating from a sample of 20 employees,
    without a valid statistical model. (Id. at 16, 33.) The court
    then prevented the defendant from presenting evidence
    about any other class member, and found, based on
    testimony from the sample group, that the entire class had
    been misclassified as exempt. (Id. at 16, 35.) The California
    Supreme Court found this procedure impermissible: by
    improperly extrapolating liability findings from a small,
    unrepresentative sample group and refusing to admit
    evidence relating to employees outside that group, the trial
    court “significantly impaired” the defendant’s ability to
    present a defense. (Id. at 33.) The Duran court concluded,
    “the trial court could not abridge [the defendant]’s
    presentation of an exemption defense simply because that
    defense was cumbersome to litigate in a class action.” (Id. at
    35.)
    That is not to say that a defendant’s trial plan for how
    to try an affirmative defense is inviolable. Where methods of
    common proof afford the defendant a fair opportunity to
    litigate every available defense, courts may limit the
    presentation of individualized evidence that would be
    cumulative or have little probative value. (See Duran,
    supra, 59 Cal.4th at 33; Evid. Code, § 352 [court may exclude
    evidence “if its probative value is substantially outweighed
    by the probability that its admission will . . . necessitate
    undue consumption of time”].) What must be preserved is
    the defendant’s ability to present the defense in a fair
    manner. (See Duran, supra, at 33.)
    39
    A trial court’s finding that a claim is unmanageable as
    presented will not always result in striking the claim. In the
    class certification context, our Supreme Court approvingly
    quoted a federal court’s explanation: “‘[i]f faced with what
    appear to be unusually difficult manageability problems at
    the certification stage, district courts have discretion to
    insist on details of the plaintiff’s plan for . . . managing the
    action.’ [Citation.] . . . [J]udges who encounter such
    challenges should attempt to leverage their ‘experience with
    and flexibility in engineering solutions to difficult problems
    of case management,’ and ‘refusing to certify on
    manageability grounds alone should be the last resort.’”
    (Noel v. Thrifty Payless, Inc. (2019) 
    7 Cal.5th 955
    , 978.)
    Thus, if possible, the court should work with the parties to
    render a PAGA claim manageable by adopting a feasible
    trial plan or limiting the claim’s scope. (Cf. Canon, supra, 68
    Cal.App.4th at 5 [in class action context, “the trial court has
    an obligation to consider the use of subclasses and other
    innovative procedural tools proposed by a party to certify a
    manageable class”]; Petersen v. Bank of America Corp. (2014)
    
    232 Cal.App.4th 238
    , 254 [to render mass action manageable
    on remand, “the trial court will have the power to require
    plaintiffs’ counsel to whip the third amended complaint’s
    desultory and scattered allegations against [defendant] into
    a tightly structured set of manageable subclaims and
    subclasses”].) As explained below, the trial court’s
    conclusion that the claim was unmanageable resulted not
    from the court’s reluctance to work with the parties, but
    40
    from Wesson’s insistence that manageability of the action
    was irrelevant.
    b. Analysis
    The trial court did not abuse its discretion in striking
    Wesson’s PAGA claim. Without offering developed
    arguments on the subject, each party implies that the other
    had the burden to prove that Wesson’s PAGA claim was or
    was not manageable. We need not decide the issue, as the
    evidence before the trial court supported its ruling, even if
    Staples had the burden of proving unmanageability.
    Wesson’s claim asserted Labor Code violations as to
    346 Staples GMs, premised on Staples’s alleged
    misclassification of those employees as exempt executives.
    By their nature, claims involving employee misclassification
    are highly fact-dependent, as the inquiry focuses on the work
    actually performed by the employee, as well as the
    employer’s realistic expectations and the realistic
    requirements of the job. (See, e.g., Cal. Code Regs., tit. 8,
    § 11070, subds. 1(A)(1)(e), 1(A)(2)(f).) Thus, trials involving
    misclassification claims often involve significant amounts of
    factual minutiae and therefore tend to be lengthy even when
    they involve only a few employees. (See, e.g., Heyen v.
    Safeway Inc. (2013) 
    216 Cal.App.4th 795
    , 799 [ten-day trial
    on single plaintiff’s misclassification claim]; Batze v.
    Safeway, Inc., supra, 10 Cal.App.5th at 475 [in bench trial on
    three employees’ misclassification claims, “the court waded
    41
    through weeks of testimony from dozens of witnesses and a
    massive quantity of documentary evidence”].)
    In the class action context, our Supreme Court
    acknowledged that misclassification cases “can pose difficult
    manageability challenges.” (Duran, supra, 59 Cal.4th at 30.)
    It explained: “Although common proof may be possible if
    there are uniform job requirements or policies, an employer’s
    liability for misclassification under most Labor Code
    exemptions will depend on employees’ individual
    circumstances. Liability to one employee is in no way
    excused or established by the employer’s classification of
    other employees.”16 (Duron, supra, at 36-37.)
    The record in this case raised significant manageability
    concerns. Staples adduced evidence that the GM position
    was not standardized, and that there was great variation in
    how Staples GMs performed their jobs and the extent to
    which they performed non-exempt tasks. The evidence
    showed that Staples stores varied widely in size, sales
    volume, staffing levels, labor budgets, and other variables
    16     The court recognized, however, that in some cases,
    misclassification could be decided on a classwide basis: “A class
    action trial may determine that an employer is liable to an entire
    class for misclassification if it is shown that the employer had a
    consistently applied policy or uniform job requirements and
    expectations contrary to a Labor Code exemption, or if it
    knowingly encouraged a uniform de facto practice inconsistent
    with the exemption. [Citation.] In such a case, the evidence for
    uniformity among class members would be strong, and common
    proof would be sufficient to call for the employer to defend its
    claimed exemption.” (Duran, supra, 59 Cal.4th at 37-38.)
    42
    that affected GMs’ work experience. Staples’s evidence also
    showed that how GMs spent their time depended on their
    experience, aptitude, and managerial approaches, among
    other factors. The trial court credited this evidence, and
    Wesson does not contest it on appeal. Based on this
    evidence, Staples argued that Wesson’s claims would require
    individualized assessments of each GM’s classification and
    would lead to “an unmanageable mess” that “would waste
    the time and resources of the Court and the parties . . . .”
    Wesson agreed that Staples’s affirmative defense
    would require individualized assessments of the 346 GMs,
    stating in his briefing to the court that “Staples [would] need
    to proffer ‘a GM-by-GM, week-by-week analysis’ throughout
    the entire relevant time period that all of the GMs were
    properly classified as exempt executives.” And he did not
    suggest there was a manageable way to litigate Staples’s
    exemption defense. Instead, Wesson argued that the
    manageability inquiry need not consider a defendant’s
    affirmative defenses, asserting that “a manager
    misclassification PAGA claim is ‘manageable’ so long as [the]
    [p]laintiff’s prima facie case, concerning each aggrieved
    employee at issue, is provable by resort to common
    evidence.” Thus, in addressing the litigation of Staples’s
    exemption defense in the trial plan he proposed to the court,
    Wesson insisted that it would be improper for him to “dictate
    how Staples should go about proving its exemption defense,”
    and simply pledged that he would not attempt to prevent
    Staples from proving its affirmative defense as it saw fit. At
    43
    the hearing on the issue, the parties estimated they would
    need six trial days per GM to litigate GMs’ classification
    individually, or roughly eight years.
    The evidence and argument before the trial court
    revealed no apparent way to litigate Staples’s affirmative
    defense in a fair and expeditious manner, as the defense
    turned in large part on GMs’ actual work experience, yet
    there was extensive variability in the group of Staples’s
    GMs. (Cf. Duran, supra, 59 Cal.4th at 33 [“If the variability
    [in a class] is too great, individual issues are more likely to
    swamp common ones and render the class action
    unmanageable”].) The parties agreed that individualized
    litigation of the issue as to each of 346 GM would require a
    trial spanning several years with many hundreds of
    witnesses. The trial court reasonably concluded that such a
    trial would “not meet any definition of manageability.”
    To be sure, Staples would have been able to offer
    common proof relating to its realistic expectations as to how
    GMs should spend their time and the realistic requirements
    of the job. In the unpublished portion of this opinion, we
    concluded its common evidence on those issues precluded
    summary adjudication. But the fact that certain evidence is
    minimally sufficient for purposes of summary adjudication
    does not mean that a factfinder would find it credible and
    persuasive at trial. Thus, Staples could not be expected to
    limit its defense to common evidence on its realistic
    expectations and the realistic requirements of the job, while
    ignoring the issue of how individual GMs actually spent
    44
    their time -- the “first and foremost” consideration under the
    IWC wage order. (Cal. Code Regs., tit. 8, § 11070, subd.
    1(A)(1)(e).) (See Duran, supra, 59 Cal.4th at 33.)
    Wesson’s argument below that a court should ignore
    affirmative defenses in assessing manageability makes little
    sense. That a plaintiff may prove his or her prima facie case
    relatively quickly and efficiently is of little comfort if any fair
    presentation of a cognizable defense would seize the court’s
    resources for years to come. (Cf. Weiss, supra, 9 Cal.5th at
    863; Cohn, supra, 
    169 Cal.App.4th 523
    , 531.)
    For the first time on appeal, Wesson contends that
    Staples had no due process right to call every GM as a
    witness at trial, and thus that the trial court could have
    rendered a trial on his claim manageable simply by limiting
    Staples’s ability to litigate its defense individually as to each
    GM. In support, Wesson points to certain language by our
    Supreme Court in Duran. The language he references does
    not support his contention.
    In holding that the trial court impermissibly
    constrained the defendant’s ability to present a defense, the
    Duran court explained, “While class action defendants may
    not have an unfettered right to present individualized
    evidence in support of a defense, . . . a class action trial
    management plan may not foreclose the litigation of relevant
    affirmative defenses, even when these defenses turn on
    individual questions.” (Duran, supra, 59 Cal.4th at 34.) The
    court further stated: “No case, to our knowledge, holds that
    a defendant has a due process right to litigate an affirmative
    45
    defense as to each individual class member. However, if
    liability is to be established on a classwide basis, defendants
    must have an opportunity to present proof of their
    affirmative defenses within whatever method the court and
    the parties fashion to try these issues.” (Id. at 38.)
    This language, cited by Wesson, indicates that a
    defendant is not categorically entitled, in every case, to
    litigate an affirmative defense individually as to each class
    member. (See Duran, supra, 59 Cal.4th at 34, 38.) Yet in
    the same breath, the court stressed that defendants must
    have a fair opportunity to litigate their affirmative defenses
    in some way, even if that entails individualized evidence.
    (Ibid.) A trial court thus may not “significantly impair[]” the
    defendant’s ability to present a defense. (Id. at 33.) As
    discussed, the evidence before the trial court supported its
    determination that Staples’s affirmative defense could not be
    fairly litigated through common proof, and no evidence
    before the court suggested it could.
    In his reply brief, Wesson summarily asserts for the
    first time that Staples could have sought to manage
    individual issues through “‘pattern and practice evidence,
    statistical evidence, sampling evidence, expert testimony,
    and other indicators of . . . centralized practices . . . .’” He
    made no such claim below, relying instead on the assertion
    that the manageability of Staples’s defense was irrelevant.
    Moreover, nothing in the record suggested that these were
    feasible means of proving how individual GMs spent their
    time, and Wesson’s argument on appeal is woefully
    46
    insufficient to establish that the trial court abused its
    discretion in concluding to the contrary.
    We do not hold that a PAGA misclassification case can
    never be managed through common-proof methods.
    However, Wesson’s lack of cooperation with the trial court’s
    inquiry in this regard stymied the court’s efforts to devise a
    plan that would allow the action to proceed, in whole or in
    part. On the record before us, the trial court’s determination
    that Wesson’s PAGA claim was unmanageable was
    eminently reasonable.17 Accordingly, we find no abuse of
    discretion in the court’s decision to strike Wesson’s PAGA
    claim.18
    17    As Wesson does not argue that the trial court should have
    rendered his claim manageable by limiting its scope, we do not
    consider the issue.
    18     We reject Wesson’s contention that the trial court
    erroneously believed he would have had the burden of disproving
    Staples’s affirmative defense of exemption at trial. The court’s
    thorough and thoughtful decision reflects a clear understanding
    of the parties’ respective burdens.
    47
    DISPOSITION
    The trial court’s orders are affirmed. Staples is
    awarded its costs on appeal.
    CERTIFIED FOR PARTIAL PUBLICATION
    MANELLA, P. J.
    We concur:
    COLLINS, J.
    CURREY, J.
    48
    

Document Info

Docket Number: B302988

Filed Date: 9/9/2021

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 9/9/2021