Martinez v. Joe's Crab Shack Holdings ( 2014 )


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  • Filed 12/3/14 Unmodified version attached
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION SEVEN
    ROBERTO MARTINEZ et al.,                              B242807
    Plaintiffs and Appellants,                    (Los Angeles County
    Super. Ct. No. BC377269)
    v.
    ORDER MODIFYING OPINION
    JOE’S CRAB SHACK HOLDINGS et al.,                         AND DENYING REHEARING
    (NO CHANGE IN JUDGMENT)
    Defendants and Respondents.
    THE COURT:
    It is ordered that the opinion filed herein on November 10, 2014 be modified as follows:
    On page 6, footnote 8, delete the words “that inadequately explained the claims” so that
    the footnote reads:
    According to CAI, more than 90 putative class members have settled potential claims
    with CAI and Landry’s directly although the record includes only 10 of these settlement
    agreements. CAI obtained these releases by reading a prepared script to managerial
    employees and offering a $500 payment for each year employed as a manager (or
    approximately $10 per week). Three other employees, including Kevin Austin, a former
    general manager who provided a declaration on behalf of CAI in this litigation in 2008,
    settled their claims through the Division of Labor Standards Enforcement. The
    settlement amounts that have not been redacted (eight of 13 agreements) range from $250
    to $5,000.
    Respondent’s petition for rehearing is denied. There is no change in judgment.
    ______________________________________________________________________________
    PERLUSS, P. J.            WOODS, J.                 SEGAL, J.*
    *
    Judge of the Los Angeles Superior Court, assigned by the Chief Justice pursuant to
    article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.
    Filed 11/10/14 Opinion on remand from Supreme Court Unmodified version
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION SEVEN
    ROBERTO MARTINEZ et al.,                                  B242807
    Plaintiffs and Appellants,                        (Los Angeles County
    Super. Ct. No. BC377269)
    v.
    JOE’S CRAB SHACK HOLDINGS et al.,
    Defendants and Respondents.
    APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, Charles F.
    Palmer, Judge. Reversed and remanded.
    Righetti Glugoski, Matthew Righetti and John Glugoski, for Plaintiffs and
    Appellants, Roberto Martinez, Lisa Saldana, Chanel Rankin-Stephens and Craig Eriksen.
    Epstein Becker & Green, Michael S. Kun and Ted A. Gehring, for Defendants and
    Respondents Crab Addison, Inc. and Ignite Restaurant Group, Inc.
    Law Offices of Mary E. Lynch; Mary E. Lynch; Sheppard, Mullin, Richter &
    Hampton, Charles F. Barker and Karin Dougan Vogel, for Defendant and Respondent
    Landry’s Restaurants, Inc.
    _____________________________
    Litigation by class action has long been recognized as a superior method of
    resolving wage and hour claims in California (see Brinker Restaurant Corp. v. Superior
    Court (2012) 
    53 Cal. 4th 1004
    , 1033 (Brinker)), including those seeking redress for unpaid
    overtime wages. Nonetheless, when confronted with the myriad individual facts asserted
    by employers in support of the executive exemption as a defense to a wage claim, courts
    at all levels have struggled to answer the question central to certification of a class—that
    is, “whether the theory of recovery advanced by the proponents of certification is, as an
    analytical matter, likely to prove amenable to class treatment.” (Sav-On Drug Stores, Inc.
    v. Superior Court (2004) 
    34 Cal. 4th 319
    , 327 (Sav-On); accord, Duran v. U.S. Bank
    National Assn. (2014) 
    59 Cal. 4th 1
    , 28 (Duran); Ayala v. Antelope Valley Newspapers,
    Inc. (2014) 
    59 Cal. 4th 522
    , 531 (Ayala).)
    Here, the trial court, after wrestling with the factual issues raised by Defendants
    Crab Addison, Inc., Ignite Restaurant Group, Inc. and Landry’s Restaurants, Inc.,1 denied
    class certification to a putative class consisting of managerial employees allegedly
    misclassified as exempt on the grounds plaintiffs had failed to establish (a) their claims are
    typical of the class, (b) they can adequately represent the class, and (c) common questions
    predominate the class claims such that a class action is the superior means of resolving the
    litigation. (See 
    Brinker, supra
    , 53 Cal.4th at p. 1021; Code Civ. Proc. § 382.) Last year
    we reversed the trial court’s order and remanded the matter for reconsideration in light of
    our then-recent decision in Benton v. Telecom Network Specialists, Inc. (2013)
    
    220 Cal. App. 4th 701
    (Benton). (See Martinez v. Joe’s Crab Shack Holdings (2013)
    
    221 Cal. App. 4th 1148
    , review granted Feb. 19, 2014, S214864.) We filed our prior
    decision in this case while Duran was pending in the Supreme Court, something we had
    noted in our opinion. The Court granted a petition for review and ordered briefing
    deferred pending its decision in Duran. The Court then decided Duran and, on July 30,
    1
    Until November 2006 Joe’s Crab Shack, a nationwide restaurant chain, was owned
    by Landry’s Restaurants, Inc. (Landry’s). The chain is now owned by Crab Addison,
    Inc., a subsidiary of Ignite Restaurant Group, Inc. (collectively CAI). CAI was sued
    erroneously under its former name, Joe’s Crab Shack Holdings.
    2
    2014, transferred the matter to us for reconsideration in light of that decision. The parties
    have submitted supplemental briefs, which we have considered. We remain convinced the
    trial court erred in denying certification and remand the case to that court for
    reconsideration of its order.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    Roberto Martinez, Lisa Saldana, Craig Eriksen and Chanel Rankin-Stephens are
    current or former employees of different Joe’s Crab Shack (JCS) restaurants in
    California. Martinez filed the original complaint in September 2007, seeking to represent
    a class of salaried managerial employees who worked at JCS restaurants in California on
    claims they had been misclassified as exempt employees and were entitled to overtime
    pay.2 In March 2010 the trial court denied Martinez’s motion for class certification on
    the ground he was not an adequate class representative. Martinez did not appeal that
    order.
    The trial court permitted Saldana, Eriksen and Rankin-Stephens to join the lawsuit
    as named plaintiffs. In June 2011 plaintiffs moved for certification of a class consisting
    of “[a]ll persons employed by Defendants in California as a salaried restaurant employee
    in a Joe’s Crab Shack restaurant at any time since September 7, 2003.” In support of
    their motion plaintiffs presented training and operations manuals, as well as deposition
    testimony from various witnesses employed by CAI and Landry’s. According to this
    evidence, JCS’s hiring and training practices are uniform throughout the chain; it utilizes
    an operations manual that applies to all restaurants and every employee; each restaurant
    offers the same menu; and managerial employees are evaluated using the same form and
    procedure. All managerial employees are classified as exempt employees and are
    expected to work a minimum of 50 hours per week. Each restaurant is staffed with three
    2
    The complaint also alleged meal period, rest period and wage statement claims,
    none of which is at issue in this appeal.
    3
    to seven managerial employees, who are cross-trained in positions throughout the
    restaurant and perform the same general tasks.3
    Plaintiffs also filed 22 declarations from current and former salaried employees
    who held managerial positions during the relevant time period.4 The gist of these
    declarations is the same. Most of the declarants were employed in assistant managerial
    positions. Although they were told they would be working 50 to 55 hours per week, all
    stated they had routinely worked more than 55 hours per week; and some reported
    working more than 70 hours per week. JCS did not keep track of the hours worked by
    managerial employees. Because labor budgets were set by district or regional managers
    and, in general, did not provide adequate staffing, managerial employees were required to
    perform “utility” functions, filling in where needed as cooks, servers, bussers, hosts,
    stockers, bartenders or kitchen staff. Managerial employees were also required to fill in
    when hourly employees failed to show up and conduct inventory one night a week after
    the restaurant closed, which could take as long as three to four hours to complete. As a
    result, the declarants stated they had worked extended time in positions ordinarily
    occupied by hourly employees but had received no overtime compensation for those
    3
    During the period the chain was owned by Landry’s, each restaurant was staffed
    with a general manager, an assistant manager, a kitchen manager and a front-end
    manager. Soon after this lawsuit was filed, CAI eliminated the specific positions of
    kitchen manager and front-end manager and categorized them as assistant managers.
    CAI’s designated person most knowledgeable about JCS managerial practices (see Code
    Civ. Proc., § 2025.230), Michael Young, testified that “all restaurants do universal
    tasks. . . . [Employees] wash dishes, they serve food, they help guests. It’s all basically
    the same. However, each restaurant is different . . . ; depending on what’s going on in the
    course of a day. How many people you have. Skill level of people.” Asked to
    distinguish between tasks performed by hourly employees from the same tasks performed
    by managerial employees, Young stated, “Managers . . . help out in various positions.
    They may perform the same tasks, but it doesn’t make it an hourly function at that time.
    If they’re performing their job based on where they need to be at a specific time[;] they’re
    using their judgment to assess where they need to be and what they’re doing at that
    specific time.”
    4
    As of the date the motion was filed, the parties agreed there were 182 members of
    the putative class.
    4
    tasks. Each of the declarants estimated he or she had spent the majority of his or her time
    performing hourly tasks; estimates ranged from more than 50 percent to 95 percent.
    Several employees, some of whom had worked in more than one restaurant or under both
    Landry’s and CAI ownership, stated that these practices were common across the board.5
    CAI and Landry submitted declarations from approximately 27 putative class
    members, each of whom reported significant variance among the duties associated with
    specific management positions, the amount of time they routinely spent on particular
    tasks and the total amount of time worked each week. More than half of the declarations
    were provided by general managers, most of whom had served in subordinate managerial
    positions in the past.6 Many of the declarants had been hired when Landry’s owned the
    5
    For instance, a former JCS employee (Brian Brinson), who first worked as an
    hourly kitchen worker in a Virginia JCS location, moved to California and worked in
    three different JCS locations as an hourly kitchen supervisor and as a salaried kitchen
    manager and senior kitchen manager. As a salaried manager Brinson averaged 60 to70
    hours per week, including weekly inventory that continued into the early hours of the
    morning. He estimated he spent 80 to 90 percent of his time performing the same tasks
    as the hourly employees—seating, bartending, running food, bussing tables, serving food,
    cleaning and cooking. His managerial duties took little time to complete. Based on his
    experience in both capacities he stated: “I can honestly say that when I moved into a
    managerial position my tasks remained the same and I did the same things I did when I
    was an hourly employee . . . . I felt like I was every position rolled into one. At Joe’s,
    things are done this way and I often needed to fill in wherever I was needed. In addition,
    often we would have to cut back on labor and send some of our hourly employees
    home[;] this meant even more time on hourly tasks. Further, if I needed to cover
    employee shifts I would often work a double shift.” Brinson stated his job required him
    to act in a “utility” capacity and that, because managers did not count against the labor
    budget, managers were required to perform the tasks of hourly employees, who would
    have had to be paid overtime.
    6
    Damian Garcia, a general manager, had also worked as an assistant general
    manager and a kitchen manager. He stated the total amount of time he spent on exempt
    activities varied depending on his position. As a general manager he spent five hours per
    week training employees but as a kitchen manager spent 10 to 15 hours each week
    training employees. He spent less time directing work as a kitchen manager and spent
    more time in that role as an assistant general manager. As a general manager he spent
    five hours per week analyzing and forecasting sales but had no such duty as a kitchen
    manager.
    5
    chain and had signed acknowledgements of the duties associated with their job and their
    exempt status.7 These declarants uniformly described their duties as primarily
    managerial in nature and, with only a couple of exceptions, opted out of the putative class
    proposed by plaintiffs.8 Many declarants estimated the amount of time they spent weekly
    performing discrete “primary” (that is, managerial) duties and “additional” (that is,
    nonexempt) duties and stated that, even when they were performing tasks ordinarily
    associated with hourly workers, they were monitoring the restaurant and supervising and
    directing employees.9 James Kuhn, a senior vice president with CAI who oversees the
    13 California JCS restaurants, stated the activities of managerial employees differed
    based on the sales volume, seating capacity, amenities and staffing of the particular
    restaurant, no two of which are the same. While CAI centralized management makes
    7
    In 2005 Landry’s directed its general managers to meet with salaried employees to
    review their duties and execute acknowledgements the majority of the employees’ time
    was spent on exempt tasks. There is no evidence in the record CAI ever trained or
    instructed managerial employees regarding the distinction between exempt and
    nonexempt duties.
    8
    According to CAI, more than 90 putative class members have settled potential
    claims with CAI and Landry’s directly although the record includes only 10 of these
    settlement agreements. CAI obtained these releases by reading a prepared script to
    managerial employees that inadequately explained the claims and offering a $500
    payment for each year employed as a manager (or approximately $10 per week). Three
    other employees, including Kevin Austin, a former general manager who provided a
    declaration on behalf of CAI in this litigation in 2008, settled their claims through the
    Division of Labor Standards Enforcement. The settlement amounts that have not been
    redacted (eight of 13 agreements) range from $250 to $5,000.
    9
    Primary duties included interviewing, hiring and training employees, scheduling,
    planning and making job assignments, directing employees, evaluating performance,
    determining what needed to be purchased for the restaurant, disciplining employees,
    analyzing and forecasting sales, inventory preparation and analysis, communicating about
    corporate matters and transitioning assistant managers and staff. Additional duties
    included interaction with guests, cooking, food service, bartending, bussing tables,
    expediting orders, taking inventory, checking and replenishing stock, routine clerical
    duties, hands-on maintenance and cleaning. Most declarants estimated approximately
    one-third of their time (varying between 55 and 70 hours per week) was spent on
    additional duties.
    6
    policy decisions affecting JCS restaurants across the board, “the day-to-day decision-
    making and daily running of the restaurants is left to each restaurant’s management
    team.”
    CAI and Landry’s also submitted evidence impeaching the statements of the
    named plaintiffs. In deposition testimony the named plaintiffs each conceded he or she
    was unable to estimate the amount of time spent on exempt tasks as opposed to
    nonexempt tasks and that every day was different. Eriksen testified it would be
    “unrealistic” to guess how much time he spent on particular tasks and admitted there
    were weeks when he devoted more than 50 percent of his time to managerial tasks.10
    Former colleagues of Saldana and Martinez also contradicted statements each had made
    in declarations concerning hours worked and the time spent on hourly tasks.11
    Presented with this evidence, the trial court denied the motion for class
    certification on the grounds plaintiffs had failed to establish (1) their claims were typical
    of the class, (2) they could adequately represent the class, (3) common questions
    predominated the claims, and (4) a class action is the superior means of resolving the
    litigation. The first two findings were based on plaintiffs’ inability to estimate the
    number of hours spent on individual exempt and nonexempt tasks and their admission the
    amount of time spent on particular tasks varied from day to day. As to the third and
    fourth findings, the court acknowledged the existence of common questions of law and
    fact,12 but concluded there remained significant individual disputed issues of fact relating
    10
    Eriksen is also one of the employees who executed a form provided to him by
    Landry’s in 2005 attesting he spent 74.5 percent of his time in managerial functions. The
    trial court sustained an objection to contradictory statements contained in his declaration
    based on this inconsistency. Rankin-Stephens executed a similar form in 2006
    acknowledging she spent 67.3 percent of her time on managerial functions.
    11
    Martinez’s performance evaluations criticized him for failing to supervise or
    discipline staff or otherwise act in a managerial function. Saldana’s evaluations praised
    her attitude but encouraged her to think more broadly about her job. There is evidence
    that Saldana was ultimately terminated for altering time reports.
    12
    The court found that all putative class members perform similar duties and
    responsibilities pursuant to a finite task list.
    7
    to the amount of time spent by individual class members on particular tasks. The
    variability among individual members of the putative class would require adjudication of
    the affirmative defense of exemption for each class member, “a time- and resource-
    consuming process.” The court rejected as unfair plaintiffs’ proffered trial plan, under
    which their expert, Richard Drogin, proposed to assess the rate at which managerial
    employees are engaged in nonexempt tasks through statistical sampling methods. Under
    these circumstances, the court concluded, a class action would not be the superior means
    of resolving the litigation.
    DISCUSSION
    1. The Standard of Review for a Ruling on Class Certification
    Class actions are statutorily authorized “when the question is one of a common or
    general interest, of many persons, or when the parties are numerous, and it is
    impracticable to bring them all before the court . . . .” (Code Civ. Proc., § 382.) The
    party seeking class certification must establish (1) “the existence of an ascertainable and
    sufficiently numerous class”; (2) “a well-defined community of interest”; and
    (3) “substantial benefits from certification that render proceeding as a class superior to
    the alternatives.” (
    Brinker, supra
    , 53 Cal.4th at p. 1021.) The community of interest
    requirement in turn requires three additional inquiries: (1) whether common questions of
    law or fact predominate; (2) whether the class representatives have claims or defenses
    typical of the class; and (3) whether the class representatives can adequately represent the
    class. (Ibid.; accord, 
    Ayala, supra
    , 59 Cal.4th at pp. 529-530.)
    “The certification question is ‘essentially a procedural one’” 
    (Sav-On, supra
    ,
    34 Cal.4th at p. 326) that examines “whether the theory of recovery advanced by the
    proponents of certification is, as an analytical matter, likely to prove amenable to class
    treatment” (id. at p. 327). A certification motion “‘does not ask whether an action is
    legally or factually meritorious’ [citation],” but rather whether the common issues it
    presents “‘are so numerous or substantial that the maintenance of a class action would be
    advantageous to the judicial process and to the litigants.’” (Id. at p. 326; see Mora v. Big
    Lots Stores, Inc. (2011) 
    194 Cal. App. 4th 496
    , 507 [“the central issue in a class
    8
    certification motion is whether the questions that will arise in the action are common or
    individual, not plaintiffs’ likelihood of success on the merits of their claims”].) The court
    must assume the class claims have merit and resolve disputes regarding the claims’
    merits only when necessary to determine whether an element for class certification is
    satisfied. (
    Brinker, supra
    , 53 Cal.4th at pp. 1023-1025.)
    “We review the trial court’s ruling for abuse of discretion and generally will not
    disturb it ‘“unless (1) it is unsupported by substantial evidence, (2) it rests on improper
    criteria, or (3) it rests on erroneous legal assumptions.”’ [Citation.] We review the trial
    court’s actual reasons for granting or denying certification; if they are erroneous, we must
    reverse, whether or not other reasons not relied upon might have supported the ruling.”
    (
    Ayala, supra
    , 59 Cal.4th at p. 530; accord, 
    Benton, supra
    , 220 Cal.App.4th at p. 716;
    Dynamex Operations West, Inc. v. Superior Court (2014) 
    230 Cal. App. 4th 718
    , 725.)
    2. The Executive Employee Exemption to Overtime Compensation
    “Under California law, employees are entitled to overtime pay for any work in
    excess of eight hours in one workday, or 40 hours in any one workweek, unless the
    employer affirmatively establishes that the employee qualifies for a statutory exemption.”
    (Heyen v. Safeway Inc. (2013) 
    216 Cal. App. 4th 795
    , 816 (Heyen); see 
    Sav-On, supra
    ,
    34 Cal.4th at p. 324; Lab. Code, §§ 510, subd. (a), 515, subd. (a).) Labor Code section
    515, subdivision (a), authorizes the Industrial Welfare Commission (IWC) to establish
    exemptions from the overtime pay requirement for “‘executive, administrative, and
    professional employees . . . primarily engaged in duties that meet the test of the
    exemption . . . [who] customarily and regularly exercise[] discretion and independent
    judgment in performing those duties . . . .’” (See Sav-On, at p. 324.)
    Each of the 16 wage orders promulgated by the IWC to govern various industries
    or occupations contains an exemption for executive, administrative and professional
    employees.13 Wage Order No. 5-2001 (Wage Order No. 5), which governs the “Public
    13
    IWC orders regulate wages, work hours, and working conditions with respect to
    various industries and occupations. (See Ramirez v. Yosemite Water Co., Inc. (1999)
    
    20 Cal. 4th 785
    , 795.) The Legislature defunded the IWC in 2004; however, its wage
    9
    Housekeeping Industry,” a category that includes restaurants, is codified at California
    Code of Regulations, title 8, section 11050. Wage Order No. 5 requires employers to
    provide overtime pay to employees working more than eight hours in one day or 40 hours
    in one week (id., subd. 3(A)) but exempts from this requirement “persons employed in
    . . . [¶] . . . executive . . . capacities” (id., subd. 1(B)). “A person employed in an
    executive capacity means any employee: [¶] . . . [¶] (a) Whose duties and
    responsibilities involve the management of the enterprise in which he/she is employed or
    of a customarily recognized department or subdivision thereof; and [¶] (b) Who
    customarily and regularly directs the work of two or more other employees therein; and
    [¶] (c) Who has the authority to hire or fire other employees . . . ; and [¶] (d) Who
    customarily and regularly exercises discretion and independent judgment; and [¶]
    (e) Who is primarily engaged in duties which meet the test of the exemption.” (Id.,
    subd. 1(B)(1)(a)-(e).) The term “primarily” is defined in the wage order as “more than
    one-half of the employee’s work time.” (Id., subd. 2(O).)
    To determine whether an employee is primarily engaged in exempt duties, Wage
    Order No. 5 provides “[t]he activities constituting exempt work and nonexempt work
    shall be construed in the same manner as such terms are construed” in certain regulations
    in effect as of January 1, 2001 under the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA), specifically
    title 29 of the Code of Federal Regulations, sections 541.102, 541.104-111, and 541.115-
    orders remain in effect. (Peabody v. Time Warner Cable, Inc. (2014) 
    59 Cal. 4th 662
    ,
    667, fn. 3.) There are currently 18 wage orders. Sixteen relate to specific industries or
    occupations: manufacturing; personal service; canning, freezing and preserving;
    professional, technical, clerical, mechanical and the like; public housekeeping; laundry,
    linen supply and dry cleaning; mercantile; product handling after harvest (covering
    commercial packing sheds); transportation; amusement and recreation; broadcasting;
    motion picture; preparation of agricultural products for market (on the farm); agricultural;
    household; and construction, drilling, logging and mining. There is also one general
    minimum wage order, and one order implementing the Eight-Hour-Day Restoration and
    Workplace Flexibility Act of 1999. (See Cal. Code Regs., tit. 8, §§ 11000-11170;
    
    Brinker, supra
    , 53 Cal.4th at p. 1026; Martinez v. Combs (2010) 
    49 Cal. 4th 35
    , 57.)
    10
    116. (Cal. Code Regs., tit. 8, § 11050, subd. 1(A)(1)(e).)14 “Exempt work shall include,
    for example, all work that is directly and closely related to exempt work and work which
    is properly viewed as a means for carrying out exempt functions. The work actually
    performed by the employee during the course of the workweek must, first and foremost,
    be examined and the amount of time the employee spends on such work, together with
    the employer’s realistic expectations and the realistic requirements of the job, shall be
    considered in determining whether the employee satisfies this requirement.” (Id., subd.
    1(B)(1)(e); see Ramirez v. Yosemite Water Co. (1999) 
    20 Cal. 4th 785
    , 802 (Ramirez) [in
    determining whether employee is an outside salesperson, trial court should consider both
    how the employee actually spends his or her time and whether the employee’s practice
    diverges from the employer’s realistic expectations].)
    Like other IWC wage orders, Wage Order No. 5 is a “‘quasi-legislative regulation
    subject to normal principles of statutory interpretation.’” 
    (Heyen, supra
    , 216 Cal.App.4th
    at p. 817.) Statutory provisions regulating wages enacted to protect employees are liberally
    construed with “‘an eye to promoting such protection.’” 
    (Ramirez, supra
    , 20 Cal.4th at
    p. 794.) Exemptions are narrowly construed and, as affirmative defenses, must be proved
    by the employer. (Id. at pp. 794-795, accord, Heyen, at p. 817.) Moreover, “because the
    elements of the exemption are stated in the conjunctive, all criteria must be established for
    the exemption to apply.” (Heyen, at p. 817; Bell v. Farmers Ins. Exchange (2001)
    
    87 Cal. App. 4th 805
    , 828-829 [elements of exemption impose independent requirements].)
    14
    The applicable federal regulations define exempt work performed by a bona fide
    executive employee as including “[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; apportioning
    the work among the workers; determining the type of materials, supplies, machinery or
    tools to be used or merchandise to be bought, stocked and sold; controlling the flow and
    distribution of materials or merchandise and supplies; providing for the safety of the men
    and the property.” (29 C.F.R. § 541.102(b) (2000).)
    11
    3. The Class Is Adequately Represented by Plaintiffs, These Claims Are Typical
    of the Class
    Although the questions whether a plaintiff has claims typical of the class and will
    be able to adequately represent the class members are related, they are not synonymous.
    The typicality requirement’s purpose “‘is to assure that the interest of the named
    representative aligns with the interests of the class. [Citation.] “‘Typicality refers to the
    nature of the claim or defense of the class representative, and not to the specific facts
    from which it arose or the relief sought.’” [Citations.] The test of typicality “is whether
    other members have the same or similar injury, whether the action is based on conduct
    which is not unique to the named plaintiffs, and whether other class members have been
    injured by the same course of conduct.”’” (Seastrom v. Neways, Inc. (2007)
    
    149 Cal. App. 4th 1496
    , 1502.) A class representative who does not have a claim against
    the defendants cannot satisfy the typicality requirement. (Medrazo v. Honda of North
    Hollywood (2008) 
    166 Cal. App. 4th 89
    , 98.)
    “The adequacy of representation component of the community of interest
    requirement for class certification comes into play when the party opposing certification
    brings forth evidence indicating widespread antagonism to the class suit.” (Capitol
    People First v. State Dept. of Developmental Services (2007) 
    155 Cal. App. 4th 676
    , 696;
    see J.P. Morgan & Co., Inc. v. Superior Court (2003) 
    113 Cal. App. 4th 195
    , 212 [“‘[t]he
    adequacy inquiry . . . serves to uncover conflicts of interest between named parties and
    the class they seek to represent’”]; see also Johnson v. GlaxoSmithKline, Inc. (2008)
    
    166 Cal. App. 4th 1497
    , 1509.) “To resolve the adequacy question the court ‘will evaluate
    “the seriousness and extent of conflicts involved compared to the importance of issues
    uniting the class; the alternatives to class representation available; the procedures
    available to limit and prevent unfairness; and any other facts bearing on the fairness with
    which the absent class member is represented.”’” (Capitol People First, at p. 697,
    quoting J.P. Morgan & Co., at p. 213.) A party’s claim of representative status will only
    be defeated by a conflict that “‘goes to the very subject matter of the litigation . . . .’”
    (Richmond v. Dart Industries, Inc. (1981) 
    29 Cal. 3d 462
    , 470.)
    12
    Citing the identical rationale for finding plaintiffs’ claims were not typical of the
    class and, consequently, they would not be adequate class representatives, the trial court
    stated plaintiffs’ claims would be “vulnerable to the defense that each of them performed
    exempt tasks more than 50% of their work time. This contrasts with the putative class
    members who [allegedly] spent more than 50% of their work time performing non-
    exempt tasks.”
    With respect to typicality, this analysis suffers from an overly focused
    examination of the facts that concentrated on individual differences rather than
    commonality. In essence, the trial court resolved the factual conflict between plaintiffs’
    declarations, in which they stated nonexempt tasks routinely occupied more than
    50 percent of their time, and their deposition testimony that they could not estimate the
    number of hours they spent on individual tasks because those tasks varied day to day.
    The inability of the witnesses to specify time spent on particular tasks is hardly
    surprising, however, and does not create an issue that must be resolved on a motion for
    class certification. What was common to plaintiffs, in addition to the standard policies
    implemented by CAI at each of their restaurants, was their assertions their tasks did not
    change once they became managers; they performed a utility function and routinely filled
    in for hourly workers in performing nonexempt tasks; and they worked far in excess of
    40 hours per week without being paid overtime wages. Their claims—and the defense of
    executive exemption to those claims—are thus typical of the class. (See 
    Sav-On, supra
    ,
    34 Cal.4th at pp. 336-337.)
    The larger problem with the adequacy of plaintiffs to represent the class as defined
    arises from the antagonism voiced by general managers, who overwhelmingly opposed
    the litigation. Again, this conflict is not unexpected: A general manager is hardly likely
    to share the duties of assistant managers, many of whom worked exclusively as kitchen-
    or front-managers. CAI stresses the fact that JCS restaurants vary in size and volume and
    were staffed according to need by three to seven managers. It is not hard to conceive that
    the lower the rung occupied by a particular manager the more likely he or she is to
    engage in tasks common to the hourly employee. This apparent conflict, however, is not
    13
    fatal. In the interest of preserving the claims of subordinate managerial employees, the
    trial court may on remand exercise its discretion to create a general managers subclass or
    to exclude general managers entirely from the class definition. (See, e.g., Richmond v.
    Dart Industries, 
    Inc., supra
    , 29 Cal.3d at pp. 470-471 [class action need not be dismissed
    when trial court can use subclasses to remove any antagonism among members of the
    putative class]; Medrazo v. Honda of North 
    Hollywood, supra
    , 166 Cal.App.4th at p. 99
    [when class representative’s “‘“interests are antagonistic to or in conflict with the
    objectives of those [s]he purports to represent’” [citation], . . . court should determine if it
    would be feasible to divide the class into subclasses to eliminate the conflict and allow
    the class action to be maintained”]; Capitol People First v. State Dept. of Developmental
    
    Services, supra
    , 155 Cal.App.4th at p. 697 [“where factual circumstances differ, or class
    members disagree as to the proper theory of liability, the trial judge, through resort to
    subclasses, intervention, and the like, may incorporate class differences into the litigation
    process and afford all members their due in deciding the proper outcome”]; Aguiar v.
    Cintas Corp. No. 2 (2006) 
    144 Cal. App. 4th 121
    , 133 [“[t]he use of subclasses is an
    appropriate device to facilitate class treatment”].)15
    4. The Trial Court Failed To Adequately Assess Means by Which Plaintiffs’
    Theory of Recovery Could Be Proved Through Resolution of Common
    Questions of Fact and Law
    a. Predominance analysis under Brinker, Duran and Ayala
    In 
    Brinker, supra
    , 
    53 Cal. 4th 1004
    the Supreme Court granted review “to resolve
    uncertainties in the handling of wage and hour class certification motions,” specifically in
    the context of alleged meal and rest break violations. (Id. at p. 1021.) The Court rejected
    15
    The trial court did not identify any additional basis for its findings on typicality
    and adequacy, but the record contains evidence Martinez received overtime wages during
    a portion of the period he alleges he was a salaried manager and Saldana was terminated
    for altering time records. On remand the court may consider whether this evidence
    compromises the ability of either plaintiff to represent the class. (See Seastrom v.
    Neways, 
    Inc., supra
    , 149 Cal.App.4th at p. 1502 [“named plaintiff’s motion for class
    certification should not be granted if ‘there is a danger that absent class members will
    suffer if their representation is preoccupied with defenses unique to it’”].)
    14
    the Court of Appeal’s reasoning that individual issues related to whether class members
    had missed or waived their breaks made class resolution infeasible. The Court instead
    found the plaintiffs’ “theory of liability”—alleging defendant had a uniform policy that
    violated the law—“is by its nature a common question eminently suited for class
    treatment.” (Id. at p. 1033.) The Court enunciated this standard for determining whether
    common issues predominate: “The ‘ultimate question’ the element of predominance
    presents is whether ‘the issues which may be jointly tried, when compared with those
    requiring separate adjudication, are so numerous or substantial that the maintenance of a
    class action would be advantageous to the judicial process and to the litigants.’
    [Citations.] The answer hinges on ‘whether the theory of recovery advanced by the
    proponents of certification is, as an analytical matter, likely to prove amenable to class
    treatment.’ [Citation.] A court must examine the allegations of the complaint and
    supporting declarations [citation] and consider whether the legal and factual issues they
    present are such that their resolution in a single class proceeding would be both desirable
    and feasible. ‘As a general rule if the defendant’s liability can be determined by facts
    common to all members of the class, a class will be certified even if the members must
    individually prove their damages.’” (Brinker, at pp. 1021-1022, fn. omitted.)
    Duran expanded on these principles in the context of a wage and hour class action
    challenging whether a bank had properly classified its outside salespersons as exempt
    employees. 
    (Duran, supra
    , 59 Cal.4th at p. 12.) Relying on its own “profoundly flawed”
    version of a statistical sampling plan proposed by the plaintiffs (id. at p. 13), the trial
    court had ruled in favor of the plaintiffs after a bench trial and awarded $15 million to the
    class. The Court of Appeal reversed. The Supreme Court granted review and affirmed
    the decision of the Court of Appeal, concluding the trial court had improperly denied the
    bank the opportunity to litigate its affirmative defense of exemption. The Court ordered a
    new trial on liability and damages and directed the trial court to reconsider whether the
    individual questions inherent in a misclassification claim might undermine the ability of
    the court to manage the case as a class action. As the Court explained, “Defenses that
    raise individual questions about the calculation of damages generally do not defeat
    15
    certification. [Citation.] However, a defense in which liability itself is predicated on
    factual questions specific to individual claimants poses a much greater challenge to
    manageability. . . . [Citation.] ‘Only in an extraordinary situation would a class action be
    justified where, subsequent to the class judgment, the members would be required to
    individually prove not only damages but also liability.’” (Id. at p. 30.) Even if the
    existence of common issues appears to warrant class treatment, the Court observed, “the
    court must also conclude that litigation of individual issues, including those arising from
    affirmative defenses, can be managed fairly and efficiently. [Citation.] ‘[W]hether in a
    given case affirmative defenses should lead a court to approve or reject certification will
    hinge on the manageability of any individual issues. [Citations.]’ In wage and hour
    cases where a party seeks class certification based on allegations that the employer
    consistently imposed a uniform policy or de facto practice on class members, the party
    must still demonstrate that the illegal effects of this conduct can be proven efficiently and
    manageably within a class setting.” (Id. at p. 29.)
    Duran acknowledged the reluctance of some California courts to certify classes
    alleging misclassification claims because of the potential for individual questions but
    concluded, “individual issues will not necessarily overwhelm common issues when a
    case involves exemptions premised on how employees spend the workday. In 
    Sav-On, supra
    , 
    34 Cal. 4th 319
    , for example, we upheld certification of an overtime class action
    based on a showing that all plaintiffs performed jobs that were highly standardized. As a
    result, class members performed essentially the same tasks, most of which were
    nonexempt as a matter of law. [Citation.] Further, the defendant’s corporate policy
    required all class members to work overtime. [Citation.] Where standardized job duties
    or other policies result in employees uniformly spending most of their time on nonexempt
    work, class treatment may be appropriate even if the case involves an exemption that
    typically entails fact-specific inquiries.” 
    (Duran, supra
    , 59 Cal.4th at p. 31.)
    Duran also addressed whether surveys and statistical sampling are appropriate
    tools to establish liability in a class context. The Court stated, “if sufficient common
    questions exist to support class certification, it may be possible to manage individual
    16
    issues through the use of surveys and statistical sampling. Statistical methods cannot
    entirely substitute for common proof, however. There must be some glue that binds class
    members together apart from statistical evidence. While sampling may furnish
    indications of an employer’s centralized practices [citation], no court has ‘deemed a mere
    proposal for statistical sampling to be an adequate evidentiary substitute for
    demonstrating the requisite commonality, or suggested that statistical sampling may be
    used to manufacture predominate common issues where the factual record indicates none
    exist.’” 
    (Duran, supra
    , 59 Cal.4th at p. 31, quoting Dailey v. Sears, Roebuck & Co.
    (2013) 
    214 Cal. App. 4th 974
    , 998.) “If statistical evidence will comprise part of the proof
    on class action claims, the court should consider at the certification stage whether a trial
    plan has been developed to address its use. A trial plan describing the statistical proof a
    party anticipates will weigh in favor of granting class certification if it shows how
    individual issues can be managed at trial.” (Duran, at pp. 31-32.) However, the Court
    cautioned, “a class action trial management plan may not foreclose the litigation of
    relevant affirmative defenses, even when these defenses turn on individual questions.”
    (Id. at p. 34.)
    Shortly after issuing Duran, the Court again addressed predominance issues in the
    context of a wage and hour class action in 
    Ayala, supra
    , 
    59 Cal. 4th 522
    . In Ayala several
    newspaper carriers sued the local newspaper that hired them alleging the newspaper had
    improperly classified them as independent contractors and thus denied them the wage and
    hour protections to which they were entitled. (Id. at 528.) The trial court denied
    certification of a class based on its belief the central question whether the carriers were
    employees or independent contractors could not be resolved without “numerous
    unmanageable individual inquiries into the extent to which each carrier was afforded
    discretion in his or her work.” (Ibid.) The Court of Appeal disagreed; the Supreme Court
    granted review and affirmed the decision of the Court of Appeal. According to the
    Supreme Court, the trial court erred in rejecting certification “based not on [the
    newspaper’s] right to exercise control, but on variations in how that right was
    exercised . . . .” (Ibid.)
    17
    Rephrasing this inquiry, the Court stated, “at the certification stage, the relevant
    inquiry is not what degree of control [the newspaper] retained over the manner and means
    of its papers’ delivery. It is, instead, a question one step further removed: Is [the
    newspaper’s] right of control over its carriers, whether great or small, sufficiently uniform
    to permit classwide assessment? That is, is there a common way to show [the newspaper]
    possessed essentially the same legal right of control with respect to each of its carriers?
    Alternatively, did its rights vary substantially, such that it might subject some carriers to
    extensive control as to how they delivered, subject to firing at will, while as to others it
    had few rights and could not have directed their manner of delivery even had it wanted,
    with no common proof able to capture these differences?” (
    Ayala, supra
    , 59 Cal.4th at
    pp. 533-534.) To answer these questions, the Court turned to the form contracts signed by
    the carriers, which spelled out the degree of control retained by the newspaper. At the
    certification stage, the Court stated, “the importance of a form contract is not in what it
    says, but that the degree of control it spells out is uniform across the class.” (Id. at p.
    534.)
    Ayala thus cautions courts to avoid focusing on the inevitable variations inherent
    in tracing the actions of individuals and to instead focus on the policies—formal or
    informal—in force in the workplace. As the Court explained, “Evidence of variations in
    how work is done may indicate a hirer has not exercised control over those aspects of a
    task, but they cannot alone differentiate between cases where the omission arises because
    the hirer concludes control is unnecessary and those where the omission is due to the
    hirer’s lack of the retained right. That a hirer chooses not to wield power does not prove
    it lacks power.” (
    Ayala, supra
    , 59 Cal.4th at p. 535.)
    b. Application of these principles to the overtime claim in this litigation
    The theory of liability in this litigation—that, by classifying all managerial
    employees as exempt, JCS violated mandatory overtime wage laws—is, to paraphrase
    Brinker, “by nature a common question eminently suited for class treatment.” (
    Brinker, supra
    , 53 Cal.4th at p. 1034.) Indeed, significant common issues pervade this litigation.
    For instance, CAI operates a chain of restaurants governed by the same policies and
    18
    procedures, many of which are promulgated in employee handbooks and training
    manuals. In addition, exempt employees are expected to work a minimum of 50 hours
    per week, another common issue that disposes of the need to assess whether employees
    worked sufficient hours to earn overtime compensation in any particular week. The
    parties have identified a finite task list, suggesting that jobs within JCS were “highly
    standardized” 
    (Duran, supra
    , 59 Cal.4th at p. 31 [citing one of the reasons class
    certification was appropriate in Sav-On]); and many of the tasks performed by assistant
    managers are identical to those performed by nonexempt employees. JCS also uses
    explicit guidelines for budgeting staffing; and employee job performance is evaluated
    using standard forms, thus clarifying if an employee meets JCS’s expectations for the
    position.
    As in Heyen, the gist of plaintiffs’ claim here is that, regardless of the patina of
    managerial discretion expressed in their job description, they functioned consistently as
    utility workers, cross-trained in all tasks, who could be assigned to fill in where needed
    without affecting the labor budget or requiring overtime compensation.16 The crux of the
    matter, therefore, lies in whether a typically nonexempt task becomes exempt when
    performed by a managerial employee charged with supervision of other employees.17 It
    16
    Like plaintiffs here, Linda Heyen had sought certification of a class of assistant
    managers who allegedly had been improperly classified as exempt employees. Her claim
    was tried individually after the trial court’s denial of class certification 
    (Heyen, supra
    ,
    216 Cal.App.4th at p. 799) and illustrates the enormous cost of resolving these claims on
    an individual, rather than a classwide, basis.
    17
    “[T]ask classification is a mixed question of law and fact appropriate for a court to
    address separately from calculating the amount of time specific employees actually spend
    on specific tasks.” 
    (Sav-On, supra
    , 34 Cal.4th at p. 330.) Relying on IWC Wage Order
    No. 4 (mercantile workers) and related FLSA regulations, our colleagues in Division
    Four of this court summarized in Heyen the analogous inquiry as to whether a grocery
    store assistant manager was properly classified as an exempt employee: “Several general
    principles emerge from these regulations. First, work of the same kind performed by a
    supervisor’s nonexempt employees generally is ‘nonexempt,’ even when that work is
    performed by the supervisor. If such work takes up a large part of a supervisor’s time,
    the supervisor likely is a ‘nonexempt’ employee. [Citations.] [¶] Second, the
    regulations do not recognize ‘hybrid’ activities—i.e., activities that have both ‘exempt’
    19
    is this inquiry CAI and Landry contend creates the necessity for individual mini-trials
    that would make trial of this claim unmanageable on a classwide basis. We recognize an
    inquiry into whether a task is “helpful in supervising the employees or contribute[s] to the
    smooth functioning of the department” is nearly impossible in hindsight. However, as
    the Supreme Court warned in Sav-On, “Any dispute over ‘how the employee actually
    spends his or her time’ [citation] . . . has the potential to generate individual issues. But
    considerations such as ‘the employer’s realistic expectations’ [citation] and ‘the actual
    overall requirements of the job,’ [citation] are likely to prove susceptible of common
    proof.” 
    (Sav-On, supra
    , 34 Cal.4th at pp. 336-337; see 
    Duran, supra
    , 59 Cal.4th at p. 52
    [“[I]n recognizing that California’s definition of an outside salesperson is quantitative in
    nature, Ramirez did not say that the test boils down to whether a particular employee
    actually spends more than 50 percent of his or her working hours on outside sales.
    and ‘nonexempt’ aspects. Rather, the regulations require that each discrete task be
    separately classified as either ‘exempt’ or ‘nonexempt.’ [Citations.] [¶] Third, identical
    tasks may be ‘exempt’ or ‘nonexempt’ based on the purpose they serve within the
    organization or department. Understanding the manager’s purpose in engaging in such
    tasks, or a task’s role in the work of the organization, is critical to the task’s proper
    categorization. A task performed because it is ‘helpful in supervising the employees or
    contribute[s] to the smooth functioning of the department’ is exempt, even though the
    identical task performed for a different, nonmanagerial reason would be nonexempt.
    [Citations.] [¶] Finally, in a large retail establishment where the replenishing of stocks
    of merchandise on the sales floor ‘is customarily assigned to a nonexempt employee, the
    performance of such work by the manager or buyer of the department is nonexempt.’
    [Citation.] Similarly, in such a large retail establishment, a manager’s participation in
    making sales to customers is nonexempt, unless the sales are made for ‘supervisory
    training or demonstration purposes.’” 
    (Heyen, supra
    , 216 Cal.App.4th at pp. 822-823.)
    Applying these principles to the tasks identified by CAI and Landry’s, inventory,
    restocking, serving, cooking, bussing tables, cleaning and other tasks ordinarily
    performed by nonexempt employees remain nonexempt when performed by a managerial
    employee. Likewise, when a managerial employee fills in for a nonexempt employee, the
    task remains nonexempt. On the other hand, if the managerial employee is performing a
    particular task for the purpose of supervisory training or to ensure the smooth functioning
    of the restaurant, the task is exempt. California law does not recognize a hybrid category
    in which the employee is deemed to be performing an exempt task at the same time he or
    she is performing a nonexempt task. 
    (Heyen, supra
    , 216 Cal.App.4th at p. 826.)
    20
    Instead, the ultimate question is: what are ‘the realistic requirements of the job’?”]
    (conc. opn. of Liu, J.); Sotelo v. Medianews Group, Inc. (2012) 
    207 Cal. App. 4th 639
    , 654
    [“[a] class . . . may establish liability by proving a uniform policy or practice by the
    employer that has the effect on the group of making it likely that group members will
    work overtime hours without overtime pay, or to miss rest/meal breaks”].)18
    In short, courts in overtime exemption cases must proceed through analysis of the
    employer’s realistic expectations and classification of tasks rather than asking the
    employee to identify in retrospect whether, at a particular time, he or she was engaged in
    an exempt or nonexempt task. For instance, the Sav-On Court observed the defendant
    had “allegedly promulgated exempt job descriptions, but implemented policies and
    practices that failed to afford its [managerial employees] true managerial discretion, and
    standardized store operations so that managers were obliged to spend over 50 percent of
    their time doing the same tasks as their subordinates.” (Id. at p. 337.) The court here
    must ask whether JCS’s realistic expectations and the actual requirements of the job
    resulted in the exercise of supervisorial discretion by managerial employees or instead
    relegated employees to the utility role described above. Conceivably, were the court to
    18
    We made a similar point in Ghazaryan v. Diva Limousine Ltd. (2008)
    
    169 Cal. App. 4th 1524
    , 1536: “The record before the trial court on the class certification
    motion established . . . that individual drivers accumulate gap time at varying rates and
    utilize that time in different ways. But the record also reveals Diva dictates to a large
    extent how drivers use their on-call time. Diva distributes an official “Chauffeur’s
    Handbook” to all drivers, which expressly bars personal use by drivers of Diva’s vehicles
    (albeit Diva appears to ignore incidental errands within a geographically proximate area),
    requires drivers to respond promptly to dispatch calls and accept trip assignments absent
    pre-arranged circumstances, requires drivers to be in full uniform while in or proximate
    to their vehicles, and requires drivers to clean and maintain their vehicles during their on-
    call time. Those limitations apply across the board to all drivers who have on-call time
    during the course of a day. Although individual testimony may be relevant to determine
    whether these policies unduly restrict the ability of drivers as a whole to utilize their on-
    call time for personal purposes, the legal question to be resolved is not an individual one.
    To the contrary, the common legal question remains the overall impact of Diva’s policies
    on its drivers, not whether any one driver, through the incidental convenience of having a
    home or gym nearby to spend his or her gap time, successfully finds a way to utilize that
    time for his or her own purposes.” (Fn. omitted.)
    21
    find JCS’s expectations for certain groups of managerial employees unrealistic, no further
    inquiry would be required to establish liability.
    More likely, however, is the prospect that some evidence will be required relating
    to how individual employees spent their time. In this respect statistical sampling may
    provide assistance in identifying the realistic demands of the job and illuminating
    whether the typical employee was able to meet those expectations. After Duran it is clear
    the outright rejection of statistical sampling as evidence to support a plaintiff’s proof of
    liability is improper so long as the proposed sampling plan accords the employer an
    opportunity to prove its affirmative defenses. 
    (Duran, supra
    , 59 Cal.4th at p. 40.) The
    statistical sampling plan proposed by plaintiffs below lacked the specificity contemplated
    in Duran. Based on the reasoning of Duran, we would expect the plaintiffs to submit a
    revised plan upon remand that more adequately addresses the concerns expressed by the
    Supreme Court.
    Nonetheless, by accepting defendants’ argument and focusing on the employee’s
    ability (or lack thereof) to identify what tasks he or she performed and for what purpose,
    the trial court failed to consider Sav-On’s explicit direction on issues of proof in such
    cases: “Contrary to defendant’s implication, our observation in Ramirez that whether the
    employee is an outside salesperson depends ‘first and foremost, [on] how the employee
    actually spends his or her time’ (Ramirez, [supra, 20 Cal.4th at p. 802]) did not create or
    imply a requirement that courts assess an employer’s affirmative exemption defense
    against every class member’s claim before certifying an overtime class action. [¶]
    [D]efendant’s proposed reading of Ramirez would require, essentially, that a certification
    proponent in an overtime class action prove the entire class was nonexempt whenever a
    defendant raises the affirmative defense of exemption. But in Ramirez itself we
    recognized that ‘the assertion of an exemption from the overtime laws is considered to be
    an affirmative defense, and therefore the employer bears the burden of proving the
    employee’s exemption.’ [Citations.] Were we to require as a prerequisite to certification
    that plaintiffs demonstrate defendant’s classification policy was, as the Court of Appeal
    put it, either ‘right as to all members of the class or wrong as to all members of the class,’
    22
    we effectively would reverse that burden. Ramirez is no authority for such a requirement,
    nor does the logic of predominance require it.” 
    (Sav-On, supra
    , 34 Cal.4th at pp. 337-
    338.) Nothing in Duran undermines this fundamental point.
    5. The Trial Court Must Reconsider Whether Class Certification Provides a
    Superior Method of Resolving Plaintiffs’ Claim
    We have not ignored the substantial case authority, including our own, upholding
    trial court decisions not to certify class actions for claims similar to those raised here (see,
    e.g., Dailey v. Sears, Roebuck & Co. (2013) 
    214 Cal. App. 4th 974
    ; Mora v. Big Lots
    Stores, 
    Inc., supra
    , 
    194 Cal. App. 4th 496
    ; Arenas v. El Torito Restaurants, Inc. (2010)
    
    183 Cal. App. 4th 723
    ); nor do we express any disagreement with the outcome of those
    cases. However, we understand from Brinker, Duran and Ayala that classwide relief
    remains the preferred method of resolving wage and hour claims, even those in which the
    facts appear to present difficult issues of proof. By refocusing its analysis on the policies
    and practices of the employer and the effect those policies and practices have on the
    putative class, as well as narrowing the class if appropriate, the trial court may in fact find
    class analysis a more efficient and effective means of resolving plaintiffs’ overtime
    claim.
    DISPOSITION
    The order denying class certification is reversed, and the cause is remanded for
    proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion. Plaintiffs are to recover their costs on
    appeal.
    PERLUSS, P. J.
    We concur:
    WOODS, J.                           SEGAL, J.*
    *
    Judge of the Los Angeles County Superior Court, assigned by the Chief Justice
    pursuant to article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.
    23