Rodriguez v. RWA Trucking Co. ( 2013 )


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  • Filed 9/20/13 (unmodified opn. attached)
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION FOUR
    SALVADOR RODRIGUEZ et al.,                            B241727
    Plaintiffs and Appellants,                    (Los Angeles County
    Super. Ct. Nos. BC182763 & BC182764)
    v.
    ORDER MODIFYING OPINION
    RWA TRUCKING COMPANY, INC.,                           [NO CHANGE IN JUDGMENT]
    Defendant and Appellant.
    THE COURT:*
    It is ordered that the opinion filed herein on September 12, 2013, be modified as
    follows:
    On pages 35-36, footnote 6, the first paragraph is deleted and the following is
    inserted in its place:
    Division Five of this district rejected Fitz-Gerald’s analysis in part in People
    ex rel. Harris v. Pac Anchor Transportation, Inc. (2011) 
    195 Cal.App.4th 765
    , review
    granted August 10, 2011, S194388.
    There is no change in the judgment.
    ________________________________________________________________________
    *EPSTEIN, P. J.                           MANELLA, J.                     SUZUKAWA, J.
    2
    Filed 9/12/13 (unmodified version)
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION FOUR
    SALVADOR RODRIGUEZ et al.,                          B241727
    Plaintiffs and Appellants,                  (Los Angeles County
    Super. Ct. Nos. BC182763 & BC182764)
    v.
    RWA TRUCKING COMPANY, INC.,
    Defendant and Appellant.
    APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, Emilie
    Elias, Judge. Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded.
    Miles L. Kavaller for Defendant and Appellant.
    Law Offices of Stephen Glick, Stephen Glick, and Anthony Jenkins for Plaintiffs
    and Appellants.
    Defendant RWA Trucking Company, Inc. (RWA) appeals from the trial court‟s
    judgment that it violated the unfair competition law, Business and Professions Code
    section 17200 (UCL or section 17200), by charging its drivers for automobile liability
    insurance, physical damage insurance, cargo insurance, and workers‟ compensation
    insurance from 1993 to 2011. RWA contends that the UCL causes of action and the state
    laws on which they are based are preempted by federal law. We affirm in part, reverse in
    part, and remand the matter to the trial court.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    I.     The Parties and the Dispute
    RWA is an interstate trucking company registered as a “for-hire interstate motor
    carrier” with the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA). At all relevant
    times, RWA conducted its trucking business from facilities in Long Beach, California,
    transporting containers and other cargo from the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach.
    RWA contracted with plaintiff Salvador Rodriguez and other drivers who owned
    their own tractors (drivers) under written lease agreements (Agreements). Under the
    Agreements, RWA leased the tractors from the drivers and dispatched the drivers to
    transport cargo. The Agreements characterized the drivers as independent contractors.
    The Agreements required each driver to carry automobile liability insurance,
    physical damage insurance, and cargo insurance (collectively, liability insurance), and it
    gave the drivers the option either to obtain their own policies or elect coverage under
    RWA‟s fleet policies. If the drivers elected coverage under RWA‟s fleet policies, RWA
    deducted from the drivers‟ earnings (or “charged back” from his or her compensation) the
    costs of the insurance. RWA also deducted from the drivers‟ earnings the cost of
    workers‟ compensation insurance. The chargebacks were reflected on weekly settlement
    statements given to each driver.
    2
    The Agreements authorized RWA to charge an administrative fee for arranging
    insurance for the drivers. An administrative fee for that purpose of at least 1 percent was
    deducted from the drivers‟ compensation during some years.
    RWA deducted the following amounts from the drivers for workers‟
    compensation: December 12, 1993, to December 31, 1994: $71,688.60; December 31,
    1994, to December 31, 1995: $71,688.60.
    During the years 1993 to 1995, RWA collected from its drivers a 1 percent
    administration fee for automobile liability insurance, physical damage insurance, and
    cargo insurance. During the years 1996 to 2002, RWA collected significantly less from
    its drivers than it paid in insurance premiums, ranging from $2,611.48 in 2002 to
    $244,269.55 in 1997. During the years 2003 to 2009, RWA deducted more from its
    drivers than it paid in insurance premiums.
    II.    The Present Litigation
    A.     The Pleadings and Class Certification
    Plaintiff filed the present action in Los Angeles Superior Court in 1997. The
    complaint alleged: (1) plaintiff was an employee, not an independent contractor, but was
    denied employee benefits; (2) defendants failed to comply with federal Truth-in-Leasing
    regulations, thereby breaching fiduciary duties to plaintiff; and (3) defendants sold
    insurance to plaintiff without a license. (Rivas v. Rail Delivery Serv. (9th Cir. 2005) 
    423 F.3d 1079
    , 1081.) On January 16, 1998, defendants removed the case to federal court; on
    September 8, 2005, the Ninth Circuit held plaintiff lacked article III standing and
    remanded the case back to state court. (Id. at p. 1084.)
    Plaintiff filed the operative fourth amended complaint on May 12, 2009. The first
    cause of action alleged RWA “transacted insurance” within the meaning of Insurance
    Code section 1631 by “selling insurance to Plaintiff for compensation” and “charging
    Plaintiff an administrative fee of at least 1% on the aforementioned insurance that
    Defendant sold to Plaintiff.” Such transactions were unlawful, plaintiff alleged, because
    RWA was not licensed to transact insurance in California. Further, RWA “failed to
    3
    properly disclose the total premium it charged Plaintiff and each Class Member by failing
    to properly disclose the at least 1% commission Defendants earned, violating California
    Insurance Code § 381(f).” These Insurance Code violations were alleged to be unlawful
    and to constitute unfair business practices in violation of the UCL. The second cause of
    action alleged RWA violated section 17200 by charging plaintiff for workers‟
    compensation insurance, in violation of Labor Code section 3751 (section 3751) and
    Albillo v. Intermodal Container Services, Inc. (2003) 
    114 Cal.App.4th 190
     (Albillo).
    The court granted plaintiff‟s motion for class certification and, on June 9, 2011, it
    issued an order certifying the following class: “All persons and entities in California that
    provided trucking services, including the transport of cargo and freight, for RWA
    Trucking Co., Inc., from December 12, 1993 through the present, who had money
    deducted from their earnings by RWA Trucking Co., Inc. to pay for Liability Insurance
    Coverage, Property Damage Insurance Coverage, Cargo Loss Insurance Coverage, or
    Workers‟ Compensation Insurance Coverage.”
    B.     Trial and Decision
    The case went to trial on stipulated facts. On December 6, 2011, the court filed a
    statement of decision. Following is a summary.
    1.     First Cause of Action: Transacting Insurance Without a License
    Prior to trial, the court found that RWA was transacting insurance and receiving
    compensation for doing so within the meaning of the Insurance Code. The court
    explained: “It is undisputed that RWA received compensation in connection with
    obtaining insurance for Rodriguez. Accordingly, RWA was required to have a license to
    transact insurance, but, undisputedly, RWA did not have a license. [¶] The Court finds
    that Albillo v. Intermodal Container Services, Inc.[, supra,] 
    114 Cal.App.4th 190
     does not
    compel a different result as to the transacting insurance without a license issue.” (Fn.
    omitted.)
    4
    Following trial, the court further found that RWA did not comply with the
    Insurance Code‟s disclosure requirements: “RWA stipulated that it did not comply with
    Insurance Code § 381 . . . . RWA did not give any class member an insurance policy or
    certificate of insurance, nor any of the items listed in Insurance Code Section 381, i.e.,
    nothing was given to the class members that showed the insurance premium, rates, or
    criteria used to determine how much to charge the truck driver for insurance.
    “. . . RWA stipulated in Fact Nos. 38, 47 and 48, just as Farmers did in the Troyk
    case, that it charged Plaintiff an „administrative fee‟ for providing insurance to Plaintiff.
    Troyk [v. Farmers Group, Inc. (2009)] 171 Cal.App.4th [1305,] 1324-1325. RWA, like
    Farmers, did not comply with the disclosure requirement in Insurance Code § 381(f).
    Following Troyk, RWA violated Insurance Code § 381(f) and Plaintiff has established
    through Stipulated Fact No. 48 that Plaintiff and each class member has standing to sue
    RWA under California‟s Unfair Competition Laws for RWA‟s violation of Insurance
    Code § 381(f).
    “. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
    “. . . The Court also rejects RWA‟s argument that its practice of violating
    Insurance Code § 381 is permitted by the „Truth-in-Leasing‟ regulation in 
    49 C.F.R. § 376.12
    (j).[1] Regardless whether charge-backs for insurance might be permitted, RWA
    must comply with the law in making any such charge-backs, such as complying with
    California Insurance Code § 381.”
    Based on these findings, the court found that RWA violated the “unlawful” prong
    of section 17200, and it ordered restitution in the amount of “the difference for each class
    member between the premium for each such insurance and the amount of money
    deducted by RWA from each class member for such insurance,” or $502,636.32, plus
    prejudgment interest of $377,490.33.
    1
    Unless otherwise indicated, all further references to the federal regulations are to
    title 49 of the Code of Federal Regulations (49 C.F.R.).
    5
    2.      Second Cause of Action: Charging Plaintiffs for Workers‟
    Compensation Insurance
    Prior to trial, the court granted plaintiffs‟ motion for summary adjudication of the
    second cause of action. The court found that under Albillo, RWA was not permitted to
    require plaintiffs to reimburse it for the cost of workers‟ compensation insurance. It
    explained: “The facts of this case are nearly identical to the facts in Albillo. Here, as in
    Albillo, the Workers‟ Compensation Policy at issue protects Defendant from lawsuits
    made by Plaintiff, should Plaintiff suffer a work-related injury. Following Albillo,
    Plaintiff is treated as though he were an employee and Defendant is treated as if it were
    an employer under the § 4150 election; thus, it is unlawful for Defendant to receive from
    Plaintiff any portion of the cost of the Workers‟ Compensation Insurance. Albillo, 114
    Cal.App.4th at 198.
    “The Albillo Court explained, „While it is correct that an election under Labor
    Code section 4150 does not make a person an employee for all purposes, it does
    expressly subject him or her to the compensation provisions of division 4 of the Act.
    Labor Code section 3751 is one of those provisions. [Citation.] Accordingly, we hold
    that by deducting amounts from appellants‟ compensation to secure workers‟
    compensation coverage, respondents violated Labor Code section 3751.‟ [Citation.]”
    Following trial, the court applied its summary adjudication holding to the entire
    plaintiff class and ordered RWA to “restore to Plaintiff and the Class all funds RWA
    retained by means of the unfair and unlawful business acts and practices alleged herein.”
    It awarded the plaintiff class “the principal amount of $143,377.20, and prejudgment
    interest through September 26, 2011 in the amount of $233,360.”
    3.      Federal Preemption
    In concluding that plaintiffs were entitled to compensation for RWA‟s violations
    of California law, the court determined that these laws were not preempted by federal
    law, namely, the Federal Aviation Administration Authorization Act of 1994 (FAAAA),
    title 49 United States Code section 14501 et seq., or the Truth-in-Leasing Act. It
    6
    explained: “There is no California case that says that the UCL is preempted in a
    FAAA[A] case. [¶] . . . [¶] . . . Equally important, the U.S. District Court for the
    Central District of California already rejected the precise preemption arguments raised by
    RWA; holding that Plaintiff‟s claims here are not preempted by 
    49 U.S.C. § 14501
    (c).
    See Renteria v. K & R Transportation, Inc. (C.D.Cal. 1999) 
    1999 WL 33268638
    . . . .
    Furthermore, the McCarran-Ferguson Act, 
    15 U.S.C. § 1012
    , prevents the Court from
    interpreting 
    49 U.S.C. § 14501
    (c) so as to preempt Plaintiff‟s claims that are based upon
    California insurance laws. Here, Congress expressly reiterated State authority to regulate
    insurance when enacting 
    49 U.S.C. § 14501
    (c)(2). Renteria, 
    1999 WL 33268638
     at *2.
    The Renteria Court held that „[t]he aim of the regulation [
    49 C.F.R. § 376.12
    (j)(1)] is to
    compel disclosure of the contract terms between the owner-operators and the carriers, not
    to govern the terms for which the parties are permitted to bargain. Nothing in the
    federal regulations prevents a state from passing legislation that mandates a particular
    contract term with regard to the costs of insurance. Similarly, while separate licensing
    requirements in each state may impact carriers in some way, the brokering of insurance is
    not the focus of the federal law[,]‟ so 
    49 U.S.C. § 14501
    (c) does not preempt California‟s
    worker‟s compensation insurance or liability insurance laws. Renteria, 
    1999 WL 33268638
     at *3 (emphasis added). Under 
    49 U.S.C. § 14501
    (c), „[t]he effects of the state
    insurance, wage, and workers‟ compensation laws on defendants . . . [are] insufficient to
    “relate to” prices. . . . Additionally, insurance and wage requirements are areas generally
    reserved to the states. See [Californians for Safe and Competitive Dump Truck Transp.
    v.] Mendonca [(9th Cir. 1998) 
    152 F.3d 1184
    ]; 
    49 U.S.C. § 14501
    (c)(2).‟ Renteria, 
    1999 WL 33268638
     at *4.” (Fns. & underling omitted.)
    C.     Judgment and Appeal
    The court entered judgment on May 22, 2012. The judgment awarded plaintiffs
    “as and for restitution for the first cause of action the sum of $502,636.32 principal, plus
    prejudgment interest through May 17, 2012 in the amount of $409,716,08 and for the
    7
    second cause of action, $143,377.20 principal plus prejudgment interest in the amount of
    $231,845.50 through May 17, 2012 for a total of $1,287,575.10.”
    Notice of entry of judgment was served on May 25, 2012. RWA timely appealed
    from the judgment, and plaintiffs timely cross-appealed.
    RWA’S APPEAL
    RWA contends: (1) RWA did not engage in the sale of insurance under California
    law; if it did violate California insurance law, that law is preempted by federal law;
    (2) California law, which prohibits an employer from charging an independent contractor
    the costs of his or her workers‟ compensation insurance, is preempted by the FAAAA;
    (3) the trial court erred in awarding plaintiffs prejudgment interest. Because RWA‟s
    appeal presents solely issues of law on stipulated facts, our review is de novo.
    (Weingarten Realty Investors v. Chiang (2012) 
    212 Cal.App.4th 163
    , 167.)
    I.     FEDERAL LAW PREEMPTS PLAINTIFFS’ CLAIM FOR UNLAWFULLY
    TRANSACTING INSURANCE
    During all the years relevant to this action, RWA required each of its drivers to
    maintain automobile liability insurance, physical damage insurance, and cargo insurance
    for his or her vehicle. RWA gave each driver the option of accepting coverage under
    RWA‟s fleet policies; if the driver elected such coverage, RWA deducted the cost of the
    insurance from the driver‟s earnings. During some years, RWA also deducted an
    additional administrative fee from the drivers‟ earnings.
    Plaintiffs allege that these deductions or “chargebacks” constitute the
    “transacting” of insurance without a license in violation of the Insurance Code. RWA
    disagrees, contending that the chargebacks at issue do not violate the California Insurance
    Code; in the alternative, RWA urges that if the chargebacks do violate California law,
    that law is preempted by federal law. We address these issues below and conclude that
    because the claim for unlawfully transacting insurance is preempted by federal law, the
    8
    award of restitution and prejudgment interest as to the first cause of action must be
    reversed.
    A.     “Transacting” Insurance Under California Law
    Insurance Code section 1631 provides that unless exempt by the provisions of this
    article, a person “shall not solicit, negotiate, or effect contracts of insurance, or act in any
    of the capacities defined in Article 1 (commencing with Section 1621)” unless the person
    holds a valid insurance license. The capacities defined in article 1 of the code include
    acting as an insurance broker—i.e., “for compensation and on behalf of another person,
    transact[ing] insurance . . . with, but not on behalf of, an admitted insurer.” (Ins. Code,
    § 1623, subd. (a), italics added.)
    “Transacting insurance” under section 35 of the Insurance Code includes all of the
    following:
    “(a) Solicitation.
    “(b) Negotiations preliminary to execution.
    “(c) Execution of a contract of insurance.
    “(d) Transaction of matters subsequent to execution of the contract and arising out
    of it.”
    Insurance Code section 1635, subdivision (h) provides that an individual need not
    hold a license to complete or deliver a declaration or certificate of coverage “under a
    running inland marine insurance contract evidencing coverage thereunder and including
    only those negotiations as are necessary to the completion or delivery if the person
    performing those acts or his or her employer has an insurable interest in the risk covered
    by the certificate or declaration,” so long as “no commission is paid or allowed, directly
    or indirectly, by the insurer, creditor, retailer, or other person for acting in those
    capacities or engaging in those activities.”
    Plaintiffs contend that by purchasing insurance for its drivers and charging the
    drivers an administrative fee, RWA “transacted insurance” for compensation within the
    meaning of the Insurance Code. Further, plaintiffs urge that RWA does not come within
    9
    the exemption of Insurance Code section 1635, subdivision (h), because not all the
    insurance coverage RWA provided its drivers was cargo insurance, and RWA recovered
    a commission for transacting insurance for its drivers.
    For the reasons that follow, we believe that California insurance law, if interpreted
    as plaintiffs suggest, is preempted by federal law. We therefore assume for the sake of
    argument that RWA‟s activities did violate California law and address the preemption
    issue below.
    B.      Federal Law Governing “Chargebacks” of Insurance Costs by Federal
    Motor Carriers
    1.    Federal Truth-in-Leasing Regulations
    As federal cases have recognized, motor carriers frequently prepay the costs of
    certain goods for which drivers ultimately may be responsible. The cost of these items
    then is deducted from drivers‟ compensation in a process known as “chargebacks.”
    Chargebacks are noted along with compensation on drivers‟ weekly pay stubs, also
    known as settlement sheets or statements. (Owner-Operator Independent Drivers Asso.,
    Inc. v. Swift Transportation Co., Inc. (9th Cir. 2011) 
    632 F.3d 1111
     (Swift).
    The Department of Transportation is authorized to regulate the relationships
    between drivers and motor carriers, including required terms of their leases. The federal
    Truth-in-Leasing regulations, 49 C.F.R. part 376, set forth specific requirements with
    regard to chargebacks. (Swift, 
    supra,
     632 F.3d at p. 1113, citing OOIDA v. Swift Transp.
    Co. (9th Cir. 2004) 
    367 F.3d 1108
    , 1110.)
    2.    Federally Mandated Motor Carrier Liability Insurance
    Section 13906 of title 49 of the United States Code requires federal motor carriers
    to carry specified levels of liability insurance, as follows: “Liability insurance
    requirement. The Secretary [of Transportation] may register a motor carrier under
    section 13902 only if the registrant files with the Secretary a bond, insurance policy, or
    other type of security approved by the Secretary, in an amount not less than such amount
    10
    as the Secretary prescribes pursuant to, or as is required by, sections 31138 and 31139,
    and the laws of the State or States in which the registrant is operating, to the extent
    applicable. The security must be sufficient to pay, not more than the amount of the
    security, for each final judgment against the registrant for bodily injury to, or death of, an
    individual resulting from the negligent operation, maintenance, or use of motor vehicles,
    or for loss or damage to property (except property referred to in paragraph (3) of this
    subsection), or both.” (
    49 U.S.C. § 13906
    (a)(1).) The Secretary “may determine the type
    and amount of security filed under this section.” (
    49 U.S.C. § 13906
    (d).)
    The Truth-in-Leasing regulations, 49 C.F.R. section 376.12(j), provide for the
    allocation of these insurance costs between motor carriers and drivers as follows:
    “Insurance. (1) The lease shall clearly specify the legal obligation of the
    authorized carrier to maintain insurance coverage for the protection of the public pursuant
    to FMCSA regulations under 49 U.S.C. 13906. The lease shall further specify who is
    responsible for providing any other insurance coverage for the operation of the leased
    equipment, such as bobtail insurance. If the authorized carrier will make a charge back to
    the lessor for any of this insurance, the lease shall specify the amount which will be
    charged-back to the lessor.
    “(2) If the lessor purchases any insurance coverage for the operation of the leased
    equipment from or through the authorized carrier, the lease shall specify that the
    authorized carrier will provide the lessor with a copy of each policy upon the request of
    the lessor. Also, where the lessor purchases such insurance in this manner, the lease shall
    specify that the authorized carrier will provide the lessor with a certificate of insurance
    for each such policy. Each certificate of insurance shall include the name of the insurer,
    the policy number, the effective dates of the policy, the amounts and types of coverage,
    the cost to the lessor for each type of coverage, and the deductible amount for each type
    of coverage for which the lessor may be liable.”
    11
    3.      Federal Cases Holding That Motor Carriers May Lawfully Charge
    Back Insurance Costs to Drivers
    The Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals considered whether section 376.12 permits
    motor carriers to lawfully charge back to drivers the costs of liability insurance in Owner-
    Operator Independent Drivers Asso., Inc. v. Mayflower Transit, LLC (7th Cir. 2010) 
    615 F.3d 790
     (Mayflower). There, defendant Mayflower paid its truck drivers a negotiated
    price per mile, reduced by the cost of insurance in the form of a chargeback. Some of the
    truckers sued, contending that the chargebacks violated 49 C.F.R. section 376.12(i),
    which provides that “the lessor is not required to purchase or rent any products,
    equipment, or services from the authorized carrier as a condition of entering into the lease
    arrangement.” The truckers contended that a requirement to reimburse Mayflower for the
    cost of insurance constituted a “purchase” of insurance within the meaning of section
    376.12(i). (Id. at p. 791.)
    The Seventh Circuit disagreed. It explained: “Plaintiffs treat the chargeback as a
    sale of insurance by Mayflower. Yet it is not an insurer. It is not authorized to
    underwrite risks. The regulation requires motor carriers to purchase insurance
    underwritten by real insurers, so that persons injured by a motor carrier‟s operations may
    find a source of compensation more reliable than the motor carrier itself, which often is
    thinly capitalized. Mayflower is a large and solvent firm that has been in business for
    decades; it can pay for its own casualties (and will do so indirectly because its insurer
    will set an experience-rated premium that covers the costs of indemnity, plus a loading
    charge for the insurer‟s administrative overhead). But many other motor carriers are
    small, and some would take too few precautions against accidents if they anticipated that
    a major loss would lead them to declare bankruptcy. Then the owners would reap profits
    as they came in, and use the corporate shield of limited investors‟ liability to protect
    themselves against tort judgments. The insurance requirement prevents that. And the
    regulation places on the motor carrier under whose certificate the service is rendered the
    obligation to secure insurance; that makes enforcement much easier than placing a
    separate mandatory-insurance obligation on the many owner-operators who own and
    12
    lease a single truck. Yet nothing in this rationale for mandatory insurance implies that
    lessors need not pay for the coverage secured through the motor carrier; as we‟ve
    observed already, they will pay indirectly (through lower rates per mile) if they do not
    pay through a chargeback.” (Mayflower, 
    supra,
     615 F.3d at p. 793.)
    The court continued: “If this were not clear from the text of § 376.12(i) and the
    fact that Mayflower is not an insurer (so it can‟t be selling insurance to the lessors), it is
    made clear by comparing § 376.12(i) with § 376.12(j)(1), which speaks to the topic. This
    subsection, captioned „Insurance,‟ reads: [¶] „The lease shall clearly specify the legal
    obligation of the authorized carrier to maintain insurance coverage for the protection of
    the public pursuant to FMCSA regulations under 49 U.S.C. 13906. The lease shall
    further specify who is responsible for providing any other insurance coverage for the
    operation of the leased equipment, such as bobtail insurance. If the authorized carrier
    will make a charge back to the lessor for any of this insurance, the lease shall specify the
    amount which will be charged-back to the lessor.‟ [¶] The reference to chargebacks in
    the third sentence is incompatible with the owner-operators‟ contention that chargebacks
    are „sales‟ forbidden by § 376.12(i). Courts do not read regulations to create such a
    glaring, and unnecessary, inconsistency.
    “Plaintiffs want us to read the third sentence, which speaks of chargebacks, as
    limited to the second, which deals with „other insurance coverage . . . such as bobtail
    insurance.‟ But the third sentence refers to „any‟ of „this‟ insurance, and that construction
    is best understood as including the insurance mentioned in the whole subsection. It
    would have been easy to write: „If the authorized carrier will make a charge back to the
    lessor for any of [the other] insurance [mentioned in the previous sentence], the lease
    shall specify the amount which will be charged-back to the lessor.‟ But that‟s not what
    the third sentence says. Section 376.12(j)(1) confirms our understanding of § 376.12(i):
    A chargeback for the cost of insurance is not a sale of insurance.” (Mayflower, 
    supra,
    615 F.3d at pp. 793-794.)
    The Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals reached a similar result in Owner-Operator
    Independent Drivers Asso. v. United Van Lines, LLC (8th Cir. 2009) 
    556 F.3d 690
    13
    (United). There, individual truckers who leased trucks to United Van Lines, a federally
    registered motor carrier, alleged that United improperly charged back the cost of
    federally-mandated public liability and property damage (PL/PD) insurance. The court
    disagreed: “„The first sentence [of § 376.12(j)(1)] establishes that all carriers must
    maintain public liability and property damage insurance. The second sentence provides
    that carriers and drivers may decide who is responsible for maintaining other insurance,
    such as bobtail insurance. The third sentence permits the carrier to charge back to the
    driver „any of this insurance.‟ The inclusion of the word „any‟ and the exclusion of the
    word „other‟ signify that „this insurance‟ [in the third sentence] refers to all insurance
    referenced in the paragraph, not just to the insurance discussed in the previous
    sentence.‟” (Id. at p. 697.) The court also rejected the truckers‟ contention that
    construing section 376.12(j)(1) to permit chargebacks conflicted with federal motor
    carrier financial responsibility statutes, which the truckers urged reflected Congress‟s
    intent to bar insurance chargebacks so as to improve carriers‟ level of care. The court
    explained: “Without question, Congress requires that motor carriers maintain adequate
    levels of PL/PD insurance to protect the public and to encourage safer motor carrier
    operations. See 
    49 C.F.R. § 387.1
    . But the statutes requiring insurance and minimum
    levels of financial responsibility—
    49 U.S.C. §§ 13906
    (a) and 31139—do not specify
    which party to a motor carrier lease must bear the cost of that insurance. Thus, the
    legislation „neither grants nor denies the [Secretary] power to regulate compensation paid
    under lease arrangements.‟ . . . In these circumstances, we must apply the plain language
    of § 376.12(j)(1) reflecting the Secretary‟s decision not to dictate how these private
    parties must resolve this aspect of their financial arrangement.” (Id. at p. 697, fn.
    omitted.)2
    2
    Plaintiffs quote United only in part and assert that “United held that Congress has
    not addressed who must pay for the insurance, or whether a trucking company can
    transact insurance as an insurance broker under state law for that matter, thus leaving the
    states to exercise their traditional state power to make such determination.” Not so.
    Immediately after the sentence plaintiffs quote, the court states that in the absence of a
    clear statement by Congress of whom shall bear the cost of liability insurance, courts
    14
    4.      Federal Cases Holding That Motor Carriers May Lawfully Mark-up
    Chargebacks to Drivers
    In Swift, supra, 
    632 F.3d 1111
    , the Ninth Circuit considered the claim of
    independent drivers that motor carriers violated federal law by marking-up chargebacks.
    The court concluded that federal law permitted motor carriers to mark-up chargebacks, as
    long as the mark-ups were not excessive. The court explained: “[49 C.F.R § 376.12]
    intended to curb excessive mark-ups by motor carriers and level the playing field with
    regard to information about how charge-backs are computed. See Final Rule, 47
    Fed.Reg. 51136, 51139, 
    1982 WL 146684
     (Nov. 12, 1982). However, [drivers] seem to
    erroneously equate „excessive‟ with „any‟ mark-ups in this instance. See DC Opinion &
    Order, 
    2007 WL 2808997
    , at *2. The district court, and virtually every court that has
    addressed the issue, has correctly concluded that profiting from charge-backs is not per se
    unlawful. Id.; see also, e.g., [Owner-Operator Indep. Drivers Ass’n v. Landstar Sys.],
    622 F.3d [1307,] 1319 [(11th Cir. Fla. 2010)]; OOIDA v. C.R. England, Inc., 
    508 F.Supp.2d 972
    , 981 (D.Utah 2007) („[C]harge-backs that include profits and fees are not
    per se unlawful under § 376.12(h). . . .‟). Thus, to ascribe to the regulations a purpose of
    eliminating carriers‟ profits is unsustainable.” (Swift, supra, at p. 1117, fn. omitted.)
    5.     Summary
    Mayflower and United stand for the proposition that federal law permits motor
    carriers to charge back the cost of liability insurance to their drivers. Swift stands for the
    related proposition that federal law also permits motor carriers to profit from chargebacks
    by marking-up (or charging an administrative fee on) charged-back items. Having thus
    established the state of federal law, we turn to the question before us—whether these
    federal regulations preempt contrary state law.
    must apply the plain language of federal regulations “reflecting the Secretary‟s decision
    not to dictate how these private parties must resolve this aspect of their financial
    arrangement.” (United, 
    supra,
     556 F.3d at p. 697.)
    15
    C.     Federal Preemption
    “A preemption „question is basically one of congressional intent. Did Congress, in
    enacting the Federal Statute, intend to exercise its constitutionally delegated authority to
    set aside the laws of a State? If so, the Supremacy Clause requires courts to follow
    federal, not state, law.‟ (Barnett Bank [of Marion Cty., N. A. v. Nelson (1996)] 517 U.S.
    [25,] 30, citing U.S. Const., art. VI, cl. 2; see also Viva! Internat. Voice for Animals v.
    Adidas Promotional Retail Operations, Inc. (2007) 
    41 Cal.4th 929
    , 935 (Viva!
    International).)” (Parks v. MBNA America Bank, N.A. (2012) 
    54 Cal.4th 376
    , 382-383
    (Parks).)
    The Supreme Court has recognized “„four species of federal preemption: express,
    conflict, obstacle, and field.‟ (Viva! International, supra, 41 Cal.4th at p. 935.) „First,
    express preemption arises when Congress “define[s] explicitly the extent to which its
    enactments pre-empt state law. [Citation.] . . . .” [Citations.] Second, conflict
    preemption will be found when simultaneous compliance with both state and federal
    directives is impossible. [Citations.] Third, obstacle preemption arises when “„under the
    circumstances of [a] particular case, [the challenged state law] stands as an obstacle to the
    accomplishment and execution of the full purposes and objectives of Congress.‟”
    [Citations.] Finally, field preemption, i.e., “Congress‟ intent to pre-empt all state law in a
    particular area,” applies “where the scheme of federal regulation is sufficiently
    comprehensive to make reasonable the inference that Congress „left no room‟ for
    supplementary state regulation.” [Citation.]‟ (Id. at p. 936; accord, Bronco Wine Co. v.
    Jolly (2004) 
    33 Cal.4th 943
    , 955; see also Barnett Bank, supra, 517 U.S. at p. 31.)”
    (Parks, supra, 54 Cal.4th at p. 383.)3
    3
    “Federal regulations have the same preemptive effect as the statutes under which
    they are promulgated, and the agency‟s reasonable construction of the statute it is charged
    with enforcing is entitled to deference. (Aguayo v. U.S. Bank (9th Cir. 2011) 
    653 F.3d 912
    , 919, 920.) The agency‟s interpretation of its own regulations controls unless it is
    plainly erroneous or inconsistent with the regulations. (Long Island Care at Home, Ltd.
    16
    We begin with obstacle preemption. Obstacle preemption is implicated when state
    law “stands as an obstacle to the accomplishment and execution of” federal law. (Parks,
    supra, 54 Cal.4th at p. 383.) Such preemption may exist even where compliance with
    both federal and state law is not impossible—i.e., because federal law “requires . . .
    something that state law prohibits.” (Id. at p. 384.) Rather, obstacle preemption may
    exist where state law prohibits something permitted (but not required) by federal law,
    thus standing as an obstacle to accomplishing the purposes of the federal law.
    Parks illustrates such circumstances. In Parks, the California Supreme Court
    considered whether the National Bank Act of 1864 (NBA), which grants national banks
    “„all such incidental powers as shall be necessary to carry on the business of banking,‟”
    preempted Civil Code section 1748.9, a California law requiring that certain disclosures
    accompany preprinted checks issued by a credit card issuer to its cardholders. (Parks,
    supra, 54 Cal.4th at p. 380.) Specifically, section 1748.9 required that a credit card issuer
    that extended credit to a cardholder through preprinted checks (convenience checks)
    “„shall disclose on the front of an attachment that is affixed by perforation or other means
    to the preprinted check or draft, in clear and conspicuous language, all of the following
    information: (1) That “use of the attached check or draft will constitute a charge against
    your credit account.” (2) The annual percentage rate and the calculation of finance
    charges, as required by Section 226.16 of Regulation Z of the Code of Federal
    Regulations, associated with the use of the attached check or draft. (3) Whether the
    finance charges are triggered immediately upon the use of the check or draft.‟” (Parks,
    supra, at p. 380.) The federal NBA did not require such disclosures. After using
    convenience checks that did not include the disclosures required by section 1748.9,
    plaintiff sued his credit card company, MBNA America Bank (MBNA), on behalf of
    himself and similarly situated MBNA customers, alleging that the bank engaged in unfair
    competition in violation of section 17200 by failing to make the disclosures mandated by
    section 1748.9. (Id. at p. 381.)
    v. Coke (2007) 
    551 U.S. 158
    , 170-171.)” (Akopyan v. Wells Fargo Home Mortgage, Inc.
    (2013) 
    215 Cal.App.4th 120
    , 138.)
    17
    The Supreme Court held that plaintiff‟s claims under sections 17200 and 1748.9
    were preempted by the NBA. (Parks, supra, 54 Cal.4th at pp. 386-387.). The court
    explained that the broad power granted by the NBA to national banks to exercise “„all
    such incidental powers as shall be necessary to carry on the business of banking‟”
    expressly included the power to loan money on personal security. (Id. at pp. 386-387.)
    The disclosure requirements in section 1748.9 purported to impose a condition on that
    federally granted power, providing that it could be exercised only if national banks
    offered credit through convenience checks containing specific disclosures. Further,
    “[t]he specific disclosure obligations imposed by section 1748.9 exceed any requirements
    in federal law. The requirement in section 1748.9 that disclosures appear „on the front of
    an attachment that is affixed by perforation or other means to the preprinted check or
    draft‟ has no counterpart in federal law. The same is true of section 1748.9‟s requirement
    that precise language („“use of the attached check or draft will constitute a charge against
    your credit account”‟) appear on each check. (§ 1748.9, subd. (a)(1).) In addition,
    although federal regulations require certain disclosures when the terms of using a
    convenience check differ from the terms of the customer‟s credit account (
    12 C.F.R. § 226.9
    (b)(1), (2) (2012)), they do not mandate that every convenience check disclose
    „[w]hether the finance charges are triggered immediately upon the use of the check,‟ as
    section 1748.9, subdivision (a)(3) requires.” (Id. at p. 387.)
    The court continued: “In characterizing the disclosure requirements of section
    1748.9, the Court of Appeal said that the statute „does not forbid the exercise of a
    banking power authorized by the NBA. Section 1748.9 does not bar national banks from
    loaning money on personal security through convenience checks.‟ It is true that section
    1748.9 . . . does not outlaw a category of banking activity. However, to say that MBNA
    may offer convenience checks so long as it complies with section 1748.9 is equivalent to
    saying that MBNA may not offer convenience checks unless it complies with section
    1748.9. Whether phrased as a conditional permission or as a contingent prohibition, the
    effect of section 1748.9 is to forbid national banks from offering credit in the form of
    convenience checks unless they comply with state law. As demonstrated by the instant
    18
    lawsuit brought under California‟s unfair competition law (Bus. & Prof. Code, § 17200
    et seq.), a national bank may be subject to monetary liability, and its convenience check
    offers may be enjoined, if it does not comply.” (Parks, supra, 54 Cal.4th at pp. 387-388.)
    Such a requirement, the court concluded, “„significantly impair[s] the exercise of
    authority‟ granted to national banks by the NBA.” (Id. at p. 388.)
    Further, the court said, although the disclosures required by California law were
    not themselves onerous, “our preemption analysis must consider the burden of disclosure
    „regimes imposed not just by [California], but by all States in which the banks operate.‟
    (Watters [v. Wachovia Bank, N.A. (2007)] 550 U.S. [1,] 13.) If disclosure requirements
    such as those in section 1748.9 were allowed to stand, national banks operating in
    multiple states would face the prospect of „“limitations and restrictions as various and as
    numerous as the States.” [Citation.]‟ (Id. at p. 14.) National banks would have to
    monitor requirements as to the content, language, manner, and format of disclosures for
    each of the 50 states (and possibly municipalities as well), and continually adjust their
    convenience check offers to comply with the prescriptions of each local jurisdiction.
    Such „[d]iverse and duplicative [regulation] of national banks‟ engagement in the
    business of banking . . . is precisely what the NBA was designed to prevent.‟ (Id. at
    pp. 13-14.)” (Parks, supra, 54 Cal.4th at pp. 388-389.)
    Applying the principles articulated in Parks, we conclude that if state insurance
    laws prohibit RWA from charging back its liability insurance costs to its drivers, those
    laws are preempted by 49 C.F.R. section 376.12. As we have said, 49 C.F.R. section
    376.12 permits motor carriers to charge back liability insurance costs to its drivers, so
    long as the amounts of those chargebacks are clearly specified. In contrast, if California
    insurance law is interpreted as plaintiffs suggest, it would forbid such chargebacks unless
    the motor carriers were licensed to sell insurance. Thus, under plaintiffs‟ interpretation
    of California law, it would prohibit precisely the kind of chargebacks that federal law
    permits.
    As in Parks, there is no indication here that Congress intended to subject the rights
    granted by federal regulation to state or local restriction. (Parks, supra, 54 Cal.4th at
    19
    p. 387.) And, as in Parks, if the present state law is enforceable against federal motor
    carriers, motor carriers may be subject to monetary liability if they do not comply with
    state law. Thus, as in Parks, requiring compliance with state insurance regulation as a
    condition of charging back insurance costs to drivers under the federal Motor Carrier Act
    would “„significantly impair the exercise of authority‟ granted” under federal law. (Id. at
    p. 388.) Further, if the state insurance law at issue is allowed to stand, motor carriers
    operating in multiple states would face the prospect of “„“limitations and restrictions as
    various and as numerous as the States.” [Citation.]‟ [Citation.]” (Ibid.) Federal motor
    carriers would have to monitor chargeback requirements for each of the 50 states and
    continually adjust their leases with drivers to comply with the prescriptions of each local
    jurisdiction. “Such „[d]iverse and duplicative [regulation] . . . is precisely what the
    [FAAAA] was designed to prevent.‟ [Citation.]” (Id. at pp. 388-389.)4
    Plaintiffs contend that obstacle preemption cannot apply where Congress has
    expressly defined the scope of preemption, but we do not agree. As our Supreme Court
    has explained: “„In Freightliner Corp. v. Myrick (1995) 
    514 U.S. 280
    , the court clarified
    the relation between express preemption clauses and implied preemption doctrines,
    explaining that “an express definition of the pre-emptive reach of a statute „implies‟—
    i.e., supports a reasonable inference—that Congress did not intend to pre-empt other
    matters,” but the express clause does not “entirely foreclose[] any possibility of implied
    pre-emption.”‟” (Martinez v. Regents of University of California (2010) 
    50 Cal.4th 1277
    ,
    1297, italics added; see also Freightliner Corp. v. Myrick, 
    supra,
     514 U.S. at p. 287 [“As
    an initial matter, we must address the argument that we need not reach the conflict pre-
    emption issue at all. According to respondents and the Court of Appeals, Cipollone v.
    Liggett Group, Inc., 
    505 U.S. 504
     (1992) held that implied pre-emption cannot exist
    when Congress has chosen to include an express pre-emption clause in a statute. This
    argument is without merit.”], italics added.)
    4
    Because we have concluded that obstacle preemption applies, we need not
    consider the other three species of federal preemption.
    20
    Plaintiffs also contend that the McCarran Ferguson Act, title 15 of the United
    States Code section 1012, prohibits the court from finding that the FAAAA preempts
    provisions of the Insurance Code. Again, we do not agree. The McCarran-Ferguson Act
    provides: “No Act of Congress shall be construed to invalidate, impair, or supersede any
    law enacted by any State for the purpose of regulating the business of insurance, or which
    imposes a fee or tax upon such business, unless such Act specifically relates to the
    business of insurance[.]” (
    15 U.S.C. § 1012
    (b), italics added.) “This act preserves a state
    statute from federal preemption where: „(1) the state statute has been enacted “for the
    purpose of regulating the business of insurance;” (2) application of the relevant federal
    statute would “invalidate, impair, or supersede” that state statute; and (3) the federal
    statute does not itself “specifically relate to the business of insurance.”‟ [Citations.] [¶]
    As the United States Supreme Court has explained, consistent with Congress‟s clear
    mandate under the McCarran-Ferguson Act, „state laws enacted “for the purpose of
    regulating the business of insurance” do not yield to conflicting federal statutes unless a
    federal statute specifically requires otherwise.‟ [Citations.]” (Pagarigan v. Superior
    Court (2002) 
    102 Cal.App.4th 1121
    , 1135.)
    In the present case, the controlling federal statutes and rules clearly “relate to” the
    business of insurance. Title 49 United States Code section 13903 requires motor carriers
    to file a bond or insurance policy; section 31139 authorizes the Secretary of
    Transportation to “prescribe regulations to require minimum levels of financial
    responsibility sufficient to satisfy liability amounts established by the Secretary covering
    public liability, property damage, and environmental restoration for the transportation [of
    property] by motor carrier”; and section 14102 authorizes the Secretary of Transportation
    to require motor carriers using motor vehicles owned by others to “obtain liability and
    cargo insurance on them.” These powers are implemented through 49 C.F.R. section
    376.12(j), which is entitled “Insurance” and requires that leases between motor carriers
    and drivers shall “clearly specify the legal obligation of the authorized carrier to maintain
    insurance coverage for the protection of the public pursuant to FMCSA regulations under
    49 U.S.C. 13906” and shall “further specify who is responsible for providing any other
    21
    insurance coverage for the operation of the leased equipment, such as bobtail insurance.”
    (Italics added.)
    Plaintiffs contend, finally, that even if RWA did not violate the Insurance Code, it
    violated 49 C.F.R. section 376.12 because it did not provide its drivers with certificates of
    insurance that specified the cost to the drivers of each kind of insurance coverage.
    Whatever the merits of this argument, it was neither pled in the operative complaint nor
    litigated in the trial court, and thus we do not reach it.
    II.    THE FAAAA DOES NOT PREEMPT CALIFORNIA LAW PROHIBITING
    EMPLOYERS FROM SEEKING REIMBURSEMENT FROM
    INDEPENDENT CONTRACTORS FOR THE COST OF WORKERS’
    COMPENSATION INSURANCE
    During some of the years relevant to this action, RWA charged back to plaintiffs
    RWA‟s costs for workers‟ compensation insurance. Plaintiffs contend this violated
    section 3751, as interpreted by Albillo, supra, 
    114 Cal.App.4th 190
    . RWA agrees that
    charging plaintiffs for workers‟ compensation insurance violated California law, but
    urges that the state law is expressly preempted by the FAAAA. For the reasons that
    follow, plaintiffs are correct. We conclude that because section 3751 is not preempted by
    federal law, the award of restitution under the second cause of action was proper.
    A.     The Workers’ Compensation Law
    The workers‟ compensation law (Lab. Code, § 3200 et seq.) “is a comprehensive
    statutory scheme that governs the compensation provided to California employees for
    injuries occurring during the course and scope of their employment. (Charles J. Vacanti,
    M.D., Inc. v. State Comp. Ins. Fund (2001) 
    24 Cal.4th 800
    , 810 . . . .) . . . „The
    underlying premise behind this statutorily created system of workers‟ compensation is the
    “„compensation bargain.‟” [Citation.] Pursuant to this presumed bargain, “the employer
    assumes liability for industrial personal injury or death without regard to fault in
    exchange for limitations on the amount of that liability. The employee is afforded
    22
    relatively swift and certain payment of benefits to cure or relieve the effects of industrial
    injury without having to prove fault but, in exchange, gives up the wider range of
    damages potentially available in tort.” [Citation.]‟ (Id. at p. 811.)” (Albillo, supra, 114
    Cal.App.4th at p. 199.)
    Independent contractors are not, by statute, subject to the workers‟ compensation
    laws. However, pursuant to Labor Code section 4150, employers and independent
    contractors may elect to “come under the compensation provisions of this division,”
    including the workers‟ compensation provisions.
    Section 3751, subdivision (a) prohibits employers from deducting the cost of
    workers‟ compensation insurance from employee wages.5 “Stated simply, this provision
    requires the employer to bear the entire cost of securing compensation.” (Albillo, supra,
    114 Cal.App.4th at p. 201.) The California Courts of Appeal have interpreted section
    3751 to apply to independent contractors who have elected to come within the workers‟
    compensation insurance system. (Albillo, supra, at p. 194.) Thus, under California law,
    “[p]arties who elect to „come under the compensation provisions of this division‟
    necessarily elect to come under Labor Code section 3751,” which bars employers from
    requiring independent contractors to cover any portion of the cost of compensation.
    (Albillo, supra, at p. 201.)
    The parties agree that under California law—specifically, section 3751 and
    Albillo—RWA could not lawfully have charged the plaintiff class for the cost of workers‟
    compensation insurance. RWA contends, however, that the FAAAA expressly preempts
    California law in this area and, therefore, charging plaintiffs for workers‟ compensation
    insurance was not unlawful. Plaintiffs disagree, contending that section 3751 and Albillo
    are not preempted by the FAAAA.
    5
    Section 3751 provides: “No employer shall exact or receive from any employee
    any contribution, or make or take any deduction from the earnings of any employee,
    either directly or indirectly, to cover the whole or any part of the cost of compensation
    under this division. Violation of this subdivision is a misdemeanor.”
    23
    B.      The FAAAA
    In 1978, Congress “„determin[ed] that “maximum reliance on competitive market
    forces‟” would favor lower airline fares and better airline service, and it enacted the
    Airline Deregulation Act [(ADA)]. Morales v. Trans World Airlines, Inc., 
    504 U.S. 374
    ,
    378 (1992) [(Morales)] (quoting 49 U.S.C.App. § 1302(a)(4) (1988 ed.)); see 
    92 Stat. 1705
    .) In order to „ensure that the States would not undo federal deregulation with
    regulation of their own,‟ that Act „included a pre-emption provision‟ that said „no State
    . . . shall enact or enforce any law . . . relating to rates, routes, or services of any air
    carrier.‟ Morales, 
    supra, at 378
    ; 49 U.S.C.App. § 1305(a)(1) (1988 ed.).” (Rowe v. New
    Hampshire Motor Transport Assn. (2008) 
    552 U.S. 364
    , 367-368 (Rowe).)
    In 1980, Congress deregulated trucking. (See Motor Carrier Act of 1980, 
    94 Stat. 793
    .) In 1994, Congress similarly sought to preempt state trucking regulation through the
    FAAAA. In doing so, it modeled its preemption provision on the ADA as follows: “[A]
    State . . . may not enact or enforce a law . . . related to a price, route, or service of any
    motor carrier . . . with respect to the transportation of property.” (
    49 U.S.C. § 14501
    (c)(1); see Rowe, 
    supra, at pp. 367-368
    .)
    Because the relevant preemption language of the ADA and FAAAA are so closely
    related, the United States Supreme Court has relied on its ADA jurisprudence to interpret
    the scope of FAAAA preemption. (Rowe, 
    supra,
     552 U.S. at p. 370.)
    C.      U.S. Supreme Court ADA and FAAAA Preemption Decisions
    The United States Supreme Court first considered the scope of ADA preemption
    in Morales, 
    supra,
     
    504 U.S. 374
    . There, the issue before the court was whether the ADA
    preempted “Air Travel Industry Enforcement Guidelines” (guidelines) adopted by state
    attorneys general that “contain[ed] detailed standards governing the content and format of
    airline advertising, the awarding of premiums to regular customers (so-called „frequent
    flyers‟), and the payment of compensation to passengers who voluntarily yield their seats
    on overbooked flights.” (Id. at p. 379.) These guidelines purported not to “„create any
    24
    new laws or regulations,‟” but instead claimed to “„explain in detail how existing state
    laws apply to air fare advertising and frequent flyer programs.‟” (Ibid.)
    The court concluded that the guidelines were preempted by the ADA. It explained
    that the ordinary meaning of “relating to” is broad—“„to stand in some relation; to have
    bearing or concern; to pertain; refer; to bring into association with or connection with,‟
    Black‟s Law Dictionary 1158 (5th ed. 1979)—and the words thus express a broad pre-
    emptive purpose.” (Morales, supra, 504 U.S. at p. 383.) Accordingly, “[s]tate
    enforcement actions having a connection with or reference to airline „rates, routes, or
    services‟ are pre-empted under 49 U.S.C.App. § 1305(a)(1).” (Morales, 
    supra, at p. 384
    ,
    italics added.) Applying this standard, the court concluded that the guidelines “quite
    obviously” related to fares. (Morales, 
    supra,
     504 U.S. at p. 387.) It explained: “One
    cannot avoid the conclusion that . . . the guidelines „relate to‟ airline rates. In its terms,
    every one of the guidelines enumerated above bears a „reference to‟ airfares. [Citation.]
    And, collectively, the guidelines establish binding requirements as to how tickets may be
    marketed if they are to be sold at given prices.” (Id. at p. 388.) Moreover, “beyond the
    guidelines‟ express reference to fares, it is clear as an economic matter that state
    restrictions on fare advertising have the forbidden significant effect upon fares” because
    “[a]dvertising „serves to inform the public of the . . . prices of products and services, and
    thus performs an indispensable role in the allocation of resources.‟” (Id. at p. 388.)
    Thus, the court held the fare advertising provisions of the guidelines were preempted by
    the ADA. (Id. at p. 391.)
    The Supreme Court applied its preemptions analysis to the FAAAA in Rowe,
    supra, 
    552 U.S. 364
    , 368. There, it considered whether the FAAAA preempted two
    provisions of Maine law that regulated the delivery of tobacco to customers within the
    state. (Id. at p. 367.) The court noted that in Morales, it had described Congress‟ goal in
    enacting the ADA as “helping assure transportation rates, routes, and services that reflect
    „maximum reliance on competitive market forces,‟ thereby stimulating „efficiency,
    innovation, and low prices,‟ as well as „variety‟ and „quality.‟” (Rowe, 
    supra, at p. 371
    .)
    Thus, Morales had held “(1) that „[s]tate enforcement actions having a connection with,
    25
    or reference to‟ carrier „“rates, routes, or services” are pre-empted‟ [citation] (emphasis
    added); (2) that such pre-emption may occur even if a state law‟s effect on rates, routes or
    services „is only indirect‟ [citation]; (3) that, in respect to pre-emption, it makes no
    difference whether a state law is „consistent‟ or „inconsistent‟ with federal regulation
    [citation]; and (4) that pre-emption occurs at least where state laws have a „significant
    impact‟ related to Congress‟ deregulatory and pre-emption-related objectives [citation].”
    (Rowe, supra, at pp. 370-371.) Morales further said that “federal law might not pre-empt
    state laws that affect fares in only a „tenuous, remote, or peripheral . . . manner.‟” (Rowe,
    
    supra, at p. 371
    .) However, the court noted, Morales “did not say where, or how, „it
    would be appropriate to draw the line,‟ for the state law before it did not „present a
    borderline question.‟” (Ibid.)
    The court held that the Maine tobacco law was preempted by the FAAAA because
    it “has a „significant‟ and adverse „impact‟ in respect to the federal Act‟s ability to
    achieve its pre-emption-related objectives.” (Rowe, supra, 552 U.S. at pp. 371-372.) It
    explained: “The Solicitor General and the carrier associations claim (and Maine does not
    deny) that the law will require carriers to offer a system of services that the market does
    not now provide (and which the carriers would prefer not to offer). And even were that
    not so, the law would freeze into place services that carriers might prefer to discontinue
    in the future. The Maine law thereby produces the very effect that the federal law sought
    to avoid, namely, a State‟s direct substitution of its own governmental commands for
    „competitive market forces‟ in determining (to a significant degree) the services that
    motor carriers will provide.” (Id. at p. 372.)
    The court concluded: “The provision . . . requires the carrier to check each
    shipment for certain markings and to compare it against the Maine attorney general‟s list
    of proscribed shippers. And it thereby directly regulates a significant aspect of the motor
    carrier‟s package pickup and delivery service. In this way it creates the kind of state-
    mandated regulation that the federal Act pre-empts. [¶] . . . [T]o interpret the federal
    law to permit these, and similar, state requirements could easily lead to a patchwork of
    state service-determining laws, rules, and regulations. That state regulatory patchwork is
    26
    inconsistent with Congress‟ major legislative effort to leave such decisions, where
    federally unregulated, to the competitive marketplace.” (Rowe, supra, 552 U.S. at
    p. 373.)
    D.      Dillingham
    The Supreme Court considered whether state labor laws were preempted by the
    federal Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA) in California
    Division of Labor Standards Enforcement v. Dillingham Construction, N.A., Inc. (1997)
    
    519 U.S. 316
     (Dillingham). There, a California law required contractors on public works
    projects to pay their workers the prevailing wage in the projects‟ locale. An exception to
    that requirement permitted a contractor to pay lower wages to workers participating in
    approved apprenticeship programs. Before the court in Dillingham was whether
    ERISA‟s preemption provision—which provided that ERISA shall supersede state laws
    “insofar as they . . . relate[d] to any employee benefit plan” (
    29 U.S.C. § 1144
    (a))—
    preempted California‟s prevailing wage law to the extent that the wage law prohibited
    paying an apprentice wage to an apprentice trained in an unapproved program.
    The court said that a law “„relate[s] to‟” a covered benefit plan for purposes of
    section 514, subdivision (a) “„“if it [1] has a connection with or [2] reference to such a
    plan.”‟” (Dillingham, supra, 519 U.S. at p. 324.) It explained that where a State‟s law
    “acts immediately and exclusively upon ERISA plans, . . . or where the existence of
    ERISA plans is essential to the law‟s operation, . . . that „reference‟ will result in pre-
    emption.” (Id. at p. 325.) Further, a law that does not refer to ERISA plans “may yet be
    pre-empted if it has a „connection with‟ ERISA plans.” (Ibid.) “[T]o determine whether
    a state law has the forbidden connection, we look both to „the objectives of the ERISA
    statute as a guide to the scope of the state law that Congress understood would survive,‟
    [citation], as well as to the nature of the effect of the state law on ERISA plans,
    [citation].” (Ibid.) In doing so, “[a]s is always the case in our pre-emption jurisprudence,
    where „federal law is said to bar state action in fields of traditional state regulation, . . .
    we have worked on the “assumption that the historic police powers of the States were not
    27
    to be superseded by the Federal Act unless that was the clear and manifest purpose of
    Congress.”‟ [Citations.]” (Ibid.)
    The court concluded that the prevailing wage law did not explicitly “make
    reference to” ERISA plans, and thus it was not barred by the second prong of the test.
    (Dillingham, supra, 519 U.S. at p. 325.) The law also did not “ha[ve] a „connection
    with‟” ERISA plans, and thus was not barred by the first prong of the test, because it had
    only an “„indirect economic influence‟” on such plans. (Id. at p. 329.) The court
    explained: “The wages to be paid on public works projects and the substantive standards
    to be applied to apprenticeship training programs are . . . quite remote from the areas with
    which ERISA is expressly concerned—„“reporting, disclosure, fiduciary responsibility,
    and the like.”‟ [New York State Conf. of Blue Cross & Blue Shield Plans v.] Travelers
    [Ins. Co. (1995) 
    514 U.S. 645
    ,] 661 (quoting Shaw [v. Delta Air Lines (1983)] 463 U.S.
    [85,] 98). A reading of § 514(a) resulting in the pre-emption of traditionally state-
    regulated substantive law in those areas where ERISA has nothing to say would be
    „unsettling,‟ Travelers, 
    514 U.S., at 665
    .” (Dillingham, 
    supra, at pp. 331-332
    .)
    The court continued: “[T]he apprenticeship portion of the prevailing wage statute
    does not bind ERISA plans to anything. No apprenticeship program is required by
    California law to meet California‟s standards. See Southern Cal. ABC, 4 Cal.4th, at 428.
    If a contractor chooses to hire apprentices for a public works project, it need not hire
    them from an approved program (although if it does not, it must pay these apprentices
    journeyman wages). So, apprenticeship programs that have not gained [California
    Apprenticeship Council] approval may still supply public works contractors with
    apprentices. Unapproved apprenticeship programs also may supply apprentices to private
    contractors. The effect of § 1777.5 on ERISA apprenticeship programs, therefore, is
    merely to provide some measure of economic incentive to comport with the State‟s
    requirements, at least to the extent that those programs seek to provide apprentices who
    can work on public works projects at a lower wage. . . . It cannot be gainsaid that
    § 1777.5 has the effect of encouraging apprenticeship programs—including ERISA
    plans—to meet the standards set out by California, but it has not been demonstrated here
    28
    that the added inducement created by the wage break available on state public works
    projects is tantamount to a compulsion upon apprenticeship programs.” (Dillingham,
    
    supra,
     519 U.S. at pp. 332-333, fns. omitted.)
    The court concluded: “The prevailing wage statute alters the incentives, but does
    not dictate the choices, facing ERISA plans. In this regard, it is „no different from
    myriad state laws in areas traditionally subject to local regulation, which Congress could
    not possibly have intended to eliminate.‟ Travelers, 514 U.S., at 668. We could not hold
    pre-empted a state law in an area of traditional state regulation based on so tenuous a
    relation without doing grave violence to our presumption that Congress intended nothing
    of the sort. We thus conclude that California‟s prevailing wage laws and apprenticeship
    standards do not have a „connection with,‟ and therefore do not „relate to,‟ ERISA plans.”
    (Dillingham, supra, 519 U.S. at p. 334.)
    E.     Lower Federal Court Decisions Addressing the Effect of FAAAA
    Preemption on State Labor Laws
    Following Morales, Rowe, and Dillingham, the lower federal courts have
    struggled with the scope of FAAAA preemption, particularly as applied to state labor
    laws. A case illustrating this struggle is Californians for Safe and Competitive Dump
    Truck Transp. v. Mendonca, 
    supra,
     
    152 F.3d 1184
     (Mendonca). There, the Ninth Circuit
    considered whether the FAAAA preempted enforcement of California‟s Prevailing Wage
    Law (CPWL). (Lab. Code, §§ 1770-1180.) Under that law, contractors and
    subcontractors awarded public works contracts were required to pay their workers “„not
    less than the general prevailing rate . . . for work of a similar character in the locality in
    which the public work is performed,‟” and contractors who failed to pay prevailing wages
    were assessed penalties. (Mendonca, supra, at p. 1186.) Plaintiffs, public works
    contractors who provided transportation on publicly-funded projects in California, failed
    to pay their workers prevailing wages and were assessed penalties by California
    enforcement authorities. Thereafter, plaintiffs filed suit seeking declaratory and
    29
    injunctive relief, claiming that enforcement of the CPWL violated the Supremacy Clause
    of the United States Constitution because the FAAAA preempted the CPWL. (Ibid.)
    The Ninth Circuit held that the FAAAA did not preempt the CPWL. It began by
    noting that state laws dealing with matters traditionally within a state‟s police powers,
    such as prevailing wage laws, should not be found to be preempted unless Congress‟s
    intent to do so was clear. (Mendonca, supra, 152 F.3d at p. 1187.) Here, Congress had
    expressed no such clear intent. The court explained: “While CPWL in a certain sense is
    „related to‟ [plaintiffs‟] prices, routes and services, we hold that the effect is no more than
    indirect, remote, and tenuous. See Dillingham, 
    117 S.Ct. at 842
    . We do not believe that
    CPWL frustrates the purpose of deregulation by acutely interfering with the forces of
    competition. See Travelers, 
    514 U.S. at 668
    . Nor can it be said, borrowing from Justice
    Scalia‟s concurrence in Dillingham, that CPWL falls into the „field of laws‟ regulating
    prices, routes, or services. See Dillingham, 
    117 S.Ct. at 843
    . Accordingly, we hold that
    CPWL is not „related to‟ [plaintiffs‟] prices, routes, and services within the meaning of
    the FAAA Act‟s preemption clause.” (Mendonca, 
    supra, at p. 1189
    , fn. omitted.)
    The court reached a similar conclusion in Air Transport Asso. of America v. City
    and County of San Francisco (9th Cir. 2001) 
    266 F.3d 1064
     (Air Transport). There, a
    provision of San Francisco‟s administrative code required city contractors to provide
    employee benefits to the domestic partners of employees, whether married or registered
    with a government entity. Plaintiffs United Airlines, Federal Express, and others
    (airlines) urged that the city ordinance was preempted by the ADA. (Id. at p. 1068.)
    Specifically, the airlines urged that there was a forbidden connection with routes and
    services because if they did not comply with the ordinance, they would be unable to lease
    property at San Francisco International Airport (SFO). The court disagreed: “What the
    Airlines are truly complaining about are free market forces and their own competitive
    decisions. Whatever leverage the City has in its negotiations over the Airlines is created
    by the market conditions that were allowed to blossom through the passage of the ADA.
    The ADA allows air carriers to make their own decisions about where to fly and how
    many resources to devote to each route and service. In this deregulated environment,
    30
    airlines can decide whether or not to make large economic investments at the San
    Francisco airport. Now, as the Airlines claim, „because of competitive demands and the
    economic commitments made to respond to those demands,‟ they are committed to
    staying at San Francisco. That economic decision may mean the Airlines will have to
    agree to abide by the Ordinance‟s nondiscrimination requirements as a „cost‟ of
    maintaining their leases at SFO. That San Francisco may have bargaining power because
    of the Airlines‟ competitive decisions does not, however, thereby disable San Francisco
    from enforcing its nondiscrimination Ordinance; it is not using that power to force the
    Airlines to adopt or change their prices, routes or services—the prerequisite for ADA
    preemption. [¶] . . .
    “Indeed, the costs of providing the domestic partner employment benefits at issue
    here—the only costs the Airlines complained about—are a small, if not inconsequential,
    fraction of the Airlines‟ costs of flying through SFO. . . . The Airlines could comply with
    the Ordinance‟s requirements by reducing or eliminating these benefits altogether,
    thereby avoiding any additional costs. Moreover, some of the plaintiffs have actually
    begun extending employment benefits to their employees‟ domestic partners on a
    nationwide basis during the pendency of this appeal, even though they were not obligated
    to do so under the Ordinance. This further evidences that the costs of providing these
    benefits are not enough to compel the Airlines to change their routes and services.
    [Citation.] Hypothetically, there might be some contract term the City could demand
    whose costs would be so high that it would compel the Airlines to change their prices,
    routes or services. [Citation.] The nondiscrimination provisions at issue here, however,
    do not approach that level.” (Air Transport, supra, 266 F.3d at pp. 1074-1075, fn.
    omitted.)
    The court reached a contrary result in Dilts v. Penske Logistics, LLC (S.D.Cal.
    2011) 
    819 F.Supp.2d 1109
     (Dilts). There, defendant Penske hired hourly employees to
    provide warehouse and warehouse management services to Whirlpool Corporation in
    California. Penske employees received customer orders, caused appliances to be
    manufactured outside California and then delivered to Whirlpool warehouses, inventoried
    31
    the appliances, loaded appliances onto trucks, and then delivered appliances to customers.
    (Id. at pp. 1111-1112.) Because Penske “expected” employees to take meal breaks, it
    automatically deducted 30 minutes from its employees‟ work time “„without inquiry into
    whether the employee was actually provided with a timely 30-minute uninterrupted and
    duty-free meal period.‟” (Id. at p. 1112.) Plaintiffs, hourly appliance delivery drivers
    and installers assigned to Penske‟s Whirlpool account, sued, alleging violations of several
    provisions of the California Labor Code as well as unfair business practices in violation
    of Business and Professions Code section 17200. Penske moved for summary judgment,
    contending that all of plaintiffs‟ causes of action were preempted by the FAAAA. (Id. at
    p. 1113.)
    The district court granted summary judgment, finding that plaintiffs‟ claims were
    preempted by the FAAAA. It explained that although state law need not directly regulate
    motor carriers to be preempted, a law will be preempted if its effect is such that motor
    carriers “would have to offer different services than what the market would otherwise
    dictate or „freeze into place services that carriers might prefer to discontinue in the
    future.‟ See Rowe, 
    552 U.S. at 371-72
     („the effect of the regulation is that carriers will
    have to offer tobacco delivery services that differ significantly from those that, in the
    absence of the regulation, the market might dictate‟).” (Dilts, supra, 819 F.Supp.2d at
    p. 1118.) The court noted, however, that neither Morales nor Rowe indicate “exactly
    where, or how, it would be appropriate to draw the line between a significant impact and
    a tenuous effect because neither of the state laws at issue in those cases presented a
    „borderline question.‟ Morales, 
    504 U.S. at 390
    ; Rowe, 
    552 U.S. at 371, 375-76
    .” (Dilts,
    supra, at p. 1118.)
    The court continued: “In a very recent decision, the Ninth Circuit examined a
    „borderline case‟ of federal preemption under the FAAA Act. See Am. Trucking Assoc.,
    Inc. v. City of Los Angeles, 
    660 F.3d 384
     (9th Cir. 2011). American Trucking
    acknowledged that „[t]he waters are murkier . . . when a State does not directly regulate
    (or even specifically reference) rates, routes, or services.‟ Id. at 396. Recognizing that
    preemption by the FAAA Act may occur even when the effect on rates, routes, and
    32
    services is only indirect, American Trucking sets out the proper inquiry in „borderline
    cases‟ where the effect on prices, routes, and services may be close to merely tenuous or
    remote: „the proper inquiry is whether the provision, directly or indirectly, “binds the . . .
    carrier to a particular price, route or service and thereby interferes with competitive
    market forces within the . . . industry.”‟ Id. (citing Air Transport Ass’n of Am. v. City &
    Cnty. of San Francisco, 
    266 F.3d 1064
    , 1071 (9th Cir. 2001)). Air Transport considered
    whether a city ordinance relating to equal protection of domestic partners had an effect on
    the routes of airlines, finding that the ordinance was not preempted because it „cannot be
    said to compel or bind the Airlines to a particular route or service,‟ even though it might
    require airlines to increase their rates or cease operating at San Francisco Airport. Air
    Transport, 
    266 F.3d at 1072-74
    . In spite of the ordinance, air carriers could still „make
    their own decisions about where to fly and how many resources to devote to each route
    and service.‟ 
    Id. at 1074
    .
    “Thus, American Trucking and Air Transport make clear that the Court‟s task here
    is to determine whether these laws, which do not directly target the motor carrier
    industry, „bind‟ Penske‟s prices, routes, or services and thereby „interfere with
    competitive market forces within the . . . industry.‟ Although it is a close question, the
    Court finds that they do.
    “. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
    “Penske argues these M & RB [meal and rest break] laws have a significant effect
    on the routes of a motor carrier. The fairly rigid meal and break requirements impact the
    types and lengths of routes that are feasible. „The five stops Plaintiffs insist Penske
    should have ensured at specified times in a 12-hour workday would thus have necessarily
    forced drivers to alter their routes daily while searching out an appropriate place to exit
    the highway, [and] locating stopping places that safely and lawfully accommodate their
    vehicles.‟ While the laws do not strictly bind Penske‟s drivers to one particular route,
    they have the same effect by depriving them of the ability to take any route that does not
    offer adequate locations for stopping, or by forcing them to take shorter or fewer routes.
    In essence, the laws bind motor carriers to a smaller set of possible routes.
    33
    “Additionally, the M & RB laws have a significant impact on Penske‟s services.
    The parties both agree that „scheduling off-duty meal periods for drivers “would require
    one or two less deliveries per day” per driver.‟ Penske states further that the mandated
    duty-free 10-minute rest periods every four hours (preferably in the middle of the four-
    hour period) and duty-free 30-minute meal breaks every five hours reduce driver
    flexibility, interfere with customer service, and, „by virtue of simple mathematics,‟
    reduce the amount of on-duty work time allowable to drivers and thus reduce the amount
    and level of service Penske can offer its customers without increasing its workforce and
    investment in equipment. (Id.) Plaintiffs do not contest these facts.
    “. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
    “Here, the length and timing of meal and rest breaks seems directly and
    significantly related to such things as the frequency and scheduling of transportation.
    Both parties agree that the M & RB laws impact the number of routes each
    driver/installer may go on each day, and Plaintiffs do not oppose Penske‟s argument that
    the laws impact the types of roads their drivers/installers may take and the amount of
    time it takes them to reach their destination from the warehouse. The connection to
    „schedules, origins, . . . and destinations‟ is far from tenuous. While Penske has not
    shown that the M & RB laws would prevent them from serving certain markets, the laws
    bind Penske to a schedule and frequency of routes that ensures many off-duty breaks at
    specific times throughout the workday in such a way that would „interfere with
    competitive market forces within the . . . industry.‟
    “. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
    “[T]o allow California to insist exactly when and for exactly how long carriers
    provide breaks for their employees would allow other States to do the same, and to do so
    differently. „And to interpret the federal law to permit these, and similar, state
    requirements could easily lead to a patchwork of state service-determining laws, rules,
    and regulations.‟ 
    Id.
     Thus, the Court finds state regulation of details significantly
    impacting the routes or services of the carrier‟s transportation itself preempted by the
    34
    FAAA Act.” (Dilts, supra, 819 F.Supp.2d at pp. 1118-1120, internal record citations
    omitted.)
    F.     Fitz-Gerald v. SkyWest Airlines, Inc.
    Division Six of this district considered the effect of ADA preemption on state
    wage and hour laws in Fitz-Gerald v. SkyWest Airlines, Inc. (2007) 
    155 Cal.App.4th 411
    (Fitz-Gerald). There, plaintiffs were flight attendants who sued their employer for
    unpaid minimum wages, unpaid meal and rest breaks, overtime, waiting time penalties,
    and violations of the UCL. (Id. at p. 415.) In the main portion of the opinion, the court
    concluded that plaintiffs‟ claims were preempted by the federal Railway Labor Act (
    45 U.S.C. § 151
     et seq.). In the alternative, the court considered whether plaintiffs‟ claims
    were also preempted by the ADA. The court held that the ADA did not preempt
    plaintiffs‟ causes of action for violations of state labor law, explaining: “SkyWest . . .
    cites no authority that the ADA preempts actions to enforce state minimum wage laws or
    state laws governing meal/rest breaks. Although the ADA has been broadly interpreted
    as preempting state „enforcement actions having a connection with, or reflect to, airline
    “rates, routes, or services,”‟ it has its limits. (Morales[, supra,] 504 U.S. at p. 384.) If
    the rule was otherwise, „any string of contingencies is sufficient to establish a connection
    with price, route or service, [and] there will be no end to ADA preemption. [Citations.]‟
    (Air Transport v. City and County of San Francisco (N.D.Cal. 1998) 
    992 F.Supp. 1149
    ,
    1183.)” (Fitz-Gerald, supra, at p. 423.) The court reached a different result, however,
    with regard to plaintiffs‟ UCL cause of action, which apparently was based on the
    underlying Labor Code violations. In that regard, it concluded without analysis that
    “[b]ased on [Morales and American Airlines, Inc. v. Wolens (1995) 
    513 U.S. 219
    ], we
    conclude that the ADA bars the fifth cause of action for relief under the California Unfair
    Business Practices Act.” (Fitz-Gerald, supra, at p. 423.)6
    6
    Division Five of this district rejected Fitz-Gerald’s analysis in part in People
    ex rel. Harris v. Pac Anchor Transportation, Inc. (2011) 
    195 Cal.App.4th 765
    , review
    granted August 10, 2011, S194388 (Pac Anchor). In Pac Anchor, the State of California
    35
    G.     Analysis
    As we have said, the FAAAA preempts state laws that “relate[]” to a “price, route,
    or service of any motor carrier.” (
    49 U.S.C. § 14501
    (c)(1); Rowe, 
    supra,
     552 U.S. at
    pp. 367-368.) Taken together, the cases discussed above hold that a state law “relates” to
    federal law if it has “„a connection with‟” or “„reference to‟” the subject of the federal
    law. Preemption may occur even if the state law‟s effect “„is only indirect,‟” but there is
    no preemption if that effect is only “„tenuous, remote, or peripheral.‟” (Rowe, supra, 552
    U.S. at pp. 370-371.) Generally applicable state labor laws are not preempted if they do
    not “acutely interfere[] with the forces of competition” or prevent carriers from making
    “their own decisions about [routes] and how many resources to devote to each route and
    service.” (Mendonca, 
    supra,
     152 F.3d at p. 1189; Air Transport, supra, 266 F.3d at
    p. 1074.) However, if the state labor laws are such that they “bind” the motor carrier‟s
    brought a UCL cause of action based on defendant‟s alleged misclassification of its
    workers as independent contractors. As a result of the classification, defendant did not
    obtain workers‟ compensation insurance, withhold state disability insurance or income
    taxes, pay unemployment insurance on behalf of drivers, insure payment of the state
    minimum wage, or provide its drivers with written statements of hours and pay. (Id. at p.
    774.) Like the Fitz-Gerald court, Division Five concluded that the state‟s action to
    enforce the state statutory obligations under the Labor Code “is not related to Pac
    Anchor‟s prices, routes, or services, even though it may remotely affect the prices, routes,
    and services that the motor carrier provides.” (Id. at p. 774.) Such a remote affect, it
    said, “is too tenuous for preemption under the FAAAA.” (Ibid.) The court disagreed
    with Fitz-Gerald, however, that all state unfair business practices statutes are preempted
    by the ADA and FAAAA: “Where a cause of action is based on allegations of unlawful
    violations of the state‟s labor and unemployment insurance laws, we see no reason to find
    preemption merely because the pleading raised these issues under the UCL, as opposed to
    separately stated causes of action. We respectfully disagree with Fitz-Gerald’s contrary
    conclusion as to preemption of causes of action under the UCL.” (Id. at p. 773.)
    Pac Anchor is currently under review by the California Supreme Court, where the
    question presented is as follows: “Is an action under the Unfair Competition Law (Bus.
    & Prof. Code, § 17200 et seq.) that is based on a trucking company‟s alleged violation of
    state labor and insurance laws „related to the price, route, or service‟ of the company and,
    therefore, preempted by the Federal Aviation Administration Authorization Act of 1994
    (
    49 U.S.C. § 14501
    )?”
    36
    prices, routes, or services, they interfere with competitive market forces and are
    preempted by the FAAAA. (Dilts, supra, 819 F.Supp.2d at pp. 1117-1118.)
    Here, both plaintiffs and RWA appear to agree that the California laws at issue do
    not “reference” motor carrier prices, routes, or services within the meaning of Morales,
    Rowe, and Dillingham. That is plainly true—section 3751 is a law of general application
    that does not apply exclusively to motor carriers. The law therefore does not “act[]
    immediately and exclusively upon” motor carriers. Further, “the existence of” motor
    carriers is not “essential to the law‟s operation.” (Dillingham, 
    supra,
     519 U.S. at p. 325.)
    Therefore, section 3751 does not “reference” motor carrier prices, routes, or services.
    We turn therefore to the second part of the analysis—whether section 3751 and
    Albillo have a “connection with” motor carrier prices, routes, or services within the
    meaning of Morales, Rowe, and Dillingham. For the following reasons, they do not.
    First, as in Dillingham, the laws at issue concern the exercise of the state‟s
    “historic police powers.” (Dillingham, supra, 519 U.S. at p. 325.) “Examples of historic
    police powers include „[c]hild labor laws, minimum and other wage laws, laws affecting
    occupational health and safety, and workmen’s compensation laws . . . .‟ (De Canas v.
    Bica (1976) 
    424 U.S. 351
    , 356-357.) „States possess broad authority under their police
    powers to regulate the employment relationship to protect workers within the State.‟
    (Ibid.)” (Farmer Brothers Coffee v. Workers’ Comp. Appeals Bd. (2005) 
    133 Cal.App.4th 533
    , 538-539, italics added.) Under these circumstances, there can be no
    federal preemption “„“unless that was the clear and manifest purpose of Congress.”‟”
    (Dillingham, 
    supra, at p. 325
    .)
    Moreover, as in Dillingham—and as distinct from Morales and Rowe—the
    workers‟ compensation laws at issue have only an indirect economic influence on motor
    carriers. That is, unlike the statutes at issue in Morales and Rowe, the workers‟
    compensation laws at issue here neither “establish binding requirements” as to how the
    motor carriers‟ products may be marketed (Morales, supra, 504 U.S. at p. 388), nor
    “freeze into place services that carriers might prefer to discontinue in the future” (Rowe,
    
    supra,
     552 U.S. at p. 372). Indeed, as in Dillingham, the laws at issue do not “bind
    37
    [motor carriers] to anything.” (Dillingham, 
    supra,
     519 U.S. at p. 332.) Specifically, they
    do not require California motor carriers to purchase workers‟ compensation insurance for
    their independent contractors. They merely provide that if motor carriers choose to
    purchase such workers‟ compensation insurance, the motor carriers cannot pass the costs
    of that insurance on to their independent contractors. Whether motor carriers purchase
    workers‟ compensation insurance is entirely their own decision—state law does not force
    their hand in this regard. As in Dillingham, state law may “alter[] the incentives, but
    does not dictate the choices” facing motor carriers. (Id. at p. 334.)
    RWA urges that section 3751 has a direct connection with prices because it
    transfers “an operating expense from the contract trucker to the motor carrier, . . .
    necessarily undermin[ing] the pricing decision the motor carrier made when determining
    what to charge its customers.” This has the effect, RWA contends, of “substituting a
    governmental policy for the forces of free market competition” and, thus, is preempted by
    the FAAAA. We do not agree. The crux of RWA‟s preemption argument is that the
    effect of California law, as interpreted by Albillo, is to increase its operating expenses
    and, thus, decrease its profitability. As we have said, however, California law does not
    require RWA to purchase workers‟ compensation insurance for its independent
    contractors. To the extent that motor carriers incur workers‟ compensation insurance
    expenses on behalf of their independent contractors, it is because they choose to purchase
    workers‟ compensation insurance—not because state law mandates that they do so.
    Moreover, on the present record there is no evidence that section 3751 increases
    RWA‟s operating expenses. Under California law, employers such as RWA may choose
    to forgo workers‟ compensation insurance for their independent contractors—thus
    exposing themselves to “„“the wider range of damages potentially available in tort”‟”
    (Albillo, supra, 114 Cal.App.4th at p. 199)—or they may purchase workers‟
    compensation insurance, which eliminates a worker‟s tort recovery in most cases. There
    is before us no evidence that purchasing workers‟ compensation insurance increased
    RWA‟s operating expenses over what they would have been had RWA chosen not to
    purchase that insurance. Indeed, RWA presumably chose to purchase workers‟
    38
    compensation insurance because it believed that doing so would decrease, not increase,
    its expenses.
    RWA also contends that Albillo affects RWA‟s services because RWA “may or
    may not be a less attractive place for a contract trucker to work” and “[t]he environment
    in which the contract trucker works . . . has a direct effect on the quality of RWA‟s
    service to its customers.” RWA‟s argument seems to suggest a direct connection
    between the services RWA offers its drivers and the services it offers its customers.
    RWA cites no authority for this proposition, nor are we aware of any. In any event, we
    reject this contention for the same reason we rejected the suggestion of an effect on
    price—nothing in California law requires RWA to provide workers‟ compensation
    insurance for its independent contractors.
    Finally, RWA cites Fitz-Gerald for the proposition that the FAAAA preempts all
    UCL causes of action, even if the underlying labor laws on which the UCL causes of
    action are based are not themselves preempted. Although Fitz-Gerald appears to so hold,
    it does not explain or justify its conclusion other than by a brief reference to Morales and
    Wolens. (Fitz-Gerald, supra, 155 Cal.App.4th at p. 423.) Thus, like the Court of Appeal
    in Pac Anchor, supra, 
    195 Cal.App.4th 765
     (see fn. 5, ante), we respectfully disagree
    with Fitz-Gerald and conclude that where a cause of action is based on allegations of
    unlawful violations of the state‟s labor laws, there is no reason to find preemption merely
    because the pleading raised these issues under the UCL, rather than directly under the
    provisions of the Labor Code alleged to have been violated.
    For all of these reasons, we conclude that section 3751, as interpreted by Albillo, is
    not preempted by the FAAAA. The trial court did not err in so concluding.
    III.   THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN AWARDING PLAINTIFFS
    PREJUDGMENT INTEREST UNDER CIVIL CODE SECTION 3287
    The trial court granted plaintiffs prejudgment interest for the period December 12,
    1993, through May 2012. RWA contends that the trial court did not exercise its
    discretionary power in making this award, but rather awarded prejudgment interest on the
    39
    basis of Civil Code section 3287 and section 3751. RWA contends this was error; citing
    M&F Fishing, Inc. v. Sea-Pac Ins. Managers, Inc. (2012) 
    202 Cal.App.4th 1509
    , RWA
    urges that because a monetary award under the UCL is restitution, not damages, it does
    not support prejudgment interest.
    Plaintiffs disagree. They assert that the trial court awarded prejudgment interest
    under its equitable powers; alternatively, they urge that a restitution award supports an
    award of prejudgment interest under Civil Code section 3287.
    For the reasons stated below, we conclude Civil Code section 3287 does not
    authorize prejudgment interest on an award of restitution under the UCL. (M&F Fishing,
    supra, 202 Cal.App.4th at p. 1528.) Because we are affirming the restitution award under
    the second cause of action, we remand the matter for the trial court to determine whether
    to award prejudgment interest as to that claim under its equitable powers.
    A.      The Trial Court’s Award of Prejudgment Interest
    The trial court awarded plaintiffs prejudgment interest as to the second cause of
    action, as follows: “As to Plaintiff‟s Second Cause of Action, the Court previously held
    that RWA is liable under Plaintiffs‟ Second Cause of Action related to the workers‟
    compensation insurance coverage charges . . . . [¶] . . . The Court finds that Restitution
    should be Ordered as the harm to Plaintiff and the certified class outweighs any utility of
    RWA‟s policies and practices in unlawfully deducting the cost of workers‟ compensation
    insurance coverage from the compensation of Plaintiff and the certified class members.
    [Citation.] Pursuant to Business and Professions Code §§ 17200, 17203, 17535 and
    pursuant to the equitable powers of this Court, RWA is Ordered to restore to Plaintiff and
    the Class all funds RWA retained by means of the unfair and unlawful business acts and
    practices alleged herein. . . .
    “The parties argued whether prejudgment interest should be awarded. [¶] RWA
    argues that prejudgment interest should not be awarded on the amount of money RWA
    unlawfully withheld from Plaintiff and the Class for workers‟ compensation insurance
    coverage until, at least, the date on which the Albillo case was published. The Court
    40
    finds that Albillo does not indicate that its decision should not be applied retroactively
    and Albillo did not create new law, but only interpreted workers‟ compensation laws that
    have existed for many years prior to the decision being rendered.
    “The trial Court awards Plaintiff and the certified class members prejudgment
    interest at 10% [per] annum. The trial court is authorized to award prejudgment interest
    under California Civil Code § 3287, based upon RWA‟s violation of Business and
    Professions Code §§ 17200, et seq., using as a predicate RWA‟s violation of California
    Labor Code § 3751. Civil Code § 3287(a) states: „Every person who is entitled to
    recover damages certain, or capable of being made certain by calculation, and the right to
    recover which is vested in him upon a particular day, is entitled also to recover interest
    thereon from that day[.]‟ The California Supreme Court long ago held that Civil Code
    § 3287 provides for prejudgment interest. See, e.g., Mass v. Board of Education (1964)
    
    61 Cal.2d 312
    .
    “Prejudgment interest under Civil Code § 3287 is awardable when a defendant
    violates a statute. See, Tripp v. Swoap (1976) 
    17 Cal.3d 671
    , 681-682 (overruled on
    other grounds in Frink v. Prod (1982) 
    31 Cal.3d 166
    , 180). In Tripp, the California
    Supreme [Court] upheld an award of prejudgment interest in a case based on a statutory
    violation. Thus, prejudgment interest may be awarded for a violation of Business and
    Professions Code §§ 17200, et seq., that is predicated on a violation of Labor Code
    § 3751; defendants that violate those statutes are not shielded against an award of
    prejudgment interest under Civil Code § 3287.
    “The courts have explained that prejudgment interest is intended to put a plaintiff
    back in the same position the plaintiff was in before money was unlawfully taken from
    the plaintiff. [Citation.] If plaintiff is not put in the same position as before having
    money unlawfully taken, then the wrongdoer „“benefits from denying liability and
    continuing to litigate, while he retains the use of money to which the plaintiff is entitled,
    and the plaintiff is deprived of the benefit he should have derived from an immediate
    recovery.”‟ [Citation.] This could not be more true than in the case at bar, that has been
    41
    litigated for over 10 years, all while RWA benefited from the use of the money that it
    unlawfully took from Plaintiff and the certified class members.
    “. . . Plaintiff and each class member is entitled to interest on the amount of money
    unlawfully deducted from their compensation for the cost of workers‟ compensation
    insurance coverage and all amounts of restitution in this case pursuant to Business &
    Professions Code § 17203. See, Ballard v. Equifax Check Servs., Inc. (E.D.Cal. 2001)
    
    158 F.Supp.2d 1163
    , 1176-1177; Irwin v. Mascott (N.D.Cal. 2000) 
    112 F.Supp.2d 937
    ,
    956.)
    “The parties stipulated that the interest calculated on the total deduction set forth
    . . . above up to the date of September 26, 2011 is $233,360. The parties agree that the
    total deductions from the class members‟ compensation for workers‟ compensation
    insurance coverage is $143,377.20, plus interest, in the total amount of $366,737.20.
    “. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
    “Defendant is ordered to restore to the Plaintiff and the Class, pursuant to this and
    further orders regarding restitution procedures, on Plaintiff‟s Second Cause of Action for
    unlawfully charging the Plaintiff and the Class the cost of workers‟ compensation
    insurance in violation of Labor Code § 3751, the principal amount of $143,377.20, and
    prejudgment interest through September 26, 2011 in the amount of $233,360.
    Prejudgment interest on the principal amount continues to accrue at the rate of 10%
    simple interest until [the] entry of judgment. . . .” (Paragraph numbering & internal
    record citation omitted.)
    B.         Civil Code Section 3287
    Civil Code section 3287 provides: “(a) Every person who is entitled to recover
    damages certain, or capable of being made certain by calculation, and the right to recover
    which is vested in him upon a particular day, is entitled also to recover interest thereon
    from that day, except during such time as the debtor is prevented by law, or by the act of
    the creditor from paying the debt. . . .” (Italics added.)
    42
    In M&F Fishing, Inc. v. Sea-Pac Ins. Managers, Inc., supra, 
    202 Cal.App.4th 1509
    , the court held that section 3287 does not authorize prejudgment interest on an
    award of restitution under the UCL. The court explained: “Civil Code section 3287,
    subdivision (a) also is inapplicable because it governs recovery of damages. . . . As we
    noted ante, under the UCL a plaintiff is entitled to injunctive relief and restitution, but not
    damages. (See Korea Supply [Co. v. Lockheed Martin Corp. (2003)] 29 Cal.4th [1134,]
    1144; see also Cel-Tech Communications, Inc. v. Los Angeles Cellular Telephone Co.
    (1999) 
    20 Cal.4th 163
    , 179.)” (M&F Fishing, Inc., supra, at p. 1538.) The court said,
    however, that although section 3287 did not authorize prejudgment interest under these
    circumstances, the trial court had inherent discretionary authority to award such interest,
    and it remanded the case to allow the trial court to exercise its discretion. (Id. at p. 1539.)
    We are not persuaded by plaintiffs‟ argument that the trial court in the present case
    awarded prejudgment interest pursuant to both section 3287 and its equitable powers. To
    the contrary, the statement of decision suggests that the award of prejudgment interest on
    the second cause of action was based solely on section 3287. We therefore remand the
    matter for the trial court to exercise its discretion with regard to an award of prejudgment
    interest on the second cause of action.
    PLAINTIFFS’ CROSS-APPEAL
    Plaintiffs contend in their cross-appeal that the trial court should have ordered
    RWA to restore to the drivers all of the money it collected for liability insurance, not
    merely the additional administrative fee RWA charged. According to plaintiffs, RWA
    “offset its own insurance costs by unlawfully taking money from the truck drivers. RWA
    should be disgorged of all money it unlawfully took from the truck drivers for liability,
    physical damage, and cargo insurance, pursuant to RWA‟s unlawful scheme of
    transacting insurance without a license under Insurance Code § 1623 and failing to
    properly disclose premiums in policy documents under Insurance Code § 381.
    Otherwise, RWA benefits from its unlawful acts.”
    43
    For the reasons discussed above, RWA did not violate the law by charging
    plaintiffs for the costs of liability insurance. Accordingly, the trial court correctly
    declined to order RWA to disgorge the money charged plaintiffs for that insurance.
    DISPOSITION
    We reverse the trial court‟s award of restitution and prejudgment interest as to the
    first cause of action for unlawfully transacting insurance in violation of the Insurance
    Code. We affirm the trial court‟s award of restitution as to the second cause of action for
    unlawful reimbursement of workers‟ compensation insurance, and we remand the matter
    for the trial court to exercise its discretion with regard to prejudgment interest in
    accordance with the views expressed in this opinion. The parties are to bear their own
    costs on appeal.
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    SUZUKAWA, J.
    We concur:
    EPSTEIN, P. J.
    MANELLA, J.
    44
    

Document Info

Docket Number: B241727M

Filed Date: 9/20/2013

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/30/2014

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