Gavriiloglou v. Prime Healthcare Management CA4/2 ( 2022 )


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  • Filed 8/26/22 Gavriiloglou v. Prime Healthcare Management CA4/2
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
    California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
    publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication
    or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION TWO
    ELENI GAVRIILOGLOU,
    Plaintiff and Appellant,                                       E076832
    v.                                                                       (Super.Ct.No. CIVDS1709515)
    PRIME HEALTHCARE                                                         OPINION
    MANAGEMENT, INC. et al.,
    Defendants and Respondents.
    APPEAL from the Superior Court of San Bernardino County. Donald R. Alvarez,
    Judge. Reversed.
    Law Offices of Gavril T. Gabriel and Gavril T. Gabriel for Plaintiff and Appellant.
    Morgan, Lewis & Bockius, Thomas M. Peterson, Christopher J. Banks, Clifford
    D. Sethness, and Samson C. Huang for Defendants and Respondents.
    Eleni Gavriiloglou brought this action against her former employer and its alleged
    alter egos. She asserted, among other things, (1) individual claims for damages based on
    Labor Code violations and (2) a representative claim for civil penalties for Labor Code
    1
    violations under the Private Attorneys General Act (Lab. Code, § 2698 et seq.) (PAGA).
    As Gavriiloglou had signed an arbitration agreement, the trial court compelled her to
    arbitrate her non-PAGA claims and stayed her PAGA claim while she did. The arbitrator
    found that the alleged Labor Code violations had not occurred. The trial court then
    granted judgment on the pleadings against Gavriiloglou on her PAGA claim; it ruled that
    the arbitrator’s findings established that she was not an “aggrieved employee” within the
    meaning of PAGA, and therefore that she lacked standing to bring a PAGA claim.
    Gavriiloglou appeals. She contends that (1) the trial court erred by denying her
    petition to vacate the arbitration award, and (2) the trial court erred by ruling that the
    arbitration award barred her PAGA claim.
    We will hold that the trial court properly denied the motion to vacate the
    arbitration award. However, we will also hold that the arbitration did not bar the PAGA
    claim because Gavriiloglou was acting in different capacities and asserting different
    rights. Accordingly, we will reverse.
    I
    STATEMENT OF THE CASE
    In her complaint, Gavriiloglou asserted causes of action against Prime Healthcare
    Management, Inc., Prime Healthcare Management II, Inc., Hospital Business Services,
    Inc., and Dr. Prem Reddy (collectively Prime):
    (1) Under the Labor Code, for:
    (a) Failure to provide meal and rest periods (Lab. Code, § 226.7);
    2
    (b) Failure to pay overtime (Lab. Code, § 510);
    (c) Failure to provide all wages due at termination (Lab. Code, § 201);
    (d) Waiting time penalties (Lab. Code, § 203);
    (e) Failure to produce an employee file (Lab. Code, § 1198.5);
    (f) Misclassification as exempt (Lab. Code, § 515);
    (g) Retaliation (Lab. Code, § 1102.5); and
    (h) PAGA penalties (Lab. Code, § 2698 et seq.);
    (2) Under the Fair Employment and Housing Act (Gov. Code, § 12900 et seq.)
    (FEHA), for:
    (a) Discrimination, harassment, and retaliation;
    (b) Failure to prevent discrimination, harassment, and retaliation;
    (c) Failure to provide reasonable accommodation;
    (d) Failure to engage in the good faith interactive process to determine
    effective reasonable accommodation; and
    (e) Wrongful termination in violation of FEHA;
    (3) Wrongful termination in violation of public policy; and
    (4) Unfair competition (Bus. & Prof. Code, § 17200).
    Gavriiloglou had signed an arbitration agreement as a condition of her
    employment. Thus, Prime filed a motion to compel arbitration of all of her non-PAGA
    claims and to stay the litigation of her PAGA claim. Over Gavriiloglou’s opposition, the
    trial court granted the motion.
    3
    The parties selected an arbitrator jointly. After an evidentiary hearing, the
    arbitrator issued a final award in the favor of Prime. In it, the arbitrator found that the
    alleged Labor Code violations did not occur.
    Prime then filed a motion for judgment on the pleadings on the PAGA claim. It
    argued that the arbitrator’s ruling against Gavriiloglou on her Labor Code claims
    established, as a matter of issue preclusion, that she was not an “aggrieved employee”
    (Lab. Code, § 2699, subd. (a)) and therefore she lacked standing to bring a PAGA claim.
    The trial court granted judgment on the pleadings, without leave to amend. Accordingly,
    it entered judgment against Gavriiloglou and in favor of Prime.
    II
    THE MOTION TO VACATE THE ARBITRATION AWARD
    Gavriiloglou contends that the trial court erred by denying her petition to vacate
    the arbitration award.
    A.     Additional Factual and Procedural Background.
    Gavriiloglou filed a petition to vacate the arbitration award. She argued that:
    (1) The arbitrator had failed to rule on her claim of failure to engage in a good-
    faith interactive process in violation of FEHA; and
    (2) The arbitrator failed to allow her to obtain the testimony of Dr. Prem Reddy,
    either in a deposition or at the hearing.
    The trial court denied the motion.
    4
    B.     Discussion.
    “To determine whether an arbitration award should be vacated under Code of Civil
    Procedure section 1286.2, we review the trial court’s decision de novo. [Citation.]”
    (Bacall v. Shumway (2021) 
    61 Cal.App.5th 950
    , 957.)
    1.      Failure to decide the good-faith interactive process claim.
    First, Gavriiloglou contends that the arbitrator failed to decide her good-faith
    interactive process claim.
    “Arbitrators are required to decide all questions submitted that are ‘necessary’ to
    determine the controversy. [Citation.] [¶] Failure to do so may be ground to vacate the
    award . . . .” (Knight et al., Cal. Practice Guide: Alternative Dispute Resolution (The
    Rutter Group 2021 update) ¶ 5:498 at p. 5-559; see also Code Civ. Proc., §§ 1283.4,
    1286.2, subd. (a)(5); VVA-TWO, LLC v. Impact Development Group, LLC (2020) 
    48 Cal.App.5th 985
    , 998.) “The award need not, however, set forth findings of fact or a
    statement of reasons. The award is valid as long as it serves to settle the entire
    controversy . . . . [Citation.]” (Severtson v. Williams Construction Co. (1985) 
    173 Cal.App.3d 86
    , 92.)
    “[I]t is presumed that all issues submitted for decision have been passed on and
    resolved, and the burden of proving otherwise is upon the party challenging the award.
    [Citations.]” (Rodrigues v. Keller (1980) 
    113 Cal.App.3d 838
    , 842.)
    FEHA prohibits an employer from discriminating against or harassing an
    employee based on, among other protected characteristics, a disability. (Gov. Code,
    5
    § 12940, subds. (a), (j).) It requires an employer “to make reasonable accommodation for
    [a] known . . . disability of an . . . employee.” (Id., subd. (m)(1).) It also requires an
    employer, “in response to a request for reasonable accommodation by an employee . . .
    with a known . . . disability,” “to engage in a timely, good faith, interactive process with
    the employee . . . to determine effective reasonable accommodations, if any . . . .” (Id.,
    subd. (n).)
    Here, the arbitrator noted that Gavriiloglou had alleged FEHA claims, including
    “failure to engage in the interactive process . . . .” In a section entitled “Disabilities,” she
    rejected them, in part because she found that “[t]here was no evidence that [Gavriiloglou]
    requested or needed any workplace accommodations related to her [disability] beyond
    occasional time off work and the use of the restroom as needed[,] which [Prime]
    provided.”
    “Once notified of a disability, the employer’s burden is to take positive steps to
    accommodate the employee’s limitations. The employee also retains a duty to cooperate
    with the employer’s effort by explaining his or her disability and qualifications.
    Reasonable accommodation thus envisions an exchange between employer and employee
    where each seeks and shares information to achieve the best match between the
    employee’s capabilities and available positions. [Citation.] If a reasonable
    accommodation does not work, the employee must notify the employer, who has a duty to
    provide further accommodation. [Citation.]” (Brown v. Los Angeles Unified School
    District (2021) 
    60 Cal.App.5th 1092
    , 1108, italics added.)
    6
    Here, then, the arbitrator’s finding that Prime provided all of the accommodations
    that (as far as the evidence showed) Gavriiloglou requested and needed was dispositive of
    her good-faith interactive process claim.
    Gavriiloglou asserts that “a trier of fact’s ruling that an employer reasonabl[y]
    accommodated an employee is not necessarily dispositive on the question of whether the
    employer also satisfied its duty to engage in good faith in the interactive process.”
    (Italics added.) In principle, we agree. (See, e.g., Wysinger v. Automobile Club of
    Southern California (2007) 
    157 Cal.App.4th 413
    , 425-426 [employer was not liable for
    failure to provide reasonable accommodation, because parties never reached the stage of
    deciding which accommodation was required, but it could be liable for failure to engage
    in interactive process].) On the facts of this case, however, as found by the arbitrator, it
    was dispositive.
    Gavriiloglou also quotes a portion of her post-hearing reply brief discussing the
    evidence supposedly proving that Prime failed to engage in the interactive process. We
    accept this as showing that Gavriiloglou did raise her interactive process claim in the
    arbitration. If only out of an excess of caution, however, we point out that it does not
    show that there were grounds to vacate the award. “Statements by an attorney, whether
    made in court or in a brief, are not evidence. [Citations.]” (Muskan Food & Fuel, Inc. v.
    City of Fresno (2021) 
    69 Cal.App.5th 372
    , 389-390.) And even if they were, a court
    cannot vacate an arbitration award based on either “‘the merits of the controversy’” or
    “‘the sufficiency of the evidence.’” (Morris v. Zuckerman (1968) 
    69 Cal.2d 686
    , 691.)
    7
    Thus, the trial court properly refused to vacate the award on the theory that the
    arbitrator had failed to decide Gavriiloglou’s interactive process claim.
    2.     Inability to call or depose Dr. Prem Reddy.
    Second, Gavriiloglou contends that the arbitrator did not allow her to call or to
    depose Dr. Prem Reddy.
    a.      Additional factual and procedural background.
    In her complaint, Gavriiloglou alleged that her supervisors, Kenneth Wheeler and
    Sheila Reddy,1 participated in the alleged FEHA and Labor Code violations. She
    complained to them about some of the violations. She also complained to Hazel Ganay, a
    member of the Human Resources staff.
    She alleged that Wheeler told her that Dr. Reddy had approved a salary increase
    and a bonus, neither of which she ever received. Dr. Reddy also asked her to create
    “‘bridge routines’ that would allow defendants to bill Medicare/Medi-Cal and other
    private health insurance companies inflated or inaccurate charges . . . . Plaintiff asked if
    this practice was illegal and was told by [Dr.] Reddy and Wheeler that this was legal.”
    (Capitalization altered.)2 Prime terminated her, in part, “in retaliation for [her] refusal to
    . . . participate in unlawful billing practices . . . .” Also, at one point, she emailed a
    1       Allegedly Sheila Reddy is Dr. Reddy’s niece.
    2       The complaint did not define or describe “bridge routines.” In her
    interrogatories to Dr. Reddy, however, Gavriiloglou defined them as “the process in
    which a third-party billing clearinghouse does not allow an electronic claim form to be
    submitted until an individual manually reviews and makes edits to submit a claim to any
    health insurance.”
    8
    complaint about disability discrimination to both Human Resources and Dr. Reddy.
    Apparently it is undisputed that it was Sheila Reddy who told Gavriiloglou that she was
    terminated.
    The arbitrator ordered the parties to meet and confer regarding a discovery plan,
    including the number of depositions to be taken.
    Gavriiloglou wanted to take 15 depositions, including Dr. Reddy’s. Prime
    objected that Dr. Reddy was an “‘apex’ witness” and Gavriiloglou had not shown good
    cause to depose him as such.
    After a hearing, the arbitrator agreed that Dr. Reddy was an apex witness and that
    Gavriiloglou had not shown good cause to take his deposition. However, she allowed
    Gavriiloglou to serve 15 interrogatories on Dr. Reddy. Gavriiloglou did so, and
    Dr. Reddy responded. In his response, he testified that:
    (1) He did not remember the substance of any conversation that he may have had
    with Wheeler about Gavriiloglou.
    (2) He did not remember Gavriiloglou ever complaining to him about bridge
    routines.
    (3) Gavriiloglou sent an email to Hazel Ganay complaining about Sheila Reddy,
    with a copy to Dr. Reddy. He forwarded it to Human Resources. He understood that
    Ganay followed up with Gavriiloglou.
    9
    (4) His only involvement in the decision to terminate Gavriiloglou was “deferring
    to” Sheila Reddy’s termination decision. This occurred during a meeting with Sheila
    Reddy. He did not remember anything else about the meeting.
    Based on Dr. Reddy’s responses, Gavriiloglou filed a motion to compel his
    deposition. The arbitrator denied the motion, finding again that Gavriiloglou had not
    shown good cause to take his deposition.
    Prime filed a motion in limine to preclude Gavriiloglou from calling Dr. Reddy to
    testify at the arbitration hearing. The arbitrator granted the motion. Thus, Dr. Reddy did
    not testify in the arbitration, either in person or by deposition.
    b.     Discussion.
    An arbitration award may be vacated if “[t]he rights of the party were substantially
    prejudiced . . . by the refusal of the arbitrators to hear evidence material to the
    controversy . . . .” (Code Civ. Proc., § 1286.2, subd (a)(5).)
    “[V]acation of an award for ‘refusal . . . to hear evidence material to the
    controversy’ (§ 1286.2, subd. (a)(5)) must rest on more than a simple error in applying
    the rules of evidence. . . . The provision . . . was designed as a ‘safety valve in private
    arbitration that permits a court to intercede when an arbitrator has prevented a party from
    fairly presenting its case.’ [Citation.] It comes into play, for example, when an
    arbitrator, without justification, permits only one side to present evidence on a disputed
    material issue. [Citation.]” (Heimlich v. Shivji (2019) 
    7 Cal.5th 350
    , 368-369.)
    10
    “[W]hen a plaintiff seeks to depose a corporate president or other official at the
    highest level of corporate management, and that official moves for a protective order to
    prohibit the deposition, the trial court should first determine whether the plaintiff has
    shown good cause that the official has unique or superior personal knowledge of
    discoverable information. If not, as will presumably often be the case in the instance of a
    large national or international corporation, the trial court should issue [a] protective order
    and first require the plaintiff to obtain the necessary discovery through less-intrusive
    methods. These would include interrogatories directed to the high-level official to
    explore the state of his or her knowledge or involvement in plaintiff’s case; the deposition
    of lower-level employees with appropriate knowledge and involvement in the subject
    matter of the litigation; and the organizational deposition of the corporation itself, which
    will require the corporation to produce for deposition the most qualified officer or
    employee to testify on its behalf as to the specified matters to be raised at the deposition.
    [Citation.] Should these avenues be exhausted, and the plaintiff make a colorable
    showing of good cause that the high-level official possesses necessary information to the
    case, the trial court may then lift the protective order and allow the deposition to
    proceed.” (Liberty Mutual Ins. Co. v. Superior Court (1992) 
    10 Cal.App.4th 1282
    ,
    1289.) These rules apply even when the deponent is a party. (See Nagle v. Superior
    Court (1994) 
    28 Cal.App.4th 1465
    , 1468.)
    Gavriiloglou does not dispute that Dr. Reddy was such a high-level official. It
    follows that the arbitrator properly restricted Gavriiloglou to serving interrogatories on
    11
    him. She has not shown that she was unable to obtain equivalent information through
    “the deposition of lower-level employees” or “the organizational deposition of the
    corporation itself.” Because she failed to “exhaust[]” these “avenues,” she cannot
    complain that she was not allowed to depose Dr. Reddy.
    Separately and alternatively, Gavriiloglou also failed to show that Dr. Reddy had
    information “necessary . . . to the case.” She argues that “Dr. Reddy is a key witness to
    the presentation of Plaintiff’s case because he had personal knowledge as to ‘bridge
    routines,’ promised bonuses, and the final termination discussion between h[im] and
    Sheila Reddy, the individual that allegedly made the decision to terminate Plaintiff.
    [Citation.]”
    Dr. Reddy denied discussing bridge routines with Gavriiloglou. It would seem
    that other witnesses could have testified about what bridge routines are, whether they are
    legal, whether Gavriiloglou objected to them, and whether she was fired for objecting to
    them. Those witnesses would include Wheeler, with whom she allegedly discussed them,
    and Sheila Reddy, who made the decision to fire her.
    Indeed, the arbitrator rejected Gavriiloglou’s claims regarding bridge routines
    because — like Dr. Reddy — both Wheeler and Sheila Reddy did not remember
    discussing them with her, and also because the evidence showed that Gavriiloglou
    “continued to work on bridge routines regularly throughout the rest of her time at Prime.”
    Thus, Gavriiloglou has not shown that Dr. Reddy’s testimony about bridge routines was
    “necessary” or that it would have changed the outcome.
    12
    Similarly, Gavriiloglou alleged that Wheeler told her that Dr. Reddy had
    authorized a salary increase and a bonus for her, which were was never paid. She had the
    opportunity to examine Wheeler and Sheila Reddy on this topic. They testified that
    bonuses were discretionary and were never promised, and the arbitrator accepted this
    testimony.
    Dr. Reddy conceded that he may have discussed Gavriiloglou with Wheeler, but if
    so, he did not remember the content of the discussion. Thus, again, it does not appear
    that his testimony was necessary or that it would have changed the outcome.
    Finally, Dr. Reddy testified that he deferred to Sheila Reddy’s decision to
    terminate Gavriiloglou and otherwise he had no recollection of the discussion.
    Accordingly, once again, Gavriiloglou has not shown that further testimony from
    Dr. Reddy on this topic would have changed the outcome.
    In sum, Gavriiloglou has not shown that her rights were substantially prejudiced
    by the arbitrator’s refusal to let her depose Dr. Reddy or call him to testify. It follows
    that the trial court properly refused to vacate the award on this ground.
    III
    THE EFFECT OF THE ARBITRATOR’S RULING ON THE PAGA CLAIM
    Gavriiloglou contends that the trial court erred by ruling that the arbitration award
    barred her PAGA claim because:
    (1) The arbitrator had no authority to decide the PAGA claim.
    13
    (2) This case is analogous to Kim v. Reins International California, Inc. (2020) 
    9 Cal.5th 73
     (Kim), which held that an employee who has settled his or her individual
    Labor Code claims remains an “aggrieved employee” with standing to assert a PAGA
    claim.
    (3) Issue preclusion did not apply because the arbitration was part of the same
    action as the litigation of the PAGA claim.
    (4) Issue preclusion did not apply because Gavriiloglou was acting in different
    capacities in the arbitration and in the litigation of the PAGA claim.
    We need not decide her first three contentions, because we conclude that the
    fourth is dispositive.
    A.    Legal Background.
    PAGA “empowers employees to sue on behalf of themselves and other aggrieved
    employees to recover civil penalties previously recoverable only by the Labor
    Commissioner . . . . [Citations.]” (ZB, N.A. v. Superior Court (2019) 
    8 Cal.5th 175
    ,
    185.) “Of the civil penalties recovered, 75 percent goes to the Labor and Workforce
    Development Agency, leaving the remaining 25 percent for the ‘aggrieved employees.’
    [Citation.]” (Arias v. Superior Court (2009) 
    46 Cal.4th 969
    , 980-981, fn. omitted.)
    “Only an ‘aggrieved employee’ has standing to bring a civil action under PAGA.
    [Citation.]” (Moniz v. Adecco USA, Inc. (2021) 
    72 Cal.App.5th 56
    , 74; see also Lab.
    Code, § 2699, subd. (a).) “Aggrieved employee” is defined as “any person who was
    14
    employed by the alleged violator and against whom one or more of the alleged violations
    was committed.” (Lab. Code, § 2699, subd. (c).)
    “All PAGA claims are ‘representative’ actions in the sense that they are brought
    on the state’s behalf. The employee acts as “‘the proxy or agent of the state’s labor law
    enforcement agencies’” and “‘represents the same legal right and interest as’” those
    agencies — “‘namely, recovery of civil penalties that otherwise would have been
    assessed and collected by the Labor Workforce Development Agency.”’ [Citation.]”
    (ZB, N.A. v. Superior Court, 
    supra,
     8 Cal.5th at p. 185.)
    B.    Issue Preclusion Where the Plaintiff Is Acting in Different Capacities.
    As mentioned, Gavriiloglou contends that issue preclusion did not apply because
    she was acting in different capacities in the arbitration and in the litigation of the PAGA
    claim.
    She did not raise this argument below. “‘We have discretion, however, to address
    a pure question of law raised for the first time on appeal. [Citation.]’ [Citation.]”
    (Kaura v. Stabilis Fund II, LLC (2018) 
    24 Cal.App.5th 420
    , 430.) This contention
    presents precisely such a question. Moreover, Prime has not objected based on her
    failure to raise the argument below; rather, it has responded to the argument on the
    merits. (See Grabowski v. Kaiser Foundation Health Plan, Inc. (2021) 
    64 Cal.App.5th 67
    , 75, fn. 3 [court considered new issue on appeal where facts were undisputed and
    respondent had not objected].)
    15
    “The doctrine of res judicata has two aspects — claim preclusion and issue
    preclusion. [Citations.]” (Ivanoff v. Bank of America, N.A. (2017) 
    9 Cal.App.5th 719
    ,
    727.) “Issue preclusion . . . ‘applies only “(1) after final adjudication (2) of an identical
    issue (3) actually litigated and necessarily decided in the first suit and (4) asserted against
    one who was a party in the first suit or one in privity with that party.”’ [Citation.]”
    (Grande v. Eisenhower Medical Center (2022) 
    13 Cal.5th 313
    , 323, italics omitted.) An
    arbitration award can have issue preclusion effect. (Sanchez v. Carmax Auto Superstores
    California, LLC (2014) 
    224 Cal.App.4th 398
    , 407; Border Business Park, Inc. v. City of
    San Diego (2006) 
    142 Cal.App.4th 1538
    , 1564.)
    According to the Restatement (Second) of Judgments, section 36(2), “[a] party
    appearing in an action in one capacity, individual or representative, is not thereby bound
    by or entitled to the benefits of the rules of res judicata in a subsequent action in which he
    appears in another capacity.” This rule applies to both claim preclusion and issue
    preclusion. (Id., com. a.) “With respect to issue preclusion, a party appearing in
    successive actions . . . is not precluded where the capacities in which he participated are
    different.” (Ibid.)3
    3       Gavriiloglou argues that issue preclusion is not involved here at all, because
    the arbitration and any further court proceedings are part of a single action. Even if so,
    there is a similar preclusion rule that does apply within a single action. “‘Issues
    adjudicated in earlier phases of a bifurcated trial are binding in later phases of that trial
    and need not be relitigated. [Citations.] No other rule is possible, or bifurcation of trial
    issues would create duplication, thus subverting the procedure’s goal of efficiency.
    [Citation.] “[D]uplication of effort is the very opposite of the purpose of bifurcated
    trials.”’ [Citations.]” (Orange County Water Dist. v. Alcoa Global Fasteners, Inc.
    (2017) 
    12 Cal.App.5th 252
    , 359; accord, Nwosu v. Uba (2004) 
    122 Cal.App.4th 1229
    ,
    16
    California follows this rule. For purposes of both issue preclusion and claim
    preclusion, “‘[i]dentity of parties means not only that they must be identical in person,
    but that the capacity in which they appear must be the same. A judgment for or against a
    party in one right or capacity cannot affect him when acting in another right or capacity.’
    [Citation.]” (Holman v. Santa Cruz County (1949) 
    91 Cal.App.2d 502
    , 513; e.g.,
    Meldrim v. Board of Supervisors (1976) 
    57 Cal.App.3d 341
    , 346; Travis Glass Co. v.
    Ibbetson (1921) 
    186 Cal. 724
    , 729-730; see also Code Civ. Proc., § 1908, subd. (a)(2)
    [judgment is conclusive between the parties when “litigating . . . in the same capacity”].)
    California does recognize one exception: “‘Where a party though appearing in
    two suits in different capacities is in fact litigating the same right, the judgment in one
    estops him in the other.’ [Citations.]” (Bernhard v. Bank of America Nat. Trust &
    Savings Assn. (1942) 
    19 Cal.2d 807
    , 814.) Here, however, Gavriiloglou is not litigating
    the same right.
    “In a lawsuit brought under [PAGA], the employee plaintiff represents the same
    legal right and interest as state labor law enforcement agencies — namely, recovery of
    civil penalties that otherwise would have been assessed and collected by the Labor
    Workforce Development Agency. [Citation.]” (Arias v. Superior Court, 
    supra,
     46
    Cal.4th at p. 986.) “[Individual] employees do not own a personal claim for PAGA civil
    penalties [citation], and whatever personal claims [individual] employees might have for
    1244; Arntz Contracting Co. v. St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co. (1996) 
    47 Cal.App.4th 464
    , 487.)
    17
    relief are not at stake [citation].” (Williams v. Superior Court (2017) 
    3 Cal.5th 531
    , 547,
    fn. 4.) Thus, in the arbitration, Gavriiloglou was litigating her own individual right to
    damages for Labor Code violations, whereas in the present PAGA action, she is litigating
    the state’s right to statutory penalties for Labor Code violations. It follows that the
    arbitrator’s findings cannot have preclusive effect.
    Recently, Howitson v. Evans Hotels, LLC (2022) 
    81 Cal.App.5th 475
     came to a
    similar conclusion, albeit in the context of claim preclusion. There, Howitson filed an
    action against her former employer, asserting Labor Code and unfair competition claims,
    individually and as a representative of a putative class, but not a PAGA claim. (Id. at
    p. 482.) That action was settled, and the trial court entered judgment for Howitson.
    (Ibid.) Howitson then filed a new action against the employer, asserting a PAGA claim
    “‘based on the same factual predicates’” as her first lawsuit. (Ibid.)
    The appellate court held that “claim preclusion does not apply because the parties
    in the two lawsuits are not the same. [Citation.] In the First Lawsuit, Howitson was the
    real party in interest, as she as an individual and class representative sought damages
    against Evans Hotels for purported Labor Code violations to the employees. [Citation.]
    [¶] However, in the Second Lawsuit, the state is the real party in interest. [Citations.]
    Although the Legislature gave Howitson, an ‘aggrieved employee,’ standing to act as a
    representative in the Second Lawsuit, she is not the real party in interest in that suit.
    [Citations.]” (Howitson v. Evans Hotels, LLC, supra, 81 Cal.App.5th at pp. 488-489.) It
    18
    also held that the state was not in privity with Howitson, “because the state had no
    interest in the subject matter of the First Lawsuit.” (Id. at pp. 490-492.)
    Finally, the appellate court held that the two actions were based on different
    primary rights. (Howitson v. Evans Hotels, LLC, supra, 81 Cal.App.5th at pp. 487-488.)
    “In the First Lawsuit, the harm suffered was to Howitson individually and to a putative
    class of former or current employees of Evans Hotel, for purported Labor Code violations
    to the employees themselves in which compensatory damages were sought. [Citation.]
    However, in the Second Lawsuit, the harm suffered for such violations is to the state and
    the general public, in which civil penalties are assessed even if there is no injury to the
    employees themselves. [Citations.]” (Id. at p. 487.)
    Prime argues that “the ‘same right,’ for purposes of issue preclusion, is not
    equivalent to the ‘same primary right,’ a concept relevant only to claim preclusion . . . .”
    (Italics omitted.) That is not entirely correct; the “same right” is relevant to whether
    either claim preclusion or issue preclusion applies against a party who is litigating in a
    different capacity. (Bernhard v. Bank of America Nat. Trust & Savings Assn., supra, 19
    Cal.2d at p. 814 [issue preclusion]; Hardware Mut. Ins. Co. of Minn. v. Valentine (1953)
    
    119 Cal.App.2d 125
    , 131 [claim preclusion].) However, we need not decide this point.
    The reasoning in Howitson was that the first lawsuit was based on the harm to individual
    employees, whereas the second lawsuit was based on the harm to the state and the general
    public. This leads to the conclusion, not only that they were not based on the same
    19
    primary right, but also that they were not based on the same right at all. The same
    reasoning applies to the individual arbitration and the PAGA litigation here.
    We therefore conclude that the trial court erred by granting judgment on the
    pleadings based on issue preclusion.
    IV
    DISPOSITION
    The judgment is reversed. Gavriiloglou is awarded costs on appeal against Prime.
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
    RAMIREZ
    P. J.
    We concur:
    SLOUGH
    J.
    FIELDS
    J.
    20
    

Document Info

Docket Number: E076832

Filed Date: 8/26/2022

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 8/26/2022