Betancourt v. OS Restaurant Services, LLC ( 2020 )


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  • Filed 4/30/20; Certified for Publication 5/21/20 (order attached)
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION EIGHT
    RAQUEL BETANCOURT,                                   B293625
    Plaintiff and Respondent,                       (Los Angeles County
    Super. Ct. No. BC629916)
    v.
    OS RESTAURANT SERVICES,
    LLC, et al.,
    Defendants and Appellants.
    APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los
    Angeles County. Deirdre Hill, Judge. Reversed and remanded
    with directions.
    Raines Feldman, Lauren J. Katunich, Robert M. Shore and
    Leticia M. Kimble for Defendants and Appellants.
    Felahy Employment Lawyers, Allen Felahy; Yash Law
    Group and Yashdeep Singh for Plaintiff and Respondent.
    __________________________
    SUMMARY
    The Labor Code mandates an award of reasonable attorney
    fees to the prevailing party in any action brought for the
    nonpayment of wages, if any party requests attorney fees at the
    initiation of the action. (Lab. Code, § 218.5, subd. (a).)1 But an
    action brought for failure to provide rest breaks or meal periods
    (§ 226.7) is not “an ‘action brought for the nonpayment of wages’ ”
    within the meaning of section 218.5. (Kirby v. Immoos Fire
    Protection, Inc. (2012) 
    53 Cal. 4th 1244
    , 1255 (Kirby);
    id. at p.
    1259 [“the Legislature intended section 226.7 claims to be
    governed by the default American rule that each side must cover
    its own attorney’s fees”].)
    The trial court awarded plaintiff over $280,000 in attorney
    fees, even though the only wage and hour claims alleged and
    litigated were for rest break and meal period violations, and
    claims for penalties based on those violations. We conclude the
    trial court abused its discretion and reverse the judgment to the
    extent it awards attorney fees to plaintiff.
    FACTS
    Defendants are OS Restaurant Services, LLC and Bloomin’
    Brands, Inc. They are the owners or operators of a Fleming’s
    Steakhouse & Wine Bar on Olympic Boulevard in Los Angeles.
    Plaintiff Raquel Betancourt worked there as a server from 2008
    through 2015.
    1.     The Complaint
    In August 2016, plaintiff sued defendants. The complaint
    alleged defendants regularly failed to give plaintiff her full
    1    Further statutory references are to the Labor Code unless
    otherwise specified.
    2
    uninterrupted rest periods, and that defendants wrongfully
    terminated plaintiff in retaliation for her making internal
    complaints that defendants violated wage and hour laws and food
    safety laws.
    Plaintiff alleged she saw a chef using a vegetable cutting
    board to prepare raw chicken, and reported the incident to her
    manager, but defendants ignored her report. Three months later,
    plaintiff informed Tiffany Yeargin, defendants’ senior human
    resource business partner, that one of the chefs routinely used
    vegetable cutting boards to prepare raw chicken, and that
    employees were regularly denied their 10-minute rest periods.
    Immediately following plaintiff’s complaints to
    Ms. Yeargin, defendants’ managerial employees began to
    retaliate by “highly scrutinizing Plaintiff’s performance” and
    singling her out for discipline for spurious reasons. Defendants
    continued to prevent her from taking her 10-minute rest periods.
    Ms. Yeargin ignored plaintiff’s complaints about the retaliatory
    actions.
    The complaint alleged that in December 2015, defendants
    issued plaintiff a formal written reprimand “based upon false and
    fabricated accusations of insubordination, which resulted in
    Plaintiff’s suspension.” After that, plaintiff again informed
    Ms. Yeargin of the retaliation and requested the reprimand be
    removed from her employment record, but her request was
    denied.
    “[I]n further retaliation against Plaintiff for her
    whistleblowing activities,” defendants terminated plaintiff’s
    employment. “To date, Defendants have refused to pay Plaintiff
    all wages earned and unpaid at the time of her termination;
    including, without limitation, unpaid rest period premiums.”
    3
    Plaintiff alleged causes of action for retaliation and
    wrongful termination because of her reports of rest break and
    food safety violations. She also alleged she was entitled to
    recover unpaid premium wages under section 226.7 for the rest
    break violations; penalties, costs and attorney fees under
    section 226 for failing to include rest break premiums on her
    itemized wage statements; and waiting time penalties under
    sections 201 through 203 for failure to pay all wages on
    termination, “including, without limitation, unpaid premium
    wages in lieu of rest periods.”
    The prayer for relief requested attorney fees under
    sections 218.5 and 226, Code of Civil Procedure section 1021.5,
    “and any other applicable provisions of law.”
    2.    The Litigation
    Defendants answered the complaint in October 2016.
    Discovery ensued. We will describe some of it as necessary
    in connection with our legal discussion. For now, it suffices to
    say that two days after the trial court issued a tentative ruling on
    October 11, 2017, compelling plaintiff to comply with discovery
    requests and awarding sanctions against her, and one day after
    plaintiff produced more than 1,000 previously withheld
    documents, the parties settled the case. About a month before
    the settlement, the parties had stipulated the complaint could be
    amended to add a cause of action for meal period violations.
    3.    The Settlement
    The parties put the terms of their settlement agreement on
    the record in open court on October 13, 2017. Defendants agreed
    to waive plaintiff’s payment of sanctions and to pay plaintiff
    $15,375 in full settlement of her claims for failure to provide meal
    and rest periods under section 226.7, failure to provide accurate
    4
    itemized wage statements under section 226, failure to pay all
    wages upon termination under sections 201 through 203, and
    “any and all wage-and-hour-related causes of action that were or
    could have been asserted in the complaint.” Plaintiff agreed to
    dismiss with prejudice and without any payment her claims for
    retaliation and wrongful termination. The parties agreed to kick
    the can down the road on their dispute about plaintiff’s right to
    recover attorney fees on her wage and hour claims by agreeing
    plaintiff could later file a motion for attorney fees incurred only
    on those claims, “consistent with applicable law.”
    4.     Plaintiff’s Motion for Attorney Fees
    Plaintiff then sought $580,794 in attorney fees (and costs of
    more than $16,000), under sections 218.5 and 226. This consisted
    of a lodestar amount of $387,196 and a multiplier of 1.5. No time
    records were provided to the court, but plaintiff’s counsel said
    869.6 hours were incurred by his firm at various hourly rates.
    Plaintiff contended her wage and hour claims were “closely
    intertwined” with her retaliation and wrongful termination
    claims, so she was entitled to recover all of her fees and costs.
    Defendants opposed the motion, contending that, among
    other reasons, Kirby and its progeny dictate that a party cannot,
    as a matter of law, recover attorney fees when she prevails only
    on a claim for meal or rest break premium pay. Defendants also
    contended plaintiff’s claims of retaliation and wrongful
    termination were the crux of her case, and virtually all discovery
    was focused on those claims. Defendants gave multiple examples
    of discovery disputes requiring them to seek court intervention,
    none of which was relevant to meal and rest break claims, and
    many of which were directed at plaintiff’s claims for economic
    damage flowing from her retaliation and wrongful termination
    5
    claims. Defendants referred to the court’s October 11, 2017
    tentative ruling stating that plaintiff “has wrongfully withheld
    documents” and that plaintiff and her counsel “have engaged in
    repeated abuses of the discovery process for months.” Defense
    counsel’s declaration stated that on October 12, 2017, plaintiff
    finally produced more than 1,100 probative documents that were
    highly damaging to plaintiff’s case and credibility.
    Defense counsel also attached plaintiff’s July 18, 2017
    settlement demand. In that demand, plaintiff’s counsel valued
    her case at $750,000. Of that total sum, plaintiff’s counsel valued
    the rest break and the derivative wage statement and waiting
    period penalty claims at less than $13,000.
    Plaintiff came up with a new theory for recovery of all her
    attorney fees in her reply to defendants’ opposition to the motion
    for attorney fees. She asserted—for the first time—that
    “[d]efendants’ own payroll and timekeeping records demonstrate
    that Plaintiff was not paid for all hours worked; and that it was
    part of Defendants’ timekeeping scheme to unilaterally
    reduce/adjust Plaintiff’s timesheets in order to avoid paying
    Plaintiff for all hours worked and all earned overtime.”
    The declaration of plaintiff’s counsel attached copies of
    defendants’ timekeeping spreadsheets and one of plaintiff’s wage
    statements. Plaintiff’s counsel opined that his analysis of these
    documents showed plaintiff “was shorted .49 total hours, and
    virtually all of this is overtime.” Plaintiff’s counsel further
    opined the timekeeping spreadsheets showed “unilateral
    downward adjustments,” and “[t]here were 47.82 total hours lost
    to ‘adjustments.’ ” Counsel did not state, in the reply papers or in
    any subsequent filings, when he had performed this analysis, i.e.,
    whether he performed the analysis before filing the motion for
    6
    attorney fees, or only after getting defendants’ opposition
    asserting the focus of the litigation had been on the retaliation
    and wrongful termination claims.
    At the January 26, 2018 hearing on the motion for fees, the
    court heard argument and continued the hearing for further
    briefing. The parties filed additional briefs, declarations and
    evidentiary objections. There were several more continuances
    following further hearings on the motion, some of which, but not
    all of which were reported by a court reporter. One of the
    unreported hearings was continued because defense counsel was
    pregnant and birth was imminent.
    In supplemental papers, plaintiff’s counsel said, upon
    further analysis, he determined that only about 10 percent of the
    hours incurred by his firm were devoted primarily to the
    retaliation and wrongful termination claims, and 90 percent of
    the time was incurred to litigate the wage and hour claims.
    Counsel reduced the fee request by 10 percent from the lodestar
    of $387,196 to $348,476.40, and did not request a lodestar
    multiplier. In later-filed supplemental papers, plaintiff sought
    another $48,914 for work performed in litigating the fee
    application since filing that motion, for a total of $397,390. No
    time records were ever supplied.
    Defendants continued to assert there was no evidence that
    plaintiff raised, litigated, and expended attorney fees on any
    theory of wage liability other than meal and rest breaks for which
    attorney fees cannot be awarded. Defense counsel’s declaration
    also stated that plaintiff’s interpretation of the pay records was
    wrong, because her counsel looked at the wrong column for hours
    worked; and adjustments were made because of failure to clock
    7
    out at the end of a shift, as confirmed on other time reports
    produced in discovery.
    On July 13, 2018, without calling the case for hearing, the
    court granted the motion for attorney fees in the amount of
    $280,794 (and costs of $8,671.95), and set an order to show cause
    regarding dismissal for August 31, 2018. The court ruled that,
    although “some aspects” of plaintiff’s wage statement and waiting
    penalty claims “are seemingly derivative of the Section 226.7
    claim, Plaintiff has proffered evidence that establishes that
    [those claims] were also premised on timekeeping and payroll
    schemes . . . and Plaintiff is thusly entitled to attorneys’ fees
    pursuant to Labor Code § 218.5. Further, the settlement
    agreement is broad in scope and includes all wage and hour
    claims.” The court found counsel’s apportionment of 90 percent of
    the work to the underlying wage issues “sufficient for
    apportionment purposes.” The court found the number of hours
    incurred was unreasonable, the hourly rates were high, and
    $280,794 was a reasonable fee award. The court did not explain
    how it derived that figure.
    Plaintiff submitted a proposed judgment pursuant to the
    terms of the settlement (Code Civ. Proc., § 664.6). Defendants
    objected to the proposed judgment on the ground plaintiff did not
    request fees for an eligible claim in her initial pleading, and
    defendants were not given an opportunity to argue the attorney
    fee motion before the court, although it had been continued for
    hearing after defense counsel’s pregnancy leave ended.
    The court overruled defendants’ objection and entered
    judgment on August 31, 2018, in the principal sum of $15,375,
    plus attorney fees of $280,794 and costs of $8,671.95.
    8
    DISCUSSION
    Defendants contend the trial court erred in awarding any
    attorney fees to plaintiff, because her complaint did not allege
    any conduct that could serve as the legal basis for a fee award
    under section 218.5; the parties’ settlement agreement provided
    no other basis for a fee award because plaintiff was entitled only
    to seek fees “consistent with applicable law”; and there is no
    evidence that plaintiff’s counsel spent any time on any claim for
    nonpayment of wages.
    We agree there was no basis for the trial court’s award of
    fees. As we stated at the outset, section 218.5 mandates an
    attorney fee award “[i]n any action brought for the nonpayment
    of wages,” if any party requests them at the initiation of the
    action. (§ 218.5, subd. (a).)2 Kirby tells us that a plaintiff cannot
    obtain attorney fees in an action for failure to provide rest breaks
    or meal periods. That is because an action for nonprovision of
    meal or rest breaks is not an action brought for nonpayment of
    wages. The remedy for nonprovision of meal or rest breaks is an
    additional hour of pay (often described in the case law as
    “premium wages”), but that does not turn a lawsuit for violation
    of meal or rest breaks into a lawsuit for nonpayment of wages.
    
    (Kirby, supra
    , 53 Cal.4th at pp. 1255, 1256-1257, 1259.)
    2      “In any action brought for the nonpayment of wages, fringe
    benefits, or health and welfare or pension fund contributions, the
    court shall award reasonable attorney’s fees and costs to the
    prevailing party if any party to the action requests attorney’s fees
    and costs upon the initiation of the action. However, if the
    prevailing party in the court action is not an employee, attorney’s
    fees and costs shall be awarded pursuant to this section only if
    the court finds that the employee brought the court action in bad
    faith.” (§ 218.5, subd. (a).)
    9
    Courts of Appeal since Kirby have held a plaintiff also
    cannot recover penalties for waiting time and wage statement
    violations in an action for failure to provide rest breaks or meal
    periods. (Naranjo v. Spectrum Security Services, Inc. (2019)
    
    40 Cal. App. 5th 444
    , 474, review granted & depublication denied,
    Jan. 2, 2020, S258966 (Naranjo); Ling v. P.F. Chang’s China
    Bistro, Inc. (2016) 
    245 Cal. App. 4th 1242
    , 1261 (Ling).)
    In Ling, the court held, following Kirby, that a claim for
    waiting time penalties is “purely derivative of” a suit for the
    unpaid wages from which the penalties arise. 
    (Ling, supra
    , 245
    Cal.App.4th at p. 1261.) Since a suit for non-provision of breaks
    is not a suit for unpaid wages, it cannot be the basis of a claim for
    waiting time penalties. “We understand that the remedy for
    a section 226.7 violation [failure to provide breaks] is an extra
    hour of pay, but the fact that the remedy is measured by an
    employee's hourly wage does not transmute the remedy into a
    wage as that term is used in section 203 [waiting time], which
    authorizes penalties to an employee who has separated from
    employment without being paid.” (Ibid.)
    Then, in Naranjo, the court held that actions for
    nonprovision of meal or rest periods “do not entitle employees to
    pursue the derivative penalties in sections 203 [waiting time] and
    226 [wage statement violations].” 
    (Naranjo, supra
    ,
    40 Cal.App.5th at p. 474; see
    ibid. [“[t]he language in
    sections 200
    [defining “wages”], 203 and 226 ‘is clear and unambiguous’ ”].)
    The court concluded that, because the appellants “were not
    entitled to section 226 derivative penalties, they were not entitled
    to section 226, subdivision (e) attorney fees.” (Ibid.)
    We agree with Ling and Naranjo that a plaintiff is not
    entitled to recover penalties for waiting time and wage statement
    10
    violations based on claims of nonprovision of rest or meal periods,
    and likewise cannot obtain attorney fees based on those claims.
    Plaintiff, however, does not address these authorities.
    Instead, she contends, first, that defendants provided an
    inadequate appellate record. Then she contends the “predicate
    misconduct” of her causes of action for waiting time and wage
    statement violations “was not rest period violations,” but instead
    was defendants’ “unlawful timekeeping and payroll schemes.”
    Both contentions are without merit.
    1.     The Inadequate Record Claim
    Plaintiff contends the record is inadequate because
    defendants did not provide reporter’s transcripts of three
    hearings on the attorney fee motion. Plaintiff points to three
    unreported hearings held on March 8, June 29, and August 31,
    2018. Plaintiff asserts that at those three hearings, “the trial
    court heard and considered arguments and evidence regarding
    Plaintiff’s entitlement to attorney’s fees and the reasonableness
    of the amount sought.” Those transcripts are necessary, plaintiff
    tells us, “to assess the basis of the trial court’s fee award.” They
    are not.
    The claim that the court “heard and considered . . .
    evidence” at the March 8 hearing is clearly unfounded. In the
    absence of the all-purpose judge who presided over this case from
    the outset, another judge on March 6 granted an ex parte
    application to select a new hearing date for the attorney fees
    motion on March 8, when the all-purpose judge would be back in
    court to reset the hearing. The March 6 minute order states the
    attorney fees motion “will not be argued on March 08, 2018.”
    Plaintiff’s own notice of ruling for the March 8 hearing tells us
    that it was a hearing on defendants’ ex parte application to
    11
    continue the attorney fee hearing—not a hearing on the attorney
    fee motion.
    The August 31, 2018 hearing was on the order to show
    cause regarding dismissal, at which defendants’ objection to the
    proposed judgment was overruled. Attorney fees had already
    been awarded, so there could not have been any evidence
    presented on that topic.
    That leaves the June 29, 2018 hearing. The minute order
    for that hearing states the court heard arguments from counsel
    and then continued the hearing to July 13. Plaintiff contends
    that at the June 29 hearing, the court heard arguments on the
    merits of the motion. Defendants say there was no argument on
    June 29. It is immaterial what arguments the court entertained
    on June 29, because plaintiff does not contend any evidence was
    presented at that hearing. As the cases plaintiff cites show, it is
    “unreported trial testimony” that results in a judgment
    “conclusively presumed correct as to all evidentiary matters”
    (italics omitted), when no error is apparent on the face of the
    existing appellate record. (Estate of Fain (1999) 
    75 Cal. App. 4th 973
    , 992; see
    ibid. [“To put it
    another way, it is presumed that
    the unreported trial testimony would demonstrate the absence of
    error.”]; see also Vo v. Las Virgenes Municipal Water Dist. (2000)
    
    79 Cal. App. 4th 440
    , 448 [absence of a record “concerning what
    actually occurred at the trial” precludes a determination that the
    trial court abused its discretion in determining attorney fees were
    reasonable].)
    In short, the claim that we must affirm the judgment
    because defendants presented an inadequate record for judicial
    review is unfounded.
    12
    2.    The Predicate Conduct for Plaintiff’s Claims
    As we have observed, plaintiff does not address the
    governing legal authorities that bar attorney fees for claims of
    meal and rest break violations. Instead, she contends “the
    predicate misconduct” of her wage and hour claims “was not rest
    period violations,” but rather “failure to pay earned wages.”
    This is a theory reflected nowhere in the record of the
    attorney fee proceedings—until plaintiff filed her reply papers.
    And in those reply papers, plaintiff cited no evidence of any work
    performed before the settlement that referred to or suggested the
    existence of a claim or cause of action for failure to pay earned
    wages.
    First, the complaint contained no cause of action for the
    unpaid balance of minimum wage or overtime compensation
    (§ 1194)—only the cause of action for failure to provide rest
    periods, and for wage statement and waiting time penalties. The
    complaint specifically alleged in the wage statement cause of
    action that defendants knowingly failed to furnish accurate and
    complete statements “by failing to include her rest break
    premiums on her itemized wage statements.” There was no
    allegation of failure to pay earned wages.
    Plaintiff points out that her waiting time cause of action
    alleged that defendants failed and refused to pay “the earned and
    unpaid wages due and owing to Plaintiff.” But she omits the
    remainder of the allegation that states, “including, without
    limitation, unpaid premium wages in lieu of rest periods.” While
    the allegation is “without limitation,” the complaint is devoid of
    any factual allegations suggesting a failure to pay anything other
    than premium wages for nonprovision of rest periods—for which
    attorney fees are not available.
    13
    Second, at a session of plaintiff’s deposition on March 30,
    2017, when asked about her discovery compliance, plaintiff
    confirmed that she had searched only for text messages between
    her and her former coworkers regarding rest breaks (i.e., not all
    messages between them), explaining, “[c]onsidering this is a
    lawsuit about rest breaks, yes.”
    Third, on July 18, 2017, plaintiff’s counsel emailed defense
    counsel a demand for settlement. Plaintiff’s demand described
    her “unpaid wage claims” as seeking payment for each missed
    rest break, plus penalties for the consequent waiting time and
    wage statement violations. There was no ambiguity on the point;
    plaintiff did not claim any other unpaid wages—only the
    premium pay for failure to provide rest breaks. Plaintiff valued
    her case at $750,000, less than $13,000 of which she attributed to
    the “unpaid wage claims.”3
    3      Plaintiff contends that it was “improper[] and unethical[]”
    for defendants to disclose settlement communications that are
    “blatantly inadmissible,” citing Evidence Code section 1154
    (“Evidence that a person has accepted or offered or promised to
    accept a sum of money . . . in satisfaction of a claim, as well as
    any . . . statements made in negotiation thereof, is inadmissible
    to prove the invalidity of the claim or any part of it.”). But
    defendants were not trying to prove the invalidity of any claim
    plaintiff made before the settlement. They were trying to prove
    that plaintiff did not make a claim that entitled her to attorney
    fees. (See Fieldson Associates, Inc. v. Whitecliff Laboratories, Inc.
    (1969) 
    276 Cal. App. 2d 770
    , 772, fn. omitted [“Section 1154 makes
    an offer of compromise inadmissible to show invalidity of the
    claim to which the offer related. Here the letters were not used
    to prove . . . invalidity of[] the claim concerning which the offer of
    compromise was made.”]; see also Zhou v. Unisource Worldwide,
    Inc. (2007) 
    157 Cal. App. 4th 1471
    , 1479 [letters “were not offered
    14
    Fourth, on September 13, 2017, a month before the case
    settled, plaintiff and defendants stipulated to the addition of a
    seventh cause of action for failure to provide meal periods. But at
    no time did plaintiff ever seek to amend the complaint to add a
    cause of action for failure to pay earned wages.
    To summarize, the appellate record includes nothing
    indicating a claim for nonpayment of wages until after the
    settlement, and after plaintiff filed her motion for attorney fees.
    The first time plaintiff asserted she had a claim for unpaid wages
    was in her reply papers. The trial court relied on two exhibits
    plaintiff filed with those reply papers, finding that this evidence
    established that her waiting time and wage statement claims
    “were also premised on timekeeping and payroll schemes.” That
    finding is not supported by the record and consequently was an
    abuse of discretion.
    The exhibits on their face say nothing about nonpayment of
    wages. Plaintiff’s counsel opined that those exhibits show
    plaintiff “was shorted .49 total hours” in one pay period, and
    defendants made “unilateral downward adjustments” to her
    hours on 15 days between 2012 and 2015. Defense counsel
    disagreed with plaintiff’s counsel’s interpretation of both exhibits,
    but, at most, plaintiff’s counsel’s opinion is post hoc evidence that
    does nothing to show plaintiff’s claims were ever premised on
    “timekeeping and payroll schemes.” There is no evidence
    plaintiff’s counsel ever expended any attorney time on
    “timekeeping and payroll schemes,” except in preparation of the
    reply papers.
    to disprove the merits of the claim under negotiation, but rather
    ‘to show the invalidity of a different claim’ ”].)
    15
    Plaintiff resists this conclusion, taking several tacks.
    Plaintiff says that defendants admitted “that they failed to
    issue Plaintiff one or more wage statements,” triggering liability
    under section 226 for wage statement violations. For this claim,
    plaintiff cites only the September 6, 2017 deposition of Tiffany
    Yeargin, defendants’ senior human resource business partner,
    who was asked, “Did you ever give [plaintiff] a final paycheck?”
    Ms. Yeargin responded, “I did not give her a final paycheck.”
    That is plainly not an admission that defendants failed to provide
    a final wage statement (and plaintiff did not so allege in her
    complaint); it is merely a statement that Ms. Yeargin did not do
    so herself.
    Plaintiff faults defendants for contending that, at her
    deposition, plaintiff never testified that she was entitled to
    compensation for unpaid hours worked. (Defense counsel’s
    February 8, 2018 declaration stated she reviewed plaintiff’s
    deposition transcripts and there was no such testimony.)
    Plaintiff asserts on appeal that counsel’s declaration was a
    “mistaken recollection of what Plaintiff had testified to” and that
    defendants “fail to cite to Plaintiff’s deposition transcript.” But
    defendants do cite to plaintiff’s deposition transcript where she
    testified that “this is a lawsuit about rest breaks,” and plaintiff
    offered no deposition testimony to the trial court to suggest that
    defense counsel was mistaken, or that plaintiff ever testified
    about any shortfall in payment of earned wages.
    Plaintiff argues she sought attorney fees under
    sections 218.5 and 226 in her operative complaint. Plaintiff again
    misses, or ignores, the point. It does not matter that plaintiff
    cited section 218.5 in her complaint. The point is that she did not
    allege a cause of action for nonpayment of wages, which is the
    16
    necessary predicate for an award of fees under section 218.5.
    Again, plaintiff’s argument simply ignores the applicable legal
    rules and the fact that she neither alleged nor litigated any cause
    of action or claim for “nonpayment of wages.”
    Next, plaintiff makes the peculiar argument that under the
    stipulated judgment, she “was entitled to seek fees for wage-and-
    hour causes of action ‘that could have been asserted in the
    complaint.’ ” (Boldface & underscore in original.) The judgment
    says no such thing, and we are at a loss to understand how
    plaintiff can have incurred any attorney fees for claims that she
    could have but did not actually assert or litigate.
    Finally, plaintiff contends we must defer to the trial court’s
    finding that counsel’s declaration supported the attorney fee
    award, and we cannot reweigh the evidence that 90 percent of the
    work was done to litigate the wage and hour claims. But the trial
    court abuses its discretion if its decision is legally erroneous or if
    it is unsupported by the record. As we have seen, it was both.
    The only evidence the court relied on in finding plaintiff
    was entitled to fees under section 218.5 was the post hoc analysis
    of “timekeeping and payroll schemes” that plaintiff presented
    with her reply papers, with no indication when that work was
    performed. Defendants argue, and we agree, that the record
    confirms that discovery and motion practice were not directed at
    any timekeeping and payroll theories, so the record provides no
    support for the allocation of any attorney time to claims for
    nonpayment of wages.
    Plaintiff argues not all written discovery, and not all
    deposition transcripts, and not all motion communications that
    occurred are in the record; “[b]ecause this material evidence is
    absent from the record on appeal, the Court must presume that
    17
    Plaintiff presented sufficient evidence to support the trial court’s
    factual finding.” That is not the case. The record before us is the
    same record the parties placed before the trial court, and in the
    trial court, plaintiff had the burden of proving her entitlement to
    attorney fees. If the record does not support that entitlement—
    and it does not—it is the trial record that is inadequate, not the
    appellate record.
    DISPOSITION
    The judgment is reversed to the extent it awards attorney
    fees to plaintiff, and the cause is remanded for entry of a new and
    different judgment denying recovery of attorney fees. Defendants
    shall recover costs on appeal.
    GRIMES, J.
    WE CONCUR:
    BIGELOW, P. J.
    STRATTON, J.
    18
    Filed 5/21/20
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION EIGHT
    RAQUEL BETANCOURT,                    B293625
    Plaintiff and Respondent,         (Los Angeles County
    Super. Ct. No. BC629916)
    v.
    ORDER CERTIFYING
    OS RESTAURANT                              OPINION
    SERVICES, LLC et al.,                  FOR PUBLICATION
    Defendants and Appellants.       [No change in judgment]
    THE COURT:
    The opinion in the above-entitled matter filed on April 30, 2020,
    was not certified for publication in the Official Reports. For good cause,
    it now appears that the opinion should be published in the Official
    Reports and it is so ordered.
    There is no change in the judgment.
    ____________________________________________________________
    BIGELOW, P. J.              GRIMES, J.        STRATTON, J.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: B293625

Filed Date: 5/21/2020

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 5/21/2020