Former Employee Alleges Autonomous Labs Violated California Labor Law

According to a recent class-action lawsuit, Autonomous Labs Inc. faces allegations that they failed to provide California workers with overtime wages, minimum wage, and meal and rest periods required by law.

The Case: Nesbitt v. Autonomous, Inc. dba Autonomous Labs Inc.

The Court: San Bernardino County Superior Court of the State of California

The Case No.: CIVSB220474

The Plaintiff: Nesbitt v. Autonomous, Inc. dba Autonomous Labs Inc.

The plaintiff in the case alleges multiple labor code violations. The plaintiff in the suit was employed by Autonomous Labs Inc from March 2017 to September 2021 and was classified as a non-exempt employee paid through an hourly wage, commission-based compensation, and non-discretionary bonuses. Plaintiff claims that the company violated the law by failing to provide legally required meal and rest periods and minimum and overtime wages for hours worked. In addition, the lawsuit alleges that Autonomous Labs’ conduct violated PAGA (Private Attorneys General Act), which gives rise to civil penalties. PAGA enables aggrieved employees to act on behalf of themself, other workers, and California state in filing to recover civil penalties. Under PAGA, aggrieved employees are essentially deputized as private attorneys to enforce the employment law. An aggrieved employee is defined as an employee of the alleged violator against whom one or more of the alleged labor law violations was committed (refer to California Labor Code Section 2699(c)).

The Defendant: Nesbitt v. Autonomous, Inc. dba Autonomous Labs Inc.

The defendant in the case, Autonomous, Inc. dba Autonomous Labs Inc., faces a class-action lawsuit. (Autonomous, Inc. operates its business in California under the name Autonomous Labs Inc. or Autonomous Labs). While Autonomous, Inc. is a Delaware corporation, the company operates under the name Autonomous Labs Inc in California - and conducts (and continues to conduct) a significant amount of business in California.

Case Details: Nesbitt v. Autonomous, Inc. dba Autonomous Labs Inc.

The complaint is currently pending in San Bernadino County Superior Court of the State of California. According to the lawsuit, Autonomous Labs allegedly violated California Labor Code numerous times. The allegations of labor code violations are based on the plaintiff’s claims that the company failed to pay overtime wages, failed to provide employees with minimum wages, failed to provide employees with rest periods and meal breaks, failed to provide accurate itemized wage statements, failed to reimburse for business expenses, made unlawful deductions, and failed to provide wages due in a timely manner.

If you have questions about California employment law or need to file a California class-action lawsuit, please get in touch with Blumenthal Nordrehaug Bhowmik DeBlouw LLP. Experienced employment law attorneys are ready to assist you in various law firm offices located in San Diego, San Francisco, Sacramento, Los Angeles, Riverside, and Chicago.

Bed Bath & Beyond’s Online Gift Platform Ends Finger Scan Case with $4.5M

Class members in the Illinois finger scan case against the online gift platform owned by popular Bed, Bath & Beyond agreed to a $4.5 settlement to end the litigation.

The Case: Williams et al. v. Personalizationmall.com LLC

The Court: U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois

The Case No.: 1:20-cv-00025

The Plaintiff: Williams et al. v. Personalizationmall.com LLC

The plaintiff, Williams, along with other class members, claim that Personalizationmall.com LLC violated Illinois Biometric Information Privacy Act by failing to obtain informed consent from their workers before mandated they scan themselves in and out of work using their fingerprints. The plaintiffs claim the company did not inform them in writing (as required by law), and that the fingerprint scanning system captured, collected, stored, and used the employees’ biometric info even though signed releases were not obtained.

The Defendant: Williams et al. v. Personalizationmall.com LLC

The Defendant in the case, Personalizationmall.com LLC, is an online gift platform owned by Bed, Bath & Beyond. In order to resolve the fingerprint scan fight, the defendant struck a deal with the plaintiffs in the case. Class members signaled to the Illinois federal judge that they agree to accept the $4.5 million deal to end litigation over the online gift platform’s allegedly illegal fingerprint scanning and collection practice.

The Case: Williams et al. v. Personalizationmall.com LLC

The class members requested preliminary approval of the settlement noting that the deal would provide compensation for more than 20,000 people allegedly required to use the company’s vein-scanning time clock without consent; which constitutes an alleged employment law violation. The $4.5 million settlement agreement was reached during the 11-hour mediation the two parties engaged in during October 2021.

If you have questions about corporate fingerprint scanning practices or other employment law violations, please get in touch with Blumenthal Nordrehaug Bhowmik DeBlouw LLP. Our experienced Illinois employment law attorneys are ready to assist you in various law firm offices located in Chicago, San Diego, San Francisco, Sacramento, Los Angeles, and Riverside.

Pending Class Action Calls Looks at Rescinded Job Offers & Medical Marijiuana

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A healthcare information worker recently filed a class action suit alleging that Stat Informatic Solutions, LLC violated employment law when they rescinded a job offer because they discovered she was a medical marijuana patient.

The Case: Epps v. Stat Informatic Solutions, LLC

The Court: U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Arkansas Central Division

The Case No.: 4:21-cv-00750

The Plaintiff: Epps v. Stat Informatic Solutions, LLC

The lead plaintiff in the case, Latricia Epps, is a healthcare management information worker. Epps alleges that Stat Informatic Solutions illegally rescinded a job offer they made to her after they found out she was a medical marijiuana patient. According to Epps, Stat Informatic Solutions gave her a job offer in April. When she received the job offer, Epps informed the company that she was a medical marijuana patient. In response, the defendant advised Epps that she could not work for the company without first completing a drug screening that did not come up positive for marijuana. According to the lawsuit, Stat Informatic Solutions actually decided to pull Epps’ job offer before she even completed a drug screening. Epps claims the defendant denied her an employment opportunity because she used medical marijuana outside of work, and she seeks to represent herself and a Class of others in similar situations who were denied employment by Stat Informatic Solutions due to medical marijuana use. Epps is demanding a jury trial and seeks Class certification, as well as punitive and constitutional damages.

The Defendant: Epps v. Stat Informatic Solutions, LLC

Stat Informatic Solutions, the defendant in the case, is a healthcare information management company.

Details of the Case: Epps v. Stat Informatic Solutions, LLC

Did Stat Informatic Solutions break the law when they refused to employ an Arkansas woman based on her status as a medical marijiuana patient? This is the question asked by the class action lawsuit currently pending in Arkansas federal court. Employers cannot deny employment (for non-sensitive jobs) based on medical marijiuana use; doing so is a violation of the Arkansas Constitution (Amendment 98), passed after the legalization of medical marijuana in 2016. The amendment prohibits discrimination against an employee based on their status as a qualifying medical marijiuana patient. Amazon faces a similar class action lawsuit in which a former employee alleges that the behemoth online retailer terminated his employment after a drug test was positive for marijiuana, despite it being legal in the state of employment.

If you have questions about California labor law violations or employment protection for medical marijiuana patients, please get in touch with Blumenthal Nordrehaug Bhowmik DeBlouw LLP. Experienced employment law attorneys are ready to assist you in various law firm offices located in San Diego, San Francisco, Sacramento, Los Angeles, Riverside, and Chicago.

City National Bank Faces California Whistleblower Lawsuit

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In recent news, a former senior vice president for City National Bank alleges he was fired due to whistleblower retaliation.

The Case: Fausto Bustos v. Royal Bank of Canada et al

The Court: U.S. District Courts, California Central District

The Case No.: 2:21-cv-04879

The Plaintiff: Fausto Bustos v. Royal Bank of Canada et al

The plaintiff in the case is Fausto Bustos, former senior vice president for City National Bank. Bustos filed a whistleblower retaliation lawsuit against his former employer in California Federal Court alleging he was fired due to whistleblower retaliation which is a violation of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act. This particular Act allows California employees to sue their employers in federal court if their employer wrongfully terminates them or otherwise retaliates against them because they report unlawful practices or illegal acts. Bustos worked at City National Bank’s downtown Los Angeles location. After raising concerns about the bank’s lax internal controls, misconduct in accounting practices, and potential tax fraud that stemmed from a reorganization of the financial institution’s digital technology department, Bustos claims he was wrongfully terminated.

The Defendant: Fausto Bustos v. Royal Bank of Canada et al

The defendant in the case is City National Bank, Royal Bank of Canada’s U.S. subsidiary.

The Case:Fausto Bustos v. Royal Bank of Canada et al

According to the complaint, Bustos was hired as the bank’s VP of Digital Development Services Lead with their Business and Technology Services (BATS) division in 2015. In this position, Bustos was responsible for managing the Bank’s digital applications portfolio. He was also responsible for managing a number of project teams and contractors responsible for development. Only four months after his hiring, he received stellar employment reviews from his supervisors, and he was promoted to Senior Vice President by 2017. In the position of Senior Vice President, his job duties expanded, and did his oversight responsibilities. In 2018, following a reorganization of the department, Bustos claimed he saw significant accounting errors due to a lapse in financial controls that signified a significant risk to the bank as a whole, an internal investigation led to discovering approximately $5.4 million in misallocated invoices. Soon afterward, in a meeting with HR and the Vice President of Corporate Security, Bustos was accused of misappropriating funds from projects. However, later investigations showed these allegations against Bustos to be baseless, and perhaps retaliatory. Superiors at City National who resented Bustos and his team for calling attention to their misconduct and process deficiencies came up with a layoff plan that effectively got rid of Bustos and several of his team members within weeks. While they were “let go” due to a supposed reorganization, their jobs were soon listed on hiring websites, and internal memos discussed recruitment needs.

If you need help with employment law violations in the workplace, get in touch with Blumenthal Nordrehaug Bhowmik DeBlouw LLP today. Experienced employment law attorneys are ready to assist you in various law firm offices located in San Diego, San Francisco, Sacramento, Los Angeles, Riverside, and Chicago.

Defendant Failed to Establish Existence of Arbitration Agreement

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In recent news, a skilled nursing facility faced with a lawsuit filed by a former employee attempted to compel arbitration, but there was a question about the existence of the cited arbitration agreement.

The Case: Bannister v. Marinidence Opco, LLC

The Court: California Court of Appeals

The Case No.: A159815

The Plaintiff: Bannister v. Marinidence Opco, LLC

The Plaintiff in the case, Maureen Bannister, is a former employee at Marinidence Opco’s skilled nursing facility. Bannister filed a lawsuit against the Defendants alleging discrimination, retaliation, defamation, etc.

The Defendant: Bannister v. Marinidence Opco, LLC

In response to the complaint, Marinidence Opco, LLC, the defendant in the case, moved to compel arbitration, claiming that when they acquired the skilled nursing facility from the previous owner, Bannister electronically signed an arbitration agreement.

The Case: Bannister v. Marinidence Opco, LLC

The plaintiff in the case responded to the defendant’s claims that she signed an arbitration agreement at the time of the facility acquisition by presenting evidence that she never saw the arbitration agreement during the onboarding process or touched the computer that she was supposed to have used to provide her electronic signature on the agreement. Accepting the evidence the plaintiff presented as establishing that she never signed the cited arbitration agreement, the court denied the defendant’s motion and held that the defendant failed to meet their burden of establishing by a preponderance of evidence that a valid arbitration agreement exists. (The system in place had no employee-specific usernames or passwords to access the onboarding portal, and social security numbers were available in personnel files). The defendant appealed, but the California Court of Appeal affirmed, holding that there was substantial evidence indicating that the defendants failed to prove the plaintiff electronically signed an arbitration agreement. Without the use of unique usernames and passwords for each individual employee, it is difficult for employers to prove that a specific employee digitally signed an arbitration agreement.

If you need to discuss California state law or if you need to file a class action lawsuit, please get in touch with Blumenthal Nordrehaug Bhowmik DeBlouw LLP. Experienced employment law attorneys are ready to assist you in various law firm offices located in San Diego, San Francisco, Sacramento, Los Angeles, Riverside, and Chicago.

Did General Atomics’ Wage Statements Violate Wage Statement Requirements?

In the General Atomics v. Superior Court case, the layout of the defendant’s wage statements are questioned in connection with mandatory wage statement requirements.

The Case: General Atomics v. Superior Court

The Court: California Court of Appeal

The Case No.: D07821l

The Plaintiff: General Atomics v. Superior Court

Plaintiff Tracy Green filed suit against General Atomics alleging that the company failed to provide accurate, itemized wage statements in accordance with employment law requirements (in violation of Labor Code section 226(a)(9)).

The Defendant: General Atomics v. Superior Court

The defendant in the case is General Atomics. The company issued wage statements that included entries for regular rate of pay and overtime pay. The entries for regular rate hours and pay included all hours worked by an employee during the pay period, including overtime hours. The wage statements also identified the number of overtime hours, and calculated pay at a rate of 0.5 times the employee’s regular rate.

The Case: General Atomics v. Superior Court

The plaintiff in General Atomics v. Superior Court claims that the defendant failed to identify an accurate rate of pay for overtime wages. According to the plaintiff, the company showed .5 times the regular rate of pay instead of the required 1.5. The plaintiff did not claim that the employer incorrectly calculated overtime pay or that they failed to pay the accurate amount of pay. The Defendant moved for summary adjudication, arguing that their wage statements were compliant because they showed the applicable hourly rates; standard contractual hourly rate and overtime rate, as well as the hours worked at each rate. General Atomics’ motion was denied in trial court. The defendant responded by challenging the trial court’s order by petition for writ of mandate. The California Court of Appeal granted the petition for writ of mandate, so the trial court vacated the order and entered an order granting General Atomics’ summary adjudication motion. The court found that due to the complexities of determining overtime compensation in various contexts, the format used by the defendant was acceptable, and that format appropriately conveyed the information required by Section 226 and allowed employees to determine using simple math whether they were paid at an accurate rate.

If you need to discuss violations of California state law or if you need to file a California class action lawsuit, please get in touch with Blumenthal Nordrehaug Bhowmik DeBlouw LLP. Experienced employment law attorneys are ready to assist you in any one of various law firm offices located in San Diego, San Francisco, Sacramento, Los Angeles, Riverside, and Chicago.

California Appellate Court Allows Former Drinker Biddle Lawyer’s Suit to Continue

A former Drinker Biddle attorney’s lawsuit alleging fraud, negligence, and breach of contract, is allowed to continue.

The Case: Avetisyan v. Drinker Biddle & Reath LLP

The Court: Cal. Ct. App., 2d Dist.

The Case No.: B294671

The Plaintiff: Avetisyan v. Drinker Biddle & Reath LLP

Former Drinker Biddle attorney, Ani Avetisyan, sued her former law firm in 2014. She filed suit shortly after being fired from the firm’s litigation department. According to Avetisyan, she started work at the Drinker Biddle firm in 2012 and regularly received performance reviews stating she needed to improve in three areas: legal research, analysis, and writing. The plaintiff alleges that the chair of the litigation department during her time at the company later said that the firm wanted her to succeed and stay at the firm, and would continue her employment as long as she could perform at the level of an average associate. She was also told the firm would give her plenty of notice if they were going to terminate her employment. Avetisyan alleges the firm fired her in December 2013.

The Defendant: Avetisyan v. Drinker Biddle & Reath LLP

The defendant in the case is Drinker Biddle & Reath LLP. The firm currently employs more than 1,300 attorneys, professionals and consultants, and operates in over 20 different locations throughout the United States, Shanghai, and London. The firm handles transactional, litigation, and regulatory cases for emerging startups, multinational corporations, etc.

Progression of the Case: Avetisyan v. Drinker Biddle & Reath LLP

LA County Superior Court dismissed Avetisyan’s claims (breach of oral, written, and implied contract, promissory estoppel, breach of the implied covenant of good faith, fraud, and negligent misrepresentation). According to the trial court, the plaintiff failed to establish any misrepresentation made by Drinker Biddle, or any reliance on the alleged misrepresentations. However, according to the California Court of Appeal, Second District, the vague retention promise is not fatal to the plaintiff’s oral contract claim, and Avetisyan, former Drinker Biddle attorney and plaintiff in the case, can proceed with a lawsuit alleging the firm breached an oral contract they terminated her from her position in the firm’s litigation department.

If you have questions about how to respond to a breach of contract or if you’ve experienced other labor law violations, please get in touch with Blumenthal Nordrehaug Bhowmik DeBlouw LLP. Experienced employment law attorneys are ready to assist you in various law firm offices located in San Diego, San Francisco, Sacramento, Los Angeles, Riverside, and Chicago.