Individual PAGA Claims Must Be Arbitrated.
One more California Court of Appeal follows the US Supreme Court in Viking Cruises v. Moriana, holding that arbitration of individual PAGA claims can be arbitrated. But the court also concludes that the employee "has standing to litigate nonindividual PAGA claims in the superior court notwithstanding his agreement to arbitrate individual PAGA claims." Nickson v. Shemran, Inc., No. D080914 (4/1 4/7/23) (Dato, Huffman, Buchanan).
Justice Dato explains in footnote 11: "As Justice Sotomayor made clear, the Supreme Court was opining on what it conceded could be a mistaken view of California law. (Viking River, at p. 1925 (conc. opn. of Sotomayor, J.) [“[I]f this Court’s understanding of state law is wrong, California courts, in an appropriate case, will have the last word.”]." Justice Dato relies on the California Supreme Court's opinion in Kim v. Reins, 9 Cal.5th 73 (2020): "As Kim explained, 'the Legislature did not intend to link PAGA standing to the maintenance of individual claims when such claims have been alleged' and '[t]his expansive approach to standing serves the state’s interest in vigorous enforcement.'”
COMMENT: Nickson joins other California decisions concluding that arbitration of individual PAGA claims can be compelled, but that the plaintiff has standing to pursue representative claims in court. See 3/30/23 post for references to other cases. But note that the Nickson also states: "We leave management of the superior court litigation during the pendency of arbitration to the trial court’s sound discretion." If trial courts stay litigation pending the outcome of arbitration, it remains to be seen how much this will dilute the strength of PAGA.
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