Court Opinion

ID: 9913006
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-12-26 17:02:34.676217+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:06:45.147600
License: Public Domain

Filed 12/26/23 Young v. Axos Financial CA4/1
                 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS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
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                COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

                                                 DIVISION ONE

                                         STATE OF CALIFORNIA

TERRANCE YOUNG,                                                      D080970

         Plaintiff and Appellant,

         v.                                                          (Super. Ct. No. 37-2021-
                                                                     00019535-CU-OE-CTL)
AXOS FINANCIAL, INC. et al.,

         Defendants and Respondents.

         APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of San Diego County,
Joel R. Wohlfeil, Judge. Dismissed in part, reversed in part, and remanded.

         Justice Law Corporation, Douglas Han, Shunt Tatavos-Gharajeh, and Talia Lux,
for Plaintiff and Appellant.
         Sheppard, Mullin, Richter & Hampton LLP, Thomas R. Kaufman and Devin S.
Lindsay, for Defendants and Respondents.
         Plaintiff Terrance Young appeals two simultaneously issued trial court
orders: (1) an order compelling arbitration on his individual claims against
Axos Financial, Inc. and Axos Bank (collectively Axos) for the violation of the

Private Attorneys General Act of 2004 (Labor Code,1 §§ 2698 et seq.)

1        Further undesignated statutory references are to the Labor Code.
(“PAGA”), and (2) an order dismissing his nonindividual representative
PAGA claims pursued on behalf of other employees. Young argues that
(1) the orders are appealable under the death knell doctrine, (2) his
agreement to arbitrate was invalid, and (3) he has standing to serve as a
PAGA representative even if his individual PAGA claims have been
compelled to arbitration.
      We conclude that the order dismissing Young’s nonindividual PAGA
claims is immediately appealable under the death knell doctrine. At the
same time, we determine that the order compelling his individual claims to
arbitration is not appealable, and we decline to exercise discretionary writ
review.
      As to the merits of Young’s appeal of the order dismissing his
nonindividual PAGA claims, we are guided by the rule announced in
Iskanian v. CLS Transportation Los Angeles, LLC (2014) 59 Cal.4th 348
(Iskanian) that wholesale representative claim waivers are invalid, which
remains good law even after the United States Supreme Court’s decision in
Viking River Cruises, Inc. v. Moriana (2022) 142 S.Ct. 1906 (Viking River).
Given California’s rule prohibiting such claim waivers, the trial court erred
by determining that Young’s waiver was valid, and we must reverse the order
dismissing Young’s nonindividual PAGA claims. The California Supreme
Court’s decision in Adolph v. Uber Technologies, Inc. (2023) 14 Cal.5th 1104
(Adolph), filed subsequent to the parties’ briefing, confirms that Young
retains standing to pursue his nonindividual PAGA claims despite the court’s
order compelling arbitration of his individual claims.

                                       2
              FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

      Beginning January 16, 2018, Axos2 employed Young as a Deposit
Operation Specialist.
      In a letter dated February 23, 2021, Young provided written notice,
pursuant to section 2699.3, subdivision (a)(1), to the California Labor &
Workforce Development Agency (LWDA) of his intent to bring a PAGA action
against Axos. Axos terminated Young’s employment on March 3, 2022.
      The LWDA did not pursue claims against Axos. On May 3, 2021,
Young filed a PAGA action against Axos as an individually aggrieved former
employee (the “individual” claims) and on behalf of other aggrieved

employees (the “nonindividual” or “representative”3 claims). The complaint
alleged Labor Code violations by Axos of sections 201, 202, 203, 204, 218.5,
221, 226, subdivision (a), 226.3, 226.7, 510, 512, subdivision (a), 558, 1174,
subdivision (d), 1194, 1197, 1197.1, 1198, 2800 and 2802 actionable under
PAGA.
      Axos moved to compel arbitration of Young’s individual PAGA claims
and to dismiss the nonindividual PAGA claims. In support of the motion,
Axos provided a declaration from a Vice President of its human resources
department stating that employees generally sign an arbitration agreement
pursuant to Axos’s “onboarding procedure.” It attached to the declaration an

2     Axos operated as BofI Federal Bank at the time.

3     Unless otherwise indicated, we use the term “representative” in the
sense that one plaintiff employee represents other absent employees, rather
than in the sense that plaintiff employee represents the state, even though
PAGA claims are also representative in the latter sense. (See Viking River,
supra, 142 S.Ct. at p. 1916.)
                                        3
arbitration agreement displaying Young’s signature, dated January 16, 2018
(the Agreement).
      The Agreement requires binding arbitration of “any claim, dispute,
and/or controversy that either party may have against the other . . . arising
from, related to, or having any relationship or connections whatsoever with
Employee’s seeking employment with, employment by, or other association
with or termination by BofI.” The Agreement also includes a waiver of class,
representative, and private attorney general claims as follows:
         “Each Party hereby waives any right it might otherwise
         have to commence, be a party to, or a class member of, any
         court action, including collective actions, against the other
         Party. Further, each of the Parties waives any right it
         might otherwise have to commence or be a party to any
         group, class or collective action claim in arbitration or any
         other forum. . . . In addition, no dispute in which the
         Parties have adverse interests shall be brought, heard or
         arbitrated as, or as part of, a class or collective action, or in
         an action in which either Party acts in a representative or
         private attorney general capacity on behalf of a class of
         persons or the general public.”

There is also a severability clause, providing that the Agreement remains
valid and enforceable even if a portion of it is deemed invalid or
unenforceable.
      Young opposed Axos’s motion to compel arbitration and to dismiss the
nonindividual claims, providing a declaration stating that on his first day of
employment, Axos provided Young with a stack of paperwork to complete
that day; he was required to sign the paperwork to begin his job; nobody from
Axos explained the contents or meaning of the documents to him; he has no
recollection of what documents he signed; and he only learned he had signed
an arbitration agreement when his attorneys obtained his personnel file.

                                         4
      On August 26, 2022, the trial court granted the motion, compelling
arbitration of Young’s individual PAGA claims and dismissing his
nonindividual claims. As to the arbitration of Young’s individual claims, the
court found it was undisputed that Young entered into the arbitration
agreement and that the agreement encompassed his claims. The court
further rejected Young’s argument that Labor Code section 432.6, subdivision

(a) invalidates the arbitration agreement based on subdivision (f).4 Under
Viking River, the court explained, Young’s individual and nonindividual
claims can be divided, with the individual claims being compelled to
arbitration and the nonindividual claims being validly waived:
         “The [Viking River] Court found that California law was
         preempted by the Federal Arbitration Act, and the holding
         in Iskanian[, supra,] 59 Cal.4th 348 was abrogated.
         Essentially, the U.S. Supreme Court explained that a
         PAGA claim could be subdivided into “individual” and
         “representative” portions. As a result, the individual claim
         was subject to arbitration and the representative action
         waiver was valid.”

Finally, the court declined Young’s request to stay dismissal of the
representative action pending Supreme Court review of Adolph v. Uber
Technologies, 2022 WL 1073583 (Apr. 11, 2022, G059860, G060198), July 20,
2022, S274671 on the issue of standing to pursue representative claims once
individual claims have been ordered to arbitration.

4     Section 432.6, subdivision (a) states: “A person shall not, as a condition
of employment, continued employment, or the receipt of any employment-
related benefit, require any applicant for employment or any employee to
waive any right, forum, or procedure for a violation of . . . this code . . . .
Subdivision (f) of that section then states: “Nothing in this section is intended
to invalidate a written arbitration agreement that is otherwise enforceable
under the Federal Arbitration Act (9 U.S.C. Sec. 1 et seq.).”
                                        5
      Young filed a notice of appeal from the trial court’s order. Axos
responded with a motion to dismiss the appeal, which we deferred to be
considered with the appeal itself.
                                 DISCUSSION
A. The Evolving PAGA Landscape
      PAGA provides “aggrieved employees” with standing “to act as private
attorneys general to prosecute and collect civil penalties on the State’s
behalf” for Labor Code violations. (Nickson v. Shemran, Inc. (2023) 90
Cal.App.5th 121, 127 (Nickson).) The statute defines an “aggrieved
employee” as “any person who was employed by the alleged violator and
against whom one or more of the alleged violations was committed.” (§ 2699,
subd. (c).) Despite the “aggrieved employee” having PAGA standing, the
state remains the real party in interest on whose behalf the employee seeks
PAGA penalties. (Kim v. Reins International California, Inc. (2020) 9 Cal.5th
73, 81 (Kim).) Over the past decade, the California Supreme Court and
United States Supreme Court have issued a series of relevant PAGA
decisions.
      First, in Iskanian, the California Supreme Court held that (1) an
employee’s waiver of the right to bring a PAGA action is unenforceable as
contrary to California public policy, and (2) the Federal Arbitration Act (FAA)
does not preempt that rule because PAGA actions are state, not private,
actions. (Iskanian, supra, 59 Cal.4th at pp. 383–387.) The court rejected the
argument that the arbitration agreement at issue in that case should be
enforced because it “prohibits only representative claims, not individual
PAGA claims.” (Id. at p. 383.) “Appellate courts interpreted this aspect of
Iskanian ‘as prohibiting splitting PAGA claims into individual and

                                       6
nonindividual components to permit arbitration of the individual claims.’ ”
(Nickson, supra, 90 Cal.App.5th at p. 128.)
      Next, in Kim, our state high court addressed standing to bring a PAGA
action. There, the plaintiff employee had settled and dismissed his individual
Labor Code claims against his employer. (Kim, supra, 9 Cal.5th at p. 82.)
The settlement excluded the PAGA claim based on the underlying Labor
Code violations. (Id. at p. 92.) Despite the settlement, the Kim court
determined that the employee remained “aggrieved” and retained standing to
prosecute a PAGA action. (Id. at p. 84.) To establish standing, the Kim court
explained, the PAGA statute merely requires “the fact of the [Labor Code]
violation” against an employee, which the “[s]ettlement did not nullify.”
(Ibid.)
      Subsequently, the United States Supreme Court overturned Iskanian
in part when it addressed FAA preemption of California’s PAGA waiver rule
and the bifurcation of PAGA claims. (Viking River, supra, 142 S.Ct. at
pp. 1924–1925). The Viking River court concluded that PAGA claims can be
divided into individual and nonindividual claims. (Ibid.) And while
“Iskanian’s rule remains valid” as to the wholesale waiver of the right to
bring nonindividual claims, the FAA preempts the rule as to agreements to
arbitrate individual PAGA claims. (Ibid.) As a result, an employee’s
agreement to arbitrate individual PAGA claims is valid, and the bifurcated
individual claims can be ordered to arbitration. (Ibid.) Further, despite the
California Supreme Court’s holding in Kim, the Viking River court suggested
that once individual claims are ordered to arbitration, the employee lacks
standing under PAGA to pursue the representative claims. (Id. at p. 1925.)

                                       7
      After Young and Axos submitted their briefing here, the California
Supreme Court issued the Adolph decision, repudiating Viking River’s
interpretation of California law as to standing under PAGA: “Where a
plaintiff has brought a PAGA action comprising individual and non-
individual claims, an order compelling arbitration of the individual claims
does not strip the plaintiff of standing as an aggrieved employee to litigate
claims on behalf of other employees under PAGA.” (Adolph, supra, 14
Cal.5th at p. 1114 [agreeing with five Court of Appeal decisions, including
this court’s opinion in Nickson, supra, 90 Cal.App.5th at p. 130].) Relying on
the court’s earlier decision in Kim, Justice Liu’s opinion explained that an
employee acquires PAGA standing upon being the victim of a Labor Code
violation by his or her employer and does not lose “the status of an ‘aggrieved
employee’ ” as a result of “an agreement to adjudicate a plaintiff's individual
claim in another forum.” (Adolph, at pp. 1120–1121.)
B. Appealability
      Viewed through the lens of Viking River, the trial court here issued two
related orders: (1) one order dismissed Young’s nonindividual PAGA claims,
and (2) the other order compelled Young’s individual PAGA claims to
arbitration. As a preliminary matter, we address appealability of each order.
      1. The Death Knell Doctrine in the PAGA Context
      Ordinarily, parties may appeal only from a final judgment. (See Code
Civ. Proc., § 904.1.) The death knell doctrine provides an exception to this
general rule, making appealable “an order that (1) amounts to a de facto final
judgment for absent plaintiffs, under circumstances where (2) the persistence
of viable but perhaps de minimis individual plaintiff claims creates a risk no
formal final judgment will ever be entered.” (In re Baycol Cases I & II (2011)

                                       8
51 Cal.4th 751, 759 (Baycol).) Thus, “[i]f an order terminates class claims,
but individual claims persist, the order terminating class claims is
immediately appealable under Daar’s death knell doctrine.” (Id. at p. 762
[citing Daar v. Yellow Cab Co. (1967) 67 Cal.2d 695].)
      Although the death knell doctrine arose in the class action context, the
First District Court of Appeal applied it in a PAGA action in Miranda v.
Anderson Enterprises, Inc. (2015) 241 Cal.App.4th 196 (Miranda). The
Miranda court reasoned that class actions and PAGA actions are similar in
that they are both representative actions in which a named plaintiff seeks
recovery on behalf of nonparties, who are then bound by the judgment. (Id.
at pp. 201–202.) Although class actions contain procedural requirements
that PAGA actions do not, the court determined that these differences are not
material for purposes of the death knell doctrine because “[t]he rationale
underlying the death knell doctrine ‘ “that without the incentive of a possible
group recovery the individual plaintiff may find it economically imprudent to
pursue his lawsuit to a final judgment and then seek appellate review of an
adverse class determination,” ’ thereby rendering the order ‘effectively
immunized by circumstance from appellate review’ (In re Baycol, supra, 51
Cal.4th at p. 758)–applies equally to representative PAGA claims.” (Id. at
p. 201.) We agree with the Miranda court’s reasoning.
      The two cases relied on by Axos fail to persuade us otherwise. (Young
v. RemX, Inc. (2016) 2 Cal.App.5th 630 (Young); Munoz v. Chipotle Mexican
Grill, Inc. (2015) 238 Cal.App.4th 291 (Munoz).) In both cases, the orders at
issue dismissed the plaintiffs’ class claims, but the plaintiffs’ PAGA claims on
behalf of themselves and other aggrieved employees survived. (Young, at
p. 635; Munoz, at p. 311.) The courts in those cases declined to apply the
death knell doctrine because the continuation of the representative PAGA

                                       9
claims prevented dismissal of class claims from having “the ‘legal effect’ of a
final judgment” by providing “ample financial incentive to pursue the
remaining representative claims.” (Munoz, at p. 311.) Young and Munoz do
not suggest the death knell doctrine only applies to class actions; rather, they
establish that the survival of some representative claims precludes the
application of the death knell doctrine.
      2. Order Dismissing Young’s Nonindividual Claims
      Applying the first prong of the death knell doctrine to the order
dismissing the nonindividual claims, the court’s ruling had the effect of a
final judgment as to absent employees. The trial court found that under
Viking River, “the representative action waiver was valid.” Given this ruling
and Axos’s policy to have new employees sign an arbitration agreement, no
nonindividual PAGA claims could proceed. (See Miranda, supra, 241
Cal.App.4th at p. 202.)
      Moving to the second prong of the death knell doctrine, although his
individual claims remain viable, the dismissal of the nonindividual claims
creates a substantial risk that Young will have insufficient incentive to
pursue them. That risk is inherent when individual claims remain, but
collective group claims have been extinguished:
         “This risk of immunity from review arose precisely, and
         only, because the individual claims lived while the class
         claims died. As the United States Supreme Court has
         explained, ‘[t]he “death knell” doctrine assumes that
         without the incentive of a possible group recovery the
         individual plaintiff may find it economically imprudent to
         pursue his lawsuit to a final judgment and then seek
         appellate review of an adverse class determination.’ ”

(Baycol, supra, 51 Cal.4th at p. 758 [emphasis added].)

                                       10
      Axos remarks that neither Young nor his attorney has provided a
representation that Young will not pursue his individual PAGA claims due to
the dismissal of the representative claims, as existed in Miranda. (Miranda,
supra, 241 Cal.App.4th at pp. 202–203.) We disagree that the death knell
doctrine requires this type of evidence; Baycol made clear that we “assume”
the risk exists “precisely, and only, because” the absence of nonindividual
claims realistically eliminates the incentive to pursue the action. The burden
is on the defendant to explain why the presumed risk is absent in a
particular case, and here Axos has made no attempt to provide that

explanation.5
      Consequently, the order dismissing Young’s nonindividual PAGA
claims is appealable under the death knell doctrine.
      3. Order Compelling Arbitration
      The parties agree that an order granting a motion to compel arbitration
is ordinarily not appealable. (Nelsen v. Legacy Partners Residential, Inc.
(2012) 207 Cal.App.4th 1115, 1121.) Nor is such an order appealable under
the death knell exception, because a motion compelling arbitration is not a
de facto final judgment and does not create a risk that there will never be a
final judgment. Other courts have questioned how an order compelling

5      For the first time at oral argument, Axos referred to language in the
trial court’s order dismissing the nonindividual PAGA claims that suggested
Young could “apply to this Court to set aside dismissal of the representative
action and to reinstate the entire action . . . should new case authority arise
before a judgment is entered . . . .” We do not generally consider such
arguments. (Let Them Choose v. San Diego Unified School Dist. (2022) 85
Cal.App.5th 693, 700, fn. 1.) Even if we were to do so here, the filing of the
Adolph decision in July 2023 after the completion of briefing in this case does
not change the fact that at the time of the filing of the notice of appeal
(September 2022), the court’s dismissal order effectively disposed of all
nonindividual claims.
                                      11
arbitration of individual claims could become appealable merely because it
was issued at the same time as an order dismissing nonindividual claims.
(See Nixon v. AmeriHome Mortgage Company, LLC (2021) 67 Cal.App.5th
934, 943–944 [“It is far from certain whether the judicially created death
knell exception to the one final judgment rule for an order dismissing class
claims extends to make appealable an otherwise nonappealable order
compelling arbitration when the two orders are issued simultaneously.”].)
And Young has not advanced any argument why the appealability of the
order dismissing the nonindividual PAGA claims under the death knell
doctrine would render the concurrent order compelling arbitration of the
individual claims immediately appealable.
      Alternatively, Young suggested that discretionary writ review would be
appropriate “so [the court] can decide the important issue of whether a PAGA
Plaintiff loses standing to bring ‘non-individual’ PAGA claims when their
‘individual’ PAGA claims are compelled to arbitration.” Of course, the basis
for this request evaporated after the California Supreme Court issued its
decision on that question in Adolph. Young has presented no other
extraordinary bases for us to exercise discretionary writ review of the order
compelling arbitration, nor do we see any. (See Zembsch v. Superior Court
(2006) 146 Cal.App.4th 153, 160, [“[W]rit review of orders directing parties to
arbitrate is available only in ‘unusual circumstances’ or in ‘exceptional
situations.’ ”].) Indeed, Young “may prevail at the arbitration proceeding. If
he loses, he can challenge the order compelling arbitration on appeal from
any judgment entered on the arbitration award.” (Muao v. Grosvenor
Properties (2002) 99 Cal.App.4th 1085, 1089.)

                                       12
      Consequently, we dismiss Young’s appeal of the order compelling

arbitration.6
C. Dismissal of Representative Claims
      Turning to the merits of the order dismissing Young’s representative
claims, the court’s ruling that representative claim waivers are valid appears
to have been based on the erroneous notion that Viking River overturned
Iskanian in full. Certainly, Viking River holds that “the FAA preempts the
rule of Iskanian insofar as it precludes division of PAGA actions into
individual and non-individual claims.” (Viking River, supra, 142 S.Ct. at
p. 1924.) But the Viking River court made clear that the FAA does not
preempt California’s prohibition of wholesale representative claim waivers:
“[non-individual] claims may not be dismissed simply because they are
‘representative.’ Iskanian’s rule remains valid to that extent.” (Id. at
pp. 1924–1925; Adolph, supra, 14 Cal.5th at p. 1117 [“In Iskanian, we held
that a predispute categorical waiver of the right to bring a PAGA action is
unenforceable [citation]—a rule that Viking River left undisturbed.”] and p.
1126 [“As noted, Viking River left intact Iskanian’s rule against agreements
that compel waiver of non-individual claims.”].)
      Young’s waiver of his right to bring private attorney general actions is
thus unenforceable as a matter of state law. We must therefore reverse the
order dismissing Young’s representative PAGA claims.
      Under Viking River and the Agreement’s severability clause, then,
Young’s individual claims “may be split off and compelled to arbitration,
while the remaining nonindividual claims remain for disposition in court.”

6     Young requests $6,500 in sanctions for Axos’s motion to dismiss the
appeal. Given the evolving nature of the law surrounding PAGA arbitration
and that Axos has prevailed in part on its motion to dismiss, we decline to
order sanctions.
                                       13
(Nickson, 90 Cal.App.5th at p. 130.) Adolph confirms that Young continues to
have standing to pursue representative PAGA claims against Axos despite
the court’s order compelling Young’s individual claim to arbitration. (Adolph,
supra, 14 Cal.5th at p. 1114.)
                                 DISPOSITION
      The appeal of the order compelling arbitration is dismissed as
premature. The order dismissing Young’s representative PAGA claims is
reversed, and the matter is remanded for further proceedings consistent with
this opinion. The parties shall bear their own costs on appeal.

                                                           DATO, Acting P. J.

WE CONCUR:

DO, J.

BUCHANAN, J.

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