Court Opinion

ID: 9915588
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2024-01-05 20:01:56.090955+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:16:40.121985
License: Public Domain

Filed 1/5/24 Baca v. Two Jinn 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                   NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS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 publication or
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                 COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

                                                       DIVISION ONE

                                              STATE OF CALIFORNIA

 TEOFILO BACA, JR.,                                                           D081613

            Plaintiff and Respondent,

            v.                                                                (Super. Ct. No. 37-2020-
                                                                              00000922-CU-OE-CTL)
 TWO JINN, INC. et al.

            Defendants and Appellants.

          APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of San Diego County,
Eddie C. Sturgeon, Judge. Reversed.
          Ames Karanjia, Jeffrey P. Ames, Mary E. Allain, Alma V. Montenegro,
and Brooke M. Arthur for Defendants and Appellants.
          Crosner Legal, Zachary Crosner, Jamie Serb; Clarkson Law Firm,
Glenn A. Danas, Zarrina Ozari, and Katelyn M. Leeviraphan for Plaintiff and
Respondent.
                                       I
                              INTRODUCTION
      Defendants Two Jinn, Inc. (hereafter, Two Jinn), Robert Hayes, and
Herb Mutter appeal an order denying their petition to compel individual
arbitration of a claim asserted by plaintiff and former Two Jinn employee,
Teofilo Baca, Jr., under the Private Attorneys General Act of 2004 (Lab.
Code, § 2698 et seq.; PAGA). The trial court denied the petition after finding
that the defendants waived their right to seek arbitration by litigating the
case in court for two years before seeking to arbitrate the PAGA claim.
      On appeal, the defendants argue they did not waive their right to
arbitrate the PAGA claim because they petitioned to compel arbitration soon
after the United States Supreme Court issued Viking River Cruises, Inc. v.
Moriana (2022) 596 U.S. __ [142 S.Ct. 1906] (Viking River), which held,
among other things, that PAGA actions do not fall outside the scope of the
Federal Arbitration Act (9 U.S.C. § 1 et seq.; FAA). According to the
defendants, the trial court erred in finding waiver because it would have been
futile for them to pursue arbitration of the PAGA claim before Viking River.
We agree with the defendants. Therefore, we reverse the order denying the
petition to compel arbitration and remand the matter for further proceedings.
                                       II
                               BACKGROUND
   A. Factual Background
      Two Jinn is a bail bond company that does business under the name
Aladdin Bail Bonds. Hayes is the company’s chief executive officer and
Mutter is its chief financial officer. Baca worked for Two Jinn as a bail
coordinator from November 2017 until September 2019.

                                       2
      When Baca started working for Two Jinn, he signed a standalone two-
page arbitration agreement. The arbitration agreement states that the
“Federal Arbitration Act shall govern the interpretation, enforcement, and all
proceedings pursuant to this Agreement. To the extent that the [FAA] is
inapplicable, the California Arbitration Act shall apply.”
      The arbitration agreement requires the parties to arbitrate covered
disputes according to the following terms:
     “The Company and I each agree to submit to final and binding
      arbitration any and all disputes that we could otherwise pursue
      in state or federal court that arise from or relate in any way to
      my recruitment, hiring, employment, or the termination of my
      employment, with the Company. This includes, without
      limitation, claims that the Company may have against me or that
      I may have against the Company, or any of its employees,
      officers, directors or agents, based on any state or federal statute
      (including claims ... based on the California Labor Code), as well
      as common law claims ... but excludes ... any other claim that
      cannot legally be subject to a pre-dispute arbitration agreement
      under applicable law. [¶] ... [¶] The arbitration shall be conducted
      by a single neutral arbitrator in accordance with the then-current
      rules of the JAMS Arbitration and Mediation Services (‘JAMS’)
      for resolution of employment disputes ....”
      The arbitration agreement includes a class action waiver, which waives
Baca’s right “to bring on behalf of persons other than [himself], or to
otherwise participate with other persons in, any class action.” However, the
agreement does not contain a representative action waiver.
   B. Procedural Background
      On January 7, 2020, Baca filed the present action against Two Jinn,
Hayes, and Mutter in the Superior Court for the County of San Diego. The
complaint asserted a single PAGA claim for alleged violations of the Labor
Code and Industrial Welfare Commission (IWC) Wage Orders, including meal
and rest break, minimum wage, overtime, itemized wage statement,

                                       3
recordkeeping, and wage payment violations. Baca sought civil penalties for
alleged violations suffered by himself and by other similarly aggrieved
employees.
      On February 13, 2020, the defendants answered the complaint. In
their answer, they did not assert the arbitration agreement as an affirmative
defense.
      On February 9, 2021, Baca filed the operative first amended complaint.
The amended complaint clarified the scope of the aggrieved employees on
whose behalf Baca sought civil penalties, but it was in all other respects
identical to the initial complaint.
      On March 12, 2021, the defendants answered the amended complaint.
Once again, they did not identify the arbitration agreement as an affirmative
defense.
      Discovery ensued. Baca propounded written interrogatories and
requests for the production of documents to which the defendants responded.
Two Jinn also deposed Baca and he, in turn, deposed Two Jinn’s person most
knowledgeable and three other corporate employees.
      The parties filed discovery motions as well. The defendants filed a
motion to sequence discovery and a motion for a protective order seeking to
limit the discovery requests to which they were obligated to respond—both of
which the court denied. For his part, Baca filed a motion to compel discovery
responses, which the court granted in part and denied in part.
      The defendants also filed substantive motions attacking Baca’s lawsuit.
On December 21, 2021, they moved to strike the allegations of the amended
complaint pertaining to meal and rest break violations on grounds that a
PAGA trial based on these allegations would be unmanageable. After a
hearing, the court denied the motion to strike.

                                       4
      On April 8, 2022, the defendants moved for summary judgment. They
argued summary judgment was warranted because Baca was not an
“aggrieved employee,” and he therefore lacked statutory standing to seek
penalties from the defendants, because he was not a Two Jinn employee
during the time period in which the defendants allegedly violated the Labor
Code and IWC Wage Orders. The court did not rule on the motion for
summary judgment, however, because it denied the defendants’ petition to
compel arbitration and the defendants appealed the court’s arbitration ruling
(see post Section II(C)) before the court could adjudicate the summary
judgment motion.
   C. Petition to Compel Arbitration
      On June 15, 2022, the United States Supreme Court issued Viking
River, supra, 596 U.S. at p. __ [142 S.Ct. 1906]. As we will discuss in depth
below, Viking River held that PAGA actions do not fall outside the scope of
the FAA, rejecting a contrary determination previously reached by the
California Supreme Court in Iskanian v. CLS Transportation Los Angeles,
LLC (2014) 59 Cal.4th 348 (Iskanian). It also concluded that the FAA
preempted a rule of California state law prohibiting predispute agreements to
split PAGA claims into bifurcated proceedings—specifically, agreements to
arbitrate Labor Code violations personally suffered by the plaintiff (so-called
individual claims) and to litigate Labor Code violations arising out of events
involving other employees (so-called non-individual claims) in court.
      On July 6, 2022, the defendants petitioned to compel arbitration of
Baca’s individual PAGA claim for the alleged Labor Code violations he
personally suffered and to stay the remainder of the case pending the
arbitration. The defendants acknowledged that parties may waive their right
to arbitrate, but argued there was no waiver in the present case because they

                                       5
did not have a right to compel arbitration of the PAGA claim until the United
States Supreme Court issued Viking River.
      On January 30, 2023, the trial court denied the petition to compel
arbitration, finding the defendants waived their right to seek arbitration. In
support of this finding, the court noted that two years had passed since the
initiation of the lawsuit, the defendants did not assert arbitration as an
affirmative defense in their answers, the parties undertook “significant
discovery” efforts, and the court had adjudicated multiple discovery motions
and a motion to strike.
      The defendants appeal the order denying their petition to compel
arbitration.
                                       III
                                 DISCUSSION
   A. Standard of Review
      “On appeal from the denial of a motion to compel arbitration, ‘we
review the arbitration agreement de novo to determine whether it is legally
enforceable, applying general principles of California contract law.’ ” (Baker
v. Osborne Development Corp. (2008) 159 Cal.App.4th 884, 892.)
      “Whether a party has waived the right to compel arbitration is
generally a question of fact. A trial court’s finding of waiver is therefore
reviewed under the substantial evidence standard unless ‘ “the facts are
undisputed and only one inference may reasonably be drawn,” ’ in which case
‘ “the reviewing court is not bound by the trial court’s ruling.” ’ ” (Sprunk v.
Prisma LLC (2017) 14 Cal.App.5th 785, 794.)
   B. The FAA Applies to the Arbitration Agreement
      The FAA states, in relevant part, that a “written provision in ... a
contract evidencing a transaction involving commerce to settle by arbitration
a controversy thereafter arising ... shall be valid, irrevocable, and enforceable
                                        6
....” (9 U.S.C. § 2.) The FAA “makes enforceable a written arbitration
provision in a contract evidencing a transaction affecting interstate
commerce.” (Desert Regional Medical Center, Inc. v. Miller (2022) 87
Cal.App.5th 295, 308.) It also “authorizes any party aggrieved by the failure
or refusal of another to arbitrate under an enforceable arbitration agreement
to petition the court for an order to compel arbitration in accordance with the
terms of the arbitration agreement.” (Ibid.; see 9 U.S.C. § 4.)
      “Section 2 [of the FAA] is a congressional declaration of a liberal federal
policy favoring arbitration agreements, notwithstanding any state
substantive or procedural policies to the contrary. The effect of the section is
to create a body of federal substantive law of arbitrability, applicable to any
arbitration agreement within the coverage of the Act.’ [Citation.] Thus, the
FAA ‘establishes that, as a matter of federal law, any doubts concerning the
scope of arbitrable issues should be resolved in favor of arbitration, whether
the problem at hand is the construction of the contract language itself or an
allegation of waiver, delay, or a like defense to arbitrability.’ [Citation.] The
policy of enforceability established by section 2 of the FAA is binding on state
courts as well as federal courts.” (Cronus Investments, Inc. v. Concierge
Services (2005) 35 Cal.4th 376, 384.)
      Our first task in this appeal is to determine whether the FAA applies to
the parties’ arbitration agreement. Baca contends the FAA does not apply to
the arbitration agreement because the defendants failed to supply the trial
court with admissible evidence establishing that the parties’ agreement, the
defendants’ business, or the parties’ employment relationship had an impact
on, or a relationship with, interstate commerce. The defendants, on the other
hand, argue the FAA applies to the arbitration agreement because the

                                        7
agreement itself specifically states that it is governed by the FAA. The
defendants have the better argument.
      “The FAA applies to contracts that involve interstate commerce
(9 U.S.C. §§ 1, 2), but since arbitration is a matter of contract, the FAA also
applies if it is so stated in the agreement.” (Barrera v. Apple American Group
LLC (2023) 95 Cal.App.5th 63, 76 (Barrera); see also Davis v. Shiekh Shoes,
LLC (2022) 84 Cal.App.5th 956, 963 [same]; Victrola 89, LLC v. Jaman
Properties 8 LLC (2020) 46 Cal.App.5th 337, 355 [“the presence of interstate
commerce is not the only manner under which the FAA may apply. ... [T]he
parties may also voluntarily elect to have the FAA govern enforcement of the
Agreement”]; cf. Mastick v. TD Ameritrade, Inc. (2012) 209 Cal.App.4th 1258,
1263 [“contracting parties may agree that the FAA will not govern their
arbitration even if the contract involves interstate commerce”].)
      Here, the arbitration agreement expressly states the FAA “shall govern
the interpretation, enforcement, and all proceedings pursuant to [the]
[a]greement ....” This contractual language unambiguously reflects the

parties’ election for the FAA to apply to the arbitration agreement.1 Because

1    The choice of law language is not made ambiguous by the arbitration
agreement’s reference to the California Arbitration Act. The agreement
merely supplies the California Arbitration Act as a backup source of law if
the FAA—the parties’ preferred source of law—is found to be inapplicable.
                                        8
the parties voluntarily agreed that the FAA would apply, the FAA governs

the arbitration agreement.2
   C. The Defendants Did Not Waive their Right to Seek Arbitration
      Having resolved the question of whether the FAA applies to the parties’
arbitration agreement, we proceed to the primary issue in this appeal—
whether the defendants waived their right to seek arbitration under the FAA.
      Baca argues the defendants waived their right to petition for
arbitration because they behaved inconsistently with their right to arbitrate,
substantially invoked the machinery of litigation, and delayed pursuing
arbitration. He emphasizes that the defendants did not seek arbitration until
two years after the commencement of the litigation, they did not assert
arbitration as an affirmative defense in either of their answers, and they
engaged in discovery and motion practice.
      In response, the defendants contend they did not waive their right to
seek arbitration because it would have been futile to request arbitration any
earlier than they did. According to the defendants, prior California Supreme
Court precedent—specifically, rules of law announced in Iskanian, supra, 59
Cal.4th 348—prevented them from pursuing arbitration earlier. The
defendants claim they requested arbitration as soon as they had a chance of
success—after the United States Supreme issued Viking River and abrogated

2     In support of his argument that the FAA does not apply to the
arbitration agreement, Baca relies on Carbajal v. CWPSC, Inc. (2016) 245
Cal.App.4th 227, Lane v. Francis Capital Management LLC (2014) 224
Cal.App.4th 676, and Hoover v. American Income Life Insurance Co. (2012)
206 Cal.App.4th 1193, three cases in which courts found that the FAA did not
apply because the parties seeking arbitration failed to show that their
arbitration agreements involved interstate commerce. These cases are
distinguishable from the present one. Unlike the arbitration agreement at
issue here, the arbitration agreements in Carbajal, Lane, and Hoover did not
expressly state that they were governed by the FAA.
                                       9
the roadblock to arbitration set up by Iskanian. Once more, we agree with
the defendants.
         1. PAGA
      “The Legislature enacted PAGA almost two decades ago in response to
widespread violations of the Labor Code and significant underenforcement of
those laws. [Citations.] Before PAGA’s enactment, tools for enforcing the
Labor Code were limited. Some statutes allowed employees to sue their
employers for damages resulting from Labor Code violations such as unpaid
wages. [Citations.] Other Labor Code violations were punishable only as
criminal misdemeanors, which local prosecutors tended not to prioritize.
[Citation.] Additionally, several statutes provided civil penalties for Labor
Code violations, but only state labor law enforcement agencies could bring an
action for civil penalties and those agencies lacked sufficient enforcement
resources.” (Adolph v. Uber Technologies, Inc. (2023) 14 Cal.5th 1104, 1116
(Adolph).)
      “To address these shortcomings, the Legislature enacted PAGA to
create new civil penalties for various Labor Code violations and ‘ “to allow
aggrieved employees, acting as private attorneys general, to recover [those]
penalties.” ’ [Citation.] An employee who brings a PAGA action to recover
civil penalties acts ‘ “as the proxy or agent” ’ of the state. [Citations.] ‘PAGA
is designed primarily to benefit the general public, not the party bringing the
action.’ [Citation.] Penalties recovered are dedicated largely ‘to public use ...
instead of being awarded entirely to a private plaintiff.’ ” (Adolph, supra, 14
Cal.5th at p. 1116.)
      “To have standing to bring a PAGA action, a plaintiff must be an
‘aggrieved employee,’ which the statute defines as ‘any person who was
employed by the alleged violator and against whom one or more of the alleged

                                       10
violations was committed.’ [Citation.] An aggrieved employee becomes
deputized to prosecute Labor Code violations once he or she has complied
with PAGA’s notice requirements. [Citation.] Before filing suit, the
aggrieved employee ‘must notify the employer and the [Labor and Workforce
Development Agency (LWDA)] of the specific labor violations alleged, along
with the facts and theories supporting the claim.’ [Citations.] ‘If the agency
does not investigate, does not issue a citation, or fails to respond to the notice
within 65 days, the employee may sue.’ [Citations.] ‘The notice requirement
allows the relevant state agency “to decide whether to allocate scarce
resources to an investigation” ’ [citation] or instead to deputize the aggrieved
employee to pursue sanctions on the state’s behalf. Once deputized, the
aggrieved employee has authority to ‘seek any civil penalties the state can.’ ”
(Adolph, supra, 14 Cal.5th at pp. 1116–1117.) Because the aggrieved
employee may seek any civil penalties the state can, the aggrieved employee
“may seek penalties not only for the Labor Code violation that affected him or
her, but also for different violations that affected other employees.” (Huff v.
Securitas Security Services USA, Inc. (2018) 23 Cal.App.5th 745, 750.)
         2. Iskanian and its Progeny
      In Iskanian, the California Supreme Court considered the viability of a
waiver of an employee’s right to bring a PAGA action contained in a
predispute arbitration agreement. It held that a waiver of the right to bring
a PAGA action in any forum impermissibly “disable[s] one of the primary
mechanisms for enforcing the Labor Code” and “harm[s] the state’s interests
in ... receiving the proceeds of civil penalties used to deter violations,” which
violates state public policy. (Iskanian, supra, 59 Cal.4th at pp. 382–383.)
      The Iskanian court also rejected an argument that a predispute
arbitration agreement may be enforced so long as it “prohibits only [non-

                                        11
individual PAGA] claims, not individual PAGA claims for Labor Code
violations that an employee suffered.” (Iskanian, supra, 59 Cal.4th at p. 383.)
The court concluded that, “whether or not an individual claim is permissible
under the PAGA, a prohibition of [non-individual] claims frustrates the
PAGA’s objectives.” (Id. at p. 384.) In other words, the Iskanian court
prohibited an employer from “forc[ing] an employee to split a PAGA claim
into ‘individual’ and [‘non-individual’] components, with each being litigated
in a different forum.” (Perez v. U-Haul Co. of California (2016) 3 Cal.App.5th
408, 421; see also Kim v. Reins International California, Inc. (2020) 9 Cal.5th
73, 88 [“Appellate courts have rejected efforts to split PAGA claims into
individual and [non-individual] components.”].)
      Additionally, the Iskanian court considered—and rejected—a claim
that the FAA preempts the state’s ban on PAGA waivers. It “conclude[d] that
the rule against PAGA waivers does not frustrate the FAA’s objectives
because ... the FAA aims to ensure an efficient forum for the resolution of
private disputes, whereas a PAGA action is a dispute between an employer
and the state Labor and Workforce Development Agency.” (Iskanian, supra,
59 Cal.4th at p. 384.) In the view of the Iskanian court, “a PAGA claim lies
outside the FAA’s coverage because it is not a dispute between an employer
and an employee arising out of their contractual relationship. It is a dispute
between an employer and the state, which alleges directly or through its
agents—either the Labor and Workforce Development Agency or aggrieved
employees—that the employer has violated the Labor Code.” (Id. at pp. 386–
387.) According to the Iskanian court, the FAA “does not aim to promote
arbitration of claims belonging to a government agency, and that is no less
true when such a claim is brought by a statutorily designated proxy for the
agency as when the claim is brought by the agency itself.” (Id. at p. 388.)

                                      12
      After Iskanian, several Courts of Appeal (including our own) were
confronted with a question arising out of—but distinct from the issues
considered in—Iskanian. Specifically, we were tasked with deciding whether
a court could compel arbitration of any PAGA claim (either an individual
PAGA claim or a non-individual PAGA claim) without the consent of the
state pursuant to a predispute arbitration agreement between an employee
and his or her employer. Relying predominately on Iskanian’s FAA
preemption analysis, the Courts of Appeal uniformly answered that question
in the negative. (See Piplack v. In-N-Out Burgers (2023) 88 Cal.App.5th
1281, 1287 (Piplack) [“After Iskanian, it was settled law in California that
PAGA claims could not be compelled to arbitration, in whole or in part.”].)
      Our court articulated the following rationale while reaching this
conclusion: “Without the state’s consent, a predispute agreement between an
employee and an employer cannot be the basis for compelling arbitration of a
representative PAGA claim because the state is the owner of the claim and
the real party in interest, and the state was not a party to the arbitration
agreement.” (Correia v. NB Baker Electric, Inc. (2019) 32 Cal.App.5th 602,
622; see also Herrera v. Doctors Medical Center of Modesto, Inc. (2021) 67
Cal.App.5th 538, 550 [“a former employee who is authorized to pursue PAGA
representative claims cannot be compelled to arbitrate the PAGA claims
based on a predispute arbitration agreement”]; Contreras v. Superior Court
(2021) 61 Cal.App.5th 461, 472 [instructing trial court to deny motion to
compel arbitration because “[n]othing in the record suggest[ed] that the state
... consented to the arbitration of petitioners’ PAGA claim”]; Julian v.
Glenair, Inc. (2017) 17 Cal.App.5th 853, 871 [“a predispute agreement to
arbitrate is ineffective to compel arbitration of a PAGA claim, as the
employee who signs the agreement is not then authorized to waive the state’s

                                       13
right to a judicial forum”]; Betancourt v. Prudential Overall Supply (2017) 9
Cal.App.5th 439, 447 [“the fact that [a plaintiff] may have entered into a
predispute agreement to arbitrate does not bind the state to arbitration”];
Tanguilig v. Bloomingdale’s, Inc. (2016) 5 Cal.App.5th 665, 678 [“Because a
PAGA plaintiff, whether suing solely on behalf of himself or herself or also on
behalf of other employees, acts as a proxy for the state ... a PAGA claim
cannot be ordered to arbitration without the state’s consent.”].)
      This was the state of the law when Baca filed the present action and
throughout the course of the litigation—until Viking River.
         3. Viking River
      On June 15, 2022, the United States Supreme Court issued Viking
River, which considered whether the FAA preempts the rules of state law
that were articulated and applied in the Iskanian decision.
      Before it reached these preemption issues, however, the Viking River
court addressed whether the FAA applies to PAGA actions. It held that the
FAA does apply to PAGA actions—an explicit rejection of the Iskanian court’s
determination that PAGA claims fall outside the scope of the FAA. (Viking
River, supra, 596 U.S. at p. __, fn. 4 [142 S.Ct. at p. 1919, fn. 4].) The Viking
River court observed that “§ 2 limit[s] the FAA’s enforcement mandate to
agreements to arbitrate controversies that ‘arise out of’ the parties’
contractual relationship,” but concluded that “disputes resolved in PAGA
actions satisfy this requirement.” (Viking River, at p. __ [142 S.Ct. at p. 1919,
fn. 4].) According to the court, “The contractual relationship between the
parties is a but-for cause of any justiciable legal controversy between the
parties under PAGA, and ‘arising out of’ language normally refers to a causal
relationship. [Citations.] And regardless of whether a PAGA action is in
some sense also a dispute between an employer and the State, nothing in the

                                       14
FAA categorically exempts claims belonging to sovereigns from the scope of
§ 2.” (Viking River, at p. __ [142 S.Ct. at p. 1919, fn. 4].)
      Proceeding to its preemption analysis, the Viking River court held the
FAA does not preempt the state’s ban against PAGA waivers. (Viking River,
supra, 596 U.S. at p. __ [142 S.Ct. at p. 1913].) In so doing, the Viking River
court rejected an assertion that PAGA waivers must be enforced because
“PAGA creates a form of class or collective proceeding” and Iskanian’s ban on
PAGA waivers thus “presents parties with the same impermissible choice as
the rules [the United States Supreme Court] ha[s] invalidated in [its]
decisions concerning class- and collective-action waivers: Either arbitrate
disputes using a form of class procedure, or do not arbitrate at all.” (Viking
River, at p. __ [142 S.Ct. at p. 1918].) In repudiating this analogy, the Viking
River court highlighted several distinctions between class actions and PAGA
actions, including the fact that a plaintiff in a PAGA action—unlike a class
action plaintiff—represents just a single principal (the LWDA), does not need
to obtain certification, and does not obtain a judgment that is binding on
other nonparty employees. (Viking River, at p. __ [142 S.Ct. at p. 1920].)
      However, the Viking River court held that Iskanian’s anti-splitting rule
runs afoul of the FAA. According to the Viking River court, the anti-splitting
rule “unduly circumscribes the freedom of parties to determine ‘the issues
subject to arbitration’ and ‘the rules by which they will arbitrate,’ [citation],
and does so in a way that violates the fundamental principle that ‘arbitration
is a matter of consent,’ [citation].” (Viking River, supra, 596 U.S. at p. __ [142
S.Ct. at p. 1923].) “If the parties agree to arbitrate ‘individual’ PAGA claims
based on personally sustained violations, [the anti-splitting rule] allows the
aggrieved employee to abrogate that agreement after the fact and demand

                                         15
either judicial proceedings or an arbitral proceeding that exceeds the scope
jointly intended by the parties.” (Id. at p. __ [142 S.Ct. at p. 1924].)
      Three weeks after the issuance of Viking River, the defendants
petitioned to compel arbitration of Baca’s individual PAGA claim.
         4. Application
      Against this backdrop, we now consider whether the defendants waived
their right to seek arbitration of the individual PAGA claim for the statutory
violations personally suffered by Baca. As we shall explain, we conclude the
defendants did not waive their right to arbitrate.
      The Piplack decision is instructive on the issue of waiver. In Piplack,
two plaintiffs filed a PAGA claim against their former employer seeking civil
penalties on their own behalf and on behalf of other aggrieved employees.
(Piplack, supra, 88 Cal.App.5th at pp. 1285–1286.) The parties were bound
by a predispute arbitration agreement with a PAGA waiver and severability
clauses requiring severance of the PAGA waiver if “necessary to ensure that
the individual [PAGA] action proceed[ed] in arbitration.” (Piplack, at
p. 1285.) The employer petitioned to compel arbitration after more than two
years of litigation, just a few months before the issuance of Viking River.
(Piplack, at p. 1286.) The trial court summarily denied the petition and, in
Piplack, the Court of Appeal reversed that decision as to one of the plaintiffs

and compelled arbitration of his individual PAGA claim.3 (Id. at pp. 1286,
1293.)
      In reaching this decision, the Piplack court rejected the plaintiffs’ claim
that the employer “waived its right to arbitrate by delaying seeking

3      With respect to the second plaintiff, Piplack remanded the matter to
the trial court to resolve factual disputes concerning the plaintiff’s capacity to
accept the arbitration agreement and his alleged disaffirmance of the
agreement. (Piplack, supra, 88 Cal.App.5th at p. 1290.)
                                        16
arbitration, participating in litigation in the trial court, omitting arbitration
as an affirmative defense in its answer to plaintiffs’ first amended complaint,
and engaging in settlement negotiations in this and other PAGA cases.”
(Piplack, supra, 88 Cal.App.5th at p. 1289.) It held the employer did not
waive its right to arbitrate, as a matter of law, because the employer “raised
its right to arbitrate as soon as it had any chance of success” based on Viking
River. (Piplack, at p. 1289.) “The fact that [the employer] vigorously
defended itself in the trial court [made] no difference because the relevant
question [was] whether there was any unreasonable delay. The omission of
arbitration as an affirmative defense to plaintiffs’ first amended complaint
[was] also not a waiver of arbitration for precisely the same reason ....” (Id. at
pp. 1289–1290; see also Iskanian, supra, 59 Cal.4th at pp. 374–378
[defendant neither acted inconsistently with its right to arbitrate nor
unreasonably delayed seeking arbitration by engaging in discovery and
litigating class certification for three years until a change in law allowed for
the enforcement of class action waiver in parties’ arbitration agreement].)
      Similarly, in Barrera, supra, 95 Cal.App.5th 63, the defendants moved
to compel arbitration of an individual PAGA claim asserted by former
employees under a predispute arbitration agreement requiring individual
arbitration of all legal claims, including PAGA claims. The trial court denied
the motion and, one week later, Viking River was issued. (Barrera, at pp. 73–
74.) Although the trial court did not address whether the defendants waived
their right to seek arbitration, the Barrera court considered the issue and
concluded, as a matter of law, that there was no waiver. (Id. at pp. 77–79.)
Relying on Piplack, the Barrera court determined that the defendants did not
waive their “right to arbitrate by ‘litigating th[e] case for over a year’ before
filing their motion to compel arbitration” because they “moved to compel

                                        17
arbitration soon after [they] learned the United States Supreme Court
granted certiorari in Viking River with respect to the Iskanian rule—which
they explained in their motion was ‘the only obstacle to arbitration of the
claim ...’ and likely to be overturned in Viking River.” (Barrera, at pp. 77–79.)
“Given these circumstances, any delay in bringing the[] motion was not
unreasonable.” (Id. at p. 79; see also Johnson v. Lowe’s Home Centers, LLC
(E.D. Cal. 2022) 630 F.Supp.3d 1352, 1354, fn. 1 [“The Court concludes
Defendant’s motion is timely because it raises arguments that were futile
prior to Viking River.”].)
      Like the defendants in Piplack and Barrera, the defendants here did
not waive their right to arbitrate because a pre-Viking River petition to
compel arbitration would have been futile. As noted, an unbroken chain of
pre-Viking River authority relied on Iskanian’s determination that a PAGA
action lies outside the FAA’s coverage in order to conclude that PAGA actions
may not be compelled into arbitration without the state’s consent. Under this
body of law, the defendants could not successfully have petitioned to compel
arbitration of any aspect of the PAGA claim—either the individual PAGA
claim or the non-individual PAGA claim—because the state did not consent
to arbitration of the PAGA claim. In Viking River, however, the United
States Supreme Court held that a PAGA action does not lie outside the scope
of the FAA. (Viking River, supra, 596 U.S. at p. __, fn. 4 [142 S.Ct. at p. 1919,
fn. 4.) This change in law gave the defendants a reasonable expectancy—for
the first time—that a court might hold that the state-must-consent rule
derived from Iskanian no longer remains good law and, therefore, at least
some portion of the PAGA claim could be compelled into arbitration without
the state’s consent. Thus, we conclude, as a matter of law, that the
defendants did not waive their right to arbitrate by refraining from seeking

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arbitration until Viking River, nor by litigating the case in the interim while
Iskanian remained fully intact.
      In light of our conclusion that the defendants did not waive their right
to seek arbitration of the PAGA claim, we reverse the order denying the
petition to compel arbitration and remand the matter for the trial court to

adjudicate the petition on the merits.4
                                       IV
                                  DISPOSITION
      The order is reversed. Appellants are entitled to their appellate costs.

                                                            McCONNELL, P. J.

WE CONCUR:

KELETY, J.

CASTILLO, J.

4     We express no opinion about whether the arbitration agreement
requires arbitration of Baca’s non-individual PAGA claim, nor do we express
an opinion on the related issue of whether the agreement delegates to the
arbitrator the task of determining the scope of arbitrable claims through its
incorporation of JAMS rules. These issues received relatively little attention
in the parties’ briefs compared to the waiver issue, and they need not be
addressed to resolve the appeal. (Martinez v. San Diego County Credit Union
(2020) 50 Cal.App.5th 1048, 1071 [“an appellate court generally will not
address an issue unnecessary to the resolution of the appeal”].)
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