The beauty of SquareSpace...

is that it allows for quite a bit of tinkering with site layout on the fly.  See, SquareSpace for some examples of how far you can go with their hosting platform.  This is both good and bad.  The good part is self-evident.  The bad part is that you can lose hours and hours of time creating graphics and adjusting layouts without realizing it.  So don't mind my tinkering with the layout; once I got started, I had to keep going until I was marginally satisfied with it.  I was bored, and I may tinker more.  So don't be surprised if the blog looks a little different every day.

Speaking of adjustments, the page-width header and "floating" banner required very precise pixel registration of some graphics.  Interestingly, chrome rendered part of the header 1 pixel off from how both Internet Explorer and Firefox render the same images.  I suspect that there is difference in how the browsers handle a rounding issue.  Regardless, everything now aligns in Chrome, Firefox 3.6, and Internet Explorer 8.  I can't help the rest of you.

The Fourth Appellate District brings us not one, but two opinions in Pellegrino v. Robert Half International, Inc.

On January 28, 2010, I posted a quick note about an Opinion in Pellegrino v. Robert Half International, Inc. (G039985).  See post here.  But, in the last two days, the Pellegrino matter has generated one additional Opinion and a modification of the earlier Opinion.  The first opinion, Pellegrino v. Robert Half International, Inc. (February 24, 2010) (G040762), was previously unpublished.  The now-published Opinion concerns an award of attorneys' fees:

RHI challenges the trial court's attorney fees award on the grounds the court (1) failed to sufficiently discount a portion of plaintiffs' attorney fees to account for the trial on the unfair competition claims for which no attorney fees were available; (2) should not have applied any multiplier to the lodestar figure in determining the attorney fees award, much less a multiplier as high as 1.75; and (3) improperly awarded an enhancement for “fees on fees.”

We affirm in part and reverse in part. The trial court did not err by reducing the lodestar amount by no more than 15 percent to reflect the parties' litigation of the unfair competition claims, because the legal and factual issues presented in those claims were interrelated with those issues presented by plaintiffs' wage and hour claims (for which attorney fees are available). The record supports the trial court's application of a 1.75 multiplier to the reduced lodestar amount for attorney fees generated up until plaintiffs brought their motion for attorney fees, based on the factors set forth in Ketchum v. Moses (2001) 24 Cal.4th 1122 (Ketchum). The record does not support, however, the application of a 1.75 multiplier to fees incurred in bringing the motion for attorney fees. We therefore reverse the amended judgment to the extent it applies a multiplier to fees incurred in bringing the attorney fees motion and remand to the trial court to recalculate the attorney fees award accordingly. We otherwise affirm the amended judgment.

Slip op., at 2-3.

The modification opinion, Pellegrino v. Robert Half International, Inc. (February 25, 2010) (G039985) concerned RHI's contention that its petition for rehearing should have been granted pursuant to Government Code section 68081 because the Court's decision was based on issues not briefed or proposed by any party.  The Court of Appeal disagreed.  Stridently.

Other commentary:

Storm's California Employment Law

Lexology and Lexology

California Employment Law Report

McAdams v. Monier, Inc. opinion after remand is published; most of original opinion remains intact

In a prior published opinion, McAdams v. Monier, Inc. (May 30, 2007, C051841), as mod. June 25, 2007, reversed a trial court order denying certification of the proposed CLRA and UCL classes.  The gravamen of the complaint was an alleged failure to disclose that the color composition of defendant's roof tiles would erode away, leaving bare concrete, well before the end of the tiles‟ represented 50-year lifetime.  Then, the Supreme Court granted review and deferred the matter (grant and hold) in light of In re Tobacco II Cases (2009) 46 Cal.4th 298 (Tobacco II), pending on the Supreme Court's docket at the time.  After Tobacco II was decided, the Supreme Court remanded with directions to vacate the decision and reconsider in light of Tobacco II.

Today, the Court of Appeal (Third Appellate District) issued its amended Opinion on Remand in McAdams v. Monier, Inc. (February 24, 2010).  But indicating that much of its Opinion would remain unchanged, the Court said, "In doing so, we reiterate our position involving the CLRA, as Tobacco II concerned only the UCL."  Slip op., at 2.  Going on, the Court summarized the new Opinion as follows:

We agree with case law that an “inference of common reliance” may be applied to a CLRA class that alleges a material misrepresentation consisting of a failure to disclose a particular fact. (Massachusetts Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. Superior Court (2002) 97 Cal.App.4th 1282, 1293 (Massachusetts Mutual).)

As for the UCL, we remand for the trial court to determine if the representative plaintiff meets the Proposition 64 standing requirements, as interpreted in Tobacco II. Otherwise, we find the UCL action suitable for class certification.

Consequently, we reverse the trial court's order denying certification of the proposed CLRA and UCL classes. We do so, however, with one proviso as to defining these classes, which we will explain in this opinion: The members of these classes, prior to purchasing or obtaining their Monier roof tile product, had to have been exposed to a statement along the lines that the roof tile would last 50 years, or would have a permanent color, or would be maintenance-free. (See Tobacco II, supra, 46 Cal.4th at p. 324.)

Slip op., at 2-3.

The opinion is extensive in its analysis of both the CLRA and the UCL.  The CLRA discussion is interesting for many reasons, including approving citation of the standing analysis in Chamberlan v. Ford Motor Co. (N.D.Cal. 2005) 369 F.Supp.2d 1138 (slip op., at 17) and clarification (and, to a degree, limitation) of the extent of the misrepresentation/omission discussion in Outboard Marine Corp. v. Superior Court (1975) 52 Cal.App.3d 30 (slip op., at 13-16).

The UCL discussion is also interesting on many levels.  For instance, the Court provides a simple reminder about what happened in Tobacco II: "In Tobacco II, the high court reversed an order that had denied class certification in a UCL lawsuit."  Slip op., at 21.  In other words, it reversed every element of the trial court order and Court of Appeal Opinion necessary to support that order.  Ultimately, the Court applied much of its certification analysis discusses in its CLRA discussion to the UCL claim, concluding that certification was appropriate.  The Court then directed the trial court "to determine whether the representative plaintiff can establish UCL standing as defined in Tobacco II and, if not, whether amendment should be permitted to add a new class representative."  Slip op., at 28.

California's budget problems are threatening a constitutional crisis

A colleague of mine (Linh Hua) and I have been talking out an issue that has troubled me for some time now.  It occurred to me that there must be a constitutional limit of some sort to the underfunding of California's judiciary.  I didn't have any specific case in mind when the concept crossed my mind, and my discussions with other practitioners elicited general agreement without specific supporting authority.  Coincidentally, just as I began to look into this issue, a confirming answer of sorts dropped into my lap.

This evening (for publication on 2/24/2010), Joel Stashenko reports in the New York Law Journal that New York's highest court has held unconstitutional the failure to grant pay raises to judges for the last 11 years.  Joel Stashenko, Denial of N.Y. Judicial Pay Raise Is Ruled Unconstitutional (February 24, 2010) www.law.com.  The high court (the New York Court of Appeals) declared the de facto pay freeze a "crisis" that threatened the separation of powers.  Declining requests for an order mandating an immediate pay raise, the Court said, "By ensuring that any judicial salary increases will be premised on their merits, this holding aims to strike the appropriate balance between preserving the independence of the Judiciary and avoiding encroachment on the budget-making authority of the Legislature."

While the Court proceeded with caution, it also warned, "It [the Legislature] should keep in mind, however, that whether the Legislature has met its constitutional obligations in that regard is within the province of this Court," citing Marbury v. Madison, 1 Cranch 137 (1803). "We therefore expect appropriate and expeditious legislative consideration."

Writing for the 5-1 majority, Judge Pigott said, "Because the Separation of Powers doctrine is aimed at preventing one branch of government from dominating or interfering with the functioning of another co-equal branch, we conclude that the independence of the judiciary is improperly jeopardized by the current judicial pay crisis, and this constitutes a violation of the Separation of Power doctrine."

In California we don't just have a pay crisis, we have a funding crisis.  Our Courts are closed one Wednesday each month, and I've heard mention that an additional closure day is under consideration by some.  We've lost a complex litigation court in Los Angeles County, a court designed to better manage the burdens imposed by complex, multi-party litigation.  If the pay issue in New York is a constitutional "crisis," what California is experiencing is a constitutional debacle.  The judiciary is not just impaired here, it is hamstrung and handcuffed.  As participants operating within one of the presumably co-equal branches of government, we must be vigilant and speak out when it is clear that a failure by one branch imperils the unfettered operation of another.

I intend to continue speaking about this issue until the futility of it all depresses me into silence.

Breaking News: Supreme Court holds that a corporation's "principal place of business" refers to the place where high level officers direct and control the company

A unanimous United States Supreme Court held today, in Hertz Corp. v. Friend, 559 U.S. ____ (February 23, 2010):

The federal diversity jurisdiction statute provides that "a corporation shall be deemed to be a citizen of any Stateby which it has been incorporated and of the State where it has its principal place of business." 28 U. S. C. §1332(c)(1) (emphasis added). We seek here to resolve different inter-pretations that the Circuits have given this phrase. In doing so, we place primary weight upon the need for judicial administration of a jurisdictional statute to remain assimple as possible. And we conclude that the phrase "principal place of business" refers to the place where thecorporation’s high level officers direct, control, and coordinate the corporation’s activities. Lower federal courts have often metaphorically called that place the corporation’s "nerve center."

Opinion, at 1.  In light of this holding, Tosco Corp. v. Communities for a Better Environment, 236 F. 3d 495 (9th Cir. 2001) is no longer good law.  The result is likely to be fewer diversity-based suits but more CAFA-based removals for class actions.

Second Interim Report on class actions in California sheds new light on certification

GreatSealCalNew100.jpg

Earlier this month, the Administrative Office of the Courts released its Second Interim Report from the Study of California Class Action Litigation.  The Second Interim Report specifically analyzed class certifications in cases initially filed with a class action designation.  The findings were surprising.

First, over the period of 2000 to 2005, certification rates plummeted: "The rate of class certification (by any means) decreased by more than 50 percent over the study years."  Report, at 6.  This sharp decline mirrored findings in federal courts.

Second, a meager 13% of cases initially filed as a class action ever had a motion for class certification filed before final disposition, and only 46% of those motions were granted.  Report, at 8-9.  However, three times more cases were certified as part of a settlement.  Report, at 11.  The Report speculated that the rate of certification by settlement could be attributable to the State's complex litigation programs:  "In California, the frequency of classes certified as part of a settlement agreement may be another product of the Complex Civil Litigation Program."  Report, at 11.  Sadly, the apparent success of this program hasn't ensured that class actions filed in Los Angeles County receive the careful attention of the Complex Civil Litigation Program.  Due to limited resources, the Los Angeles County Complex Courts are rejecting most class actions to focus on construction defect cases, mass torts, and other multi-party suits.

The Second Interim Report also examined data to test the hypothesis that class certification pressures settlements from defendants.  The data did not support that hypothesis.  For example, the lack of interlocutory review of orders granting certification did not reveal a settlement pressure when compared to federal courts:

Given the absence of an interlocutory appeal option in California, one may conclude that settlement pressure would exert more effect and more cases would be compelled to settle after the granting of a motion for class certification as compared to federal court. However, the disposition composition for certified cases that reached a final outcome in California does not support this hypothesis. Table 16 shows that the rate of settlement after certification through a court-granted motion for certification is 69%. This is actually slightly lower than the rate of 72% in the federal court. California‘s lack of intermediate recourse in response to the granting of class certification does not result in a higher rate of settlement in that situation when compared to data from federal court.

Report, at 26.  Summing up the data analysis related to the theorized pressure to settle, the Report concluded:

In sum, California data show that very few cases could be included in a category in which the commonly discussed parameters that define settlement pressure from class certification may have been a factor in the decision to settle. Many cases circumvented the issue altogether by including class certification as an element of the settlement itself. In cases with a class certified through a court-granted motion for certification, neither the overall disposition composition nor the time-to-settlement analyses seem to suggest an automatic or immediate progression from certification through motion to settlement which would allow the determination that pressure results in inevitable settlement. The conclusion here is not that the idea of settlement pressure is fabricated, or even altogether negligible, but rather that the pervasive effect of settlement pressure in California does not appear to be supported by the data.

Report, at 28.  It is at least fair to say that the only comprehensive study of California class action data available does not provide support for the recent, repeated claims by CJAC, Governor Schwarzenegger, and others that class actions are out of control, forcing settlements or in need of reforms such as the right to immediately appeal any order certifying a class.  Such a reform would likely lower the number of contested settlements from meager to negligible.  Certainly, that is a desirable result for businesses that underpay employees, sell defective products, or falsely advertise goods and services.  It is not, however, necessary to save our bankrupt state.

California Supreme Court declines review in Cohen v. DIRECTV, Inc. (October 28, 2009); lets lower courts sort it out for now

Today, the California Supreme Court denied a Petition for Review and Depublication in Cohen v. DIRECTV, Inc. (October 28, 2009).  The Court may very well have viewed the issues as premature, given that Cohen has been heavily criticized by other decisions and may become marginalized to the point of extinction.  Most recently, the modified opinion in Steroid Hormone Product Cases all but called Cohen flat out wrong in its analysis of Tobacco II.  The fun never stops.

More thoughts on Jaimez v. DAIOHS USA, Inc.

There is quite a bit to absorb in  Jaimez v. DAIOHS USA, Inc., et al. (February 8, 2010), and I wanted to provide some further commentary.  For example, no California Court of Appeal has interpreted or provided any guidance to trial courts regarding the wage statement "injury" requirement.  Jaimez holds that: (1) "a very modest showing" will satisfy the injury requirement; (2) the filing of a lawsuit and "the difficulty and expense ... encountered in attempting to reconstruct time and pay records" may satisfy the wage statement injury requirement; (3) the "injury" requirement is distinct from "damages"; and, (4) trial courts may certify wage statement classes even without evidence of an injury arising from inaccurate wage statements. Opinion at 22-23.

Jaimez also re-affirms and clarifies key standards applicable to class certification motions, including the fact that the proper predominance analysis is comparative. Jaimez appears to be the first published California Court of Appeal decision since the issuance of Sav-On Drug Stores, Inc. v. Superior Court, 34 Cal. 4th 319 (2004) to hold that the "relevant comparison lies between the costs and benefits of adjudicating plaintiffs' claims in a class action and the costs and benefits of proceeding by numerous separate actions- not between the complexity of a class suit that must accommodate some individualized inquiries and the absence of any remedial proceeding whatsoever." Opinion at 13 (quoting Sav-On, 34 Cal. 4th at 339  n.10). This holding is a good reminder of the "relevant comparison" predominance analysis when examining whether to certify a class.

Jaimez clarifies the role of the trial court when considering issues surrounding certification of meal break classes, holding that trial courts may certify a meal break class regardless of any legal uncertainty regarding an employer's obligation to provide meal breaks. Opinion at 18-19.

Jaimez also establishes important precedent regarding meal break timing requirements.  Employers and employees continue to dispute when employees are entitled to meal breaks.  No California Court of Appeal has offered guidance on this frequently disputed issue. Jaimez holds that trial courts may certify meal break classes based on the theory that an employer failed to provide meal breaks within the first five hours of a shift.

Labor Code § 226 directs employers to provide their employees with "an accurate itemized statement in writing" showing "total hours worked" and "all applicable hourly rates in effect during the pay period and the corresponding number of hours worked at each hourly rate."  When a violation occurs, "[a]n employee suffering injury as a result of a knowing and intentional failure by an employer to comply with [section 226(a)] is entitled to" specified damages. Id.  While this statutory language appears to differentiate between injury and damage, employees in California continue to face substantial resistance to the type of analysis supplied by Jaimez.

No California Court of Appeal has directly construed the wage statement "injury" requirement. Rather, only federal authorities have discussed this issue.  California employers, employees and courts continue to dispute the meaning of the wage statement injury requirement.  Jaimez now provides the first comments from a California Court of Appeal interpreting the wage statement injury requirement, assisting trial courts and litigants in the process.  On this point, Jaimez holds: "While there must be some injury in order to recover damages, a very modest showing will suffice." Opinion at 22.  Going further, Jaimez explains that '''this lawsuit, and the difficulty and expense [Jaimez has] encountered in attempting to reconstruct time and pay records,' may well be 'further evidence of the injury' he has suffered." Opinion at 22.  Adopting the federal approach to identifying injury, Jaimez explains that injury can include "the possibility of not being paid overtime, employee confusion over whether they received all wages owed them, difficulty and expense involved in reconstructing pay records, and forcing employees to make mathematical computations to analyze whether the wages paid in fact compensated them for all hours worked."  Opinion at 22.  This clearly articulated standard was missing from California jurisprudence.

Finally, with respect just to the wage statement aspects of the opinion, Jaimez holds that the absence of evidence at the certification stage of an injury arising from inaccurate wage statements does not preclude class certification because the plaintiff's theory (an erroneous wage statement form) is suitable for class treatment. Opinion at 22-23.

Despite many decisions regarding aspects of class certification, the actual application of certification standards to the facts of a particular case remains an area of substantial confusion for litigants and many trial courts.  Jaimez, citing Ghazaryan v. Diva Limousine, Ltd., 169 Cal.App.4th 1524 (2008), tacitly recognized this ongoing area of difficulty for trial courts when it said, "The trial court misapplied the criteria, focusing on the potential conflicting issues of fact or law on an individual basis, rather than evaluating 'whether the theory of recovery advanced by the plaintiff is likely to prove amenable to class treatment.'"  Opinion, at 13.

Following this general observation about the application of incorrect criteria to the certification question, the Jaimez Opinion follows with one of the more thorough discussions of how to apply correct certification criteria to the specific facts of a case, on a claim-by-claim basis, spanning some 10 pages of the Opinion.  For example, the Opinion provides concrete examples regarding the correct method for evaluating evidence submitted in support or opposition to the motion for class certification:

[H]ad the trial court focused on the correct criteria, it would have necessarily found the First Choice declarations, while identifying individual effects of policies and practices that may well call for individual damages determinations, nevertheless confirm the predominance of common legal and factual issues that make this case more amenable to class treatment.  For example:

  • Eight of the First Choice Declarations admit that RSR’s regularly “forego” meal breaks and one states that he never takes a meal break; and
  • The First Choice declarations also fail to state that the RSR’s were compensated with an additional hour of pay, as required by California law, when the RSR’s failed to follow their “normal” practice and/or did not receive a 30-minute uninterrupted meal period.

The First Choice declarations actually demonstrate there are numerous predominant common factual issues.  The fact that individual RSR’s may have different damages does not require denial of the class certification motion.  Furthermore, declarations from a small percentage of objectors do not bar class certification.  In sum, the trial court applied improper criteria in evaluating the merits of the First Choice declarants’ statements rather than considering whether they rebutted plaintiff’s substantial evidence that predominant factual issues (if not legal, too) make this case more amenable to class treatment than to myriad individual adjudications (Bell v. Farmers Ins. Exchange (2004) 115 Cal.App.4th 715, 743 (Bell); Richmond, supra, 29 Cal.3d at p. 475.)

Opinion at 15-16.  Opinions with this degree of practical detail about the correct method for evaluating evidence submitted in support of and in opposition to class certification are uncommon.  The rarity of such discussions about the practical mechanics of certification makes this Opinion that much more valuable for practitioners and trial courts alike.  Clarity of legal standards tends to reduce the duration and cost of litigation.

Just as important as the practical demonstration of how to assess evidence supplied by the parties on a contested certification motion is the Opinion's restatement of the correct legal test for evaluating predominance.  Since Sav-On, trial courts have continued to deny certification on the erroneous ground that a complex class action would, by necessity, require management of some individualized inquiries.  Jaimez provides a needed reminder that “'[T]he established legal standard for commonality . . . is comparative.'”  Opinion at 13, citing Sav-OnJaimez continues, "Specifically, '[t]he relevant comparison lies between the costs and benefits of adjudicating plaintiffs’ claims in a class action and the costs and benefits of proceeding by numerous separate actions—not between the complexity of a class suit that must accommodate some individualized inquiries and the absence of any remedial proceeding whatsoever.  [Citations.]'"  Ibid.  Though simple to state, this principle has received inconsistent application in practice.  Where a legal standard is applied inconsistently, repeated affirmations of the principle will help guide trial courts towards greater homogeneity of their analyses.   

The Supreme Court is currently considering appeals of the decisions in Brinker Restaurant Corp. v. Superior Court [previously reported at 165 Cal. App. 4th 25 (2008)] and Brinkley v. Public Storage, Inc. [previously reported at 167 Cal. App. 4th 1278 (2008)], both of which address, among other things, issues surrounding meal period requirements.  Jaimez bluntly observes that the law in this area is unsettled.  Despite this uncertainty, since Petitions for Review were granted in Brinker and Brinkley, trial courts throughout the state have routinely declined to decide matters based on existing law, proposing to stay wage & hour class actions while awaiting Supreme Court decisions that may not be issued until late 2010 or later.

Prior to publication, no California case addressed the issue of how to apply the standards for class certification to meal and rest break claims while the Brinker and Brinkley cases are pending before the California Supreme Court.  Moreover, the conflict between the court of appeal's decision in Cicairos v. Summit Logistics, Inc., 133 Cal. App. 4th 944 (2005) and a number of federal district court decisions also remains unresolved.  The Court, in Jaimez, found a way to avoid paralysis while awaiting Supreme Court decisions in Brinker and Brinkley. Jaimez held that a court "need not try to predict the outcome of the Supreme Court's review [of, in this case, Brinker and Brinkley], as we are not, at this stage, charged with adjudicating the legal or factual merits of Jaimez's causes of action."  Opinion at 19.

Jaimez makes it clear that trial courts need not stay class actions pending the outcome of the Supreme Court's proceedings in Brinker and Brinkley simply because they involve meal and rest break claims. California trial courts that are frequently being asked to deny or delay class certification of meal and rest break claims will find the Court's demonstrative application of class certification principles to meal and rest break claims helpful.

There is also a strong argument that, under California law, employees must have a 30-minute, uninterrupted meal break within the first five hours of a shift.  Labor Code § 512 say, "An employer may not employ an employee for a work period of more than five hours per day without providing the employee with a meal period of not less than 30 minutes .... "  Wage orders provide: "No employer shall employ any person for a work period of more than five (5) hours without a meal period of not less than 30 minutes .... "  And the California Supreme Court said, "Pursuant to IWC wage orders, employees are entitled to an unpaid 30-minute, duty-free meal period after working for five hours .... "  Murphy v. Kenneth Cole Productions, Inc., 40 Cal. 4th 1094, 1104 (2007).

Despite these and other suggestive authority, trial courts continue to encounter employers and employees that dispute when employees are entitled to meal breaks. No California Court of Appeal has offered explicit guidance on this issue before this opinion. Jaimez found that trial courts may certify meal break classes based on the theory that an employer failed to provide meal breaks within the first five hours of a shift. See Opinion at 19 (observing that individual issues do not predominate because the First Choice's declarations "fail to establish that any of the meal breaks were: (1) uninterrupted, (2) for 30 continuous minutes, or (3) provided within the first five, hours of a shift").

There is a lot to chew on in Jaimez (much of it not all that palatable to employers).  I can't imagine that, with an opinion this comprehensive, we've heard the last about Jaimez.  There is more to read about in Jaimez (like what to do when the plaintiff is inadequate), but I am done writing about it.

Breaking News: Tacit rebuke of Cohen becomes explicit in modified opinion issued in Steroid Hormone Product Cases

In Steroid Hormone Product Cases (January 21, 2010), the Court of Appeal (Second Appellate District, Division Four) reversed an order denying class certification and made some statements that seemed to be an implied rebuke of Cohen's treatment of In re Tobacco II Cases (2009) 46 Cal.4th 298 (Tobacco II).  (See this post for discussion of original decision.)  Today, the Court issued a modified opinion that explicitly rejects Cohen.  The full passage regarding Cohen is set forth below:

After we issued our opinion, GNC petitioned for rehearing, arguing that two recent cases from the Second Appellate District -- Cohen v. DIRECTV, Inc. (2009) 178 Cal.App.4th 966 (Cohen) and In re Vioxx Class Cases (2009) 180 Cal.App.4th 116 (Vioxx) -- support the trial court's denial of class certification in this case. Both cases are distinguishable.
In Cohen, the plaintiff alleged that DIRECTV violated the UCL and the CLRA by inducing subscribers to purchase high definition television services through misrepresentations in DIRECTV‟s advertising that DIRECTV's broadcast of those channels would meet certain technical specifications. (Cohen, supra, 178 Cal.App.4th at pp. 969-970.) In opposing class certification, DIRECTV submitted evidence that many subscribers had never seen, or did not remember seeing, advertisements with the alleged misrepresentations about the technical specifications, and purchased the services at issue due to other factors. (Id. at p. 970.) The trial court found that common issues of fact did not predominate because the allegedly fraudulent representations were not uniformly made to or considered by the class members. (Id. at p. 973.)
The appellate court affirmed. In discussing the UCL claim, the appellate court noted that Tobacco II, supra, 46 Cal.4th 298, was irrelevant to class certification because it addressed only the issue of standing, and did not instruct "our state's trial courts to dispatch with an examination of commonality when addressing a motion for class certification." (Cohen, supra, 178 Cal.App.4th at p. 981.) The court then concluded that the trial court's concern that the plaintiff's UCL and CLRA claims would involve individual factual issues regarding class members' reliance on the alleged misrepresentations “was a proper criterion for the court's consideration when examining 'commonality' in the context of the subscribers' motion for class certification, even after Tobacco II.” (Ibid.)
We agree that Tobacco II did not dispense with the commonality requirement for class certification. But to the extent the appellate court's opinion might be understood to hold that plaintiffs must show class members' reliance on the alleged misrepresentations under the UCL, we disagree. As Tobacco II made clear, Proposition 64 did not change the substantive law governing UCL claims, other than the standing requirements for the named plaintiffs, and "before Proposition 64, 'California courts have repeatedly held that relief under the UCL is available without individualized proof of deception, reliance and injury.'[Citation.]" (Tobacco II, supra, 46 Cal.4th at p. 326.) But in any event, the Cohen court's discussion regarding the appropriateness of considering class members' reliance when examining commonality is irrelevant here, where the UCL claim is based upon the unlawful prong of the UCL and thus presents no issue regarding reliance.
Modification Order, at 1-3.