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Date: 03-25-2018

Case Style: Norma Serrano v. Aerotek, Inc.

Case Number: A149187

Judge: Humes, P.J.

Court: California Court of Appeals First Appellate District Division One on appeal from the Superior Court, San Mateo County

Plaintiff's Attorney: Michael H. Kim and Ronald Wael Makarem

Defendant's Attorney: Michael Stuart Kun and Mark Royce Curiel

Description: Plaintiff Norma Serrano brought this lawsuit against her former employer,
Aerotek, Inc., which placed her as a temporary employee with its client, Bay Bread, LLC.
She raised four causes of action against Aerotek and Bay Bread based on their alleged
failure to provide meal periods. On appeal, she challenges an order granting summary
judgment to Aerotek, arguing the trial court erred by determining that Aerotek satisfied
its own duty to provide meal periods and was not liable for any meal period violations by
Bay Bread. We affirm.
I.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL
BACKGROUND
Aerotek is a staffing agency that places temporary employees with its clients. Bay
Bread operates a food production facility in South San Francisco. In September 2010,
Aerotek and Bay Bread entered a contract under which Aerotek provided temporary
employees to work at Bay Bread. The contract stated that temporary employees would
work “under [Bay Bread’s] management and supervision at a facility or in an
2
environment controlled by [Bay Bread]” and that it was Bay Bread’s “responsibility to
control, manage and supervise the work” these employees were assigned to perform
under the contract. The contract also contained a clause under which Bay Bread agreed
to “comply with applicable federal, state, and local laws in connection with the services
provided by [Aerotek] hereunder.”
Aerotek’s policies that applied to temporary employees on assignment with clients
were set forth in an employee handbook. In relevant part, Aerotek’s meal period policy
required the following:
After a work period of more than 5 hours, an hourly employee must
be provided an uninterrupted 30-minute off-duty meal break. This meal
period must begin no later than the end of the employee’s 5th hour of work,
and the employee is expected to take this meal break in full. If, however,
an employee’s workday is no more than 6 hours, the employee may elect to
waive the off-duty meal period in advance by written agreement with the
company.
An employee should be relieved from all duties during these 30-
minute meal breaks, and the employee must accurately record the time of
day he or she began and ended the meal period. A meal period during
which the employee is relieved of all duties is not considered time worked
and thus the employee will not be paid for the meal break.

If at any time an employee believes that someone is preventing him
or her from taking, or interfering with the employee’s ability to take an
authorized . . . meal period, the employee immediately should report the
matter to their Aerotek Representative. The employee will suffer no
retaliation for reporting this matter.
Bay Bread set the schedules that Aerotek temporary employees worked and
managed their shifts, including the taking of meal breaks. Bay Bread had its own meal
period policy that applied to its employees but not Aerotek’s temporary employees.
David Razon, who was deposed as Bay Bread’s “person most knowledgeable,” testified
that every Aerotek temporary employee who worked at Bay Bread received the Aerotek
3
employee handbook and went through an orientation. These orientations took place at
Bay Bread and were conducted by both Aerotek and Bay Bread representatives. Aerotek
representatives conducted training on Aerotek’s employment policies, including its meal
period policy.
1
Bay Bread representatives familiarized temporary employees with the
Bay Bread facility and instructed them on Bay Bread’s policies, including issues of
“safety[,] security, [and] compliance.”
Razon was not familiar with Aerotek’s policy, which he considered not “relevant”
because Bay Bread “ran [its] shifts in such a way that everyone got a break compliant
with state law.” According to Razon, two considerations informed when Aerotek
temporary employees took their meal breaks: the need to “ensur[e] that everyone got an
uninterrupted meal break by the time five hours of their shift elapsed” and “workflow,”
for example, “when things needed to come in and out of the oven. We can’t go take a
break and let the cookies burn.”
During the time period at issue, Aerotek employed an on-site account manager,
David Scott, who worked in an administrative building on Bay Bread’s site, across the
parking lot from the production facility where the temporary employees worked. Scott
visited the production facility twice a day for “walk-throughs,” which typically lasted 10
to 15 minutes. According to him, it would have been impossible to monitor whether and
when Aerotek temporary employees took their meal breaks, and he was not responsible
for this type of supervision. Scott did review the time records of Aerotek temporary
employees for “missed clock-in and clock-outs,” but he was not tasked with looking for
meal period violations. He would then send the time records to Aerotek’s field support
group to be used in issuing paychecks, and that group did not have the responsibility to
look for meal period issues either. In contrast, Razon indicated that it was “Bay Bread’s
expectation that . . . Scott would have been reviewing . . . Aerotek [temporary]

1 At oral argument, Serrano’s counsel inaccurately represented that Aerotek
temporary employees were trained on Aerotek’s meal break policy only before being
assigned to work at Bay Bread.
4
employees’ time records to ensure that those employees were taking . . . compliant meal
breaks.”
Aerotek hired Serrano to work as a temporary hourly employee at Bay Bread from
September 10 to October 4, 2012, and from January 16 to April 30, 2013. Both times,
she signed forms acknowledging she had received Aerotek’s employee handbook and
“underst[ood] that [she] should consult [her] supervisor or the Human Resources
Department regarding any questions not answered in the handbook.” Both times, she
also signed forms waiving a meal period on any day she worked no more than six hours,
and she never revoked those waivers.
Serrano worked in Bay Bread’s production facility. Scott estimated that “as many
as 200 Aerotek temporary employees” and “as many as 100 Bay Bread employees”
worked at the facility during the periods she was employed there. Her time records show
that on several days on which she worked more than six hours, she took her meal breaks
more than five hours after beginning work or, in a couple instances, did not take a meal
break at all.
2
Scott stated that Serrano approached him once to discuss a conflict she had
with a Bay Bread employee, but she never questioned him “about the meal period policy
or about when meal periods were available.” Nor did she “ever share any concern with
[him] about meal[] periods . . . [or] ever report that she was being prevented from taking
compliant meal[] periods. Indeed, at no time before or during [her] employment did any
Aerotek employee ever share any concern with [him] about meal periods at Bay
Bread . . . [or] ever contend that they had been prevented from taking compliant meal[]
periods.”
In response to an interrogatory asking Serrano to specify the facts supporting her
claim that Aerotek “in any way prevented [her] from taking lawful meal periods,” she
stated that she was “presently unaware of any actions Aerotek affirmatively took to

2
Serrano claims that “her time records from Aerotek confirmed that her meal
periods were late or noncompliant 36 days out of 42 days.” Our review of the records
cited—which cover only the second period during which she worked at Bay Bread—
reveals slightly fewer days on which a violation could have occurred, but the exact
number does not affect our resolution of the issues on appeal.
5
‘prevent’ [her] from taking meal breaks within the first five hour[s] of work” but
“believe[d] that Aerotek failed to ensure that . . . Bay Bread implemented appropriate
meal break policies.” In response to another interrogatory, she explained that her
“coworkers informed her that she should take her meal breaks at the same time as others
in her group.”
Serrano filed this lawsuit as a putative class action in January 2014, and the
operative complaint alleges causes of action against both Aerotek and Bay Bread for
failure to provide meal periods under Labor Code sections 226.7 and 512, failure to pay
wages upon termination under Labor Code sections 201 and 202, unfair competition
under Business and Professions Code section 17200, and penalties under the Private
Attorneys General Act (PAGA).
3 Aerotek filed a motion for summary judgment of all
the claims, and the trial court granted the motion.4
The court entered final judgment for
Aerotek in June 2016.
II.
DISCUSSION
A. General Legal Standards.
1. Standard of review.
The standard for reviewing a grant of summary judgment is well-established.
Summary judgment is appropriate if “there is no triable issue as to any material fact
and . . . the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” (Code Civ. Proc.,
§ 437c, subd. (c).) To meet its initial burden in moving for summary judgment, a
defendant must present evidence that either “conclusively negate[s] an element of the
plaintiff’s cause of action” or “show[s] that the plaintiff does not possess, and cannot

3
The lawsuit originally included another named plaintiff who brought claims for
rest period violations against Aerotek and another one of its clients, but those claims were
eventually settled. All further statutory references are to the Labor Code unless otherwise
noted.
4
The trial court also granted Aerotek’s motion for judgment on the pleadings,
which Bay Bread joined, to dismiss Serrano’s claim for waiting time penalties based on
the alleged meal period violations. Although Serrano also appealed from that order, she
does not raise claims related to it in her brief.
6
reasonably obtain,” evidence necessary to establish at least one element of the cause of
action. (Aguilar v. Atlantic Richfield Co. (2001) 25 Cal.4th 826, 853-854.) Once the
defendant satisfies its initial burden, “the burden shifts to the plaintiff . . . to show that a
triable issue of one or more material facts exists as to the cause of action or a defense
thereto.” (Code Civ. Proc., § 437c, subd. (p)(2).) When considering an appeal from a
grant of summary judgment, we independently review the record, “liberally construing
the evidence in support of the party opposing summary judgment and resolving doubts
concerning the evidence in favor of that party.” (Miller v. Department of Corrections
(2005) 36 Cal.4th 446, 460.)
2. Meal period requirements.
As a nonexempt employee, Serrano was entitled to meal periods during the
workday. “An employer shall not require an employee to work during a meal . . . period
mandated pursuant to an . . . applicable . . . order of the Industrial Welfare Commission.”
(§ 226.7, subd. (b).) Under the applicable wage order, IWC wage order No. 7-2001 (Cal.
Code Regs., tit. 8, § 11070 (Wage Order No. 7)), “[n]o 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, except that when a work period of not more than six (6) hours will complete
the day’s work the meal period may be waived by mutual consent of the employer and
the employee.” (Wage Order No. 7, subd. 11(A).) Specifically, a meal break must be
provided “after no more than five hours in a work day,” not just “at any point in
scheduled shifts that exceed five hours.” (Brinker Restaurant Corp. v. Superior Court
(2012) 53 Cal.4th 1004, 1041 (Brinker).) If an employer violates these requirements, it
must pay premium wages. (§ 226.7, subd. (c); Wage Order No. 7, subd. 11(E); Brinker,
at p. 1018.)
Brinker, the leading decision on the scope of an employer’s duty to provide meal
periods, held that “an employer must relieve the employee of all duty for the designated
period, but need not ensure that the employee does no work.” (Brinker, supra, 53 Cal.4th
at p. 1034.) An employer satisfies its duty to provide meal periods “if it relieves its
employees of all duty, relinquishes control over their activities and permits them a
7
reasonable opportunity to take an uninterrupted 30-minute break, and does not impede or
discourage them from doing so.” (Id. at p. 1040.) An employer is not required, however,
“to police meal breaks and ensure no work thereafter is performed.” (Ibid.) As a result,
“[p]roof an employer had knowledge of employees working through meal periods will
not alone subject the employer to liability for premium pay.” (Ibid.)
B. Undisputed Evidence Establishes that Aerotek Satisfied Its Obligation to
Provide Meal Periods Under Brinker.
Serrano contends that the trial court erred in its rulings on issues related to whether
Aerotek satisfied its own duty to provide meal periods. We are not persuaded.
The trial court determined that Aerotek had fulfilled its initial burden in moving
for summary judgment by showing that it provided Serrano with compliant meal periods,
based on evidence that it “adopted a lawful meal period policy” she “repeatedly
acknowledged” receiving and her admission that “she [was] unaware of any actions taken
by Aerotek to prevent her from taking meal periods.” The court also found that Serrano’s
allegation that Aerotek “failed to ‘ensure’ that its client, Bay Bread, implemented
appropriate meal break policies” was undermined by the evidence that Aerotek required
Bay Bread to comply with all applicable laws and “instructed [Serrano] to immediately
report if she was being prevented from taking authorized meal periods” but received no
such reports.
The trial court then determined that Serrano had failed to raise a triable issue of
material fact as to whether Aerotek provided her with compliant meal periods. In doing
so, the court rejected her argument that Aerotek’s meal period policy was entitled to no
weight because it was not incorporated into the contract and Razon had testified that,
while he was generally aware Aerotek had a policy, he considered the terms of that policy
to be irrelevant. Relying on Brinker, the court also disagreed that Aerotek should have
investigated potential violations as revealed in the time records, noting that Aerotek did
nothing to prevent Serrano from taking breaks and she never complained about not
receiving them.
8
Consistent with her position below, Serrano argues that Aerotek’s own meal
period policy is “irrelevant” because Bay Bread was not aware of it and did not enforce
it. She offers no authority to support her position that Aerotek had a duty to take
affirmative steps to ensure that Bay Bread implemented the policy. In fact, this position
is at odds with Brinker, which held that an employer is not required to “police” the taking
of meal breaks and that mere knowledge they are not being taken does not establish
liability. (Brinker, supra, 53 Cal.4th at p. 1040.) Brinker did also recognize that “[w]hat
will suffice” to satisfy an employer’s duty to provide meal periods “may vary from
industry to industry” (ibid.), and we do not mean to suggest that a temporary staffing
agency meets its duty and immunizes itself from liability by merely promulgating a
compliant meal period policy without regard to a client’s implementation of it. Here,
however, the undisputed evidence shows that Aerotek did do more than that. The
contract between the parties required Bay Bread to comply with applicable laws, Aerotek
provided its meal period policy to temporary employees and trained them on it during
orientation, and the policy required them to notify Aerotek if they believed they were
being prevented from taking meal breaks. Serrano fails to convince us that anything
more is required of staffing agencies when they provide temporary employees to other
companies.
In a related claim, Serrano also argues that Aerotek’s failure to review time
records and investigate whether meal period violations were occurring was a breach of its
own duty to provide meal periods, not a nonactionable failure “to police or ensure that
meal periods are taken.” We fail to understand the distinction Serrano attempts to draw.
She provides no authority to suggest that Aerotek could not fulfill its duty to provide
meal breaks without investigating whether those breaks were being taken, and we
specifically reject her contention that “time records show[ing] late and missed meal
periods creat[ed] a presumption of violations.” Even if Aerotek had actual or
constructive knowledge that she was not taking her meal breaks within five hours of
starting work, Brinker makes clear that such knowledge does not establish liability
9
because an employer has no obligation to ensure that employees actually take provided
breaks. (Brinker, supra, 53 Cal.4th at p. 1040.)
In short, Serrano’s attempt to impose a heightened duty on Aerotek finds no
support in Brinker or any other relevant authority. The trial court correctly determined
that there was no triable issue of material fact as to whether Aerotek fulfilled its own duty
to provide meal periods.
C. Serrano Fails to Demonstrate that Aerotek Is Vicariously Liable for Any
Meal Period Violations Committed by Bay Bread.
Serrano also claims that Aerotek is vicariously liable for Bay Bread’s alleged meal
period violations. We disagree.
Serrano claims that vicarious liability exists based on the nondelegable duty
doctrine. The doctrine is an exception to the common law rule that “a person who hired
an independent contractor generally was not liable to third parties for injuries caused by
the contractor’s negligence in performing the work.” (Srithong v. Total Investment Co.
(1994) 23 Cal.App.4th 721, 725-726.) The doctrine “is a form of vicarious liability
because it is not based on the personal fault of the [party] who hired the independent
contractor. Rather, the party charged with a nondelegable duty is ‘held liable for the
negligence of his [or her] agent, whether his [or her] agent was an employee or an
independent contractor.’ ” (Id. at p. 727, italics omitted.)
Although the nondelegable duty doctrine may enable the injured employee of an
independent contractor to sue the party who hired the independent contractor (see, e.g.,
Felmlee v. Falcon Cable TV (1995) 36 Cal.App.4th 1032, 1034-1035), Serrano fails to
explain how it applies here. There is no dispute that as her direct employer Aerotek had a
duty to provide her with meal periods, and Aerotek does not claim that it delegated that
duty to Bay Bread.
Even if Aerotek purported to have delegated its duty, however, Serrano offers no
authority suggesting the doctrine allows her to hold Aerotek liable for any failure by Bay
Bread to provide meal periods. If anything, case law is to the contrary. (See Benton v.
Telecom Network Specialists, Inc. (2013) 220 Cal.App.4th 701, 728 [finding it
10
“conceivable that, under certain circumstances, a joint employer could satisfy its
affirmative meal and rest obligations by delegating those duties to a coemployer”].)
Though Serrano argues in terms of the nondelegable duty doctrine, her contention
that Aerotek is liable for Bay Bread’s violations is essentially grounded on the idea that
Aerotek and Bay Bread were her joint employers. In addressing this issue, we will
assume without deciding that both companies were her employers.
Serrano’s reliance on the concept of joint employers is revealed by the main
decision she discusses, Noe v. Superior Court (2015) 237 Cal.App.4th 316 (Noe). In that
case, the Second District Court of Appeal held that section 226.8, which makes it
“unlawful for any person or employer to engage in . . . [w]illful misclassification of an
individual as an independent contractor” (§ 226.8, subd. (a)(1)), “is not limited to
employers who make the misclassification decision, but also extends to any employer
who is aware that a coemployer has willfully misclassified their joint employees and fails
to remedy the misclassification.” (Noe, at pp. 319-320.) Thus, two companies who had
contracted with a third company to provide labor services could be liable for the third
company’s purported misclassification of the plaintiff as an independent contractor. (Id.
at p. 319.)
In reaching its holding, Noe rejected the plaintiff’s argument that the two
companies that had failed to make the classification decision could be held liable even if
they had no knowledge of the misclassification. (Noe, supra, 237 Cal.App.4th at pp. 331-
332.) The court determined that there was “no authority for the proposition that a joint
employer may be held liable for Labor Code violations committed by a cojoint employer
based on principles of agency or joint and several liability. Rather, whether an employer
is liable under the Labor Code depends on the duties imposed under the particular statute
at issue.” (Id. at pp. 333-334.) In a footnote following this statement, the court indicated
that “many sections of the Labor Code do impose employer liability ‘by virtue of
employer status.’ For example, section 512 requires every employer to provide its
employees meal periods; section 226.7 provides employees a remedy against employers
who fail to comply with this obligation. [Citations.] Because sections 512 and 226.7
11
impose a duty on every employer to provide meal periods, an employee with multiple
employers who is denied a meal period may pursue a section 226.7 claim against any of
his or her employers.” (Id. at p. 334, fn. 10.) The court contrasted these statutes with
section 226.8, which requires a showing not only that the plaintiff was misclassified “but
also that the particular employer who is being sued actually engaged in the act of
voluntarily and knowingly misclassifying the claimant.” (Noe, at p. 334, fn. 10.)
The trial court here rejected Serrano’s reliance on Noe, determining both that the
statements about section 226.7 in footnote 10 were dicta and that, “to the extent the Court
of Appeal’s dicta suggests that a joint employer is liable for meal break violations
committed solely by a co-joint employer, the dicta is not persuasive as it is contrary to the
holding of Brinker.” We agree with the trial court’s assessment on both points. First,
footnote 10’s discussion of section 226.7 is undoubtedly dictum. “ ‘Dictum is the
“statement of a principle not necessary to the decision.” ’ ” (Manufacturers Life Ins. Co.
v. Superior Court (1995) 10 Cal.4th 257, 287.) Noe’s holding that an employer could not
be liable for a co-employer’s misclassification under section 226.8 if it was unaware of
the misclassification did not depend on any determination about the scope of liability
under section 226.7. Serrano does not seriously argue otherwise, making only the
conclusory assertion that “Noe clearly imposes liability on Aerotek for Bay Bread’s meal
period violation[s].” We conclude that Noe is not authority for the proposition that an
employer that has fulfilled its own duty to provide meal periods is nevertheless liable for
any meal period violation by a co-employer. (See Santisas v. Goodin (1998) 17 Cal.4th
599, 620.)
Second, even if footnote 10’s discussion of section 226.7 had precedential value, it
is inconsistent with Brinker. Brinker does not impose liability on an employer that makes
compliant meal periods available even if the employer is aware that its employees are not
taking the breaks. It is true that the duty to provide meal periods arises by virtue of an
entity’s status as an employer of a person for at least five hours. (Brinker, supra,
53 Cal.4th at p. 1034; Noe, supra, 237 Cal.App.4th at p. 334, fn. 10.) But Noe made clear
that whether an employer is liable for a co-employer’s violations depends on the scope of
12
the employer’s own duty under the relevant statutes, not “principles of agency or joint
and several liability.” (Noe, at pp. 333-334.) Here, Serrano points to nothing in the
language of the applicable wage order or statutes to support the conclusion that an
employer is liable not only for a breach of its own duty but also for a co-employer’s
breach of the co-employer’s own duty. To the extent Noe’s statement that “an employee
with multiple employers who is denied a meal period may pursue a section 226.7 claim
against any of his or her employers” suggests that an employer is automatically liable for
its co-employers’ breach of their own duty to provide meal periods, we decline to rely on
it. (Id. at p. 334, fn. 10.)
Serrano also argues that even if Noe does not establish that “multiple employers
can be liable for meal period violations [solely] by virtue of their employer status,” at the
very least the decision’s “ ‘actual engagement’ test” applies here and establishes
Aerotek’s liability because Aerotek “knew or should have known about the pattern of
meal period violations . . . and did nothing to investigate, correct or address the problem
with Bay Bread.” (Italics omitted.) Noe’s holding that a joint employer could be held
liable for misclassification decisions it knew about and failed to address was based on
section 226.8’s language, however, not any principle generally applicable to all Labor
Code provisions. As the court stated, “whether an employer is liable under the Labor
Code depends on the duties imposed under the particular statute at issue.” (Noe, supra,
237 Cal.App.4th at p. 334.) Again, Serrano identifies nothing in the language of the
pertinent wage order or statutes to support her position.
D. Serrano’s Derivative Claims Were Properly Dismissed.
In its ruling, the trial court implicitly agreed with Aerotek that because “the
undisputed evidence establishe[d] it provided [Serrano] with compliant meal periods,”
her “meal period claim and derivative claims for waiting time penalties, unfair business
practices, and PAGA penalties fail[ed] as a matter of law.” On appeal, Serrano accepts
that the derivative claims “rise or fall based on the meal period claim,” and we therefore
also affirm the dismissal of the derivative claims.

Outcome: The judgment is affirmed. Respondent is awarded its costs on appeal.

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