Delta Argues for Rehearing of California Wage Violation Class Action
/Delta Airlines argues that the full Ninth Circuit should rehear their appeal regarding a proposed California wage violation class action. Delta argues for the rehearing claiming that the panel misapplied federal law intended to stop state laws from creating an unreasonable burden on interstate commerce.
Details of the Case: Dev Oman et al. v. Delta Air Lines Inc.
Court: U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
Case No.: 17-15124
Dev Oman et al. v. Delta Air Lines Inc.: The Plaintiff
The proposed class action was filed in 2015 by Dev Oman on behalf of flight attendants. Later Todd Eichmann, Flores and Lehr joined the lawsuit. Plaintiffs in the case claimed that Delta shorted their flight crew workers on pay and violated wage statement and timekeeping requirements as stated in employment law.
Dev Oman et al. v. Delta Air Lines Inc.: The Defendant
According to Delta, Michael Lehr, one of the flight attendants who brought the suit, spent 94% of time during one pay period working outside California. And another named flight attendant, Albert Flores, spent 94% of his time working outside of California. In this case, Delta questions whether applying California state employment law is an undue burden on interstate commerce and if permitting California to apply its laws beyond its borders violates the dormant commerce clause.
Dev Oman et al. v. Delta Air Lines Inc.: An Overview
In 2017,summary judgment was granted in favor of Delta by the district court. The district court’s findings were based on the statements regarding the flight attendant’s spending most of their work hours in federal airspace - not California, so it did not matter if Delta failed to comply with California wage statement requirements since they would be subject to federal law, not California law. The plaintiffs appealed. In June 2020, the California Supreme Court responded to questions from the Ninth Circuit regarding the case stating that workers were entitled to California wage and hour protections if California served as the base of their “work operations” (even if most of their time on the job was out of state). In February 2021, the panel ruled that the commerce clause did not bar California rules from applying, and in so doing, reversed the district court’s summary judgement in favor of the airlines. Delta petitioned for a rehearing in March 2021 arguing that the Ninth Circuit received bad guidance from the California Supreme Court.
If you need to discuss California state labor laws or if you need to file wage and hour claims, please get in touch with Blumenthal Nordrehaug Bhowmik DeBlouw LLP. Experienced employment law attorneys are ready to assist you in various law firm offices located in San Diego, San Francisco, Sacramento, Los Angeles, Riverside, and Chicago.