Falk v. Children's Hospital CA2/3 , 237 Cal. App. 4th 1454 ( 2015 )


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  • Filed 6/3/15 Falk v. Children’s Hospital CA2/3
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS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 ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication
    or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION THREE
    MICHELLE FALK,                                                       B251182
    Plaintiff and Appellant,                                    (Los Angeles County
    Super. Ct. No. BC496720)
    v.
    CHILDREN’S HOSPITAL
    LOS ANGELES,
    Defendant and Respondent.
    APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County,
    Jane L. Johnson, Judge. Affirmed in part; reversed in part.
    The Gold Firm, Steven Bruce Gold; Law Office of Joseph Antonelli,
    Joseph Antonelli, Janelle Carney and Jason Hatcher for Plaintiff and Appellant.
    Sheppard, Mullin, Richter & Hampton, Derek R. Havel, Daniel J. McQueen,
    Marlene M. Nicolas, Matthew A. Tobias; Ballard Rosenberg Golper & Savitt and
    Linda Miller Savitt for Defendant and Respondent.
    _________________________
    INTRODUCTION
    The trial court granted summary judgment in favor of defendant and respondent
    Children’s Hospital Los Angeles (Children’s Hospital or the hospital) and against
    plaintiff and appellant Michelle Falk on the ground her wage and labor claims were time-
    barred. The court rejected Falk’s argument the filing of a prior class action tolled her
    limitations periods, under American Pipe & Construction Co. v. Utah (1974) 
    414 U.S. 538
     (American Pipe), which held that, under certain circumstances, the filing of a class
    action tolls a limitations period for class members who file subsequent actions. We find
    that American Pipe tolling applies to some of Falk’s claims, but not to others. We
    therefore affirm in part and reverse in part the judgment.
    BACKGROUND
    I.     The class action complaints.
    Since May 2007, four class action complaints, including Falk’s, have been filed
    against Children’s Hospital raising wage and labor violations.
    A.     May 1, 2007: The Palazzolo class action.1
    Children’s Hospital employed Thomas Palazzolo from July 2005 to January 2007
    as a non-exempt, hourly paid patient care service aide. On May 1, 2007, Palazzolo filed a
    class action complaint on behalf of “[a]ll non-exempt or hourly paid persons.” The
    complaint asserted these causes of action:
    (1) Violation of Labor Code sections 510, 511, and 11982 for unpaid overtime:
    plaintiff and class members worked more than 8 hours per day, 12 hours per day or
    40 hours per week without overtime compensation. “[I]ncentives in the form of shift
    differentials” were not incorporated in overtime.
    1
    Palazzolo v. Children’s Hospital Los Angeles (Super. Ct. L.A. County, 2007,
    No. BC370354).
    2
    All further undesignated statutory references are to the Labor Code.
    2
    (2) Violation of sections 201 and 202 for failure to pay wages upon termination:
    the hospital failed to pay earned and unearned wages at the time of discharge or within
    72 hours of an employee leaving.
    (3) Violation of section 204 for failure to pay wages: the hospital failed to pay
    wages on regular paydays.
    (4) Violation of sections 226.7, subdivision (a), and 512, subdivision (a), for
    denial of meal periods: plaintiffs were required to work without meal periods and were
    not compensated for work performed during meal periods.
    (5) Violation of section 226.7, subdivision (a), for denial of rest periods: plaintiffs
    were required to work without compensation during rest periods.
    (6) Violation of section 226, subdivision (a), for improper wage statements: the
    hospital failed to provide “complete and accurate wage statements that include” the “total
    number of hours worked” and employees’ social security numbers.
    (7) Violation of section 221 seeking repayment of wages to employer: the hospital
    deducted from wages “parking fees and ID deposits” without obtaining prior written
    authorization.
    (8) Violation of section 2802 seeking indemnification for employee’s expenses:
    the hospital failed to reimburse “necessary business-related expenses,” including parking
    fees and ID deposits. “Specifically, [the hospital] had, and continue[s] to have, a policy
    and practice of requiring employees . . . to pay for parking fees and ID deposits out of
    their own funds” and not reimbursing them.
    (9) Conversion and theft of labor: the hospital refused to pay wages due on the
    next payday after wages were earned.
    (10) Violation of the Unfair Competition Law (Bus. & Prof. Code, § 17200
    et seq.).
    Summary judgment was entered in the hospital’s favor on April 7, 2009. The trial
    court ruled on the merits that there were no triable issues of material fact. Class claims
    and class certification were never addressed.
    3
    We affirmed the judgment. (Palazzolo v. Children’s Hospital of Los Angeles
    (Dec. 1, 2010, B216508) [nonpub. opn.].) Class certification was also not raised or
    addressed in the appeal. The remittitur issued on February 3, 2011.
    B.     January 27, 2012: The Mays class action.3
    Denise Mays, a registered nurse, worked for Children’s Hospital as a “non-exempt
    hourly employee.” She began working for the hospital in September 2008, and her
    employment ended May 31, 2012.
    Mays’s operative class action complaint4 alleged these causes of action against the
    hospital:
    (1) Recovery of unpaid wages (§§ 204, 206, 218, 226, 510, 511, 1194, 1198): the
    hospital, as a matter of policy, scheduled non-exempt hourly employees to work in excess
    of eight hours per day and/or in excess of 40 hours per pay week, without paying
    overtime compensation. The hospital failed to pay “all wages earned, including
    minimum wages, straight time pay, overtime, and remuneration when calculating the
    hourly non-exempt employees regular rate of pay . . . .” The hospital, specifically,
    employed a “two rate system” in paying its hourly non-exempt employees who were
    regularly scheduled to 12-hour shifts: 12-hour shift, non-exempt employees who worked
    overtime were paid a “lower ‘standard wage,’ or ‘straight time wage,’ or ‘base pay
    wage,’ while employees who did not work overtime were paid the correct wage.5 As to
    the “regular rate,” the hospital failed to include compensation for “non-discretionary
    bonus, charge nurse premium, shift differential premium, preceptor pay and other types
    of remuneration.”
    3
    Mays v. Children’s Hospital Los Angeles (Super. Ct. L.A. County, 2013,
    No. BC477830) (Mays).
    4
    Mays filed first (February 6, 2012), second (August 15, 2012), and third
    (March 29, 2013) amended complaints.
    5
    Mays explained that if an employee who is scheduled to work a 12-hour shift
    works an eight-hour shift, she is paid $35 per hour. If that same employee works a
    12-hour shift, the hospital reduces her pay to $30 per hour.
    4
    (2) Violation of Business and Professions Code section 17200.
    (3) Failure to pay wages upon separation from employment (§ 200): the hospital’s
    final paychecks failed to include all pay owed, including penalties for each day the
    employee was paid late.
    (4) Failure to allow rest periods (§ 226.7): the hospital has a policy of
    discouraging non-exempt employees from taking a rest break for any work period greater
    than two hours and up to four hours.
    (5) Failure to allow meal periods (§ 226.7): the hospital failed to provide and
    discouraged legally compliant meal periods. Employees were required to carry pagers
    and to answer them while on breaks. The hospital required employees to punch in and
    out for meal periods, regardless of whether the meal period was taken.
    (6) Failure to provide proper wage statements (§ 226): the hospital failed to
    provide the class with an itemized wage statement that included total hours worked, net
    wages earned, and all applicable hourly rates and the corresponding number of hours
    worked.
    (7) Recovery of unpaid wages and penalties (§§ 221, 223, 224): the hospital had a
    “practice of paying each employee a differing hourly rate of pay that varies depending
    solely on the number of hours worked by the employee who is regularly scheduled to
    work 12 hours in a day.” This “retention operates as a ‘kickback’ ” to the hospital.
    (8) Private Attorney General Act (§§ 2698-2699).
    In Mays, Children’s Hospital filed a form notice of related case to Palazzolo.6
    C.     December 3, 2012: The Falk class action.
    Falk worked at Children’s Hospital from March 6, 2006 to August 25, 2006 as a
    licensed vocational nurse. Falk’s class action alleged these causes of action,
    substantively identical to Mays, against the hospital:7
    6
    The hospital also filed, in Schmidt, discussed post, a notice of related case to
    Mays.
    7
    The hospital conceded for the purposes of the motion for summary judgment that
    Mays and Falk “set forth essentially the same claims for unpaid wages under a ‘dual rate’
    5
    (1) Failure to reimburse for business expenses (§ 2802): Falk was not reimbursed
    for work related expenses, such as parking at the facility.
    (2) Injunctive and declaratory relief and restitution (Bus. & Prof. Code, § 17200).
    (3) Recovery of unpaid wages and penalties (§§ 204, 206, 218, 226, 510, 511,
    1194, 1198): the hospital failed to pay all wages earned, including minimum wages,
    straight time pay, overtime, and remuneration.
    (4) Failure to provide proper wage statements (§ 226).
    (5) Failure to allow meal periods (§§ 226.7, 512).
    (6) Failure to allow rest periods (§§ 226.7, 512).
    (7) Failure to pay wages upon separation from employment (§ 200).
    D.     January 24, 2013: The Schmidt action.8
    On January 24, 2013, Joseph Schmidt filed a class action for, among other things,
    Labor Code violations against Children’s Hospital.9
    II.    Children’s Hospital moves for summary adjudication and judgment.10
    A.     The motion for summary judgment.
    Before class certification was decided, the hospital moved for summary judgment
    on the ground that the statutes of limitations applicable to Falk were not tolled by
    Palazzolo or Mays. The hospital argued that American Pipe tolling did not apply to
    Falk’s claims because the judgment in Palazzolo was the equivalent of an adverse ruling
    on the substantive merits of the class; American Pipe tolling applies only to individual
    theory, as well as nearly identical meal period, rest period and derivative causes of
    action.”
    8
    Schmidt v. Children’s Hospital Los Angeles (Super. Ct. L.A. County, 2013,
    No. BC499818) (Schmidt).
    9
    We do not discuss Schmidt in detail, because it is irrelevant to the issue of tolling,
    as Schmidt was filed after Falk’s complaint.
    10
    The parties agreed that the trial court would consider, in a motion for summary
    adjudication, the statute of limitations issue.
    6
    actions and not to successive class actions; and Palazzolo did not place the hospital on
    notice of Falk’s dual rate wage claims and highly specific meal and rest period claims.
    Falk responded that Palazzolo tolled her claims; the hospital was judicially
    estopped from arguing that Falk was unrelated to Mays and Palazzolo; and the statutes of
    limitations should be equitably tolled.
    It was undisputed that the trial and appellate courts in Palazzolo never addressed
    class certification.
    B.      The trial court’s ruling.
    The trial court granted summary judgment against Falk on July 3, 2013. Judgment
    was entered on July 15, 2013. The court found American Pipe tolling inapplicable
    because judgment in Palazzolo was on the ground the individual plaintiff had no viable
    causes of action. The court also rejected the notion that American Pipe permits
    “piggybacking” of successive class actions. Even if American Pipe applied, the court
    found that Palazzolo did not put the hospital on notice of the “esoteric ‘dual rate’ ” claim
    raised by Falk.11
    DISCUSSION
    I.     Standard of review.
    We independently review the trial court’s order granting summary judgment and
    determine if the undisputed facts establish that Children’s Hospital is entitled to judgment
    as a matter of law on its statute of limitations defense. (Code Civ. Proc., § 437c, subd.
    (c); Aguilar v. Atlantic Richfield Co. (2001) 
    25 Cal.4th 826
    , 849, 860.)
    11
    The trial court also found that Palazzolo did not toll the statutes of limitation for
    the claims in Mays. But because Mays filed her complaint on January 27, 2012, while
    she was still employed by the hospital, her claims were allowed to go forward based on
    that filing date.
    7
    II.    American Pipe tolling.
    Falk’s employment ended on August 25, 2006. Assuming that four years is the
    outermost limitations period applicable to her claims,12 her complaint had to be filed by
    August 25, 2010 to state a claim. Her complaint was not filed until December 3, 2012.
    Falk, however, contends that her complaint was timely because any limitations period
    was tolled from May 1, 2007 (the day Palazzolo was filed) to February 3, 2011 (the day
    we issued the remittitur in Palazzolo),13 and from January 27, 2012 (the day Mays was
    filed) under American Pipe, supra, 
    414 U.S. 538
    .
    A.     American Pipe tolling commences when the initial class action is filed.
    American Pipe applied tolling under the following circumstances. Utah filed a
    putative class action. Class certification was denied, under Federal Rules of Civil
    Procedure, rule 23 (28 U.S.C.) (Rule 23), because the class was so numerous that joinder
    of all members was impracticable. (American Pipe, 
    supra,
     414 U.S. at p. 543.) Class
    members then filed motions to intervene, but their motions were denied on statute of
    limitations grounds. (Id. at p. 544.) American Pipe concluded that Utah’s filing of the
    putative class action tolled the statute of limitations for the intervenors: “where class
    action status has been denied solely because of failure to demonstrate that ‘the class is so
    numerous that joinder of all members is impracticable,’ the commencement of the
    original class suit tolls the running of the statute for all purported members of the class
    12
    The parties appear to agree that actions for a penalty (e.g., the wage statement
    cause of action) are subject to a one-year limitations period (Code Civ. Proc., § 340,
    subd. (a); Murphy v. Kenneth Cole Productions, Inc. (2007) 
    40 Cal.4th 1094
    , 1108);
    actions for unpaid wages are subject to a three-year statute of limitations (Code Civ.
    Proc., § 338, subd. (a); Pineda v. Bank of America, N.A. (2010) 
    50 Cal.4th 1389
    , 1395-
    1396); and actions for restitution and under Business and Professions Code section 17200
    are subject to a four-year statute of limitations (Bus. & Prof. Code, § 17208; Cortez v.
    Purolator Air Filtration Products Co. (2000) 
    23 Cal.4th 163
    , 178-179).
    13
    We discuss post whether any tolling period would be to the day judgment was
    entered (April 7, 2009) or the day the remittitur issued (February 3, 2011).
    8
    who make timely motions to intervene after the court has found the suit inappropriate for
    class action status.” (Id. at pp. 552-553.)
    Crown, Cork & Seal Co. v. Parker (1983) 
    462 U.S. 345
     (Crown, Cork), extended
    American Pipe. The plaintiffs filed a class action discrimination case. Their motion for
    class certification was denied because the named plaintiffs’ claims were atypical of those
    of the class, they were not adequate representatives, and the class was not so numerous as
    to make joinder impracticable. (Crown, Cork, at pp. 347-348.) After denial of class
    certification, Parker filed an individual action alleging similar claims as in the class
    action. Crown, Cork held that the “filing of a class action tolls the statute of limitations
    ‘as to all asserted members of the class,’ [citation] not just as to intervenors.” (Id. at
    p. 350.) “Once the statute of limitations has been tolled, it remains tolled for all members
    of the putative class until class certification is denied. At that point, class members may
    choose to file their own suits or to intervene as plaintiffs in the pending action.” (Id. at
    p. 354.)
    Our California Supreme Court summarized the tolling rule derived from American
    Pipe and Crown, Cork: “under limited circumstances, if class certification is denied, the
    statute of limitations is tolled from the time of commencement of the suit to the time of
    denial of certification for all purported members of the class who either make timely
    motions to intervene in the surviving individual action [citation], or who timely file their
    individual actions [citation].” (Jolly v. Eli Lilly & Co. (1988) 
    44 Cal.3d 1103
    , 1119
    (Jolly).)
    Based on American Pipe and its progeny, Falk contends that the filing of
    Palazzolo, as well as Mays, tolled any limitations periods for her subsequent class action.
    Sawyer v. Atlas Heating & Sheet Metal Works, Inc. (7th Cir. 2011) 
    642 F.3d 560
    , 562
    (Sawyer), is instructive. A class action was filed. Before the district court had decided
    whether to certify the class, the plaintiff voluntarily dismissed the complaint, leaving the
    other putative class members “in the lurch.” (Id. at p. 561.) Sawyer tried to intervene in
    the action to keep it alive, but the district court denied intervention. Sawyer therefore
    filed his own class action. In applying American Pipe tolling to Sawyer’s action, the
    9
    court rejected the defendant’s argument the initial action did not “count” because it was “
    ‘never a class action.’ ” (Sawyer, at p. 563.) That could not be determinative, because
    American Pipe and Crown, Cork also were never class actions. (Ibid.)
    Rather, the “rationale of American Pipe does not permit a distinction among
    situations in which the putative class representative gives up before, or after, the judge
    decides whether the case may proceed on behalf of a class. Tolling lasts from the day a
    class claim is asserted until the day the suit is conclusively not a class action—which may
    be because the judge rules adversely to the plaintiff, or because the plaintiff reads the
    handwriting on the wall and decides not to throw good money after bad.” (Sawyer,
    
    supra,
     642 F.3d at p. 563; see also American Pipe, 
    supra,
     414 U.S. at p. 554 [“the
    commencement of a class action suspends the applicable statute of limitations as to all
    asserted members of the class who would have been parties had the suit been permitted to
    continue as a class”], italics added.) American Pipe’s “goal of enabling members of a
    putative class to rely on a pending action to protect their interests can be achieved only if
    the way in which the first suit ends—denial of class certification by the judge,
    abandonment by the plaintiff, or any other fashion—is irrelevant.” (Sawyer, at p. 562.)14
    Denial of certification, however, is important to the extent denial is based on a
    “reason that would be equally applicable to any later suit,” “for example, that the
    supposed victims are too few to justify class litigation, that a common question does not
    predominate, or that person-specific issues would make class treatment unmanageable,”
    in which circumstances tolling would not apply. (Sawyer, supra, 642 F.3d at p. 564; see
    generally Yang v. Odom (3d Cir. 2004) 
    392 F.3d 97
    , 104 [“American Pipe tolling applies
    to would-be class members who file a class action following the denial of class
    certification due to Rule 23 deficiencies of the class representative. American Pipe
    tolling would not apply to sequential class actions where the earlier denial of certification
    14
    Accord, Leyse v. Bank of America, N.A. (3d Cir. 2013) 
    538 Fed.Appx. 156
    .
    10
    was based on a Rule 23 defect in the class itself”];15 McKowan Lowe & Co., Ltd v.
    Jasmine, Ltd. (3d Cir. 2002) 
    295 F.3d 380
    , 389 [“class claims of intervening class
    members are tolled if” class certification is denied for “reasons unrelated to the
    appropriateness of the substantive claims for certification”]; Perkin v. San Diego Gas &
    Electric Co. (2014) 
    225 Cal.App.4th 492
    , 507-508 (Perkin) [class certification was not
    denied because of “ ‘subtle factors’ ” but because of insufficient commonality and the
    class action was not superior to individual litigation; tolling therefore was inappropriate].)
    What happened here is similar to Sawyer. Palazzolo was filed as a class action.
    Class certification was never denied or granted.16 Indeed, the issue was never addressed
    in the trial court. Instead, the hospital chose to move for summary judgment on
    Palazzolo’s individual claims, before the certification issue was decided.17 That motion
    for summary judgment was granted because Palazzolo, not the class, failed to state viable
    15
    Yang agreed with a line of cases refusing to “toll limitations periods for
    substantively identical class actions in which the earlier putative class was denied
    certification because the substantive claims were inappropriate for class treatment.”
    (Yang v. Odom, 
    supra,
     392 F.3d at p. 104.)
    16
    American Pipe tolling has been applied in other cases where no class certification
    decision was rendered. (In re Hanford Nuclear Reservation Litigation (9th Cir. 2008)
    
    534 F.3d 986
    , 1008-1009 [motion for class certification withdrawn; class members who
    filed individual suits while the motion for class certification was pending were entitled to
    American Pipe tolling]; In re Worldcom Securities Litigation (2d Cir. 2007) 
    496 F.3d 245
    , 256 [“because Appellants were members of a class asserted in a class action
    complaint, their limitations period was tolled under the doctrine of American Pipe until
    such time as they ceased to be members of the asserted class, notwithstanding that they
    also filed individual actions prior to the class certification decision”]; see Kandel v.
    Brother Int’l Corp. (C.D.Cal. May 12, 2009, No. CV 08-1040 DSF (RCx)) 2009
    U.S.Dist. Lexis 105242 [tolling applied to second class action filed while certification of
    first class action pending; the two class actions were consolidated].)
    17
    Where a lead plaintiff in a class action is no longer a suitable representative, leave
    should be granted to add a new representative; this “rule prevents a prospective defendant
    from avoiding a class action by ‘picking off’ prospective class action plaintiffs one by
    one.” (Larner v. Los Angeles Doctors Hospital Associates, LP (2008) 
    168 Cal.App.4th 1291
    , 1298-1299.)
    11
    causes of action. The merits of Palazzolo’s individual claims were therefore addressed
    and adjudicated but not the merits of the class claims. Although it appears that Palazzolo
    tried to preserve the class claims, he failed.18 Like the putative class members left in a
    “lurch” when the lead plaintiff voluntarily dismissed the class action in Sawyer, the
    putative class members in Palazzolo were, through no fault of their own, left without an
    action to pursue their claims. Where certification was not denied based on a reason that
    would be applicable to a subsequent action or, as here, not addressed at all, American
    Pipe tolling should apply.
    B.     Palazzolo gave Children’s Hospital sufficient notice of claims in Falk.
    Still, tolling will not apply unless the two policy considerations underlying
    American Pipe are met. Those considerations are, first, protection of efficiency and
    economy in litigation as promoted by the class action device, and, second, effectuation of
    the purpose of the statute of limitations to protect a defendant from unfair claims. (Jolly,
    supra, 44 Cal.3d at pp. 1121-1122.) Crucial to this second consideration is that the initial
    class action provide the defendant with sufficient notice of the substantive claims brought
    against it as well as the “ ‘number and generic identities of the potential plaintiffs.’ ”
    (Id. at p. 1121, quoting American Pipe, 
    supra,
     414 U.S. at pp. 554-555.)
    Justice Blackmun thus cautioned that American Pipe “must not be regarded as
    encouragement to lawyers in a case of this kind to frame their pleadings as a class action,
    intentionally, to attract and save members of the purported class who have slept on their
    rights. . . . [¶] . . . [Class members] will be permitted to press their claims subject only to
    the requirement that they have an interest relating to the property or transaction and be
    18
    After summary judgment was granted, Palazzolo filed an application to amend the
    complaint to add Lisa Aguilar as a class representative, and Aguilar filed an application
    to intervene. (Palazzolo v. Children’s Hospital, supra, B216508, at [p. 7, fn. 5].)
    Aguilar’s application was denied and the trial court did not rule on Palazzolo’s motion.
    We dismissed an appeal of those matters on jurisdictional grounds. (Ibid.)
    Falk suggests that Palazzolo’s attorney committed malpractice by failing to
    preserve the class claims, and she submits documents showing that Palazzolo’s trial
    counsel was sued for malpractice in connection with its handling of another class action.
    12
    impaired or impeded in their ability to protect that interest. . . . Such claims, therefore,
    invariably will concern the same evidence, memories, and witnesses as the subject matter
    of the original class suit, and the defendant will not be prejudiced by later
    intervention . . . .” (American Pipe, supra, 414 U.S. at pp. 561-562 (conc. opn. of
    Blackmun, J.); see also Crown, Cork, 
    supra,
     462 U.S. at p. 354 [“The tolling rule of
    American Pipe is a generous one, inviting abuse. It preserves for class members a range
    of options pending a decision on class certification. The rule should not be read,
    however, as leaving a plaintiff free to raise different or peripheral claims following denial
    of class status”] (conc. opn. of Powell, J.).)
    Hence, that the initial class action put the defendant on notice of claims against it
    is essential to the applicability of tolling. (Crown, Cork, 
    supra,
     462 U.S. at p. 355
    (conc. opn. of Powell, J.); Jolly, supra, 44 Cal.3d at p. 1122 [prior class action involving
    the drug DES did not toll subsequent personal injury action for DES-related claims;
    noting that mass tort claims are not amenable to class actions].) The claims in the
    first action need not necessarily be identical to the ones in the subsequent action, but
    they must be substantively similar, based on the same claims and subject matter and
    similar evidence. (Perkin, supra, 225 Cal.App.4th at p. 504; see, e.g., Tosti v. City of
    Los Angeles (9th Cir. 1985) 
    754 F.2d 1485
    , 1489.)
    Did Palazzolo put Children’s Hospital on sufficient notice of the claims in Falk?
    Palazzolo was light on specifics. It was brought on behalf of “all non-exempt or hourly”
    employees. As to the unpaid wages/overtime claim, the complaint generically alleged
    that the hospital failed to pay “premium wages for overtime compensation” at one and a
    half or two times the regular hourly rate. The pleading also referred to “incentives in the
    form of shift differentials” which were not incorporated in overtime.19
    19
    In affirming the judgment in Palazzolo, we noted that the complaint alleged
    plaintiff “and the putative class worked in excess of 12 hours per day for which they were
    not compensated, and the shift differentials were not properly calculated into the
    overtime rate of pay. [¶] Palazzolo’s opinion that the shift differential threw off the
    overtime compensation does not raise a triable issue of fact as to the proper overtime rate.
    This evidence does not dispute the Children[’]s Hospital’s overtime policy complies
    13
    In contrast to these general allegations in Palazzolo, Mays and Falk were specific.
    With respect to unpaid wages, Mays and Falk alleged that the hospital used a “dual rate”
    compensation system that deprived employees of proper overtime pay by reducing the
    “regular rate of pay” for overtime hours. In other words, a 12-hour shift employee was
    paid a lower hourly rate than an eight-hour employee to offset the overtime hours. The
    12-hour shift employees against whom this dual rate scheme was instituted were a
    “subclass” of a “ ‘regular rate class.’ ” The regular rate class were “hourly non-exempt
    employees . . . from January 2003 to the present and who were not paid all earned wages,
    as a result of the [hospital’s] failure to include certain remuneration that must be included
    in hourly non-exempt employees’ regular rate.” The “remuneration” includes forms of
    compensation such as “nondiscretionary bonuses, charge nurse premium, shift
    differentials premium, preceptor premium, shift bonuses, and in-house registry into the
    hourly non-exempt employees’ regular rate.” “Plaintiff . . . alleges that [the hospital]
    does not add all compensation paid to hourly non-exempt employees when calculating
    the regular rate as required by law.”20
    Tolling applies. Palazzolo claimed that the hospital failed to pay proper overtime.
    Falk raises the same claim, although Falk explains in detail how overtime was improperly
    calculated by describing the dual rate system. Falk’s specificity does not undermine the
    notice the hospital had, by virtue of Palazzolo, that the hospital was allegedly not paying
    legal overtime wages. The evidence to support both claims would be the same or similar,
    in that how the overtime rate is calculated would be at issue in Palazzolo and Falk. Had
    with the law.” (Palazzolo v. Children’s Hospital of Los Angeles, supra, B216508, at
    [pp. 9-10].)
    20
    It is unclear whether Falk alleges a class of non-exempt hourly workers who do
    not necessarily work overtime but who the hospital nonetheless fails to pay the proper
    regular rate of pay by excluding other remuneration. Because no party raised this issue,
    we do not address whether Palazzolo, which was limited to overtime pay, put the hospital
    on notice of any claim that all non-exempt hourly employees were not paid the proper
    regular rate of pay.
    14
    Palazzolo gone forward, evidence of any dual rate scheme presumably would have been
    discovered.
    Similarly, as to causes of action concerning meal and rest periods, Palazzolo and
    Falk raise the same substantive claims. Palazzolo alleged, generally, that employees
    were required to work without meal and rest periods and were not compensated for work
    performed during those periods. Falk elaborated: the hospital discouraged these periods,
    required the class to carry pagers and to answer them during meal periods, and required
    hourly employees to punch out and in for meal periods even if a meal was not taken.
    Falk’s elaboration of the ways in which the class was deprived of meal and rest periods
    does not somehow render the meal and rest period claims different from those in
    Palazzolo. Although the hospital dismisses the similarity in the evidence and witnesses
    in Palazzolo and Falk as neither here nor there, for this will often be the case in wage and
    hour lawsuits against an entity, the similarity in evidence and witnesses weighs in favor
    of tolling.
    The hospital concedes that the Business and Professions Code section 17200,
    improper wage statement, and waiting time penalty claims are derivative of the unpaid
    wages/overtime and meal and rest period claims. Because they rise or fall based on the
    unpaid wages and meal and rest period claims that we have found subject to tolling, they
    are also tolled.21
    The timeliness, however, of Falk’s claims still depends on the length of the tolling
    period, which we address next.
    C.      The tolling period.
    The tolling period began May 1, 2007, when Palazzolo was filed. The parties
    disagree as to when the tolling period ended.
    The hospital contends that any tolling period ended on April 7, 2009, when
    judgment was entered in Palazzolo. The hospital thus equates the judgment with a denial
    21
    Falk’s last day of work was August 25, 2006. Absent tolling, she therefore had to
    August 25, 2007 to file one-year claims; to August 25, 2009 to file three-year claims; and
    to August 25, 2010 to file four-year claims.
    15
    of class certification. (See generally Jolly, supra, 44 Cal.3d at p. 1119 [American Pipe
    held that “under limited circumstances, if class certification is denied, the statute of
    limitations is tolled from the time of commencement of the suit to the time of denial of
    certification”]; Bangert v. Narmco Materials, Inc. (1984) 
    163 Cal.App.3d 207
    , 212-213
    [statute of limitations tolled until the day class certification denied].)
    Falk contends that the tolling period ended February 3, 2011, when the remittitur
    issued in Palazzolo. She distinguishes Jolly and Bangert because no class certification
    ruling was ever made in Palazzolo like in those cases. Falk again cites Sawyer, which
    found, “[t]olling lasts from the day a class claim is asserted until the day the suit is
    conclusively not a class action.” (Sawyer, 
    supra,
     642 F.3d at p. 563.)
    Under the somewhat unique circumstances here, where no certification decision
    was made before the action was dismissed, tolling until the date the remittitur issued,
    thereby conclusively ending the case and any opportunity putative class members might
    have had to intervene in Palazzolo, is equitable. The hospital chose to litigate the merits
    of Palazzolo’s individual claims before the class was certified. (See Fireside Bank v.
    Superior Court (2007) 
    40 Cal.4th 1069
    , 1081 [procedural class-action issues must
    ordinarily be resolved before a decision on the merits]; Williams v. Superior Court (2013)
    
    221 Cal.App.4th 1353
    , 1360 [class certification motion is not a trial on the merits].) The
    hospital took the risk that the putative class would remain extant when the hospital chose
    to attack Palazzolo’s individual claims before class certification could be decided.
    Falk’s claims were therefore tolled from May 1, 2007 to February 3, 2011
    (1375 days or 3 years 9 months 3 days). Because 249 days22 had already run on Falk’s
    claims by the time Palazzolo was filed, she only had 116 days left to file her complaint to
    preserve any cause of action subject to a one-year limitations period. Even assuming that
    Mays started a new tolling period, 116 days from February 3, 2011 expired before Mays
    filed her class action on January 27, 2012. Claims subject to a one-year limitations
    22
    Falk’s employment ended August 25, 2006. Two hundred forty-nine days later,
    Palazzolo was commenced, on May 1, 2007.
    16
    period, i.e., the wage statement claim, are therefore time-barred. 23 Remaining claims
    subject to a three-or four-year limitations period are timely.
    D.     “Piggybacking” class actions is, under certain circumstances, permissible.
    American Pipe and Crown, Cork applied tolling to individuals intervening in the
    initial putative class action and to subsequent individual actions. They did not address
    subsequent class actions seeking the benefit of tolling based on a prior class action. The
    valid concern is “stacking” or “piggybacking” class actions (as opposed to individual
    actions) could allow a limitations period to run indefinitely.
    But the Ninth Circuit has allowed “piggybacking” of class actions under certain
    circumstances: if class certification is denied in the earlier action based solely on Rule 23
    deficiencies in the putative class representative—and not on Rule 23 deficiencies in the
    class itself—then tolling applies. (Yang v. Odom, 
    supra,
     
    392 F.3d 97
    ; Catholic Social
    Services, Inc. v. I.N.S. (9th Cir. 2000) 
    232 F.3d 1139
     [successive class actions
    permissible where the subsequent class is not attempting to relitigate an earlier denial of
    class certification or to correct a procedural deficiency in the earlier would-be class]; see
    Kandel v. Brother Int’l Corp., supra, 2009 U.S.Dist. Lexis 105242 [tolling applies to
    second class action, consolidated with the first, where second action asserted identical
    claims against defendant and did not seek to relitigate a denial of class certification or
    correct a procedural deficiency]; Sawyer, 
    supra,
     642 F.3d at pp. 563-565; Wasserman,
    Tolling: The American Pipe Tolling Rule and Successive Class Actions (2006) 
    58 Fla. 23
    Falk appears to concede that this claim is barred, and we therefore do not reach
    any argument regarding judicial estoppel and/or equitable tolling except to note that a
    notice of related case does not constitute an admission that matters are “related” for the
    purposes of judicial estoppel. (See generally Aguilar v. Lerner (2004) 
    32 Cal.4th 974
    ,
    986-987 [the “doctrine applies when ‘(1) the same party has taken two positions; (2) the
    positions were taken in judicial or quasi-judicial administrative proceedings; (3) the party
    was successful in asserting the first position (i.e., the tribunal adopted the position or
    accepted it as true); (4) the two positions are totally inconsistent; and (5) the first position
    was not taken as a result of ignorance, fraud, or mistake.’ [Citations.]]”; Jackson v.
    County of Los Angeles (1997) 
    60 Cal.App.4th 171
    , 181; Cal. Rules of Court, rule 3.300
    [a notice of related case is a procedural, case management device obligating parties to
    inform the court whether an action is related to another].)
    17
    L.Rev. 803; but see Robbin v. Fluor Corp. (9th Cir. 1987) 
    835 F.2d 213
     [stacking
    limitations periods by filing successive class actions is not permissible].)
    Because there was no ruling in Palazzolo implicating any deficiency in the
    putative class (as opposed to Palazzolo’s individual claims), Falk may file a successive
    class action.24
    24
    We need not address the propriety of “double piggybacking,” because Falk’s
    claims, except those subject to a one-year limitations period, are timely based on the
    tolling period established by Palazzolo.
    18
    DISPOSITION
    The judgment is affirmed in part and reversed in part. The judgment is affirmed as
    to claims subject to a one-year limitations period. The judgment is reversed as to claims
    subject to a three-or four-year limitations period. The parties are to bear their own costs
    on appeal.
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS
    ALDRICH, J.
    WE CONCUR:
    KITCHING, Acting P. J.
    EGERTON, J.*
    *
    Judge of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, assigned by the Chief Justice
    pursuant to article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.
    19