Brinker's gone. But Brinkley's here! At least for now. In Brinkley v. Public Storage, Inc., the court of appeal issued a published opinion, in which it held that meal and rest periods merely must be provided, not forced. This holding tracks Brinker v. Superior Court (now on review).
The court in Brinkley relied on federal case law, the same cases on which the court of appeal in Brinker relied.
Given the similarity to Brinker, the Supreme Court may accept review of Brinkley under a "Grant and Hold" order. So, don't rely on Brinkley unless review is denied. We won't learn its fate for a couple of months.
The second key issue in Brinkley is the court's holding that the wage statement statute, Lab. Code section 226 requires proof of injury and some intent on behalf of the employer. That statute provides penalties of up to $4000 per employee for non-compliant wage statements....
Be careful out there!
DGV
DLSE: Brinker is Dead. Long Live Brinker!
Earlier this year, the California Division of Labor Standards Enforcement adopted the meal period standards that the Court of Appeal announced in the famous Brinker decision. We covered that DLSE memo here.
So now that the California Supreme Court decided to review the Brinker case, what will the DLSE do?
Well DLSE just issued a NEW memo in which it rescinds its Brinker memorandum, here. In its new "rescission" memo, the DLSE strongly suggests it will continue to enforce meal period laws such that an employer need not force employees to take meal periods; it simply must offer them. (So, to DLSE, Brinker is gone, but not forgotten).
Good news for employers facing DLSE claims. But in court, this area of the law remains pretty muddy.
Hat tip to Storm and Wage Law.
So now that the California Supreme Court decided to review the Brinker case, what will the DLSE do?
Well DLSE just issued a NEW memo in which it rescinds its Brinker memorandum, here. In its new "rescission" memo, the DLSE strongly suggests it will continue to enforce meal period laws such that an employer need not force employees to take meal periods; it simply must offer them. (So, to DLSE, Brinker is gone, but not forgotten).
Good news for employers facing DLSE claims. But in court, this area of the law remains pretty muddy.
Hat tip to Storm and Wage Law.
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