Los Angeles Times

No class action for Uber drivers

Ruling by U.S. appeals court says the firm can force its drivers into individual arbitratio­n.

- By Jim Puzzangher­a and Maura Dolan

A panel of the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals says the ridehailin­g company can force drivers into individual arbitratio­n.

WASHINGTON — A federal appeals court Tuesday ruled that Uber can force its drivers into individual arbitratio­n over pay and benefit disputes, voiding an effort by thousands of drivers to join in a class-action suit against the ride-hailing company.

The unanimous decision by a three-judge panel of the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco overturned a lower-court order that had certified the drivers’ class-action effort.

In the ruling Tuesday, U.S. Circuit Court Judge Richard R. Clifton cited a 5-4 U.S. Supreme Court decision in May that employers could enforce so-called arbitratio­n agreements that require workers to give up the ability to collective­ly pursue claims that they were shortchang­ed or treated unfairly.

Uber said in a statement that it was “pleased with the court’s decision.”

But the legal dispute over how workers are classified in the so-called gig economy is complex and Tuesday’s decision might not be the end.

In addition to a potential appeal, the California Supreme Court weighed in this spring with a ruling that made it harder for employers to classify their workers as independen­t contractor­s. That state ruling doesn’t directly affect the case but could be a factor if Uber drivers in California take their cases to arbitratio­n.

Current and former Uber drivers had filed suits starting in 2013 against the San Francisco company, saying it had misclassif­ied them as independen­t contractor­s instead of employees. The classifica­tion means that drivers are responsibl­e for their own work-related ex-

penses such as gas, car repairs and insurance.

The drivers wanted to join together to sue Uber over the classifica­tion. But Uber said that they had to pursue their claims separately in individual arbitratio­n cases. U.S. District Judge Edward Chen in San Francisco certified the class-action effort in 2015.

Shannon Liss-Riordan, a lawyer for the drivers, said that Tuesday’s decision was expected given the earlier Supreme Court ruling and that the drivers were considerin­g an appeal to the full 9th Circuit.

In the meantime, she said they were urging Uber drivers nationwide who want to pursue claims against the company “to contact us immediatel­y to sign up for individual arbitratio­n.”

“Thousands of drivers have already signed up for individual arbitratio­n,” she said in an emailed statement. “If Uber wants to resolve these disputes one by one, we are ready to do that — one by one.”

Eve Wagner, a mediator and arbitrator in employment law, called the 9th Circuit decision “a staggering blow” to the drivers and their lawyers.

“It is much easier to have a class action than to have thousands of individual arbitratio­ns,” she said, adding that some drivers who were part of the class may decide not to pursue the claims.

In a class action, most of the work is done by a few workers who represent the class. Now individual­s will have to be more proactive, she said.

The California Supreme Court ruling in April said that in order to classify a worker as an independen­t contractor, businesses must show that the worker is free from the control and direction of the employer; performs work that is outside the hirer’s core business; and customaril­y engages in “an independen­tly establishe­d trade, occupation or business.”

But that ruling applied to issues such as minimum wage, overtime and rest breaks. It does not apply to the work-related expense disputes at the heart of the federal case.

Once those cases go to arbitratio­n, the drivers can cite the California Supreme Court decision, legal experts said. The California ruling applies only to workers who live in the state, Wagner said. Workers in other states would be governed by laws there, in addition to federal law.

 ?? David Butow For The Times ?? A PANEL OF the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals overturned a lower-court order that had certified a class-action effort by Uber drivers accusing the company of misclassif­ying them as independen­t contractor­s instead of employees. Above, an Uber car in San Francisco.
David Butow For The Times A PANEL OF the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals overturned a lower-court order that had certified a class-action effort by Uber drivers accusing the company of misclassif­ying them as independen­t contractor­s instead of employees. Above, an Uber car in San Francisco.

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