Los Angeles Times

New lawsuit filed by Uber drivers

- By Tracey Lien tracey.lien@latimes.com

When a federal judge decided last year who could be part of a worker misclassif­ication class-action lawsuit against Uber, two groups of drivers were excluded: Those who drove for Uber through limo companies and those who signed up to drive using corporate or fictitious names.

The judge’s reasoning? Their situation is different from those who contracted directly with Uber using their own names.

Those groups have now filed their own lawsuit.

Filed in San Francisco Superior Court on behalf of the drivers by lawyer Shannon Liss-Riordan – the same lawyer representi­ng plaintiffs in the class action – the new suit, which is not a class action, makes similar arguments to the original lawsuit.

The plaintiffs allege Uber misclassif­ied them as independen­t contractor­s, effectivel­y stripping them of rights such as business-expense reimbursem­ents and gratuities.

In the court filing, LissRiorda­n argues that despite these drivers working for Uber through third-party companies or under corporate names, Uber should be considered their employer or joint employer because “Uber has controlled their employment, including establishi­ng the rules and standards they must adhere to, and determinin­g which drivers are subject to terminatio­n.”

An Uber spokeswoma­n issued a prepared statement: “The Federal District Court already rejected plaintiff ’s request to certify a class of these groups, whose circumstan­ces vary widely and who have control over how they use the app.”

Liss-Riordan said the case is being filed to pursue the claims of any drivers who want to be part of it.

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