Monday, May 21, 2018

Can’t Wait for the Perfect When the 5-Year Rule Looms

Tanguilig v. Nieman Marcus Grp., No. A141383 (D1d4 Apr. 16, 2018)

Under Code of Civil Procedure § 583.310, a case
must be dismissed with prejudice if it has not been brought to trial within five years of filing. The five years is subject to various kinds of tolling. Plaintiff in this case—a wage-and-hour class action combined with some PAGA claims that was filed in 2007—needs three different kinds of tolling to get within the five year window. 

Her key tolling argument here comes under § 583.340(c), which stops the clock during periods where it is “impossible, impracticable, or futile” to bring the case to trial. That section permits tolling due to circumstances, beyond the plaintiff’s control, that prevent her from expeditiously bringing her case to trial. 


Unlike most of Defendant’s employees, Plaintiff quit instead of signing an employment contract containing an arbitration clause with a class action waiver. That caused some typicality issues for her class action. So several years into the case, Plaintiff added an additional class rep who had signed the agreement. But that solution led to bigger problems. It resulted in the trial court compelling a significant part the new rep's case to mandatory non-class arbitration. Notably, almost a year later, the trial court reconsidered its stay and ultimately lifted it. (The reconsideration was ultimately affirmed on appeal almost three years ago.)

Now, Plaintiff seeks tolling under § 583.340(c) for the period in which the stay was in effect. But none of the stuff with the new rep prevented Plaintiff from proceeding to trial on her own (smaller) part of the class, which wasn’t stayed. The fact that Plaintiff preferred to go to trial with a bigger, better class didn’t mean that going to trial was “impossible, impracticable, or futile” under § 538.340(c).

Affirmed.

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