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In Re Cintas Corp. Overtime Pay Arbitration Litigation

JPMLAugust 18, 2006No. MDL-1781Cited 2 times
RemandedCintas Corp.
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Case Details

Judge(s)
Hodges, Jensen, Motz, Miller, Vratil, Hansen, Scirica
Status — whether other courts must follow this ruling
Published
Circuit
Federal Circuit

Related Laws

No specific laws identified for this ruling.

Claim Types

Wage Theft

Outcome

The JPML granted centralization of 71 FLSA overtime pay actions involving Cintas Corp. and transferred them to the Northern District of California for coordinated pretrial proceedings before Judge Saundra Brown Armstrong.

What This Ruling Means

# Cintas Corp. Overtime Pay Case Summary **What Happened** Former Cintas employees sued the company, claiming it failed to pay them overtime wages they were owed. Cintas responded by filing 70 separate legal motions, trying to force each employee's case into private arbitration (a private dispute process) rather than allowing them to proceed together in court. **What the Court Decided** The Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation rejected Cintas's approach. Instead of handling 70 separate arbitration requests, the court consolidated the cases and transferred them to the Northern District of California. This allowed the employees to pursue their wage theft claims together as a group rather than individually. **Why This Matters for Workers** This ruling demonstrates that companies cannot always use arbitration clauses to prevent employees from joining together in legal action. When many workers face similar wage problems, courts may keep their cases grouped, making it easier and more affordable to challenge employer practices collectively. This strengthens workers' ability to pursue wage theft claims against large employers.

This summary was generated to explain the ruling in plain English and is not legal advice.

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