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Nisei Farmers League v. Cal. Labor & Workforce Dev. Agency

CALCTAPP5DJanuary 4, 2019No. F075102Cited 22 times
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Case Details

Judge(s)
Levy
Status — whether other courts must follow this ruling
Published
Procedural Posture — the stage the case had reached
appeal

Related Laws

No specific laws identified for this ruling.

Outcome

The trial court properly sustained the demurrer filed by state labor agencies, dismissing the constitutional challenges to Labor Code section 226.2 regarding piece-rate wage requirements. The court of appeal affirmed, finding no facial unconstitutionality or merit to the vagueness and retroactivity claims.

What This Ruling Means

**What happened:** The Nisei Farmers League, representing agricultural employers, sued California's Labor & Workforce Development Agency to challenge a state law (Labor Code section 226.2) that requires employers to pay piece-rate workers for non-productive time. Piece-rate workers are typically paid based on how much they produce (like picking a certain number of boxes of fruit) rather than by the hour. The new law required employers to also pay these workers for time spent on tasks that don't directly produce results, such as attending safety meetings or waiting for equipment. The employers argued this law was unconstitutional, claiming it was too vague and unfairly applied to past conduct. **What the court decided:** Both the trial court and appeals court sided with the state agency. The courts ruled that the piece-rate wage law is constitutional and not too vague for employers to understand and follow. They rejected the employers' challenges completely. **Why this matters for workers:** This decision protects piece-rate workers, especially in agriculture, by ensuring they get paid for all their work time, not just when they're actively producing. The ruling strengthens wage protections and confirms that employers must compensate workers fairly for all required work activities, even those that don't directly result in measurable output.

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

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