Margulies et al v. Tri-County Metropolitan Transportation Dist. of Oregon
Filing
136
OPINION & ORDER: TriMet's Motion for Partial Summary Judgment 120 is Granted in Part and Denied in Part. The sixty-five plaintiffs, including Margulies, who ceased working as a bus or train operator prior to June 22, 2012, failed to provide timely notice under the OTCA and, thus, summary judgment on those plaintiffs' state-law claims is Granted in favor of TriMet. The remaining twenty-eight plaintiffs identified in TriMet's motion provided timely notice and, thus, summary judgment on those plaintiffs' state-law claims is Denied. Signed on 9/8/14 by Magistrate Judge Paul Papak. (gm)
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF OREGON
ALLEN MARGULIES, JOHN OLSEN,
and STEPHEN FUNG, individually,
and CHRISTOPHER DAY and THOMAS
GOLDHAMMER, individually and as
class representatives,
Plaintiffs,
v.
3:13-cv-00475-PK
OPINION AND ORDER
TRI-COUNTY METROPOLITAN
TRANSPORTATION DISTRICT
OF OREGON,
Defendant.
PAPAK, Magistrate Judge:
Plaintiffs filed the instant action against defendant Tri-County Metropolitan
Transpotiation District of Oregon ("TriMet"), alleging that TriMet engages in a pattern or
practice of failing to pay its bus and train operators for all compensable work, including ovetiime
Page I - OPINION AND ORDER
pay, in violation of the federal Fair Labor Standards Act ("FLSA") and Oregon law. Now before
the court is TriMet's motion for partial summmy judgment (#120). For the reasons discussed
below, the motion is granted in part and denied in part.
BACKGROUND
On December 19, 2012, plaintiff Allen Margulies sent a letter to TriMet, indicating that
he intended to file a lawsuit ''on behalf of all current employees and former employees of
TriMet" due to TriMet's failure to compensate its employees for all hours worked and its failure
to pay overtime wages. Ex. A, Declaration of Joel B. Young ("Young Deel."), #124-1, at 1-9.
The caption of the letter states that it is a notice of a class action pursuant to Oregon Rule of Civil
Procedure 32H. Id at 1. On Janumy 14, 2013, plaintiffs Stephen Fung and Christopher Day also
sent TriMet a·notice of their intent to file an action "on behalf of all cu11'ent and former
employees ofTriMet." Ex. C, Young Deel., #124-1, at 1-9. Like Margulies's letter, Fung and
Day cited TriMet's failure to compensate its employees for all hours worked and its failure to pay
ove1time wages as the basis of the class action. Id On January 17, 2013, TriMet responded to
both letters, stating that, as public employees, Margulies, Fung, and Day were subject to a
collective-bargaining agreement, which governed the wage issues raised in the letters. Ex. B,
Young Deel., #124-1, at 1; Ex. D, Young Deel., #124-1, at 1.
Thereafter, on Janumy 22, 2013, Margulies filed an action against TriMet in the Circuit
Court for the County of Multnomah, alleging various claims under the FLSA and Oregon law on
behalf of himself and "all other similarly situated individuals currently and/or formerly employed
by" TriMet. Ex. 3, Declaration of Jennifer Goodrich ("Goodrich Deel."), #122-3, at 1. On
Febrnmy 15, 2013, Margulies filed an amended complaint in the Circuit Court for the County of
Page 2 - OPINION AND ORDER
Multnomah, adding Day and John Olsen as named plaintiffs. Ex. 4, Goodrich Deel., #122-4, at
1. On Februmy 21, 2013, plaintiffs served TriMet with a copy of the complaint and the amended
complaint. Ex. 5, Goodrich Deel., #122-5, at 1-3.
TriMet subsequently removed the case to this court on the basis of federal-question and
supplemental jurisdiction. Notice of Removal, #1, at 1-5. Plaintiffs filed their second amended
complaint on June 17, 2013, alleging that TriMet fails to pay bus and train operators for:
"(!)non-commute travel time between disparate stmt and end points of operators' scheduled
runs, (2) the differential between scheduled run times and actual run times, (3) pre-depmture
time, (4) mandatmy meetings with supervisors, (5) mandatory medical examinations, and [(6)]
any applicable overtime due for such compensable time." Second Amended Complaint, #18,
~
4.
Plaintiffs allege claims under the FLSA (Claim I); Oregon's minimum-wage law, Oregon
Revised Statute ("ORS") § 653.025 (Claim II); Oregon's overtime-pay law, ORS § 653.268
(Claim III); and Oregon's timely-wage-pay law, ORS § 652.120 (Claim IV). Plaintiffs fmther
allege that TriMet's violation of Oregon law was willful, in violation of ORS § 652.140
(Claim V).
On October 10, 2013, the court granted TriMet's first motion for partial summmy
judgment and dismissed plaintiff-bus operators' FLSA claims. October 10, 2013 Opinion and
Order, #61, at 40. The comt also granted plaintiffs' motion to conditionally cettify the action as a
representative collective action under 29 U.S.C. § 2 l 6(b). Id To date, 458 plaintiffs have opted
to join the action, including the five named plaintiffs.' On Janumy 22, 2014, the court granted
1
In the motion for partial summaty judgment, TriMet states that 457 plaintiffs, including
the five named plaintiffs, have opted to join the lawsuit. It appears, however, that TriMet names
Robetto Silva on its list of plaintiffs twice and did not include Robert C. DePew, who filed a
Page 3 - OPINION AND ORDER
the parties' stipulated motion to dismiss the minimum-wage claims. See Janumy 22, 2014
Minute Order, #108. Thus, the following claims remain:(!) plaintiff-train operators' FLSA and
state-law ove1time and untimely-wage-pay claims; and (2) plaintiff-bus operators' state-law
ove1time and untimely-wage-pay claims.
On April 4, 2014, TriMet filed the instant motion for partial summary judgment, seeking
swnmary judgment in its favor on ninety-three plaintiffs' state-law claims. See TriMet's Motion
for Partial Summary Judgment, #120. On April 28, 2014, plaintiffs filed their resistance. See
Plaintiffs' Resistance, #124. On June 12, 2014, TriMet filed its reply in suppo1t of the motion for
pmtial summmy judgment. See TriMet's Reply, #127. The couit heard oral argument on the
motion on June 25, 2014. The matter is fully submitted and ready for decision.
LEGAL STANDARD
Summary judgment is appropriate ifthe pleadings, depositions, answers to
interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, "show[] that there is
no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of
law." Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a). Summary judgment is not proper if material factual issues exist for
trial. See, e.g., Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477 U.S. 317, 322 (1986); Anderson v. Liberty Lobby,
Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 247-48 (1986); Warren v. City of Carlsbad, 58 F.3d 439, 441 (9th Cir. 1995).
The substantive law governing a claim or defense determines whether a fact is material. See
1\Iorelandv. Las Vegas l'vfetro. Police Dep't, 159 F.3d 365, 369 (9th Cir. 1998). In evaluating a
motion for summmy judgment, the district courts of the United States must draw all reasonable
consent-to-join f01m on November 19, 2013, and Leurine Jackson, who filed a consent-to-join
f01m on Februmy 26, 2014.
Page 4 - OPINION AND ORDER
inferences in favor of the nonmoving party and may neither make credibility determinations nor
perform any weighing of the evidence. See, e.g., Reeves v. Sanderson Plumbing Prods., Inc., 530
U.S. 133, 150 (2000); Lytle v. Household "11/fg., Inc., 494 U.S. 545, 554-55 (1990).
DISCUSSION
TriMet seeks summaiy judgment on ninety-three plaintiffs' state-law claims. TriMet
contends that sunnnaiy judgment is appropriate because these plaintiffs did not provide timely
notice of their claims as required by the Oregon Tort Claims Act ("OTCA"). Plaintiffs respond
that their claims are not "torts" within the meaning of the OTCA and, even if they were, the
ninety-three plaintiffs at issue provided the requisite notice by virtue ofMargulies's December
19, 2012 letter to TriMet. I begin by reviewing the relevant provisions of the OTCA before
addressing the central questions at issue-that is, whether plaintiffs' claims are torts subject to
the OTCA's requirements and, if so, whether the ninety-three plaintiffs TriMet identifies in its
motion complied with the OTCA's notice provision.
I.
OTCA's Framework
A plaintiff filing a tort claim against a public body must comply with the provisions of
the OTCA. See ORS§ 30.265(1). For purposes of the OCTA, a "tort" is defined as
the breach of a legal duty that is imposed by law, other than a duty
arising from contract or quasi-contract, the breach of which results
in inju1y to a specific person or persons for which the law provides
a civil right of action for damages or for a protective remedy.
ORS § 30.260(8). A "public body" includes, among other entities, a municipal corporation.
ORS§ 30.260(4).
Relevant to the instant dispute is the OTCA's requirement that a plaintiff may not
Page 5 - OPINION AND ORDER
maintain an action against a public body "unless notice of [the] claim is given." ORS
§ 30.275(1). The notice requirement is "mandat01y ... and a condition [precedent] to recove1y"
under the OTCA. Urban Renewal Agency of City of Coos Bay v. Lackey, 275 Or. 35, 40, 549
P.2d 657, 660 (Or. 1976). "The purpose of the notice requirement of ORS[§] 30.275 is to allow
the public body an opportunity to investigate a matter promptly and to settle all meritorious
claims without litigation." Flug v. Univ. of Or., 170 Or. App. 660, 671, 13 P.3d 544, 551 (Or. Ct.
App. 2000) (citing Robinson v. Shipley, 64 Or. App. 794, 797, 669 P.2d 1169, 1171 (Or. Ct. App.
1983)); accord Urban Renewal Agency, 275 Or. at 41, 549 P.2d at 660.
A plaintiff satisfies the OTCA's notice requirement if, "within 180 days after the alleged
loss or injmy," ORS § 30.275(2)(b), the plaintiff gives formal notice, actual notice, or
commences an action on the claim, ORS § 30.275(3). The notice must include: (1) a "statement
that a claim for damages is or will be asserted against the public body"; (2) a "description of the
time, place and circumstances giving rise to the claim, as far as known to the claimant"; and
(3) the "name of the claimant and the mailing address to which conespondence concerning the
claim may be sent." ORS§ 30.275(4). "When the purposes of the notice requirement have been
met, the court may use the theory of substantial compliance to ignore technical errors in notices
otherwise proper in form and content, avoiding the harsh results of insisting on strict compliance
with the statute." Robinson, 64 Or.App. at 797, 669 P.2d at 1171; see also Urban Renewal
Agency, 275 Or. at 40, 549 P .2d at 660 (noting that "substantial compliance" with the notice
requirement is sufficient).
II.
Does OTCA Apply?
In this case, TriMet contends that plaintiffs' state-law claims are subject to the OTCA
Page 6 - OPINION AND ORDER
because TriMet is a "public body" and plaintiffs' state-law claims are "torts." Thus, TriMet
maintains that plaintiffs must establish compliance with the OTCA's notice provision. Plaintiffs
do not dispute that TriMet is a "public body" within the meaning of the OTCA2 but contend that
the OTCA does not apply to their state-law claims because such claims are more properly
characterized as contract claims, which are expressly excluded from the OTCA. Both patiies
acknowledge that the Oregon Court of Appeals held in Butte1jield v. State, 163 Or. App. 227,
987 P.2d 569 (Or. Ct. App. 1999), denying review, 330 Or. 252, 6 P.3d 1099 (Or. 2000), that a
claim under the FLSA is a tort claim, thus requiring compliance with the OTCA's notice
provision. In their resistance, however, plaintiffs argue that this comt is not bound to accept the
Oregon Court of Appeals' analysis in Butte1jield. Because of its import to this case, I begin by
examining the decision in Butte1jield.
A.
Butte1field v. State
In Butterfield, the plaintiffs sued their employer, the State of Oregon, arguing that they
were owed ove11ime wages under the FLSA. Butterfield, 163 Or. App. at 230, 987 P .2d at 570.
The State of Oregon moved for summary judgment on the basis that the plaintiffs had failed to
comply with the OTCA's notice requirement. Id. at 231, 987 P.2d at 571. The plaintiffs
responded that the OTCA was "inapplicable because the state's duty to pay ove1time [arose] out
of employment contracts" and contract actions are expressly excluded from the OTCA's
definition of a to11. Id at 232, 987 P.2d at 571 (emphasis omitted). After reviewing the relevant
2
See Griffin v. Tri-County A!fetro. Transp. Dist. of Or., 318 Or. 500, 503, 870 P.2d 808,
809 (Or. 1994) ("Defendant Tri-County Metropolitan Transpo1tation District of Oregon (TriMet) is a municipal corporation that is subject to the Oregon T011 Claims Act (OTCA)." (citation
omitted)).
Page 7 - OPINION AND ORDER
Oregon Supreme Comt case law, the Oregon Court of Appeals disagreed with the plaintiffs'
contention. Id. at 238, 987 P.2d at 574-75. The comt first noted that the plaintiffs did not
purport to rely on any te1m contained in their employment contracts; rather, their claims were
based on alleged violations of the FLSA. Id. at 234, 987 P.2d at 573. The court went on to state
that, when the legislature intends for a statute to become pmt of a contract, the legislature
expresses this intention in the statute. Id. at 236, 987 P.2d at 574. For instance, the court noted
that "the [Oregon] legislature requires certain statutory requirements to be expressed in insurance
policies." Id., 987 P.2d at 574. The cou1t, however, found no such legislative intent in the
FLSA. Id., 987 P.2d at 574. Finally, the court concluded that there was no evidence that
plaintiffs were "induced to enter into their employment relationship because of the provisions of
the FLSA or that its provisions [were] part of a bargained-for consideration in exchange for their
perfo1mance." Id. at 238, 987 P.2d at 575. Thus, the Oregon Comt of Appeals held that the
plaintiffs' FLSA claims were tort claims subject to the OTCA and, accordingly, the plaintiffs
were required to comply with the OTCA's notice provision. Id., 987 P.2d at 575.
In a dissenting opinion, Judge Rex Armstrong sharply disagreed with the majority's
holding and instead concluded that an action under the FLSA is a contract action and, thus, not
subject to the OTCA. Judge Armstrong reasoned that the FLSA is part of eve1y employment
contract because its provisions establish minimum te1ms with regard to payment of wages. Id at
239, 9-87 P.2d at 575 (Armstrong, J., dissenting). Judge Armstrong noted that, prior to the
passage of the Portal-to-P01tal Act establishing a federal statute of limitations applicable to
FLSA claims, federal comts consistently held that a state's statute of limitations for contract
actions governed FLSA claims. Id at 239-41, 987 P.2d at 575-76. Moreover, Judge Armstrong
Page 8 - OPINION AND ORDER
argued that Oregon law supported a finding that a FLSA claim is based on contract; specifically,
Judge Armstrong noted that, under Oregon law, "it is well established that the applicable law of
the land becomes part ofeve1y contract." Id. at 241, 987 P.2d at 576. Thus, Judge Armstrong
concluded that, because the plaintiffs' FSLA claims were based in contract, not to1t, the OTCA
did not apply and, thus, plaintiffs failure to give notice was not fatal to their claims. Id at 243,
987 P.2d at 577.
B.
Does Butterfield Govern?
Plaintiffs contend that Butterfield does not compel dismissal of their state-law claims for
two reasons. First, plaintiffs suggest that the analysis in Butterfield is inapplicable because it
addressed claims under the FLSA rather than Oregon's statutes governing ove1time pay, regular
wage payment, and wage payment on termination-the statutory provisions at issue here. I
disagree. While the Butte1jield majority did not specifically address Oregon law, it broadly held
that, because the plaintiffs were not relying on any duty imposed by their employment contracts
and, rather, were relying on an independent duty imposed by a statute, their claims were to1t
claims and not contract claims. Because there is nothing indicating that Butte1jields analysis
must be limited to claims under the FLSA, I find that Butterfields analysis applies.
Next, plaintiffs contend that, even if Butte1jields analysis applies, the comt is not
obligated to follow Butte1jields holding. "[W]here there is no convincing evidence that the state
supreme court would decide differently, a federal court is obligated to follow the decisions of the
state's intermediate appellate comts." Ryman v. Sears, Roebuck & Co., 505 F.3d 993, 995 (9th
Cir. 2007) (alteration in original) (quoting Vestar Dev. IL LLC v. Gen. Dynamics Corp., 249 F.3d
958, 960 (9th Cir. 2001)) (internal quotation marks omitted); see also Estrella v. Brandt, 682
Page 9 - OPINION AND ORDER
F.2d 814, 817 (9th Cir. 1982) (noting that a federal court should follow a state inte1mediate
appellate comi decision "unless it is convinced by other persuasive data that the highest court of
the state would decide otherwise" (citation omitted) (internal quotation mark omitted)). A
federal comi's mere disagreement with the state inte1mediate appellate court decision is an
insufficient basis for not following the decision. Ryman, 505 F.3d at 995. Rather, the federal
comi must cite evidence that the state supreme comi would have decided the issue differently.
Id.
Here, plaintiffs argue that there is convincing evidence that the Oregon Supreme Court
would decide the present issue differently. Specifically, plaintiffs argue that the dissenting
opinion in Butterfield is well-reasoned, the parties in Butte1jield did not adequately briefthe
issues, and, as Judge Annstrong noted in his dissenting opinion, federal courts have found that
FLSA claims are contract claims for the purpose of determining what state statute of limitations
to apply. Plaintiffs maintain that, in light of the well-established principle that "the applicable
law of the land becomes pmi of every contract," the "stronger argument" is that claims under
Oregon's wage-and-hour laws are contract claims. Plaintiffs' Resistance, #124, at 4, 10.
While I agree with plaintiffs that Judge Armstrong's dissenting opinion is well-reasoned
and that the weight of federal law supports a conclusion that FLSA actions are contractual in
nature, I am not convinced that the Oregon Supreme Court would disaffirm Butterfield. Indeed,
the limited evidence available suggests that the Oregon Supreme Comi would follow the
Butte1jield majority's holding that FLSA claims are t01i, rather than contract, claims. First, in
Butterfield, the Oregon Supreme Court denied the plaintiffs' petition for review. While this is
certainly not dispositive, it suggests that the Oregon Supreme Court found no serious e1rnr in the
Page 10- OPINION AND ORDER
Oregon Court of Appeals' decision. See Ryman, 505 F.3d at 995 & n.2 (finding that the district
comi failed to cite to clear and convincing evidence that the Oregon Supreme Court would
disagree with an Oregon Court of Appeals' decision, noting that, "[a]lthough not dispositive," the
Oregon Supreme Court declined to review the Oregon Court of Appeals' decision).
Second, as the Butte1jield majority explains, prior to Congress's creation of a federal
statute of limitations for FLSA actions, the Oregon Supreme Co mi decided in Fullerton v.
Lamm, 177 Or. 655, 163 P.2d 941 (Or. 1945), that the statute oflimitations applicable to actions
"upon a liability created by statute" governed FLSA actions, rather than the statute of limitations
applicable to contract actions. Butte1jield, 163 Or. App. at 233-34, 987 P.2d at 572 (quoting
.
Fullerton, 177 Or. at 661, 163 P.2d at 944). While plaintiffs, as well as the dissenting opinion in
Butte1jield, persuasively argue that Fullerton should be given limited weight as the Oregon
Supreme Comi's rejection of the statute of limitations applicable to contract actions was dictum
that had no bearing on the court's ultimate conclusion, I nevertheless find that it is of some
relevance in determining how the Oregon Supreme Comi might decide the issue presented in this
case.
Finally, I note that the Oregon Court of Appeals has since affomed Butterfields
conclusion and, once again, the Oregon Supreme Comi has denied review. See Jenkins v.
Portland Hous. Auth., 260 Or. App. 26, 30-32, 316 P.3d 369, 372 (Or. Ct. App. 2013) (finding
that an action seeking damages under the habitability provisions of the Oregon Residential
Landlord and Tenant Act was a to1i action because the defendant's duty to the plaintiff arose from
the statute, not the rental agreement), denying review, 355 Or. 380, 328 P.3d 696 (Or. 2014); see
also Byrd v. Oregon State Police, 236 Or. App. 555, 558, 238 P.3d 404, 405 (Or. Ct. App. 2010)
Page 11 - OPINION AND ORDER
(citing Butterfield for the proposition that FLSA claims are to1t claims subject to the OTCA).
In light of the foregoing, I find that, while I may disagree with the majority's decision in
Butterfield, there is not clear and convincing evidence that the Oregon Supreme Couit would
disaffinn Butterfield. See Ryman, 505 F.3d at 995 (noting that a federal comt's mere
disagreement with the state intermediate appellate court decision is an insufficient basis for not
following the decision). To the contrary, the limited evidence available suggests that the Oregon
Supreme Cou1t would adopt Butte1fields holding. Although Butterfield addressed FLSA claims,
its analysis applies with equal force to claims under ORS §§ 653.268, 652.120, and 652.140.
Thus, consistent with Butte1field, I find that plaintiffs' state-law claims are t01ts within the
meaning of the OTCA and, therefore, plaintiffs were required to comply with the OTCA's notice
provision.
III.
Did Plaintiffs Comply with OTCA's Notice Requirement?
Having dete1mined that the OTCA's notice provision applies, I must now dete1mine
whether plaintiffs provided the requisite notice. Defendants contend that, of the 458 plaintiffs
that have opted to join the lawsuit, ninety-three plaintiffs failed to provide timely notice.
Plaintiffs respond that Margulies's December 19, 2012 letter served as notice on behalf of all
plaintiffs and, thus, the ninety-three plaintiffs TriMet identifies complied with the notice
requirement.
As an initial matter, I find that Margulies failed to give timely notice. According to
TriMet's records, which plaintiffs do not contest, Margulies retired on May 13, 2012. See Ex. 7,
Goodrich Deel., #122-7, at 1. Thus, under the continuing-tort the01y that TriMet adopts in its
Page 12 - OPINION AND ORDER
motion, 3 Margulies could not have been injured or suffered loss after May 13, 2012. The earliest
date that Margulies could have provided notice of his tort claim was December 19, 2012-the
date that he sent the letter to TriMet regarding his intent to file a class action-which is well after
the expiration of the OTCA's 180-day notice period. See Ex. A, Young Deel., # 124-1, at 1.
Accordingly, I find that, because Margulies failed to provide timely notice as required under ORS
§ 30.275, TriMet is entitled to judgment in its favor on Margulies's claims under ORS
§§ 653.268, 652.120, and 652.140.
I likewise conclude that, because December 19, 2012, is the earliest date that any plaintiff
could have arguably provided notice, any plaintiff who ceased working as a bus or train operator
prior to June 22, 2012-that is, 180 days prior to December 19, 2012-failed to provide timely
notice under the OTCA. TriMet is therefore entitled to summmy judgment in its favor on the
state-law claims asserted by the sixty-four plaintiffs who ceased working as a bus or train
operator prior to June 22, 2012. 4 See Ex. 7, Goodrich Deel., #122-7, at 1-3.
The more difficult question is whether Margulies's December 19, 2012 letter satisfies the
notice requirement for the remaining twenty-eight plaintiffs identified in TriMet's motion.
TriMet argues that ORS § 30.275 does not permit notice on behalf of a class, as evidenced by the
3
See TriMet's Memo. in Support of Motion for Pmtial Summmy Judgment, #121, at 8
(citing Barns v. City ofEugene, 183 Or. App. 471, 475, 52 P.3d 1094, 1096 (Or. Ct. App. 2002)).
4
In their resistance, plaintiffs argue at great length that, although streetcar operators are
technically employed by Portland Streetcar, Inc., TriMet is liable for streetcar operators' wage
claims under the economic-realities test. The impoti of this argument is not clear. Plaintiffs'
overtime and related wage claims, as pleaded in the second amended complaint, are limited to
bus and train operators. Thus, the last date that any plaintiff was injured or damaged by TriMet's
alleged wrongdoing is the date that he or she stopped working as a bus or train operator. It is of
no consequence whether a plaintiff went on to become a streetcar operator, just as it is of no
consequence whether a plaintiff went onto become a station agent or a fare inspector.
Page 13 - OPINION AND ORDER
requirements that the notice include "the time, place and circumstances giving rise to the claim,"
as well as the "name of the claimant." ORS§ 30.275(4). Because the December 19, 2012 letter
does not provide any name other Margulies's or the time, place, and circumstances for each
plaintiff's claim, TriMet argues that the letter fails to satisfy the notice requirement for the
remaining twenty-eight plaintiffs. TriMet instead contends that the remaining plaintiffs did not
provide notice until they were either named as a plaintiff in the complaint or filed a consent-tojoin fonn.
In response, plaintiffs contend that TriMet's reading of ORS § 30.275 would foreclose all
class actions asserting tort claims against a public body and there is no indication that the
legislature intended such a result. Plaintiffs further note that several other state courts have
interpreted their respective tort claims acts to allow notice of a class claim. Finally, plaintiffs
argue that the December 19, 2012 letter satisfies ORS§ 30.275's requirements, as it "specifically
identified the labor practices that caused TriMet employees to be unpaid for their work" and
noted that the violations were ongoing. Plaintiffs' Resistance, #124, at 19.
First, I agree with plaintiffs that ORS § 30.275 permits a class representative to provide
notice on behalf of a class. Among other information, a notice of a claim under ORS § 30.275
must include the "name of the claimant" and a "description of the time, place and circumstances
giving rise to the claim, so far as known to the claimant." ORS § 30.275(4). The statute does not
define "claim" or "claimant." TriMet offers no persuasive argument as to why "claim" cannot be
read to include class claims or why "claimant" cannot be read to refer to a class
representative-that is, the individual filing the claim on behalf of the class. See Budden v. Bd.
ofSch. Comm'rs of City of Indianapolis, 698N.E.2d1157, 1162 (Ind. 1998) (finding that, in the
Page 14- OPINION AND ORDER
.
context of a class action, the phrase "person making the claim" in the notice provision of the
Indiana tort claims act refers to "the named plaintiffs"); City ofSan Jose v. Superior Court, 12
Cal. 3d 447, 457, 525 P.2d 701, 707 (Cal. 1974) (finding that, in the context ofa class action, the
word "claimant" in the notice provision of the California tort claims act "must be equated with
the class itself').
Such a reading is consistent with the legislative intent behind the OTCA. In enacting the
OTCA, the Oregon legislature pmiially waived sovereign immunity, thereby allowing "injured
persons to assert-albeit with some limitations-the same tort claims against public bodies that
they could, at common law, assert against other totifeasors." Vaughn v. First Transit, Inc., 346
Or. 128, 136-37, 206 P.3d 181, 187 (Or. 2009). In other words, with the exception of the
limitations outlined in the OTCA, the legislature sought to place public bodies on equal footing
with all other to1ifeasors. Thus, just as a private to1ifeasor may be subject to a class action, so
too can a public body. Yet TriMet's reading of ORS§ 30.275 would have the practical effect of
foreclosing such class actions against public bodies. As the Court of Appeals of Washington
explained in Oda v. State, 111 Wash. App. 79, 44 P.3d 8 (Wash. App. Div. 1 2002):
It is the very nature of a class action to gather into a single lawsuit
a large number of individuals whose names may be unknown to the
original parties. The mechanisms that fully identify and notify the
members of the class are not available until someone commences
the action and then obtained permission to proceed under [Federal
Rule of Civil Procedure 23].
Id at 88, 44 P.3d at 12-13. Requiring each individual ofa class action to provide notice under
ORS § 30.275 would, in effect, preclude any class action alleging to1i claims against a public
body. I find no evidence that the Oregon legislature intended such a result. See City ofSan Jose,
Page 15 - OPINION AND ORDER
12 Cal. 3d at 457, 525 P.2d at 707-08 (finding that the California tmi claims act permits notice
on behalf of a class and noting that requiring "detailed info1mation in advance of the complaint
would severely restrict the maintenance of appropriate class actions-contrary to recognized
policy favoring them").
Thus, having concluded that the OTCA permits notice on behalf of a class, I must
consider whether Margulies's December 19, 2012 letter provided such notice. TriMet argues that
the notice fails to comply with the requirements under ORS § 30.275, as it
fails to inform TriMet of the identity of the potential claimants,
which of the six possible kinds of wage claims listed in the Second
Amended Complaint each unknown claimant might have, the
number of overtime hours at issue for each claimant, the amount of
unpaid wages each unknown claimant might have for each kind of
wage claim that the claimant may assert, when each claimant
purportedly was not paid, and other unique circumstances giving
rise to each claim that is purpo1iedly encompassed by the notice.
TriMet's Reply, #127, at 10-11. I am not persuaded that ORS§ 30.275 requires this level of
detail. Indeed, ORS§ 30.275 provides only that the notice must include a "description of the
time, place and circumstances giving rise to the claim, so far as known to the claimant." ORS
§ 30.275 (emphasis added); see also Hughes v. City of Portland, 255 Or. App. 271, 281-82, 296
P.3d 642, 647 (Or. Ct. App. 2013) (noting that ORS § 30.275 does not require a claimant to "give
the public body such detailed information that the public body can dete1mine the extent of its
potential liability from the face of the notice"). 5 Here, the December 19, 2012 letter identifies
Margulies, who, at that time, was acting as class representative; it identifies the members of the
5
Under a prior version of the OTCA's notice provision, a claimant was required to
specify "the amount of compensation or other relief demanded." Krieger v. Just, 319 Or. 328,
336, 876 P.2d 754, 758 (Or. 1994) (discussing the "various changes to the notice requirement"
between 1973 and 1981 ).
Page 16- OPINION AND ORDER
proposed class (all cmTent and former TriMet employees); it describes in detail TriMet's alleged
practice of failing to pay its employees for all compensable time; and it states that TriMet's
conduct is ongoing. This information was sufficient to allow TriMet "an oppotiunity to
investigate [the] matter[] promptly and ascertain all necessary facts." Webb v. Highway Div. of
Or. State Dep't o/Transp., 293 Or. 645, 649, 652 P.2d 783, 785 (Or. 1982) (citing Urban
Renewal Agency, 275 Or. at 41, 549 P.2d at 660). Thus, I find that the December 19, 2012 letter
substantially complies with the OTCA's notice provision and, because the letter provided notice
on behalf of the class, the remaining twenty-eight plaintiffs identified in TriMet's motion
provided timely notice under the OTCA.
CONCLUSION
For the reasons set forth above, TriMet's motion for partial summmy judgment(# 120) is
granted in pmt and denied in pati. The sixty-five plaintiffs, including Margulies, who ceased
working as a bus or train operator prior to June 22, 2012, failed to provide timely notice under
the OTCA and, thus, summmy judgment on those plaintiffs' state-law claims is granted in favor
of TriMet. The remaining twenty-eight plaintiffs identified in TriMet's motion provided timely
notice and, thus, summary judgment on those plaintiffs' state-law claims is denied.
Dated this 8th day of September, 2014.
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' / (0l£ A ·~ ·r f\i/~
Honorable Paul Papak
United States Magistrate Judge
Page 17 - OPINION AND ORDER
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