Settled Cases
Aon Corp. Settles Employee Misclassification Lawsuit for $10.5M
July 8, 2011
A $10.5 class action wage and hour lawsuit settlement has been recently approved in
The California Account Specialists were reportedly misclassified as exempt administrative employees who were salaried, and therefore did not receive overtime compensation when they worked beyond forty hours in a workweek. The group of California Aon specialists reportedly included relationship specialists, client specialists and senior account specialists, as well as account managers, client services representatives, and customer services representatives--and were all classified as exempt from overtime and rest and meal break requirements.
The California class action wage and hour lawsuit was certified last year, against Aon Insurance Services, Aon Risk Services Companies, and Aon Corporation, and the $10.5 million settlement approved last week by the Los Angeles Superior Court, applies to 534 class action members, who should receive their wage and hour settlement within the next sixty days.
As our
Often employee misclassification happens when an employee is guided to work in such a way that causes the exempt employee to lose his exempt status, like when an employer subtracts work time that was missed from the employee's salary, which make the employee eligible to receive overtime pay.
Under the Fair Labor and Standards Act (FLSA), non-exempt employees are required by law to be compensated for one and a half their regular hourly rate of pay when they work over forty hours in week. Employers often miscalculate how much overtime workers are actually owed, when working past a forty hour work week, which can also lead to wage and hour violations.
July 19, 2011
The California class action wage and hour lawsuit was originally filed against Oracle Corporation, by a group of instructors, residents of Arizona and Colorado, who traveled between states, instructing customers on how to properly use the Oracle software products. The employees argued in the lawsuit that under
The employees in the lawsuit claimed that Oracle engaged in employee misclassification by erroneously classifying them as teachers under federal law, putting them in the category of "exempt" workers, who are not entitled to overtime compensation. The employees argued that they were in fact "non-exempt" employees under
Oracle reportedly argued that
The California Supreme Court decided unanimously that non-exempt employees who are residents of
Pending Cases
CA Drug Sales Reps Sue Novo Nordisk in Class Action Wage and Hour Lawsuit
July 28, 2011
In the lawsuit, the pharmaceutical sales representatives accuse the drug giant of engaging in employee misclassification by classifying them as outside salespersons, and "exempt" from overtime laws under
Under the FLSA and
The Novo Nordisk class action wage and hour complaint claims that the primary qualification for an outside salesperson exemption is that the sales representatives must be making sales. The Novo Nordisk sales representatives claim that while working they were not actually making sales, rather only promoting prescription drugs to physicians. According to the complaint, the physician can only agree to prescribe the medicine to the patients, but cannot actually buy the drugs from the pharmaceutical sales representatives directly.
The sales representatives allege the as they have been misclassified by Novo Nordisk, and that they do not qualify for the outside salesperson exemption. The employees claim that they should receive overtime compensation for working over eight hour days and forty hour weeks under California Labor Code and the FLSA.
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