
Publication
ESG and internal investigations: New compliance challenges
As ESG concerns have come to the forefront in different jurisdictions, the scope of these inquiries is expanding in kind.
United States | Publication | May 3, 2021
In an unpublished opinion issued this month, a California appeals court declared unenforceable Uber’s arbitration provision requiring drivers to waive the right to bring a collective action under the Private Attorneys General Act (PAGA). At issue was an Uber agreement requiring its drivers to enter into before using the Uber App to pick up riders, and an arbitration provision within the agreement which required the drivers to waive any right to bring a PAGA representative action. Although PAGA applies only to “aggrieved employees,” the plaintiff contended that he and other drivers were employees who had been misclassified as independent contractors.
The court of appeals rejected Uber’s argument that the threshold question of whether the drivers were misclassified was arbitrable, notwithstanding the California Supreme Court’s ban on PAGA representative action waivers, following several prior court decisions on this subject. A PAGA claim is indivisible and belongs to the state, according to the court, with the private litigant stepping in the shoes of the state as a private attorney general. Therefore, employees may not be forced to arbitrate whether their claims fell within the parameters of PAGA before proceeding with a representative action. Bottom line: PAGA representative action claims are not in any fashion subject to arbitration, so employers must be prepared to deal with PAGA litigation.
Publication
As ESG concerns have come to the forefront in different jurisdictions, the scope of these inquiries is expanding in kind.
Publication
In compliance with the constitutional reforms published in the Federal Official Gazette, new secondary legislation regulating the energy sector, specifically in terms of power and hydrocarbons, was published on March 18, 2025.
Publication
In compliance with the constitutional reforms published in the Federal Official Gazette, new secondary legislation regulating the energy sector, specifically in terms of power and hydrocarbons, was published on March 18, 2025.
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