A Minnesota federal district court recently denied FLSA conditional certification over the claims of workers who were not assigned to a Minnesota project at issue or not Minnesota residents due to specific jurisdiction considerations. Vallone et al. v. The CJS Solutions Group, LLC, No. 19-1532 (D. Minn. Feb. 5, 2020).

The court based its decision on a 2017 U.S. Supreme Court decision that held that due process requires a court to have specific jurisdiction over a defendant in a mass action only if the action arises out of or relates to that defendant’s contacts with the forum.

The plaintiffs in Vallone assisted physicians, nurses, and others with transitioning to new computerized patient-management systems in hospitals and other health care facilities nationally. The defendant-company is headquartered and has its principal place of business in Florida. The named plaintiffs traveled to facilities in Minnesota and hospitals in Missouri and New York. The plaintiffs claimed the company did not lawfully pay them for time spent traveling from remote locations to worksites during the workday or for a cancelled day of training for the Minnesota project that required some workers to travel to Minnesota.

The plaintiffs sought conditional certification of “all hourly paid, non-exempt, W-2 employees … whose time was neither paid under the [FLSA]” (1) while engaging in travel wherein the travel was undertaken during the employee’s normal working hours; or (2) for the cancelled training day in Minnesota for workers who did not live in the area.

The defendant-company argued, under Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. v. Superior Court, 137 S. Ct. 1773 (2017), that the District of Minnesota Court lacked specific jurisdiction over the company as to any putative plaintiff who worked outside the state of Minnesota. Because the plaintiffs in an FLSA collective action must opt-in to be included in a lawsuit, similar to a mass action, the opt-in plaintiffs’ claims establish the underlying controversy against the defendant, the court in Vallone reasoned. The court held that only if the claims arise out of or relate to the defendant’s contacts with Minnesota can it constitutionally exercise jurisdiction over the defendant.

Many courts are applying Bristol-Myers in the FLSA collective action context. Defendants in such actions should consider whether a potential collective may be limited at the conditional certification stage or earlier. Moreover, they should evaluate whether narrowing the size of the collective is possible right away so that they may properly raise the defense in their responsive pleadings. Please contact a Jackson Lewis attorney with any questions.

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Photo of Stephanie L. Adler-Paindiris Stephanie L. Adler-Paindiris

Stephanie L. Adler-Paindiris is a Principal and the Co-Leader of the firm’s Class Actions and Complex Litigation practice group. Her practice focuses exclusively on the representation of employers at the trial and appellate level in state and federal courts facing class and collective…

Stephanie L. Adler-Paindiris is a Principal and the Co-Leader of the firm’s Class Actions and Complex Litigation practice group. Her practice focuses exclusively on the representation of employers at the trial and appellate level in state and federal courts facing class and collective actions as well as claims of discrimination, retaliation or whistleblowing activity on an individual basis.  She also appears regularly before administrative judges and agencies.

Ms. Adler-Paindiris has conducted over a dozen trials before juries and judges in state and federal courts. In addition, Ms. Adler has participated in arbitrations and administrative hearings before the Florida Division of Administrative Hearings as well as AAA and FINRA. Ms. Adler-Paindiris has successfully defended appeals before four Courts of Appeals and has been admitted to the U.S. Supreme Court.

Ms. Adler-Paindiris also provides on-going legal support and counsel on a daily basis for many of her clients. She routinely provides training to managers and supervisors in all areas of employment law, including but not limited to, supervisory training, sexual and racial harassment prevention, disciplinary practice, documentation policies, safety and disability management.

Ms. Adler-Paindiris is also the Co-Leader of Jackson Lewis’ Women’s Interest Network or “WIN” working with the firm’s women attorneys and clients to increase diversity and inclusion efforts both internally and with our clients.

Ms. Adler-Paindiris is active in her community supporting a number of organizations related to her five children. She is also passionate about volunteering her time and services to the Wounded Warrior Project and other organizations.