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Case :-cv-0-ddp-jpr Document Filed 0/0/ Page of Page ID #: 0 0 Eric H. Gibbs (State Bar No. ) ehg@girardgibbs.com David Berger (State Bar No. ) dmb@girardgibbs.com Scott Grzenczyk (State Bar No. 0) smg@girardgibbs.com GIRARD GIBBS LLP 0 California Street, th Floor San Francisco, California 0 Telephone: () -00 Facsimile: () - Attorneys for Plaintiff and Class Representative Ronald Ross RONALD ROSS, v. Plaintiff, FOOD MANAGEMENT PARTNERS, INC.; and CATALINA RESTAURANT GROUP, INC., UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT CENTRAL DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA WESTERN DIVISION Defendants. Case No. -cv- COMPLAINT FOR DAMAGES FOR VIOLATION OF THE WORKER ADJUSTMENT AND RETRAINING NOTIFICATION ACT ( U.S.C. 0 et seq.; Cal. Labor Code 00 et seq.) DEMAND FOR JURY TRIAL CLASS ACTION

Case :-cv-0-ddp-jpr Document Filed 0/0/ Page of Page ID #: 0 0 Plaintiff Ronald Ross, individually and on behalf of a class of all others similarly situated, for his Complaint against Defendants Food Management Partners, Inc. and Catalina Restaurant Group, Inc. states as follows: JURISDICTION AND VENUE. This Court s jurisdiction is based on U.S.C., U.S.C. 0, 0(a)(), and California Labor Code 0 of the Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification Act (the United States and California Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification Acts are referred to herein collectively as the WARN Act unless otherwise stated) ( U.S.C. 0, et seq.; California Labor Code 00, et seq.).. Venue in this district is proper under U.S.C. (b) and (c), and section (a)() of the WARN Act ( U.S.C. 0(a)()) because Defendants do business in this district, employed Plaintiff and many other individuals in this district, and the acts underlying the WARN Act claims occurred in this district. PARTIES. Plaintiff Ronald Ross was a full-time employee of Defendants who, in addition to other substantial employee benefits, earned regular compensation and was damaged by Defendants acts in violation of the WARN Act.. Defendant Catalina Restaurant Group Inc. ( Catalina ) is a Delaware Corporation that is registered to do business in California and has its principal place of business in California. Catalina operates the Coco s Bakery and Carrows chains of restaurants.. Defendant Food Management Partners, Inc. ( FMP ) is a Texas Corporation with its principal place of business in Hollywood Park, Texas that recently purchased Catalina.. The Defendants are a single employer in that, based on information and belief, they share common ownership, corporate directors, and officers, and FMP has de facto control over Catalina. Defendants have fully integrated and interdependent business operations and share personnel policies that emanate from a common source.

Case :-cv-0-ddp-jpr Document Filed 0/0/ Page of Page ID #: 0 0 FACTS. Until recently, Catalina Restaurant Group, Inc. operated nearly 0 Coco s Bakery and Carrows Restaurants, primarily in California, Nevada, and Arizona.. On March, 0, Defendant FMP acquired Catalina from Catalina s previous owner, Zensho America Corporation.. On April, 0, FMP closed approximately of Catalina s Coco s Bakery and Carrows Restaurants. Many employees showed up to work only to find a sign on the door announcing that the restaurant had closed. 0. On April, 0, Defendants terminated the restaurant employees and nearly all of the 00 employees who worked at Catalina s corporate headquarters.. The terminated employees were not given advance notice that they would be terminated, were offered no severance pay, and those whose compensation included medical insurance benefits were told that their coverage would be cut off after one week.. Plaintiff Ronald Ross is one of those employees who were abruptly terminated. Mr. Ross worked at Coco s and Carrows Restaurants for almost years. For the past several years, he has worked as a team leader. He primarily worked at the Coco s restaurants in Torrance and Compton, California, and the Carrows restaurant in Gardena, California.. It was not unusual for employees to be scheduled to work at multiple Coco s and/or Carrows restaurants in the same pay period. Mr. Ross and similar employees were paid by Catalina, and received one paycheck, regardless of the restaurants at which they worked.. In addition to sharing employees and coordinating their employees schedules, Catalina restaurants freely shared inventory. They also relied on a shared set of back office computer systems, including systems for ordering food and supplies, managing payroll and timekeeping, processing credit card transactions, tracking cash receipts, and financial reporting.

Case :-cv-0-ddp-jpr Document Filed 0/0/ Page of Page ID #: 0 0. For at least the past months, Mr. Ross has worked more than 0 hours per week at Catalina s Torrance, California restaurant.. On the morning of April, 0, Mr. Ross was scheduled to work at the Torrance, California location that day and the Compton, California location the next day. Before he left for work, Mr. Ross received a telephone call from his supervisor. Mr. Ross s supervisor told him not to come to work at either location on April or because the restaurants were taking inventory. Instead, he was told to come to the Torrance restaurant on Friday, April to attend a meeting.. At the April, 0 meeting, Mr. Ross was told that he and all of his coworkers were being terminated, effective immediately, and that the Torrance and Compton locations were shutting down.. Mr. Ross was not given any advance notice of his termination.. At least 0 full-time employees were terminated at the Torrance, California restaurant on or about April, 0, or within a 0-day period of that date. 0. Alternatively, at least 0 full-time employees were terminated at the Torrance, California restaurant within a 0-day period of April, 0, and these terminations were not the result of separate and distinct actions and causes.. On or about April, 0, Defendants terminated approximately,000 other, similarly situated persons, without providing the notices required by the WARN Act. CLASS ACTION ALLEGATIONS. Plaintiff brings this action as a class action under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure (a), (b)() and () and the WARN Act ( U.S.C. 0(a)(); Cal. Labor Code 0).. Plaintiff brings this action on behalf of himself and all other similarly situated employees. Plaintiff seeks to represent a Class initially defined as: All of Defendants employees that were terminated from employment on or within 0 days of

Case :-cv-0-ddp-jpr Document Filed 0/0/ Page of Page ID #: 0 0 April, 0 without being provided 0 days written notice of a plant closing and/or mass layoff before the date of their termination.. Plaintiff further seeks to represent a subclass initially defined as: All of Defendants employees in California who were terminated from employment on or within 0 days of April, 0 without being provided 0 days written notice of a termination and/or mass layoff before the date of their termination.. Plaintiff and class members are affected employee(s) subject to an employment loss, as those terms are defined in the WARN Act, U.S.C. 0(a)() and ().. Plaintiff and class members were subjected to one or more plant closings and/or mass layoffs as those terms are defined in the federal WARN Act, U.S.C. 0.. Plaintiff and the sub-class members are employees at a covered establishment subject to a mass layoff and/or termination as those terms are defined in the California WARN Act, California Labor Code 00(h), (a), (d) and (f), respectively.. Plaintiff s claims satisfy the numerosity, commonality, typicality, adequacy and superiority requirements of a class action.. The members of the class and the sub-class each exceed 00 in number, and joinder is therefore impracticable. The precise number of class members and their addresses are readily determinable from the books and records of Defendants. 0. There are common questions of fact and law as to the class that predominate over any questions affecting only individual class members. The questions of law and fact common to the class arising from Defendants actions include, without limitation, the following: a. whether the provisions of the WARN Act apply;

Case :-cv-0-ddp-jpr Document Filed 0/0/ Page of Page ID #: 0 0 b. whether Defendants employee terminations on or about April, 0, or within 0 days of that date, constitute plant closings terminations and/or mass layoffs under the WARN Act; c. whether Defendants failed to provide the notices required by the WARN Act ( U.S.C. 0(b); Cal. Labor Code 0); d. whether Defendants can avail themselves of any of the provisions of the WARN Act that permit shorter notice periods; e. the appropriate formulae to measure damages under the WARN Act ( U.S.C. 0(a); Cal. Labor Code 0); and f. the appropriate definitions and formulae to measure payments to potentially offset damages under the WARN Act ( U.S.C. 0(a)(); Cal. Labor Code 0).. The questions set forth above predominate over any questions affecting only individual persons, and a class action is superior with respect to considerations of consistency, economy, efficiency, fairness and equity, to other available methods for the fair and efficient adjudication of the WARN Act claims.. A class action is the superior method for the fair and efficient adjudication of this controversy. Defendants have acted or refused to act on grounds generally applicable to the class. The presentation of separate actions by individual class members could create a risk of inconsistent and varying adjudications, establish incompatible standards of conduct for Defendants, and/or substantially impair or impede the ability of class members to protect their interests.. Plaintiff is an affected employee who was terminated by Defendants on or about April, 0, without the notice required by the WARN Act. He is thereby a member of the class. Plaintiff is committed to pursuing this action and has retained counsel with extensive experience prosecuting complex wage, employment, and class action litigation. Accordingly, Plaintiff is an adequate representative of the class and has the same interests as all of its members. Further, Plaintiff s claims are typical of the

Case :-cv-0-ddp-jpr Document Filed 0/0/ Page of Page ID #: 0 0 claims of all members of the class, and Plaintiff will fairly and adequately protect the interests of the absent members of the class.. Further, class action treatment of this action is authorized and appropriate under the WARN Act ( U.S.C. 0(a)(); Cal. Labor Code 0), which clearly provides that a plaintiff seeking to enforce liabilities under the WARN Act may sue either on behalf of his or her self, for other persons similarly situated, or both. CLAIM I Violations of the United States Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification Act. Plaintiff reasserts and re-alleges the allegations set forth above.. At all times material herein, Plaintiff, and similarly situated persons, have been entitled to the rights, protections, and benefits provided under the federal WARN Act, U.S.C. 0, et seq.. The federal WARN Act regulates the amount of notice an employer must provide to employees who will be terminated due to the employer s closing of a plant or mass layoffs, as well as the back pay and other associated benefits an affected employee is due based on a violation of the required notice period.. Defendants were, and are, subject to the notice and back pay requirements of the federal WARN Act because it is a business enterprise that employs 00 or more employees, excluding part-time employees, as defined in the Act, US.C. 0()(A).. Defendants willfully violated the federal WARN Act by failing to provide the required notice. 0. Section 0 of the federal WARN Act exempts certain employers from the notice requirements of the Act. U.S.C. 0()-(). None of the federal WARN Act exemptions apply to Defendants. Accordingly, Plaintiff and class members must receive the notice and back pay required by the federal WARN Act ( U.S.C. 0 and 0).. Plaintiff and class members have been damaged by Defendants conduct constituting violations of the federal WARN Act and are entitled to damages for their

Case :-cv-0-ddp-jpr Document Filed 0/0/ Page of Page ID #: 0 0 back pay and associated benefits for each day of the violation because Defendants have not acted in good faith nor with reasonable grounds to believe its acts and omissions were not a violation of the federal WARN Act. CLAIM II Violations of the California Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification Act. Plaintiff reasserts and re-alleges the allegations set forth above.. At all times material herein, Plaintiff, and similarly situated persons, have been entitled to the rights, protections, and benefits provided under the California WARN Act, California Labor Code 00, et seq.. The California WARN Act regulates the amount of notice an employer must provide to employees who will be terminated due to the employer s layoffs, as well as the back pay and other associated benefits an affected employee is due based on a violation of the required notice period.. Defendants were, and are, subject to the notice and back pay requirements of the California WARN Act because it is a covered establishment that employs or more employees, excluding part-time employees, as defined in the Act. Cal. Labor Code 00.. Defendants willfully violated the California WARN Act by failing to provide the required notice.. The California WARN Act exempts certain employers from the notice requirements of the Act. None of the California WARN Act exemptions apply to Defendants. Accordingly, Plaintiff and class members must receive the notice and back pay required by the California WARN Act.. Plaintiff and all similarly situated employees have been damaged by Defendants conduct constituting violations of the California WARN Act and are entitled to damages for their back pay and associated benefits for each day of the violation because Defendants have not acted in good faith nor with reasonable grounds to believe its acts and omissions were not a violation of the California WARN Act.

Case :-cv-0-ddp-jpr Document Filed 0/0/ Page of Page ID #: 0 0 PRAYER FOR RELIEF WHEREFORE, Plaintiff, and all similarly situated employees, demand judgment against Defendants and pray for: () an order certifying that the action may be maintained as a class action under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure ; () designation of Ronald Ross as the representative of the class, and counsel of record as Class Counsel; () compensatory damages in an amount equal to at least the amounts provided by the WARN Act ( U.S.C. 0(a); Cal. Labor Code 0(a)); () reasonable attorneys fees, costs and disbursements as allowed by the WARN Act (0 U.S.C. 0()(); Cal. Labor Code 0); and () such other relief as the Court deems fair and equitable. DEMAND FOR JURY TRIAL Plaintiff hereby requests trial by jury of all issues triable by jury. DATED: April, 0 Respectfully submitted, GIRARD GIBBS LLP By: /s/ Eric H. Gibbs Eric H. Gibbs Eric H. Gibbs (State Bar No. ) ehg@girardgibbs.com David Berger (State Bar No. ) dmb@girardgibbs.com Scott Grzenczyk (State Bar No. 0) smg@girardgibbs.com GIRARD GIBBS LLP 0 California Street, th Floor San Francisco, California 0 Telephone: () -00 Facsimile: () - Attorneys for Plaintiff and Class Representative Ronald Ross