When a state safety regulator wants records to figure out whether a dead gig-economy worker was an employee at all, does it have to win that question first – in a separate lawsuit – before it can even ask? In this new published decision, the Court of Appeal says no. California’s workplace-safety agency can subpoena the records it needs to establish its own jurisdiction. But the court also reined in a trial-court order that had handed the agency everything it asked for, sending the case back to trim overbroad requests.
In this case Dino Park fell down a flight of stairs after making a delivery for Uber Eats on May 26, 2023, and died several days later from his injuries. The Los Angeles County Coroner’s Office notified the Division of Occupational Safety and Health (Cal/OSHA) of the death on June 7, 2023. Park’s widow had limited information but provided tax returns showing he had been paid by Uber Technologies, Inc. Cal/OSHA tried to arrange a meeting with Uber to discuss Park’s employment status and the circumstances of his death; Uber declined.
On September 5, 2023, the agency served Uber with an administrative subpoena under Government Code section 11181, subdivision (e), and Labor Code section 6314, subdivision (c), seeking 20 categories of records bearing on whether Park was an employee or independent contractor, the circumstances of his death, and records about other similarly situated drivers. Uber produced nothing, raising only objections: that the agency lacked jurisdiction because Park was an independent contractor under Proposition 22 (Bus. & Prof. Code, § 7448 et seq.); that it had no consent or inspection warrant; that the requests sought confidential business information, invaded third-party privacy, and were overbroad and irrelevant.
Cal/OSHA petitioned to compel compliance (Gov. Code, § 11187). While that petition was pending, the agency issued a citation to Uber under Labor Code section 6317—$5,000 for failing to immediately report the death and $1,350 for failing to maintain an effective injury and illness prevention program—which Uber did not appeal. After a June 2024 hearing, the trial court granted the petition and ordered Uber to produce all 20 categories of documents within 30 days, without limiting or modifying any request. Uber appealed, and the Court of Appeal granted a writ of supersedeas staying the order pending the appeal.
In the published case of Division of Occupational Safety and Health v. Uber Technologies, Inc., Case No. B340734 (June 2026), the Court of Appeal affirmed the order compelling production but reversed it to the extent it required production of all requested documents without limitation, and remanded for the trial court to reconsider the scope of the requests. In short: the agency’s power to subpoena was upheld at every turn, but the unbounded breadth of the order was not.
The court grounded its analysis in the California Supreme Court case of Brovelli v. Superior Court (1961) 56 Cal.2d 524, which holds that an administrative subpoena is valid so long as it (1) inquires into matters the agency is authorized to investigate, (2) is not too indefinite, and (3) seeks information reasonably relevant to the inquiry – agencies may investigate, like a grand jury, on mere suspicion the law is being violated “or even just because it wants assurance that it is not” (quoting United States v. Morton Salt Co. (1950) 338 U.S. 632).
But the order’s scope swept too far. The court found the record underdeveloped on the relevance of several requests, particularly Nos. 8 through 20, whose breadth was magnified by expansive definitions. The subpoena defined “DRIVER(S)” and “USER(S)” to include any “person” who uses Uber’s platform – language broad enough to reach customers – yet nothing explained how records about platform users or customers bore on Park’s employment status, the circumstances of his death, or Uber’s training and prevention practices.
On remand, the trial court must reconsider the scope of the requests under Brovelli and issue a new, appropriately tailored production order.