Nowhere Santa Monica and eight other Nowhere LLCs operate nine organic grocery stores and cafes known as Erewhon in the Los Angeles area. A tenth LLC, Nowhere Holdco, is their managing member.
Edgar Gonzalez worked for Nowhere Santa Monica at its Erewhon market for approximately five months. As a condition of employment, Gonzalez entered into an individual (i.e., non-class) arbitration agreement with Nowhere Santa Monica which provided that any dispute “between Nowhere Santa Monica, LLC DBA Erewhon-Santa Monica” and Gonzalez relating to his employment would be submitted to arbitration.
On May 25, 2022, Gonzalez filed suit against the ten Nowhere entities,defining them as “Defendants” those ten entities plus “any of their parent, subsidiary, or affiliated companies.” He alleged that he and the putative class members “were employees or former employees of Defendants covered by” the Labor Code and applicable Industrial Welfare Commission Wage Orders.
In ten causes of action Gonzalez alleged defendants violated the Labor Code by failing to pay minimum and overtime wages; provide meal or rest periods; provide timely wages and accurate wage statements; indemnify employees for expenses; or pay for vested vacation time on termination of employment. These violations, Gonzalez alleged, constituted unfair business practices.
The complaint, a 20-page block of unbroken, nondescript boilerplate, mentioned no employment agreement, described no work performed or control exerted over such work, and made no distinction between any of the ten defendants.
The ten Nowhere entities filed a joint motion to compel Gonzalez to arbitrate his claims on an individual, non-class basis and to dismiss his class allegations. In support of the motion, Tom Wong, Nowhere Holdco’s Chief Financial Officer, declared that each Erewhon market had its own management team that supervised its own employees. Wong declared that Gonzalez worked for Nowhere Santa Monica at the Erewhon market in Santa Monica from May 27, 2021 to October 15, 2021, and never worked at any other Erewhon market or was employed by any defendant other than Nowhere Santa Monica.
Gonzalez opposed the motion on the ground the non-Santa Monica Nowhere entities were not parties to the arbitration agreement.
The trial court found no evidence that Gonzalez was “attempting to enforce any benefit as to the [non-Santa Monica] Defendants while refusing to arbitrate with them,” and thus no evidence demonstrating that his “claims against the nonsignatory Defendants were ‘intimately founded in and intertwined with’ Plaintiff’s arbitrable claims against Nowhere Santa Monica.” The court therefore granted the motion to compel individual arbitration as to Nowhere Santa Monica but denied it as to the other Nowhere entities. Gonzalez thereafter dismissed his complaint against Nowhere Santa Monica.
The other Nowhere entities appeal. The Court of Appeal reversed in the published case of Gonzalez v. Nowhere Beverly Hills LLC -B328959 (December 2024).
It is undisputed that an arbitration agreement exists between Gonzalez and Nowhere Santa Monica. The non-Santa Monica entities admit they are nonsignatories to this agreement, but contend they may enforce it under principles of equitable estoppel because Gonzalez’s (and the class’s) claims against all Nowhere entities depend on and are intertwined with Nowhere Santa Monica’s obligations under the employment agreement with Gonzalez. The Court of Appeal agreed.
“Because arbitration is a matter of contract, the basic rule is that one must be a party to an arbitration agreement to be bound by it or invoke it – with limited exceptions.” One exception is the doctrine of equitable estoppel, which as a general matter precludes a party from asserting rights it otherwise would have had against another when its own conduct renders assertion of those rights inequitable.
In the arbitration context, “If a plaintiff relies on the terms of an agreement to assert his or her claims against a nonsignatory defendant, the plaintiff may be equitably estopped from repudiating the arbitration clause of that very agreement. In other words, a signatory to an agreement with an arbitration clause cannot . . . ‘on the one hand, seek to hold the non-signatory liable pursuant to duties imposed by the agreement, which contains an arbitration provision, but, on the other hand, deny arbitration’s applicability because the defendant is a non-signatory.”
Applying these principles, the Court of Appeal concluded that the trial court incorrectly denied the non-Santa Monica entities’ motion to compel arbitration because all of Gonzalez’s claims against them are intimately founded in and intertwined with the employment agreement with Nowhere Santa Monica, an agreement which contains an arbitration provision.