Court of Appeal affirms limits on intervention in PAGA settlements: Moniz v. Adecco USA, Inc.

In Moniz v. Adecco USA, Inc.,           Cal.App.5th           (Mar. 4, 2025), the Court of Appeal (First Appellate District, Division Four) held that PAGA does not grant a plaintiff with overlapping claims the right to intervene in or move to vacate another’s PAGA settlement, closely following Turrieta v. Lyft, Inc. (2024) 16 Cal.5th 664.

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Plaintiff (Moniz) sued under PAGA and settled with defendant. Another plaintiff with overlapping PAGA claims (Correa) unsuccessfully moved to intervene then vacate the judgment. The Court of Appeal reversed, but on remand, the trial court approved a revised settlement agreement awarded Correa only a small portion of requested attorney’s fees. It denied Correa’s motion to vacate the judgment or for a new settlement hearing. Correa appealed. 

The Court of Appeal affirmed the denial of Correa’s motion. It held per Turrieta that nothing in PAGA expressly grants PAGA plaintiffs the authority to intervene under CCP § 387 or vacate a settlement judgment under CCP § 663. The Court of Appeal rejected Correa’s argument based on the law of the case doctrine, finding that Turrieta clarified the controlling law. It also rejected Correa’s attempt to distinguish Turrieta, finding that her personal interests arose solely from PAGA, and granting intervention based on those interests would contradict the Legislature’s intent in enacting the statute.

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