Court of Appeal holds time-barred individual claim doesn’t bar representative PAGA action for violations predating 2024 amendment: Osuna v. Spectrum Security Services, Inc.

In Osuna v. Spectrum Security Services, Inc. (2025) 111 Cal.App.5th 516, the Court of Appeal (Second Appellate District, Division Six) held that an employee suffering Labor Code violations prior to the 2024 amendment to Labor Code § 2699 can still be an “aggrieved employee” with standing for a representative PAGA action under the former § 2699(c), even if their individual claims for those violations are time-barred.

Plaintiff worked for Defendant until February 2022. In August 2023, he notified the LWDA of various Labor Code violations, which he alleged continued against other employees following his termination. He then sued, asserting individual and class claims alongside a single representative PAGA claim. The trial court dismissed Plaintiff’s class claims, sent his individual claims to arbitration, and sustained Defendant’s demurrer to the PAGA claim (without leave to amend) because Plaintiff’s own alleged violations fell outside the one-year statute of limitations. Plaintiff appealed the PAGA dismissal.

The Court of Appeal reversed the order sustaining the demurrer to Plaintiff’s PAGA claim. As a threshold issue, it concluded that the death knell doctrine permitted Plaintiff to appeal the order, since no other aggrieved employee had filed an LWDA notice tolling PAGA’s statute of limitations. It then held, following Johnson v. Maxim Healthcare Services, Inc. (2021) 66

Cal.App.5th 924, that employees with time-barred individual claims can still pursue representative PAGA actions. Plaintiff was therefore an “aggrieved employee” under the former Lab. Code § 2699 (c). 
Citing Kim v. Reins International California, Inc. (2020) 9 Cal.5th 73 and Adolph v. Uber Technologies, Inc. (2023) 14 Cal.5th 1104, the Court distinguished PAGA standing (requiring only that Plaintiff once suffered an alleged violation) from the remedy (contingent on PAGA’s statute of limitations for the violations pursued). A timeliness requirement for standing itself was added by Assembly Bill No. 2288 in 2024, inapplicable here. Defendant’s cited cases were distinguished as involving no timely violations by any employee for which PAGA penalties could be sought. This holding, contrasting with the Court of Appeal’s recent ruling in Williams v. Alacrity Solutions Group (2025) 110 Cal. App. 5th 932, sets the stage for a potential review by the California Supreme Court.

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