Judge Not At All Impressed By Class Action Lawsuit Claiming Yelp Reviewers Are Really Employees

from the the-court-is-Not-Your-Personal-Army dept

Late in 2013, a few like-minded individuals decided Yelp owed them money for all the reviews they had voluntarily written over the years. The class action suit bascially alleged Yelp's machinery was lubricated with the blood of unpaid reviewers. The original filing threw off the shackles of normal, dry legal prose in favor of phrases like "thumbing its nose at workers… and taxing authorities," "dependent on a horde of non-wage-paid reviewers," "system of cult-like rewards and disciplines," and "a 21st-century galley slave ship with pirates banging the drums."



All in all, the original complaint reads more like a screed against content farming than a list of recognizable torts. Somehow, it has managed to survive a venue shift and the ineptitude of the plaintiffs' counsel, as well as a complete dismissal. But only barely. And with the threat of Anti-SLAPP fees looming over it. In the opinion granting the smallest of leeway to the complaining party, the judge first notes that not only are they supposed to state coherent claims, but they're also supposed to explain why they're entitled to relief. The court has some problems with the claims themselves.

Here, each of the three named plaintiffs alleges that he or she “was hired by Yelp, Inc. as a writer and she fulfilled that job description and job functions.” Each plaintiff allegedly was “directed how to write reviews and given other such employee type direction from employer defendant.” Yelp allegedly controlled each plaintiff’s “work schedule and conditions.” Two of the three plaintiffs are alleged to have been “fired” with “no warning [and] a flimsy explanation.”

A reasonable inference to be drawn from the complaint, and from plaintiffs’ arguments, is plaintiffs use the term “hired” to refer to a process by which any member of the public can sign up for an account on the Yelp website and submit reviews, and the term “fired” to refer to having their accounts involuntarily closed, presumably for conduct that Yelp contends breached its terms of service agreement. A further reasonable inference is that plaintiffs and the putative class members may contribute reviews under circumstances that either cannot be reasonably characterized as performing a service to Yelp at all, or that at most would constitute acts of volunteerism.

Plaintiffs offer a strident argument, marked by ad hominem attacks on counsel, that the anti-SLAPP statute is inapplicable because they merely seek to hold Yelp liable under quasi-contractual theories for non-payment of wages, not for exercising any free speech rights. A plaintiff’s theory of liability, however, is not relevant to the question of whether the claim “arises from” a defendant’s exercise of free speech rights. As alleged, Yelp publishes information— reviews—regarding the services and goods various business establishments offer to the public. Plaintiff’s claims plainly arise from that conduct, which undisputedly involves speech on matters of public interest.

Both before and after the transfer of this action to this district, plaintiffs have filed various pleadings with confusing titles in the captions and/or garbled descriptions and/or incorrect event types in the electronic docket entries. As a result, the court in the Central District issued several orders striking certain of plaintiffs’ submissions. Complaining that plaintiffs’ filings in this district failed to comply with the local rules on notice, and that various ambiguities now exist as to what motions are pending and as to the briefing schedules, defendant seeks “administrative relief” under Local Rule 7-11. Defendant requests an order vacating the current hearing, and postponing at least one of plaintiffs’ motions until after a case management conference has been held.



[...]



More problematically, plaintiffs failed to set the hearing in the ECF system, with the result that no briefing schedule appeared in the docket entry. It is counsel’s responsibility to learn to use the ECF system correctly, and he is hereby directed to undertake appropriate steps to ensure that he and/or his office staff can file and docket pleadings in the proper manner.

Plaintiffs seek sanctions against Yelp and its counsel. Although the precise basis of plaintiffs’ complaints and the scope of the relief they seek are difficult to discern from their rambling and invective-filled papers, the gist appears to be a contention that Yelp did not exercise good faith in connection with a court-ordered mediation session, and that it should therefore be placed into “default” status until it funds and participates in a new mediation session, and pays monetary penalties to the court. Plaintiffs have failed to make a persuasive showing that Yelp or its counsel engaged in sanctionable misconduct, or that the relief they seek would be warranted in any event. The motion for sanctions is denied.

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Clearly a violation of labor laws... except for the part where the plaintiffs wholly misrepresented the actual situation.As such, the labor law cited by the plaintiffs is inapplicable, since it does not cover voluntary acts, even if said acts are monetized by the defendant. That being said, the judge doesn't completely close the door on this particular claim. He notes that it may be possible (but highly unlikely) that a recognizable labor law claim can be raised from this mess of a lawsuit and has given the plaintiffs 20 days to file an amended complaint.Yelp asked the court for damages under California's Anti-SLAPP law, claiming the lawsuit was nothing more than an attempt to chill its speech, seeing as the claims themselves were baseless and publishing reviews is (duh) a protected form of speech. The court has some sympathy for this argument, partially because the plaintiffs were unable to respond coherently to Yelp's Anti-SLAPP motion.Unfortunately, the ad hominem attack on Yelp that was filed instead of a proper response is buried somewhere in the mess of a docket -- something that has less to do with a venue move and the consolidation of filings, and more to do with the plaintiffs' counsel being mostly incompetent . (A read through other filings makes it clear the counsel humored the plaintiffs' desire to be cast as warriors railing against an unjust system, rather than steer them towards articulable arguments and claims.)Whether or not this sort of ineptitude led to the plaintiffs' counsel being disciplined by the State Bar isn't made explicit, but a later motion by the plaintiffs attempted to obtain an injunction against the Bar's proceedings as well as add it (!) as a defendant. This was denied Whatever the case, the judge finds both prongs of the Anti-SLAPP test have been met (the second being the failure to state a viable claim), but says it's still too early to consider the question of awarding fees. The plaintiffs haveasked for sanctions to be awarded against Yelp, but the judge notes he's doing most of the work in discerning what it is the plaintiffs are actually seeking.The only remaining option for the plaintiffs at this point is to file a coherent set of claims that might have a chance at surviving more than a cursory examination. The plaintiffs may have entered the legal arena with every intention of extracting paychecks for their voluntary efforts, but given this opinion, the likelihood of them losing both the casetheir money seems much more probable.

Filed Under: class action, employees, employment, reviews, volunteers

Companies: yelp