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BISNAR & CHASE
1301 Dove St, #120
Newport Beach, CA 92660

1-866-868-4452





California Lunch Break Law Lawyers


Wal-Mart Workers Illegally Denied Lunch Breaks Use
Civil Justice System to Hold Retailer Accountable

Case Illustrates Importance of Class Action Lawsuits
Wal-Mart stole wages from 116,000 California employees

For 116,000 Wal-Mart employees in California who were illegally denied lunch breaks, the civil justice system proved their last and only resort to hold the retail giant accountable and recover wages they should have been paid.

California state law requires employers to give 30-minute lunch breaks to employees who work longer than six-hour shifts. Wal-Mart described its denial of legally required lunch breaks as a "compliance issue." But an attorney for the workers said, "What was compelling for the jury was that we put a lot of evidence before them of memos by Wal-Mart from seven years ago that concluded they had been breaking the law. Instead of taking steps to solve the problem, Wal-Mart concealed it." The jury found that between 2001 and 2005 Wal-Mart had broken the law and ordered the retailer to compensate its workers fairly.

Had it not been for a class action suit, the workers never would have been paid what they were due; since each individual employee's lost wages may have been only a few hundred or a few thousand dollars it would not have been worth the cost and effort to bring an individual suit. By using a class action suit, the employees were able to band together to hold Wal-Mart accountable for systematically defrauding all of its California employees.

By combining hundreds or thousands of individual cases into one, class actions make the civil justice system more efficient, save taxpayer dollars and court time, and allow individuals who've been wronged by giant corporations to hold them accountable.

In the Stores

California isn't the only state where Wal-Mart has been held accountable for breaking wage and hour laws. The company settled claims that it defrauded its Colorado employees, and is facing claims in Pennsylvania and elsewhere challenging the company's illegal practice of forcing employees to work "off-the-clock" without pay and missing their promised breaks. In 2002, statisticians estimated Wal-Mart shortchanged its Texas workers $150 million over four years by regularly not paying them for working through their 15-minute breaks. In addition to the similar wage and hour class-action suits in other states, Wal-Mart faces a lawsuit alleging systematic discrimination against women, and has also run into trouble for violating child labor laws.

By the Numbers

$10 Billion: Wal-Mart's annual profits.

60,767: Number of breaks Wal-Mart employees were forced to miss in one week, according to an analysis of Wal-Mart time records.

BISNAR & CHASE, CALIFORNIA WAGE AND HOUR LAWYERS ARE DEDICATED TO HELPING VICTIMS OF OVERTIME VIOLATIONS.

CALL US TODAY FOR A FREE CONSULTATION WITH AN EXPERIENCED AND SUCCESSFUL ATTORNEY OR CLICK HERE TO FILL OUT OUR ONLINE CASE EVALUATION FORM

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BISNAR & CHASE
1-866-868-4452



California Lunch Break Law Lawyer Disclaimer: The wage and hour, lunch break, lunch break law, class action, overtime, employee compensation or other California personal injury legal information presented at this site should not be construed to be neither formal legal advice nor the formation of a lawyer or attorney client relationship. Any results set forth here were dependent on the facts of that case and the results will differ from case to case. Please contact a California Wage and Hour Attorney at our law offices. This web site is not intended to solicit clients for matters outside of the State of California, although we have relationships with attorneys and law firms in states throughout the United States. The lawyer responsible for this website is John Bisnar.

The Employee Rights Attorneys at Bisnar|Chase are licensed to practice in California, Nevada, Washington and New York. We represent Employee Rights clients in other states through our associations with local law firms. Through the local firm, we will be admitted to practice law in their State, "pro hac vice", meaning "for this particular occasion". When in our client's best interest, we employ the local law firm (at no additional cost to our client) to assist us with routine court appearances and discovery proceedings to more efficiently pursue our client's cause.

Copyright © 2011 BISNAR|CHASE, LLP - California Overtime Lawyers - Class Action Attorneys - California Wage and Hour Law Firm, serving the Southern California counties of Los Angeles, Orange County, Riverside, San Diego, San Bernardino, Inland Empire, Fresno, Ventura and Santa Barbara. Also serving Nevada personal injury victims. All rights reserved.

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