Section 238 Of Article 1. General Occupations From California Labor Code >> Division 2. >> Part 1. >> Chapter 1. >> Article 1.
238
. (a) If a final judgment against an employer arising from the
employer's nonpayment of wages for work performed in this state
remains unsatisfied after a period of 30 days after the time to
appeal therefrom has expired and no appeal therefrom is pending, the
employer shall not continue to conduct business in this state,
including conducting business using the labor of another business,
contractor, or subcontractor instead of the labor of an employee,
unless the employer has obtained a bond from a surety company
admitted to do business in this state and has filed a copy of that
bond with the Labor Commissioner. The bond shall be effective and
maintained until satisfaction of all judgments for nonpayment of
wages. The principal sum of the bond shall not be less than the
following:
(1) Fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) if the unsatisfied portion of
the judgment is no more than five thousand dollars ($5,000).
(2) One hundred thousand dollars ($100,000) if the unsatisfied
portion of the judgment is more than five thousand dollars ($5,000)
and no more than ten thousand dollars ($10,000).
(3) One hundred fifty thousand dollars ($150,000) if the
unsatisfied portion of the judgment is more than ten thousand dollars
($10,000).
(b) In lieu of filing and maintaining the bond required by this
section, the employer may provide the Labor Commissioner with a
notarized copy of an accord reached with an individual holding an
unsatisfied final judgment. If the accord provides for the judgment
to be paid in installments, and an installment payment is not made,
the employer is no longer excused from satisfying the bond
requirement of this section.
(c) (1) The bond required by this section shall be in favor of,
and payable to, the people of the State of California, and shall be
for the benefit of any employee damaged by his or her employer's
failure to pay wages, including any interest, penalties, and attorney'
s fees.
(2) This section shall not require a bond in favor of employees
covered by a bona fide collective bargaining agreement, if the
agreement expressly provides for wages, hours of work, working
conditions, a process to resolve disputes concerning nonpayment of
wages, and a waiver of the bond required by this section.
(3) Thirty days prior to the cancellation or termination of any
bond required by this section, the surety shall send written notice
to both the employer and the Labor Commissioner, identifying the bond
and the date of the cancellation or termination. If the bond is
terminated or canceled, the employer shall obtain a new surety bond
and file a copy of that bond with the Labor Commissioner to remain in
compliance with this section.
(d) For purposes of this section, a judgment also includes any
final arbitration award where the time to file a petition for a trial
de novo or a petition to vacate or correct the arbitration award has
expired and no petition is pending.
(e) Subject to subdivision (f), an employer similar in operation
and ownership to an employer with an unsatisfied final judgment for
unpaid wages, upon receiving written notice of the unsatisfied
judgment, shall be deemed the same employer for purposes of this
section if (1) the employees of the successor employer are engaged in
substantially the same work in substantially the same working
conditions under substantially the same supervisors or (2) if the new
entity has substantially the same production process or operations,
produces substantially the same products or offers substantially the
same services, and has substantially the same body of customers.
(f) Any employer, or other person acting on behalf of an employer,
that conducts business in violation of this section shall be subject
to a civil penalty of two thousand five hundred dollars ($2,500).
Any employer that has previously been assessed and failed to pay a
penalty pursuant to this section shall be subject to an additional
penalty of one hundred dollars ($100) for each calendar day that the
employer conducts business in violation of this section; however,
this additional amount shall not exceed one hundred thousand dollars
($100,000). These civil penalties may be assessed under a citation
issued by the Labor Commissioner and the procedures for issuing,
contesting, and enforcing judgments shall be the same as those set
forth in Section 1197.1. The Labor Commissioner shall not assess
these civil penalties against an entity determined to be a successor
employer pursuant to subdivision (e) within the first 30 days after
notice of the judgment.