December 08, 2022
A California federal judge signed off on Walmart's $35 million deal resolving class claims that the retail giant provided inaccurate pay stubs to around 265,000 workers, which includes $11.6 million in attorney fees for class counsel.
December 02, 2022
A California federal judge said Friday that he'll grant final approval to Walmart's $35 million deal to resolve class claims that the retail giant gave inaccurate wage statements to about 265,000 workers, a settlement that will pay class attorneys $11.6 million in fees.
July 01, 2022
Walmart's $35 million settlement with workers alleging the retailer gave them inaccurate wage statements can proceed, a California federal judge ruled after initially rejecting the agreement.
May 06, 2022
A California federal judge considering whether to approve Walmart's $35 million deal over allegedly inaccurate wage statements asked the retailer Friday to brief him about adding languageĀ tailored to a recent state appellate court decision that would limit the settlement's release.
March 22, 2022
A California federal judge on Monday refused to sign off on a $35 million settlement to resolve class claims that Walmart failed to provide a group of employees with accurate wage statements, saying the release of claims is too broad.
September 07, 2021
Walmart agreed to pay $35 million to settle a class action in California federal court in which a group of employees accused the company of failing to provide them with accurate wage statements.
April 30, 2021
Walmart agreed to settle a certified class action filed by company employees who accused the retail giant of failing to provide proper wage statements, the parties told a California federal court Friday.
November 26, 2019
A California federal judge on Monday certified two classes of Walmart employees, each with an estimated 200,000 members, who say the retail giant failed to pay them the correct amount for overtime work and provide them with proper wage statements, respectively.
November 15, 2019
A California federal judge indicated Friday he's leaning toward granting class certification on two of four claims brought on behalf of more than 200,000 Walmart workers who say the retail giant failed to pay workers the correct amount of overtime and provide them with proper wage statements, among other claims.