Deliverymen Suing Matsu
Sushi Under FSLA Got Trial Now Charging
Conference Aug 29
By Matthew
Russell Lee, Patreon
BBC
- Guardian
UK - Honduras
- ESPN
SDNY COURTHOUSE,
August 25 – Qiang Lu sued
Matsu Sushi of 483 Columbus
Avenue in Manhattan for
failure to pay overtime and to
provide required information
"in Chinese, [his] native
language."
On
September 24, 2021 U.S.
District Court for the
Southern District of New York
Magistrate Judge Katharine H.
Parker held a proceeding.
Inner City Press covered it, here.
Now in August 2022 it's come
to trial, see below.
On
September 24, 2021, the Law
Offices of Vincent S. Wong,
for the defendants, asked for
an extension of time for
discovery, and got it.
Jump cut to
August 22, 2022 when the civil
trial began before Judge John
P. Cronan, to whom the case
was reassigned. Inner City
Press went and covered it. The
questioning was about when a
half day was added - in 2015?
There were only two other
people in the gallery of
Courtroom 12D.
On August 23, the
redirect examination was doing
long. Judge Cronan told
plaintiffs' counsel to stay
within the scope of the cross
examination. On re-cross, the
witness acknowledged he had in
those days swapped shifts, and
couldn't remember which day,
no one could. The next witness
dramatically identified the
defendant, by point and
saying, He is wearing black
clothing.
On August 24, the
defense was questioning a
plaintiff why his name did not
appear in a handwritten
notebook of who got paid, in
and before December, 2016.
Judge Cronan said to move you,
if they had already stipulated
to this.
In the docket are
dueling emails about
stipulations, including an
argument to exclude before
"the jury will gain no
additional clarity... given
how squishy his memory of his
employment at the 28th Street
and 27th Street locations
were."
On August 25,
defense counsel was asking a
witness is someone other than
Brother Fa could have
substitutes shifts. The
plaintiffs' lawyer objected,
overrule, then re-phrase.
Judge Cronan after the jury
left told counsel the charge
conference should be Monday,
with briefing on the burden on
the wage statement claim.
The case is Lu,
et al. v. Purple Sushi, Inc.
et al., 19-cv-5828 (Cronan)
***
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