Klause AI: The Definitive California Statutory Contract Audit

California operates under a distinct and highly protective legal framework. Standard contract analysis tools fail to recognize the nuances of California's mandatory public policies, leaving you exposed to significant liability. Klause AI provides a specialized California statutory contract audit, engineered to identify violations of the Business and Professions Code, the Labor Code, and the Fair Employment and Housing Act.

The Unenforceability Doctrine

BPC §16600: The Cornerstone of California Employment Law

This statute establishes a strong public policy against restraints on trade, rendering virtually all non-compete agreements void and unenforceable within the state.

Crucially, employers frequently attempt to bypass this protection by inserting "Choice of Law" or "Forum Selection" clauses, stipulating that the contract is governed by the laws of another state (e.g., New York or Delaware). Klause AI's engine recognizes that California courts consistently reject these attempts when they contravene fundamental state policy. Our system automatically flags any post-employment restrictive covenant as HIGH RISK, regardless of the stated jurisdiction within the document.

The Statutory Matrix

Comprehensive Risk Identification

Klause AI cross-references your agreement against a comprehensive matrix of California statutes. We identify isolated violations and the cascading liabilities they create.

BPC §16600

Non-Compete Ban

Flags any clause restricting post-employment competition or client solicitation.

Clauses are void; attempts to enforce can trigger unfair competition claims.

AB 5 (2019)

Worker Classification

Analyzes the agreement against the stringent "ABC Test" for independent contractors.

Misclassification leads to massive penalties for unpaid wages and taxes.

Lab. Code §226

Wage Statements

Identifies missing requirements for itemized pay stubs, often linked to AB 5 misclassification.

Statutory penalties ranging from $250 to $4,000 per employee violation.

Lab. Code §2802

Expense Reimbursement

Audits clauses that attempt to shift business expenses onto the employee or contractor.

Mandatory reimbursement of all necessary expenditures incurred by the employee.

FEHA

Anti-Discrimination

Detects clauses attempting to waive protections across 15+ protected categories.

Waivers are void; exposes the drafting party to significant civil litigation.

Lab. Code §970

False Promises

Flags vague or misleading promises regarding relocation, compensation, or duration of work.

Actionable fraud claims with potential for double damages.

CCP §1281

Arbitration Limits

Identifies mandatory arbitration clauses that attempt to waive Private Attorneys General Act (PAGA) claims.

PAGA waivers are generally unenforceable; exposes the company to representative actions.

The Misclassification Nexus: AB 5 and Cascading Liability

Klause AI's analysis goes beyond surface-level keyword matching. We understand the interconnected nature of California Labor Law. For example, if our engine detects an independent contractor agreement that fails the AB 5 "ABC Test," it immediately flags the secondary risks.

Misclassification under AB 5 inherently triggers violations of Labor Code §226 (failure to provide accurate wage statements) and Labor Code §2802 (failure to reimburse business expenses). We provide a holistic view of your legal exposure, connecting the dots that standard tools miss.

Execute a Statutory Audit of Your California Agreement

Ensure your contracts comply with the most stringent labor and business codes in the United States. Select the California jurisdiction to activate our specialized statutory cross-referencing engine.

Perform a California Statutory Audit Now