
The receipt has subtly turned into a battlefield at some point in the lengthy, fluorescent-lit history of American pizza chains. The majority of people never check theirs. After taking a quick look at the total, they sign and leave with a heated box. Occasionally, however, someone reads the fine print, scowls, and contacts an attorney. John Murphy experienced something similar in California, and now Domino’s is the one looking at a courtroom calendar.
Domino’s is accused in the lawsuit, which was filed in late February in the federal court in San Francisco, of adding a small but persistent charge to in-person orders and then marking it as “Tax 2” on the receipt. It appears to be official. It is situated adjacent to the real sales tax. A casual consumer would think it was being collected by the state of California. The state was not acting in this manner, according to the complaint. Domino’s allegedly set the fee as a covert means of recovering operating expenses without increasing menu prices.
| Domino’s Pizza — Lawsuit Snapshot | Details |
|---|---|
| Case Name | Murphy v. Domino’s Pizza Franchising LLC, et al. |
| Case Number | 3:26-cv-01712 |
| Filed On | February 26, 2026 |
| Court | U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California |
| Plaintiff | John Murphy (representing a proposed California class) |
| Defendants | Domino’s Pizza Franchising LLC, Domino’s Pizza LLC, Ari Foods Inc., Aai Foods Inc. |
| Law Firm Representing Plaintiff | Almeida Law Group LLC |
| Lead Attorneys | Wesley M. Griffith, David A. McGee |
| Core Allegation | Mandatory fees disguised as “Tax 2” on in-person receipts |
| Laws Allegedly Violated | California’s Honest Pricing Act, Consumers’ Legal Remedies Act, False Advertising Law, Unfair Competition Law |
| Relief Sought | Monetary damages, punitive damages, injunctive relief, jury trial |
| Class Definition | California consumers charged the fee on in-person Domino’s purchases |
| Industry Context | Part of a broader wave of junk-fee litigation across U.S. retail and food sectors |
On the surface, it seems insignificant—perhaps 75 cents for a pepperoni order. However, this is the peculiar power of these cases. The sum per client is essentially insignificant. The sum of millions of pizzas sold over many years is not. The lawsuit’s lead attorney, Wesley Griffith of the Almeida Law Group, described it as a blatant violation of California’s Honest Pricing Act, which went into effect in 2024 and subtly changed the requirements for restaurants, lodging facilities, and ticket vendors to advertise prices. The idea is straightforward. If a fee is required, it must be included in the sticker price. There are no surprises at the counter.
Observing this, it seems as though a certain era in consumer pricing is coming to an end. Businesses exploited the discrepancy between what was advertised and what was actually charged for decades. resort charges. convenience fees. fees for services. handling surcharges. According to the Domino’s case, some of them were hidden, some were revealed, and some were disguised as government taxes. The lawyers are now catching up after California decided enough was enough.
As is fairly typical at this point, Domino’s hasn’t made many public statements. While its franchise partners absorb the noise, the company typically weathered these storms in silence. The franchise structure is important, so it’s worth stopping here. There aren’t many Domino’s locations owned by the company. The franchisees Ari Foods Inc. and Aai Foods Inc. operate the locations mentioned in the lawsuit, and it will likely take months to litigate the legal issue of how much the parent company controls their pricing decisions. According to the complaint, Domino’s is in charge of the tax fields, menu boards, and receipt formatting. It is another matter entirely if a judge concurs.
One San Francisco user pointed out in a Reddit thread about the case that Domino’s only serves half of the neighborhoods due to the city’s unique weariness. Another commenter accused the franchisee of more serious labor issues, claiming that his father had worked at a city location. It remains to be seen if any of that becomes evidence. However, it does depict a business operation under closer scrutiny than the Ann Arbor corporate office is likely to want.
Most of what follows is procedural. Motions will occur. Domino’s will probably attempt to force arbitration or contend that the franchisees—rather than the parent company—are the rightful defendants. Certification of the class is required. This doesn’t happen very fast. Beyond the pizza aisle, though, the underlying question is intriguing. American customers have had enough of fees. Regulators are paying attention. Additionally, businesses that relied on small, opaque fees to build their margins may find the upcoming years difficult. Whether Murphy’s case becomes a landmark or a footnote is still up in the air, but at least someone is finally reading the receipt.
