Vatalaro v. County of Sacramento CA3 ( 2022 )


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  • Filed 5/5/22 Vatalaro v. County of Sacramento CA3
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED
    California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not
    certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for
    publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT
    (Sacramento)
    ----
    CYNTHIA VATALARO,                                                                              C090896
    Plaintiff and Appellant,                                         (Super. Ct. No. 34-2017-
    00207387-CU-WT-GDS)
    v.
    COUNTY OF SACRAMENTO,
    Defendant and Respondent.
    After being terminated from a position with Sacramento County (the County),
    Cynthia J. Vatalaro sued the County for unlawful retaliation under Labor Code section
    1102.5 (section 1102.5)—a statute that protects whistleblowing employees. Under this
    statute, an employer cannot retaliate against an employee for disclosing information that
    the employee has reasonable cause to believe reveals a violation of a local, state, or
    federal law. Vatalaro alleged that, in violation of this statute, the County retaliated
    against her after she reported that she was working below her service classification.
    1
    The County afterward filed a motion for summary judgment. It contended that
    Vatalaro could not show that she had a reasonable belief, or any belief at all, that the
    information she disclosed evidenced a violation of any law. The County added that,
    regardless, Vatalaro’s claim still failed because the County had a legitimate,
    nonretaliatory reason for terminating her—namely, she had been insubordinate,
    disrespectful, and dishonest. The trial court, agreeing with the County on both these
    points, granted summary judgment in the County’s favor.
    On appeal, Vatalaro alleges that the trial court was wrong on both these issues.
    She first argues that the facts show she had a reasonable belief that the County violated
    the law in having her work below her service classification, even if her belief was
    incorrect. She further argues that the County’s stated reason for terminating her was
    merely a pretext for retaliation.
    We affirm, though on a ground somewhat different than those raised at the trial
    level. The County, again, argued that Vatalaro’s claim failed for two reasons, including
    because the County showed it had a legitimate, nonretaliatory reason for terminating her.
    But the relevant standard is not whether the County demonstrated it had such a reason; it
    is instead whether the County “demonstrate[d] by clear and convincing evidence that the
    alleged action would have occurred for legitimate, independent reasons even if the
    employee had not engaged in activities protected by Section 1102.5.” (Lab. Code,
    § 1102.6 (§ 1102.6).) We requested supplemental briefing on this issue and, after
    reviewing the parties’ briefing and the record, we are satisfied that the County provided
    sufficient undisputed evidence to support summary judgment under the appropriate
    standard.
    BACKGROUND
    I.     Factual Background
    Vatalaro formerly worked with the County of Sacramento. In 2013, her then-
    supervisor, Michelle Callejas, discussed the possibility of her promoting from an
    2
    Administrative Analyst II, her position at the time, to an Administrative Services Officer
    (ASO) III. Vatalaro afterward worked with Callejas to develop the duties that would be
    associated with the promotion and, in 2015, she finally received the promotion to an ASO
    III. Under County civil service rules, Vatalaro’s new position was probationary for a
    period of six months.
    Before she started her new position, Vatalaro discovered her supervisor would be
    Mindy Yamasaki and received from Yamasaki a job description that listed her expected
    job duties. Vatalaro afterward expressed concerns about both. She first contacted a
    County human resources analyst and asked about the “reporting structure.” In a series of
    emails, she indicated that she believed she should be reporting to Callejas, not Yamasaki,
    in her new position. But the analyst found no issue, explaining that “[t]here is nothing in
    the class specifications that would prohibit the reporting relationships you are proposing.”
    Vatalaro later expressed concerns about her assigned job duties, which differed
    from the duties she had developed with Callejas and the duties she believed appropriate
    for an ASO III. Over a phone call, according to Vatalaro, the analyst told her that her
    assigned duties “did not rise to the level of an ASO III” and “would cause [her]
    promotional issues because [she would not be] doing the duties that would prepare [her]
    for the next level of promotability.” The analyst further, according to Vatalaro, told her
    “that if this particular job classification came under a study, . . . it would be unsure if
    [Vatalaro] would be able to remain in that job classification since it did not rise to the
    level.” Vatalaro, around this time, also spoke with Callejas about her assigned duties.
    According to Vatalaro, Callejas had similar concerns as the analyst, stating that she “felt
    [Vatalaro’s assigned job duties] were . . . below the level of classification that [Vatalaro]
    was going to be in.”
    Shortly after Vatalaro spoke with the human resources analyst and Callejas, and
    before Vatalaro began her new position, Vatalaro met with Yamasaki. According to
    Vatalaro’s written notes, which all parties agree accurately recorded the facts, “[t]he
    3
    focus of the meeting was about [Vatalaro] having to get along with [Yamasaki’s] staff.”
    Yamasaki noted that “her staff had reservations about working with [Vatalaro].”
    Vatalaro responded that perhaps “her staff felt threatened by [her]” because, in the past,
    she had completed their work when they “weren’t meeting expectations.” But Yamasaki
    declined to give a specific reason for her staff’s reservations. Vatalaro then asked about
    her anticipated tasks, telling Yamasaki that she already had “enough time . . . to put
    something together regarding [her] duties.” But Yamasaki said they could discuss her
    tasks at a future meeting.
    After beginning her new position, Valataro felt Yamasaki mistreated her on
    several occasions, which she believed was attributable to her complaints about her
    assigned job duties. First, Vatalaro believed that Yamasaki failed to assign her
    appropriate work. Vatalaro first raised the issue with Yamasaki a few days into her new
    position. At that time, after finding her assigned work too lowly for an ASO III, Vatalaro
    asked Yamasaki if she could do tasks that she felt better matched her position. But
    Yamasaki declined her request, saying, “[W]e all do staff work.” A month later, Vatalaro
    raised the issue again, asking Yamasaki to tell Callejas that “she doesn’t have
    assignments” at the appropriate level. But according to Vatalaro, Yamasaki said nothing
    in response and appeared angry.
    Second, Vatalaro felt that Yamasaki excluded her from a staff appreciation
    meeting. After learning of the details of the meeting, Vatalaro wrote Yamasaki: “I
    wanted to thank you for including me in the PA appreciation breakfast, it shows how
    much I’m seen as part of the team.” Yamasaki responded that she had informed Vatalaro
    about the meeting, but Valataro had “decided to take the entire day off.” She also offered
    to meet in person to discuss the matter further. But Vatalaro felt this characterization was
    inaccurate. She said she understood from her conversation with Yamasaki that staff was
    getting “together for a catch up,” not for an appreciation event that would include
    “treats.” She also rejected the offer to meet in person, stating she felt there was “nothing
    4
    more to discuss” and expressing a preference for “email [in the future] so there is no
    misunderstanding.”
    Third, Valataro believed that Yamasaki assigned her certain assignments as
    punishment after Vatalaro complained to Callejas about Yamasaki’s conduct. Vatalaro,
    in an email to Callejas, wrote that Yamasaki “has not given me any concessions on tasks
    or projects that I’d like to work on” and simply says, “ ‘[W]ell, these (tasks) are the needs
    that I have here.’ ” Vatalaro added that she would not have “advocated so strongly to
    bring [Yamasaki] back to this division,” following her stint with “the state for a number
    of years,” if she “had known this was going to happen.” Shortly after Vatalaro emailed
    Callejas, Yamasaki emailed Vatalaro. She wrote that she was “pleased to have [Vatalaro]
    as a member of” the management team, that she believed Vatalaro to be a “valuable part”
    of this team, and that, in their field, staff “get various assignments to complete that do not
    always align to a prescribed duty statement.” She then listed “some of the initial projects
    [Vatalaro would] be working on.” Vatalaro considered this email to be retaliatory. She
    reasoned, it appears, that because Yamasaki assigned her two tasks “without having a
    discussion about them with [her] first,” and did so shortly after Valataro had emailed
    Callejas, that tended to show that Yamasaki had assigned these tasks to retaliate against
    Vatalaro.
    Fourth, Vatalaro believed that Yamasaki and another co-worker, Verronda Moore,
    teamed up to harass her on several occasions following her further complaints about her
    assignments. The first time occurred when Vatalaro, during a meeting with Yamasaki,
    said that Moore had told her that she could not talk in a certain meeting and that, if she
    did, Moore would “poke [her] in the leg.” According to Vatalaro, Yamasaki “was
    immediately upset” after Vatalaro relayed this information and called Moore into the
    meeting to investigate the allegation. But after Moore denied the accusation, Moore and
    Yamasaki yelled at Vatalaro for not “telling the truth.” In Vatalaro’s view, this meeting
    was retaliation for Vatalaro raising the issue of “being worked out of class.” Following
    5
    the meeting, Vatalaro called Callejas and alleged that Yamasaki and Moore had harassed
    her. Callejas, who had a duty to report claims of harassment, afterward reported the
    matter to the County’s Department of Personnel Services.
    A second event of alleged harassment occurred a couple of weeks later at another
    meeting. At the start of the meeting, Moore handed Vatalaro an agenda with three
    sections: “Perceptions of what’s working well,” “Perceptions of what’s not working
    well,” and “Proposed resolutions for moving forward.” All agenda items appeared to
    concern Vatalaro’s alleged behavior. Under “what’s working well,” the agenda noted,
    among other things, “[p]leasant communication exchanges” before a certain point in
    Vatalaro’s tenure. And under “what’s not working well,” the agenda noted, among other
    things, “[b]ody language and expressions,” “[n]on-engaging behavior,” and “[s]preading
    false rumors.” Yamasaki had noted similar issues the week before, stating that Vatalaro
    “needed to work on [her] body language and facial expressions”—though Vatalaro said
    she did not understand “exactly” what Yamasaki meant at the time. After reviewing the
    agenda, Yamasaki and Moore described steps that Vatalaro should take to correct these
    issues. Vatalaro, in turn, told Yamasaki and Moore that she felt they had bullied and
    harassed her in their previous meeting. Yamasaki and Moore tried to defend themselves,
    asserting that Vatalaro was mistaken to believe that their conduct constituted harassment.
    But Vatalaro disagreed, stating that their yelling at her in a closed room was harassment.
    Vatalaro also objected to Moore’s giving her assignments or “directives.” Vatalaro stated
    that these tasks did not rise to the level of an ASO III and, in any event, she was not one
    of Moore’s staff. Moore afterward emailed Vatalaro and asked her to identify examples
    when Moore had given her directives. But Vatalaro never responded.
    A third event of alleged harassment occurred later that same day. According to
    Vatalaro’s typed notes, Moore asked Vatalaro to attend a meeting with her, Yamasaki,
    and a co-worker who had earlier accused Vatalaro of harassment. Moore told Vatalaro
    that she and Yamasaki would serve as neutral facilitators. They then listened to the co-
    6
    worker’s complaints against Vatalaro, which, according to Vatalaro, concerned the co-
    worker’s mistaken perception that Vatalaro had questioned her work in 2013. Over the
    course of the meeting, Vatalaro apologized several times and Yamasaki and Moore, in
    turn, largely remained silent. Vatalaro appeared to believe that this meeting, like the two
    before it, was held in retaliation for Vatalaro’s earlier complaints.
    Following the last of these meetings, Yamasaki—who, like Callejas, had a duty to
    report claims of harassment—called the County’s Department of Personnel Services to
    report that Vatalaro had made a harassment complaint. Yamasaki also discussed their
    meetings with Vatalaro over the phone. During the call, according to Vatalaro, Vatalaro
    mentioned that Moore had asked to meet with her to review the County’s “harassment
    and bullying definitions.” Vatalaro noted she “was not comfortable discussing the
    definitions of harassment and bullying with her” and wanted Moore and Yamasaki to
    “follow the correct protocols” for harassment complaints. She then asked Yamasaki for
    “advice on how to proceed” with Moore. Yamasaki responded that Vatalaro could take
    her time in “decid[ing] what [she] wanted to do with [Moore’s request for a meeting],”
    though she appears not to have offered any advice on how to respond. Yamasaki then
    described “how difficult it’s been working with [Vatalaro] because she has felt that
    [Vatalaro] ha[s] been distant and unwilling to cooperate.” Vatalaro, in response, noted
    that Callejas had told her before she started her new role that Yamasaki “didn’t want
    [her] in the management position.” She then asked: “[H]ow do you expect me to react
    when I’m being told that I’m moving under a manager who doesn’t want me and was
    forced to move me into the position . . . ?” After further discussion, according to
    Vatalaro, Yamasaki “told [her] that [they] would need to talk more and that she still
    hasn’t decided what to do about [her] probation.”
    Lastly, Vatalaro believed that the County released her from probation in retaliation
    for her complaints. After Yamasaki notified the County’s Department of Personnel
    Services of Vatalaro’s harassment complaint, a staff member in that department contacted
    7
    Vatalaro and encouraged her to fill out an employee complaint form—though Vatalaro
    never ultimately did so. Around this time, Yamasaki recommended Vatalaro’s release on
    the alleged grounds that she “ha[d] been insubordinate, disrespectful, and dishonest in her
    actions.” In support of her recommendation, Yamasaki submitted a memorandum to
    Callejas that detailed various instances when, according to Yamasaki, Vatalaro exhibited
    these qualities. Yamasaki noted, for instance, that Vatalaro repeatedly called several
    work meetings “a waste of her time” and, on one occasion, declined to meet with her
    because she thought it would not be a “valuable use of [her] time.” She added, as another
    example, that after she asked Vatalaro to research test analytics software for staff,
    Vatalaro “roll[ed] her eyes, look[ed] away, and gestur[ed] with her hands as if it were a
    waste of time to pursue this for . . . staff.” And she further noted, among other things,
    that Vatalaro expressed dissatisfaction with her job and said she planned to “promote up
    higher” to a better position.
    Shortly after Yamasaki submitted her recommendation, Callejas signed the
    recommendation and the County informed Vatalaro that her “employment as an
    Administrative Services Officer III [had been] terminated” and that she would “return to
    [her] previous job classification of Administrative Analyst Level II.” Vatalaro afterward
    wrote the County that she would not return to her previous position, stating that her
    experience at work had left her physically sick and that she “continue[d] to suffer from
    such a level of anxiety that [she] ha[d] been advised not to return to such a hostile
    environment.”
    II.    Procedural Background
    In 2017, over a year after being released from probation, Vatalaro sued the
    County. She alleged two causes of action. In the first, she asserted that the County had
    retaliated against her for reporting that “she was working below her classification.” She
    then alleged that, in doing so, the County violated section 1102.5—a statute that prohibits
    employers from retaliating against an employee for disclosing information when “the
    8
    employee has reasonable cause to believe that the information discloses a violation of
    state or federal statute, or a violation of or noncompliance with a local, state, or federal
    rule or regulation. . . .” (§ 1102.5, subd. (b).) In her second cause of action, Vatalaro
    asserted that the County “constructively terminated her employment” in violation of
    public policy.
    The County afterward filed a motion for summary judgment. Beginning with
    Vatalaro’s unlawful retaliation claim, the County argued that the claim failed because
    Vatalaro could not establish a prima facie case of unlawful retaliation. It reasoned that
    “[b]ecause [Vatalaro’s] complaints about her job assignments were not complaints of
    illegal activity, nor did [Vatalaro] have a belief that they even violated the Civil Service
    Rules, they are not protected activity under Labor Code § 1102.5, and any alleged
    harassment by her manager as a result of these complaints, is not retaliation.” The
    County added, as relevant here, that Vatalaro’s unlawful retaliation claim also failed for
    another reason: The “County had a legitimate, non-retaliatory reason for releasing her
    from probation”—namely, she had been “ ‘insubordinate, disrespectful, and dishonest.’ ”
    Turning next to Vatalaro’s wrongful termination claim, the County argued that this claim
    too failed because, among other things, “a public employee cannot state a common law
    claim for wrongful termination in violation of public policy against a public entity
    employer.”
    After considering the County’s motion and Vatalaro’s opposition, the trial court
    granted summary judgment in the County’s favor. Starting with Vatalaro’s first cause of
    action, the court found that the County had “met its burden to show that [Vatalaro] cannot
    allege[] a prima facie case of retaliation because she has not alleged or presented
    evidence of protected conduct under this statute.” The court reasoned that Vatalaro had
    neither “alleged that she had a reasonable belief that a specific federal, state, or local law
    or regulation was violated by [the County],” nor “presented evidence that she engaged in
    protected conduct,” but instead had only showed that she complained about “internal
    9
    personnel matters.” The court added that Vatalaro’s claim for retaliation further failed
    for another reason: The County “presented evidence that it had a legitimate business
    reason for releasing her from probation” and Vatalaro “fail[ed] to raise a triable issue of
    material fact to support that the reasons given for the release from probation were
    ‘pretext.’ ” Turning to Vatalaro’s second cause of action, the court found, among other
    things, that “[t]his cause of action is barred because a public employee cannot state a
    common law claim for wrongful termination in violation of public policy against a public
    entity employer.”
    Vatalaro timely appealed.
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    A trial court may grant a motion for summary judgment “if all the papers
    submitted show that there is no triable issue as to any material fact and that the moving
    party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.” (Code Civ. Proc. § 437c, subd. (c).)
    To meet its burden on summary judgment, a moving defendant must show either
    that one or more elements of the plaintiff’s causes of action fail or that there is a complete
    defense to the plaintiff’s case. (Code Civ. Proc. § 437c, subd. (p)(2).) If the defendant
    meets this initial burden, the burden then shifts to the plaintiff to show that a triable issue
    of one or more material facts exists. (Ibid.) A triable issue of a material fact exists “if,
    and only if, the evidence would allow a reasonable trier of fact to find the underlying fact
    in favor of the party opposing the motion in accordance with the applicable standard of
    proof.” (Aguilar v. Atlantic Richfield Co. (2001) 
    25 Cal.4th 826
    , 845 (Aguilar).)
    We review an order granting summary judgment de novo, and “ ‘ “liberally
    construe the evidence in support of the party opposing summary judgment and resolve
    doubts concerning the evidence in favor of that party.” ’ [Citation.]” (Hartford Casualty
    Ins. Co. v. Swift Distribution, Inc. (2014) 
    59 Cal.4th 277
    , 286.)
    10
    DISCUSSION
    On appeal, Vatalaro challenges both the trial court’s grounds for rejecting her
    claim of retaliation under section 1102.5. First, she contends the trial court wrongly
    concluded that she could not establish a prima facie claim of retaliation under this statute.
    And second, she contends the trial court wrongly found that the County presented
    evidence showing it had a legitimate business reason for releasing her from probation.
    I.     Framework for Evaluating Section 1102.5 Claims
    Before turning to Vatalaro’s arguments, we start with the general framework for
    evaluating claims under section 1102.5.
    According to both parties in their initial briefing (and the trial court), courts
    evaluate a plaintiff’s section 1102.5 claim using a three-part burden-shifting framework.
    Under this framework, the employee must first establish a prima facie case of unlawful
    retaliation. Next, if the employee makes this showing, the employer then bears the
    burden of showing it had a legitimate, nondiscriminatory reason for the adverse
    employment action. Lastly, if the employer meets its burden, the burden then shifts back
    to the employee to show that the employer’s offered reason was merely a pretext for
    retaliation. Several courts, including our own, have endorsed this type of framework for
    evaluating section 1102.5 claims. (See Patten v. Grant Joint Union High School
    Dist. (2005) 
    134 Cal.App.4th 1378
    , 1384 [“The elements of a section 1102.5(b)
    retaliation cause of action require that (1) the plaintiff establish a prima facie case of
    retaliation, (2) the defendant provide a legitimate, nonretaliatory explanation for its acts,
    and (3) the plaintiff show this explanation is merely a pretext for the retaliation”]; Mokler
    v. County of Orange (2007) 
    157 Cal.App.4th 121
     [same]; Hager v. County of Los Angeles
    (2014) 
    228 Cal.App.4th 1538
    , 1540 [same].)
    But this framework for evaluating section 1102.5 claims is deeply flawed, as our
    Supreme Court recently explained in Lawson v. PPG Architectural Finishes, Inc. (2022)
    
    12 Cal.5th 703
     (Lawson). The principal flaw with the parties’ arguments (and the cases
    11
    on which they rely) is that they fail to acknowledge section 1102.6. Since 2003, that
    statute has stated: “In a civil action or administrative proceeding brought pursuant to
    Section 1102.5, once it has been demonstrated by a preponderance of the evidence that an
    activity proscribed by Section 1102.5 was a contributing factor in the alleged prohibited
    action against the employee, the employer shall have the burden of proof to demonstrate
    by clear and convincing evidence that the alleged action would have occurred for
    legitimate, independent reasons even if the employee had not engaged in activities
    protected by Section 1102.5.”
    The plain text of section 1102.6 undermines the parties’ offered three-part test for
    several reasons. We focus on three. First, the parties’ argument misunderstands the
    employer’s burden of production. The parties suggest that the employer need only supply
    evidence showing its position is more likely true than not. The employer, in particular,
    need only show by a preponderance of the evidence that it had a legitimate,
    nondiscriminatory reason for the adverse employment action to avoid liability. (See
    Aguilar, 
    supra,
     25 Cal.4th at p. 845 [describing the “preponderance of evidence”
    standard].) But section 1102.6 explicitly imposes a higher burden of production, clear
    and convincing evidence.
    Second, the parties’ argument misunderstands the employer’s required showing. It
    is not enough, as the parties have argued, that an employer shows it had a legitimate,
    nondiscriminatory reason for the adverse employment action. Were that the standard,
    then an employer could satisfy its burden simply by showing it had one legitimate reason
    for its action, even if several illegitimate reasons principally motivated its decision. (See
    Lawson v. PPG Architectural Finishes, Inc. (9th Cir. 2020) 
    982 F.3d 752
    , 759.) But that
    is not the applicable standard here. Under section 1102.6, the employer must instead
    show “the alleged action would have occurred for legitimate, independent reasons even if
    the employee had not engaged in activities protected by Section 1102.5.”
    12
    Third, the parties’ argument misunderstands the employee’s need to show pretext.
    Both parties, again, argue that the employee must show, at step three of the three-part
    burden-shifting framework, that the employer’s proffered reason for taking an adverse
    action was merely a pretext for retaliation. But although that requirement may make
    sense under a burden-shifting framework that only requires the employer to show it had a
    legitimate, nondiscriminatory reason for its action, it makes no sense under the
    framework described in section 1102.6. As the Lawson court explained, “[u]nder section
    1102.6, a plaintiff does not need to show that the employer’s nonretaliatory reason was
    pretextual. Even if the employer had a genuine, nonretaliatory reason for its adverse
    action, the plaintiff still carries the burden assigned by statute if it is shown that the
    employer also had at least one retaliatory reason that was a contributing factor in the
    action.” (Lawson, supra, 12 Cal.5th at p. 715-716.)
    For these reasons, we decline to apply the parties’ offered three-part framework
    for evaluating section 1102.5 claims. We instead look to section 1102.6, which “provides
    the governing framework.” (Lawson, supra, 12 Cal.5th at p. 718.) To sum up the
    statute’s requirements: “First, it places the burden on the plaintiff to establish, by a
    preponderance of the evidence, that retaliation for an employee’s protected activities was
    a contributing factor in a contested employment action. . . . Once the plaintiff has made
    the required showing, the burden shifts to the employer to demonstrate, by clear and
    convincing evidence, that it would have taken the action in question for legitimate,
    independent reasons even had the plaintiff not engaged in protected activity.” (Ibid.; see
    also § 1102.6.)
    II.    Prima Facie Claim of Retaliation
    With this framework in mind, we turn to Vatalaro’s contention that she could
    establish a prima facie claim of retaliation under section 1102.5—which is largely
    unaffected by the parties’ misunderstanding of the governing framework for these types
    of claims.
    13
    Section 1102.5, subdivision (b), as noted, prohibits employers from retaliating
    against whistleblowing employees. Relevant here, it states: “An employer . . . shall not
    retaliate against an employee for disclosing information . . . to a person with authority
    over the employee or another employee who has the authority to investigate, discover, or
    correct the violation or noncompliance . . . if the employee has reasonable cause to
    believe that the information discloses a violation of state or federal statute, or a violation
    of or noncompliance with a local, state, or federal rule or regulation, regardless of
    whether disclosing the information is part of the employee’s job duties.” (§ 1102.5, subd.
    (b).)
    Although the statute speaks in terms of employees who have “reasonable cause to
    believe” that the information they reveal discloses a violation of or noncompliance with a
    local, state, or federal law, all parties in this case appear to construe it to refer to
    employees who “reasonably believe” that the information they reveal discloses a
    violation of or noncompliance with the law. In Vatalaro’s words, for instance, the statute
    “merely requires [that she] had a reasonable belief that [the County’s] conduct violated
    the law or that it engaged in conduct that was noncompliant with a local, state, or federal
    rule or regulation.” (Original italics and underscores omitted.) And in the County’s
    similar words, “employees are protected from retaliation as whistleblowers if they
    reasonably believe their employer is engaged in illegal activity, and the employee
    discloses information regarding the suspected illegal activity to a government or law
    enforcement agency.” Several courts have interpreted the statute similarly. (See, e.g.,
    Nejadian v. County of Los Angeles (2019) 
    40 Cal.App.5th 703
    , 719 (Nejadian) [“under
    subdivision (b) of section 1102.5, . . . the employee must show only that he or she
    reasonably believed that there was a violation of a statute, rule, or regulation”]; Collier v.
    Superior Court (1991) 
    228 Cal.App.3d 1117
    , 1123 (Collier) [§ 1102.5 protects
    employees who report “a reasonably suspected violation of the law . . .”].)
    14
    We assume for a moment that the parties’ reading of the statute is correct. Under
    this reading, we find Vatalaro’s challenge to the trial court’s decision falls short. The
    trial court, again, concluded that Vatalaro could not establish a prima facie claim of
    retaliation, because she could not show she had a reasonable belief that the law had been
    violated. Challenging this conclusion, Vatalaro argues that she believed her assigned
    duties violated state “civil service rules” and that, for various reasons, her belief was
    reasonable. But as the County notes, Vatalaro ignores a significant issue in making this
    argument: She earlier conceded that she had no such belief during discovery. When
    asked at her deposition whether “it was her understanding” that her job description
    “violated civil service rules,” Vatalaro first offered an evasive response. But when the
    County’s attorney pressed the point, Vatalaro said, “I don’t know”—which we
    understand to be a clear concession that she did not have an understanding that her job
    description “violated civil service rules.” After further questioning, Vatalaro said her job
    description violated two things, neither of which included any civil service rule: “It
    violated the agreement [she] had with [Callejas] and . . . also violated some type of policy
    with HR.” Considering Vatalaro’s deposition testimony, we cannot accept her current
    claim that she in fact did believe her job description violated “civil service rules.”
    We find that true even though Vatalaro, in a declaration following her deposition,
    contradicted her deposition testimony. Shortly after her deposition, Vatalaro said in a
    declaration that she believed her job description “did not comply with the Civil Service
    Requirements.” Vatalaro, in other words, contradicted her earlier admission that she did
    not believe her job description “violated civil service rules.” But we find this belated
    declaration could not undo her earlier deposition admission. As other courts have
    explained, even at the summary judgment stage, courts “may give ‘great weight’ to
    admissions made in discovery and ‘disregard contradictory and self-serving affidavits of
    the party.’ ” (Whitmire v. Ingersoll-Rand Co. (2010) 
    184 Cal.App.4th 1078
    , 1087.)
    Applying this principle in this case, we find it appropriate to disregard Vatalaro’s
    15
    declaration about her understanding of civil service rules in light of her earlier,
    contradictory deposition testimony on the same topic.
    But all that said, we are not convinced that Vatalaro’s actual beliefs are the
    relevant consideration under section 1102.5—even though both parties argue otherwise
    on this point. Under the parties’ understanding, again, the phrases “reasonable cause to
    believe” and “reasonably believed” are equivalent. And so, when section 1102.5 refers to
    employees who had “reasonable cause to believe” that the information they revealed
    disclosed a violation of the law, the statute in effect refers to employees who “reasonably
    believed” that the information they revealed disclosed a violation. Many, perhaps most,
    decisions interpreting section 1102.5 have endorsed a similar reading. (See, e.g.,
    Nejadian, supra, 40 Cal.App.5th at p. 719 [“under subdivision (b) of section
    1102.5, . . . the employee must show only that he or she reasonably believed that there
    was a violation of a statute, rule, or regulation”]; Ross v. County of Riverside (2019)
    
    36 Cal.App.5th 580
    , 593 [§ 1102.5 “requires only that an employee disclose information
    and that the employee reasonably believe the information discloses unlawful activity”];
    Siri v. Sutter Home Winery, Inc. (2019) 
    31 Cal.App.5th 598
    , 605 [“Plaintiff’s right to
    recover turns only on whether she was discharged for communicating her reasonable
    belief that defendant was not properly reporting its use tax obligation.”]; Mize-Kurzman
    v. Marin Community College Dist. (2012) 
    202 Cal.App.4th 832
    , 850 [an employee must
    at least “voice a reasonable suspicion that a violation of a constitutional, statutory, or
    regulatory provision has occurred”]; Collier, supra, 228 Cal.App.3d at p. 1123 [same].)1
    1  Our Supreme Court, citing Collier, found in one case that an employee’s “ ‘reasonably
    based suspicions’ ” were enough to trigger section 1102.5. (Green v. Ralee Engineering
    Co. (1998) 
    19 Cal.4th 66
    , 87.) But the court did not discuss the outer reach of the
    statute’s “reasonable cause to believe” language. It did not, for example, discuss whether
    an employee who had reasonable cause to be suspicious, but was not in fact suspicious,
    could also invoke the statute.
    16
    But despite these many cases supporting the parties’ reading, we hesitate to
    interpret section 1102.5 similarly. The courts in these several cases, for whatever reason,
    appeared to have equated “reasonable cause to believe” with “reasonably believes.” And
    perhaps, given the facts of these cases, their doing so was immaterial. But these phrases
    are not equivalent. A person, after all, may have “reasonable to cause to believe” that
    something is true, even if she does not in fact believe it to be true. The Legislature has
    itself recognized as much in other circumstances. (See Pen. Code, § 26 [recognizing that
    defendants may have had reasonable cause to believe their lives were endangered even if
    they did not in fact believe their lives were endangered; duress is a defense to any
    noncapital crime where defendants acted “under threats or menaces sufficient show that
    they had reasonable cause to and did believe their lives would be endangered if they
    refused”].) So too have other courts. (See, e.g., Bernstein v. South Cent. Bell Telephone
    Co. (5th Cir. 1984) 
    730 F.2d 987
    , 991 [“the district court’s finding turns not on what [the
    defendant] in fact believed, but on what [it] had ‘reasonable cause’ to believe”]; Yorke v.
    Thomas Iseri Produce Co. (7th Cir. 1969) 
    418 F.2d 811
    , 814 [“the decision turns not on
    what the officers of the bank in fact believed, but on what they had ‘reasonable cause’ to
    believe”].)
    Considering the generally acknowledged distinction between a person who has
    cause to believe something is true and a person who actually believes something is true,
    we harbor serious doubts about the parties’ understanding of section 1102.5. But we stop
    short of rejecting their reading altogether. In some circumstances, notably, courts have
    construed “reasonable cause to believe” to mean “reasonable cause to believe” and
    “actually believes.” That was true, for example, in People v. Gonzales (2013) 
    56 Cal.4th 353
    . Our Supreme Court there construed Evidence Code section 1024, which creates an
    exception to the psychotherapist-patient privilege when “the psychotherapist has
    reasonable cause to believe that the patient is in such mental or emotional condition as to
    be dangerous to himself or to the person or property of another and that disclosure of the
    17
    communication is necessary to prevent the threatened danger.” Although the statute, by
    its terms, only requires the psychotherapist to have “reasonable cause to believe” the
    patient is dangerous, the court found a broader interpretation appropriate after
    considering “the Law Revision Commission Comment accompanying this exception.”
    The court reasoned that this comment “indicates that the drafters intended the exception
    to come into play only when the therapist has reasonable cause to believe and actually
    believes that the patient is dangerous.” (People v. Gonzales, supra, 56 Cal. 4th at p. 381,
    fn. 12, italics added.) Perhaps similar considerations could favor a similar reading of
    section 1102.5. But because, as we turn to next, we conclude that the trial court’s
    decision can be sustained on an alternative ground, we need not pursue this issue further.
    III.    Legitimate, Nonretaliatory Reason
    We consider next Vatalaro’s contention that the County’s stated grounds for
    releasing her from probation “lack[] credence and competent evidence” and were merely
    a “pretext” for retaliation.
    Vatalaro’s argument on this point follows from her (and the County’s and the trial
    court’s) initial misunderstanding of the governing framework for section 1102.5 claims.
    Again, all proceeded on the understanding that an employer could defeat an employee’s
    retaliation claim under section 1102.5 if (1) it showed it had a legitimate,
    nondiscriminatory reason for the adverse employment action and (2) the employee failed
    to show its proffered reason was merely a pretext for discrimination. But as covered
    above, their understanding was flawed. Once an employee makes a prima facie case
    under section 1102.5, the employer must do more than show it had a legitimate,
    nondiscriminatory reason for the adverse employment action. It must, per section 1102.6,
    “demonstrate, by clear and convincing evidence, that it would have taken the action in
    question for legitimate, independent reasons even had the plaintiff not engaged in
    protected activity.” (Lawson, supra, 12 Cal.5th at p. 718; see also § 1102.6.) And, as the
    18
    Lawson court explained, the employee need not “show that the employer’s nonretaliatory
    reason was pretextual.” (Id. at p. 716.)
    Because all parties (and the trial court) relied on the wrong standard at the trial
    level, and because the parties continued to rely on this standard in their initial briefs on
    appeal, we asked the parties to submit supplemental briefing to account for Lawson and
    section 1102.6. According to Vatalaro’s supplemental briefing, the County’s evidence
    was insufficient to show that her release from probation would have happened even had
    she not complained that she was working on low-level assignments. But according to the
    County’s supplemental briefing, the County met its burden “to establish by clear and
    convincing evidence that it would have made the same employment decision without
    [the] alleged protected conduct.” We ultimately agree with the County. Although the
    County pointed to the wrong standard in its motion for summary judgment, it nonetheless
    supplied sufficient evidence to satisfy the more demanding standard under section
    1102.6. In particular, it demonstrated by clear and convincing evidence that it would
    have released Vatalaro from probation for legitimate, independent reasons even had
    Vatalaro not engaged in the allegedly protected conduct.
    The County, again, offered three reasons for its decision to release Vatalaro from
    probation: Vatalaro had been “ ‘insubordinate, disrespectful, and dishonest.’ ” Yamasaki
    described her reasons for reaching this conclusion in a memorandum recommending
    Vatalaro’s release. She stated, for instance, that Vatalaro had been dishonest on several
    occasions. On one occasion, for example, she noted that Vatalaro “indicated that she
    could not complete her work as she could not talk directly to” a co-worker during a
    meeting. Vatalaro explained that Moore had prohibited her from speaking during the
    meeting. But after Moore said that Vatalaro did speak in the meeting, Vatalaro admitted
    that she in fact “did participate in the meeting by talking and asking questions.”
    Yamasaki further stated that Vatalaro had repeatedly been insubordinate and
    disrespectful. She wrote that Vatalaro repeatedly called several work meetings “a waste
    19
    of her time” and, on one occasion, declined to meet with her because she thought it would
    not be a “valuable use of [her] time.” She added that after she asked Vatalaro to research
    test analytics software for staff, Vatalaro “roll[ed] her eyes, look[ed] away, and
    gestur[ed] with her hands as if it were a waste of time to pursue this for . . . staff.” She
    noted that after she sought Vatalaro’s assistance on another occasion, Yamasaki emailed:
    “Anytime you need another secretary, just let me know.” She wrote that after she
    requested an update from Vatalaro on a project, Vatalaro sent her an email with the
    subject line “Dear Fran,” in reference to a former County employee who had a poor
    reputation as a manager. She stated that, following a misunderstanding about an
    assignment, Vatalaro wrote “a disrespectful and unprofessional” email that accused
    Yamasaki of wasting her time. And she noted, among other things, that Vatalaro
    expressed dissatisfaction with her job and said she planned to “promote up higher” to a
    better position.
    Vatalaro, as best we can tell, never meaningfully disputed the alleged act of
    dishonesty discussed above. She did, however, offer additional facts. Yamasaki, again,
    noted that Vatalaro “indicated that she could not complete her work as she could not talk
    directly to” a co-worker during a meeting, but she then later admitted she “did participate
    in the meeting by talking and asking questions.” Touching on this topic at her deposition,
    Vatalaro maintained that Moore did in fact instruct her not to speak during this meeting.
    But Yamasaki never said any differently in recommending Vatalaro’s release. She
    instead accused Vatalaro of acting dishonestly because she “indicated that she could not
    complete her work as she could not talk directly to” the co-worker during the meeting,
    even though she ultimately conceded she “did participate in the meeting by talking and
    asking questions.” Whether Moore initially instructed Vatalaro not to speak in the
    meeting thus appears to have been immaterial to Yamasaki’s reasoning for finding
    Vatalaro acted dishonestly.
    20
    Vatalaro also, as far as we can tell, never disputed the alleged acts of disrespectful
    and insubordinate conduct discussed above. And considering the undisputed evidence of
    her emails, her declining to do so is perhaps not surprising. Early in Vatalaro’s tenure as
    an ASO III, for instance, Yamasaki emailed Vatalaro to set up a one-on-one meeting and
    mentioned some agenda topics for the meeting. But Vatalaro responded that “[t]hese
    agenda items have already been given to you as far as updates go.” She then added: “I
    would like to make valuable use of my time so if there is something more you would like
    to discuss please let me know or else we could discuss these through a phone call.” In a
    separate email, to give another example, Vatalaro accused Yamasaki of wasting her time
    by failing to sufficiently clarify an assignment, writing: “You know, you could have
    saved a whole lot of time if you just would have said that an hour ago.” And in another
    email, to give one last example, Vatalaro sent her an email with the subject line “Dear
    Fran”—again, in apparent reference to a former County employee who had a poor
    reputation as a manager. Not surprisingly, Yamasaki regarded Vatalaro as acting
    disrespectful and insubordinate in these instances.
    Even Vatalaro acknowledged her shortcomings at one point, at least in part.
    According to her own notes, during a phone call with Yamasaki, Yamasaki described
    “how difficult it’s been working with [Vatalaro] because she has felt that [Vatalaro] ha[s]
    been distant and unwilling to cooperate.” In attempting to justify her conduct, Vatalaro
    noted that Callejas had told her before she started her new role that Yamasaki “didn’t
    want [her] in the management position.” She then asked: “[H]ow do you expect me to
    react when I’m being told that I’m moving under a manager who doesn’t want me and
    was forced to move me into the position . . . ?” Even Vatalaro, then, appeared to at least
    acknowledge that she had been “difficult” to work with, “distant,” and “unwilling to
    cooperate.”
    Considering these and other facts in the record, we conclude that the County’s
    undisputed evidence would require a reasonable factfinder to find it “highly probable”
    21
    that the County’s decision to release Vatalaro from probation would have occurred for
    legitimate, independent reasons even if Vatalaro had not complained about working on
    low-level assignments. (Conservatorship of O.B. (2020) 
    9 Cal.5th 989
    , 1011-1012
    [discussing appellate review of findings made under the clear-and-convincing evidence
    standard].) We find, that is, that the County presented sufficient undisputed evidence to
    satisfy its burden under section 1102.6 on summary judgment. We also find that Vatalaro
    failed to raise any triable issue of material fact that would preclude summary judgment in
    this case.
    Although Vatalaro’s claims the County’s evidence falls short for several reasons,
    we find none of her arguments raise a triable issue as to any material fact. She first
    attempts to mischaracterize the County’s reasoning for dismissing her. In her telling, the
    County’s “underlying facts supporting a release from probation rest solely on the fact that
    Vatalaro was not a ‘potted plant’ and that she continued to try to right what she perceived
    was a wrong—the fact that she was being forced to work below class without any
    recourse.” But that is not a fair characterization. As covered, Yamasaki detailed specific
    instances in which Vatalaro had been “insubordinate, disrespectful, and dishonest.” And
    again, even Vatalaro appeared to acknowledge that she had been “difficult” to work with,
    “distant,” and “unwilling to cooperate.” Vatalaro’s contrary characterization of the facts
    finds no support in the record.
    Vatalaro also argues that the County’s stated reasons for releasing her from
    probation were “factually baseless” because she “was a competent employee,” “was
    never coached or disciplined,” and “was never provided assignments where she could
    manage or provide leadership.” But all these arguments are either immaterial or lack
    evidentiary support. First, we accept that Vatalaro was generally “a competent
    employee.” Even the County does not appear to dispute this point. But Vatalaro’s
    general competency as an employee is not material to this case, which concerns the
    County’s adverse employment action based on her “insubordinate, disrespectful, and
    22
    dishonest” conduct, not the quality of her work. Second, although Vatalaro contends she
    “was never provided assignments where she could manage or provide leadership,” she
    fails to support her contention with supportive facts. And in any event, in her
    memorandum recommending Vatalaro’s release, Yamasaki noted that she tried to place
    Vatalaro in charge of managing data entry staff. But Vatalaro called it “a dump job,”
    complained “there were lots of personnel problems with staff in the unit,” and stated that
    Moore should continue to supervise the unit—something that Vatalaro never appears to
    have disputed. Lastly, although Vatalaro claims that she was “never coached or
    disciplined,” her record citations only show that she was never coached or disciplined in
    writing. According to Yamasaki and Callejas, however, she was coached and disciplined
    orally. Yamasaki testified that she gave Vatalaro an “oral warning,” expressed
    “concern[] about her probationary status,” and “coach[ed] her on areas of improvement.”
    Callejas, in turn, testified that she coached Vatalaro about steps she could take to “work
    better with [Yamasaki],” including advising her to be careful on her use of sarcasm.
    Vatalaro never disputes this testimony. Nor does she dispute that, before her release,
    Yamasaki and Moore prepared a written agenda discussing her perceived shortcomings
    and discussed these issues with her in a meeting.
    Vatalaro next suggests that the County’s stated reasons should not be accepted
    because “[n]either of Vatalaro’s supervisors involved with writing and signing the letter
    [recommending release] verified any of the facts which formed the basis for Vatalaro’s
    release from probation.” Vatalaro, in other words, appears to fault Yamasaki for relying
    solely on unverified complaints against Vatalaro to justify her decision recommending
    Vatalaro’s release from probation. But nothing in the record supports her claim.
    Yamasaki made clear that she relied principally on her own personal interactions with
    Vatalaro. She noted, for instance, that she heard Vatalaro repeatedly call meetings a
    waste of time, she received an email from Vatalaro refusing to meet with her because she
    thought it would not be a “valuable use of [her] time,” and she heard Vatalaro claim that
    23
    “she could not complete her work as she could not talk directly to” a co-worker during a
    meeting, even though Vatalaro later conceded that she in fact “did participate in the
    meeting by talking and asking questions.” As this and other evidence show, Yamasaki
    did not rely solely on unverified complaints against Vatalaro, as Vatalaro suggests; she
    instead relied principally on her own personal interactions with Vatalaro.
    Finally, Vatalaro suggests that two of the County’s stated reasons could not
    support the decision releasing her from probation. First, she asserts that Yamasaki
    claimed she “did not get along with staff . . . based upon an incident that occurred in
    2013—two years before Vatalaro took the ASO III position.” Second, she claims that
    Yamasaki accused her of lying after she reported that Yamasaki and Moore had harassed
    her. But Vatalaro’s arguments appear to be premised on a misunderstanding of the
    record. Nothing in Yamasaki’s memorandum recommending Vatalaro’s release alludes
    to Vatalaro’s failure to get along with staff in 2013 nor accuses Vatalaro of raising false
    claims of harassment. And although Yamasaki’s memorandum, as discussed, detailed
    various specific incidents when Vatalaro allegedly acted insubordinate, disrespectful, and
    dishonest, Vatalaro generally, if not entirely, ignores these incidents.
    In sum, because the County met its burden under section 1102.6 to show that it
    would have released Vatalaro from probation for legitimate, independent reasons even if
    Vatalaro had never complained about her assignments, and because Vatalaro has failed to
    raise any triable issue of material fact on this issue, we conclude that the trial court
    properly granted judgment in the County’s favor. (Cf. Gonzalez v. City of New
    York (S.D.N.Y. 2020) 
    442 F.Supp.3d 665
    , 697-698 [finding, under a framework similar
    to the one described in section 1102.6, that the “Defendants have met their burden to
    show that they would have failed to interview [an employee for a position] even if he had
    never filed the Internal Grievance or lodged other complaints,” based on evidence the
    employee “was excessively absent and insubordinate and lied [about his job title] on [a]
    questionnaire”] aff’d Gonzalez v. City of New York (2d Cir. 2021) 
    845 Fed.Appx. 11
    .)
    24
    DISPOSITION
    The judgment is affirmed. The County is entitled to recover its costs on appeal.
    (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.278(a).)
    \s\                     ,
    BLEASE, Acting P. J.
    We concur:
    \s\              ,
    HULL, J.
    \s\              ,
    KRAUSE, J.
    25
    

Document Info

Docket Number: C090896

Filed Date: 5/5/2022

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 5/5/2022