Reese v. Enjoy Technology CA1/2 ( 2022 )


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  •       Filed 5/18/22 Reese v. Enjoy Technology CA1/2
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
    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 This opinion has not
    been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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
    FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION TWO
    CHRISTOPHER REESE,
    Plaintiff and Respondent,
    A161662
    v.
    ENJOY TECHNOLOGY, INC                                        (Alameda County
    et al.,                                                      Super. Ct. No.
    HG20065994)
    Defendants and Appellants.
    Defendants Enjoy Technology, Inc. (Enjoy), Christopher Harris, and
    Jasmin Staubli appeal from an order that denied their motion to compel
    Christopher Reese to arbitrate his claims against them. We affirm.
    BACKGROUND
    The Parties and the General Setting
    Enjoy is a technology company that uses its technology to offer direct
    delivery and setup of cellular phones and peripherals to customers. Some of
    Enjoy’s employees, called “experts,” deliver the phones to the customer’s
    home, office, or other location and assist the customer with the setup process
    and related activities.
    In November 2018, respondent Christopher Reese went to work at
    Enjoy as an expert. Prior to that employment, Reese was presented with an
    email referring to a series of documents to sign prior to being hired, the
    1
    details of which are critical to the issue here, and will be described below.
    Reese’s employment at Enjoy ended approximately a year after it began, in
    November 2019, when Reese resigned, later claiming to have been
    constructively discharged.
    The Proceedings Below
    On June 26, 2020, Reese filed a complaint naming three defendants:
    Enjoy, Christopher Harris, and Jasmin Staubli, the individuals alleged to be
    Reese’s supervisors, with Harris his direct supervisor. The complaint alleged
    various claims based on the Fair Employment and Housing Act (FEHA),
    including racial discrimination, harassment, retaliation, and failure to
    prevent; it also alleged common-law claims, violations of the Labor Code, and
    emotional distress.
    The essence of Reese’s claims was that he, an African-American male,
    was disproportionately assigned to deliveries in high crime, low-income areas
    like Oakland and Vallejo rather than in safer, primarily Caucasian, higher
    income areas like Walnut Creek and Marin County. Reese alleged when he
    raised other safety concerns, such as with the storage of items to be delivered
    in his delivery vehicle, the concerns were disregarded; and when he raised
    these concerns with human resources, he received no response. Reese
    resigned, effective November 5, 2019, claiming to be constructively
    discharged.
    On August 4, Enjoy, Harris, and Staubli (collectively defendants) filed a
    motion to compel arbitration, based on Code of Civil Procedure section
    1281.2. The motion argued all Reese’s claims were governed by an
    arbitration provision in what defendants described as an “Employment and
    Arbitration Agreement” he had signed.
    2
    Enjoy’s moving papers included the notice of motion, a short
    memorandum of points and authorities, and the declaration of Clare McKay,
    Enjoy’s senior legal counsel. McKay’s declaration was a short, six-
    paragraphs, comprising all of 29-lines, only seven lines of which had anything
    to do with Reese’s pre-employment communications with Enjoy. These are
    the seven lines:
    “Plaintiff Christopher Reese was hired by Enjoy in November 2018. On
    November 4, 2018, he was provided with a copy of Enjoy’s At-Will
    Employment, Confidential Information, Invention Assignment, and
    Arbitration Agreement (hereinafter ‘Arbitration Agreement’). He was given
    time to review the materials and ask any questions he may have regarding it.
    After reviewing the Employment Agreement, Mr. Reese signed and returned
    the document. [¶] Attached hereto as Exhibit 1 is a true and correct copy of
    the Arbitration Agreement signed by Mr. Reese on November 5, 2018.”
    McKay’s declaration provided no details whatsoever as to how Reese
    was “provided” the “Arbitration Agreement”—indeed, what in fact he was
    “provided.” This, it would develop, would be shown only in Reese’s
    declaration in opposition to defendants’ motion, and to a lesser extent from a
    declaration submitted by defendants in its reply to that opposition.
    And what it showed was that late on the evening of November 4—
    7:44:46 p.m. to be exact—Fatima Franco, the People Success Coordinator at
    Enjoy, sent Reese an email that provided in relevant part as follows:
    “Hi Christopher!
    “Congratulations and welcome to the Enjoy family. We are super
    excited to have you join us on November 26th!
    3
    “You will receive an email shortly from BambooHR, our HR portal.
    You’ll see a few things in this email from BambooHR that you’ll need to
    complete. Please complete these within the next 24 hours.
    “1. Complete & verify your personal information:
    “This can be found under the ‘Personal’ tab you can find at the top of
    the page. Please fill in your personal information, including Social Security
    Number, Date of Birth, Emergency Contact, mailing address and Driver’s
    license information (located under the ‘Personal’ tab) and Uniform Size
    (located under the ‘Assets’ tab). If you provided this information to your
    recruiter upon hire, please verify that your information is correct-please see
    below on where to find that information.
    “*You must complete this on a desktop to see all fields.
    “2. Complete the documents found in BambooHR:
    “1. PIIA
    “2. Photo Release
    “3. AT&T Release Form
    “4. I-9 Form (the remaining text boxes to be completed by HR
    when you start)
    “5. Company Vehicle Operating & Usage Policy
    “6. Sexual Harassment Policy
    “7. Acceptable Use Policy
    “8. Background-DMV-Drug Screen (The background/drug
    screen will be initiated as soon as you enter your driver’s license
    information in BambooHR. Please see below on where to fill that out
    in BambooHR. . . .”
    4
    So, what Franco sent to Reese to complete were eight documents,
    containing untold pages, not one of which, it is clear, made any mention of
    “arbitration” or an “arbitration agreement.”
    On September 9, Reese filed his opposition to the motion, which
    included a memorandum of points and authorities and his declaration. The
    points and authorities argued that: (1) defendants had not met their burden
    of proving an agreement to arbitrate; and (2) the agreement was
    unenforceable because it was unconscionable.
    As to Reese’s declaration, he testified about “onboarding documents via
    email that “I was forced to complete.” And, Reese went on, “No one at Enjoy
    explained to me that one of those onboarding documents was an arbitration
    agreement and no one explained what an arbitration agreement was to me.”
    Later in his declaration Reese testified that, “[u]pon being given the
    onboarding documents, I was not told that I could ask any questions I had
    related to the documents. Additionally, I was never told to consult with an
    attorney prior to completing any of the onboarding documents. [¶] Around
    the time that I was offered the position at Enjoy, I attempted to negotiate my
    pay rate with an individual from human resources, but I was told this was
    not possible. At the time of being given the onboarding documents, I was
    never given an opportunity to negotiate the terms in the onboarding
    documents, and clearly, not any of the terms of the arbitration agreement. I
    was never told that I could negotiate the terms of my onboarding documents
    and based on my experience with attempting to negotiate the pay rate, I
    never believed that negotiating the terms of the onboarding documents was a
    possibility. I was never even told there was an arbitration agreement
    contained in the various onboarding documents. I do not recall signing any
    document that contained an arbitration provision. I was not aware that the
    5
    arbitration agreement constituted a waiver of a jury trial nor was I told that I
    could opt out of such an agreement. [¶] . . . [¶] I did not know there was an
    arbitration provision included in the onboarding documents, nor did I
    understand that I was waiving my rights to a jury trial. I never consented to
    waiving my rights to a jury trial because I did not consent to the arbitration
    agreement.”
    As noted, the claimed factual support in Enjoy’s motion—the entire
    factual support—was in McKay’s declaration, a declaration that, without
    foundation, testified that Reese was provided with a copy of Enjoy’s “At-Will
    Employment, Confidential Information, Invention Assignment, and
    Arbitration Agreement.” McKay’s declaration did not provide how she
    allegedly knew this information, or whether she personally provided Reese
    with the agreement. McKay’s declaration also testified, again without
    foundation, that Reese “was given time to review the materials,” and to ask
    any questions he might have had. Finally, in the same conclusory manner,
    McKay testified that “after reviewing the employment agreement [Reese]
    signed and returned the document.”
    In light of the significance of McKay’s declaration, Reese’s counsel took
    her deposition, at which she admitted she did not have personal knowledge of
    whether Reese actually signed the arbitration agreement, or any other
    document purportedly provided to him in the November 4 email. She also
    admitted she did not witness Reese sign any documents. Instead, McKay
    said that she had “personal knowledge” that Reese signed the purported
    arbitration agreement simply because the arbitration agreement “ha[d] his
    [electronic] signature on it.” And while McKay testified in her declaration
    that Reese was given the opportunity to read the arbitration agreement and
    ask questions about it, McKay also admitted she had no personal knowledge
    6
    of whether Reese was told he could ask questions about the arbitration
    agreement, assuming it was ever given to him.1 In short, McKay’s deposition
    testimony belied the testimony in her declaration, and Reese’s opposition
    included lengthy objections to her “evidence.”
    Defendants filed a reply, which included a brief declaration of Fatima
    Franco, the people operations manager within Enjoy’s human resources
    department who had provided the email to Reese. Franco’s declaration
    attached what she called a “true and correct copy of an email chain between
    Mr. Reese and myself dated November 5, 2018,” which email chain provided
    in pertinent part that Reese sent an email to Franco stating: “Hello Fatima,
    My name is Christopher Reese I completed all the paperwork”; that Franco
    replied: “Hi Christopher! Thank you for completing the forms so quickly”;
    and that Reese responded by thanking her for her response.
    As is apparent, nowhere mentioned in Franco’s email is the document
    on which Enjoy’s motion is based—an “At-Will Employment, Confidential
    Information, Invention Assignment, and Arbitration Agreement,” which
    defendants’ brief short-handedly calls the “Employment and Arbitration
    Agreement.” According to McKay, the “At-Will Employment, Confidential
    Information, Invention Assignment, and Arbitration Agreement” was the title
    of the document containing the arbitration agreement Enjoy claimed Reese
    signed during his hiring process, and which was referred to in Franco’s email
    as “PIIA.” As defendants’ brief blissfully puts it, without any explanation or
    discussion, “Franco states the ‘At-Will Employment, Confidential
    1 McKay also testified there was no time frame by which Reese needed
    to return the documents, which was clearly contradicted by the November 4,
    2018 email that specifically stated that Reese had 24 hours to complete the
    documents listed in the email.
    7
    Information, Invention Assignment, and Arbitration Agreement [is] referred
    to as the PIIA.’ ”
    What the acronym PIIA stands for is never explained. And for
    whatever reason, defendants seem pleased with the content and placement of
    the arbitration provision, which they describe at one point this way: “The
    Employment and Arbitration Agreement . . . is a single document, consisting
    of 12 pages, which includes numbered paragraph headings 1−14, plus six
    (6) pages of exhibits. [Citation.] In the body of the Employment and
    Arbitration Agreement, on the eighth page, is paragraph heading 13 entitled
    ‘ARBITRATION AND EQUITABLE RELIEF.’ [Citation.] It contains five
    (5) subparagraphs, A−E, including ‘Arbitration,’ ‘Procedure,’ ‘Remedy,’
    ‘Administrative Relief’ and ‘Voluntary Nature of Agreement.’ [Citation.] The
    entire arbitration provision is in all caps and various sections are also
    bolded.” In short, the arbitration provision is on the eighth page of a 12-page
    document—a document, it bears repeating, described in Franco’s email as
    “PIIA.”
    The motion came on for hearing on October 28, prior to which the trial
    court had issued a tentative ruling denying the motion. At the conclusion of
    the hearing the court took the motion under submission, and the next day
    entered its final order denying the motion. The order was a comprehensive,
    four single-spaced pages which, following its introduction, set forth the
    applicable law. It then described in detail McKay’s declaration, at the
    conclusion of which description the court said, “The Court SUSTAINS
    [Reese’s] objections Nos. 1−3 to this declaration on the grounds that McKay
    admitted during deposition that she does not have personal knowledge
    regarding the circumstances surrounding [Reese’s] alleged signing of the
    8
    Arbitration Agreement.2 The Court OVERRULES the remaining objections
    to the McKay declaration.”
    The court then quoted the arbitration provision on which defendants
    rely, noting “[t]he arbitration agreement appears to have the electronic
    signature of ‘Christopher Jermaine Reese’ dated November 5, 2018.” Then,
    after briefly detailing Reese’s claims, the court went on to frame the question:
    “Here, there is no dispute over whether [Reese’s] claims are within the scope
    of the Arbitration Agreement, if it were valid. However, [Reese] argues that
    the document presented by Enjoy’s counsel is not properly authenticated and
    that the Arbitration Agreement is unconscionable.”
    The court then noted—and properly so—that defendants bear “the
    burden of proving the existence of a valid arbitration agreement by a
    preponderance of the evidence,” quoting from Ruiz v. Moss Bros. Auto Group,
    Inc. (2014) 
    232 Cal.App.4th 836
    , 842 (Ruiz), going on to describe that case at
    some length. And the order concluded as follows:
    2 In quoting the trial court’s order, defendants’ brief notes, in a footnote
    yet, that “[t]he trial court also made some evidentiary rulings, but they are
    immaterial and do not bear on the determination of the motion or this
    appeal.” Such comment is truly perplexing, as the three objections sustained
    by the trial court were to these passages in McKay’s declaration: (1) “On
    November 4, 2018, [Reese] was provided with a copy of Enjoy’s At-Will
    Employment, Confidential Information, Invention Assignment, and
    Arbitration Agreement (hereinafter ‘Arbitration Agreement’)”; (2) he “was
    given time to review the materials and ask any questions he may have
    regarding it”; and (3) “after reviewing the Employment Agreement, Mr. Reese
    signed and returned the document.” The trial court sustained these three
    objections, explaining at length why, including with its holding that “[i]t is
    clear that [Reese] is disputing that he signed the [a]rbitration [a]greement,
    and therefore it was [Enjoy’s] burden to provide evidence authenticating
    [Reese’s] purported electronic signature.” These are hardly “immaterial”
    rulings.
    9
    “As in Ruiz, [Reese] in this case asserts that he was given onboarding
    documents to complete, but does not recall signing an arbitration agreement.
    (Declaration of Christopher Reese [‘Reese Dec.’] ¶ 6 [‘I do not recall signing
    any document that contained an arbitration provision’].) [Reese] points out
    that during McKay’s deposition, she states that she did not have personal
    knowledge that [Reese] was told that he could ask any questions regarding
    the Arbitration Agreement, did not have personal knowledge that [Reese]
    reviewed the Arbitration Agreement, and she did not witness [Reese] sign the
    document. (Declaration of Carla Espinoza [‘Espinoza Dec.’], Ex. 3 at
    17:1−18:18.) Instead, McKay states that she has ‘personal knowledge that
    [Reese] signed the document’ because the Arbitration Agreement ‘has his
    signature on it, which was authenticated by BambooHR.’ (Id. at 18:6−10.)
    When asked how BambooHR authenticates a signature, McKay stated that
    ‘it’s similar to DocuSign,’ in that it ‘electronically authenticates the signature
    after the employee signs,’ ‘prompts them to confirm their signature,’ and
    ‘confirms the IP address[.]’ (Id. at 18:19−25.)
    “After [Reese] challenged the authenticity of the document and stated
    that he did not recall signing an arbitration agreement, Defendants were
    required to provide any evidence to establish the authenticity of the
    Arbitration Agreement or electronic signature as stated in Ruiz. Instead,
    Defendants simply argue that they did not have to authenticate the
    Arbitration Agreement as a preliminary matter, and that [Reese] purportedly
    did not dispute the fact that he signed the Arbitration Agreement. It is clear
    that [Reese] is disputing that he signed the Arbitration Agreement, and
    therefore it was Defendants’ burden to provide evidence authenticating his
    purported electronic signature. As Defendants failed to do so, they failed to
    establish the existence of an arbitration agreement. On this ground, the
    10
    Court DENIES WITHOUT PREJUDICE Defendants’ Motion to Compel
    Arbitration.
    “The Court does not reach the remaining issues regarding the
    enforceability and validity of the Arbitration Agreement.”
    On November 13, defendants filed their notice of appeal.
    DISCUSSION
    Introduction
    Defendants have filed an opening brief that contains a total of 14 pages
    of “argument,” consisting of these three bold-faced statements:
    “A. Defendants need not authenticate the signed Employment and
    Arbitration Agreement for it to be enforceable”; “B. Plaintiff’s failure to read
    the Employment and Arbitration Agreement or recall its arbitration
    provision does not shift the burden to Defendants to prove its authenticity”;
    and “C. The trial court misapplied the facts and erred in relying on Ruiz[,
    supra, 
    232 Cal.App.4th 836
    ], which is distinguishable on its face, in denying
    Defendants’ motion.”
    While “A” and “B” may be correct statements as far as they go in the
    abstract, they fail to come to grips with the situation here. And “C” is simply
    wrong. The trial court got it right.
    The Law and the Standard of Review
    A party moving to compel arbitration has the burden to prove the
    existence of a valid agreement to arbitrate. (See Code Civ. Proc, § 1281.2
    [court will order arbitration “if it determines that an agreement to
    arbitrate . . . exists”].) In the words of the Supreme Court, “The petitioner
    bears the burden of proving the existence of a valid arbitration agreement by
    the preponderance of the evidence, and a party opposing the petition bears
    the burden of proving by a preponderance of the evidence any fact necessary
    11
    to its defense. [Citation.] [T]he trial court sits as the trier of fact, weighing
    all the affidavits, declarations, and other documentary evidence, as well as
    any oral testimony received at the court’s discretion, to reach a final
    determination.” (Engalla v. Permanente Medical Group, Inc. (1997)
    
    15 Cal.4th 951
    , 972; accord, Ruiz, supra, 232 Cal.App.4th at p. 842.)
    And we review the matter in light of the applicable standard of review,
    which we have described this way: “There is no uniform standard of review
    for evaluating an order denying a motion to compel arbitration. [Citation.] If
    the court’s order is based on a decision of fact, then we adopt a substantial
    evidence standard. [Citations.] Alternatively, if the court’s denial rests
    solely on a decision of law, then a de novo standard of review is employed.
    [Citations.]” (Robertson v. Health Net of California, Inc. (2005)
    
    132 Cal.App.4th 1419
    , 1425; accord, Carlson v. Home Team Pest Defense, Inc.
    (2015) 
    239 Cal.App.4th 619
    , 630.)
    Here, the trial court considered and analyzed all the facts and
    circumstances to arrive at its holding—an analysis, not incidentally, counsel
    for defendants point-blank acknowledged at oral argument was what was
    involved. As counsel there put it, the court “will look at context and
    surrounding circumstances to all available evidence and inferences that can
    be drawn from that.” That is the setting here, a determination of fact—and it
    is supported by the record.
    As noted, the trial court relied heavily on Ruiz. So does Reese. And so
    will we, as the facts are almost indistinguishable from the setting here.
    There, like here, an employer sought to compel arbitration based on a
    declaration by a person without first-hand knowledge—there, business
    manager Main—that the employee electronically signed an agreement to
    arbitrate, a declaration that did not explain how Main arrived at her
    12
    conclusion. As the Court of Appeal described it, Ruiz’s opposition argued that
    “Main’s ‘conclusory statement’ that he electronically signed the 2011
    agreement was ‘not enough to prove by a preponderance of the evidence’ that
    he did, in fact, electronically sign the agreement. In his opposing declaration,
    Ruiz averred he did not recall signing any arbitration agreement on
    September 21, 2011, or at any other time, and if he had been presented with
    an agreement that limited his ability to sue Moss Bros. he would not have
    signed it. [¶] Ruiz further indicated, however, that he may have signed an
    arbitration agreement when he was hired as a service technician for Moss
    Bros. in March 2010, but he was uncertain. On March 12, his first day of
    work, he met with his supervisor, Mike Dawe, to process his ‘new-hire
    paperwork,’ and during this meeting he was given a ‘big stack of forms’ and
    was told he had to sign them. He was given a brief description of each form
    but not an opportunity to ‘read each and every form.’ He then met with
    Kimberly Pacheco who had him ‘electronically sign a few [additional] forms,’
    but he did not recall signing any arbitration agreement when he was hired in
    2010, and he did not receive copies of any of the forms he was required to
    sign.” (Ruiz, supra, 232 Cal.App.4th at p. 840, fn. omitted.)
    The employer filed reply papers indicating that all employees were
    required to sign, and explained how the employee was to log on, to review and
    sign forms. But the court added, “still, Main did not indicate whether or if so,
    how” the employer “ascertained that Ruiz electronically signed, or was the
    person who electronically signed . . . .” (Ruiz, supra, 232 Cal.App.4th at
    p. 841.) This, the court would later say, “left a critical gap in the evidence
    supporting the petition.” (Id. at p. 844.)
    And so the court went on to hold: “In the face of Ruiz’s failure to recall
    electronically signing the 2011 agreement, the fact the 2011 agreement had
    13
    an electronic signature on it in the name of Ruiz, and a date and time stamp
    for the signature, was insufficient to support a finding that the electronic
    signature was, in fact, ‘the act of’ Ruiz. (Civ. Code, § 1633.9, subd. (a).) For
    the same reason, the evidence was insufficient to support a finding that the
    electronic signature was what Moss Bros. claimed it was: the electronic
    signature of Ruiz. (Evid. Code, § 1400, item (a).) This was not a difficult
    evidentiary burden to meet, but it was not met here.” (Ruiz, supra,
    232 Cal.app.4th at p. 844.)3
    Fabian v. Renovate America, Inc. (2019) 
    42 Cal.App.5th 1062
     (Fabian),
    is also instructive. There, defendant put forth an agreement to arbitrate by
    attaching to its petition a copy of the arbitration agreement that purportedly
    bore plaintiff’s electronic signature. (Id. at p. 1067.) However, because
    plaintiff declared she did not sign the arbitration agreement, the defendant
    then had the burden of proving by a preponderance of the evidence that the
    electronic signature was authentic, and defendant failed to prove plaintiff
    electronically signed contract because defendant did not explain “DocuSign”
    process. (Id. at pp. 1068–1069.)
    In sum, the trial court analyzed the evidence before it, and held that
    Enjoy had not met its burden of proving the existence of a valid arbitration
    agreement by a preponderance of the evidence. In light of this, defendants
    3 Defendants seek to distinguish Ruiz on three bases, one of which,
    however quizzically, asserts that the Employment and Arbitration
    Agreement here is “not a stand-alone arbitration agreement like in Ruiz, but
    is instead a 12-page (plus attachments) At-Will Employment, Confidential
    Information, Invention Assignment and Arbitration Agreement, where the
    arbitration provision is located on the eighth page under the heading ‘13.
    Arbitration and Equitable Relief.’ ” If that is a good point of distinction,
    it comes in a novel guise.
    14
    have a heavy, perhaps insurmountable, burden on appeal, as set forth, for
    example in Sonic Manufacturing Technologies, Inc. v. AAE Systems, Inc.
    (2011) 
    196 Cal.App.4th 456
    , 466 (Sonic): “ ‘Thus, where the issue on appeal
    turns on a failure of proof at trial, the question for a reviewing court becomes
    whether the evidence compels a finding in favor of the appellant as a matter
    of law. [Citations.] Specifically, the question becomes whether the
    appellant’s evidence was (1) “uncontradicted and unimpeached” and (2) “of
    such a character and weight to leave no room for a judicial determination
    that it was insufficient to support a finding.” ’ (In re I.W. (2009)
    
    180 Cal.App.4th 1517
    , 1527−1528 [overruled in part on other grounds as
    stated in Conservatorship of O.B. (2020) 
    9 Cal.5th 989
    , 1010 & fn. 7].”
    (Accord, Los Angeles County Dept. of Children & Family Services v. Superior
    Court (2013) 
    215 Cal.App.4th 962
    , 967.)
    Fabian recently described the burden imposed by Sonic this way:
    “ ‘ “[w]here, as here, the judgment is against the party who has the burden of
    proof, it is almost impossible for him to prevail on appeal by arguing the
    evidence compels a judgment in his favor. That is because unless the trial
    court makes specific findings of fact in favor of the losing [party], we presume
    the trial court found the [party’s] evidence lacks sufficient weight and
    credibility to carry the burden of proof. [Citations.] We have no power on
    appeal to judge the credibility of witnesses or to reweigh the evidence.” ’
    [Citation.] ‘The appellate court cannot substitute its factual determinations
    for those of the trial court; it must view all factual matters most favorably to
    the prevailing party and in support of the judgment. [Citation.] ‘ “All
    conflicts, therefore, must be resolved in favor of the respondent.’ [Citation.]”
    [Citation.]’ [Citation.]” (Fabian, supra, 42 Cal.App.5th at p. 1067.)
    15
    Defendants do not even attempt to meet this burden. And their brief
    arguments against the trial court’s ruling are unavailing.
    Defendants’ primary bold-faced argument, to which it devotes almost
    half of its argument, is that defendants need not authenticate the signed
    Arbitration Agreement for it to be enforceable, in claimed support of which it
    relies primarily on Condee v. Longwood Management Corp. (2001)
    
    88 Cal.App.4th 215
     (Condee) and Baker v. Italian Maple Holdings, LLC
    (2017) 
    13 Cal.App.5th 1152
     (Baker). Neither is apt.
    Condee held only that an agreement to arbitrate can be easily shown,
    assuming there is no contrary showing by the employee, which, of course, is
    not the situation here. So as Ruiz put it, defendants’ “reliance on Condee is
    misplaced,” as the opposing party “did not challenge the authenticity of its
    signature on the agreement.” (Ruiz, supra, 232 Cal.App.4th at p. 845.) As
    Ruiz distilled it, “Properly understood, Condee holds that a petitioner is not
    required to authenticate an opposing party’s signature on an arbitration
    agreement as a preliminary matter in moving for arbitration or in the event
    the authenticity of the signature is not challenged. (Id. at p. 846; see also
    Toal v. Tardif (2009) 
    178 Cal.App.4th 1208
    , 1219, fn. 8.)4
    Baker, supra, 
    13 Cal.App.5th 1152
     is similarly unhelpful, as there was
    no dispute that Ms. La Berge signed the agreement. (Id. at p. 1162.)
    Defendants’ bold-faced “B”—Reese’s failure to read the employment
    and arbitration agreement or recall its arbitration provision does not shift the
    burden to defendants to prove its authenticity—has no application here, as
    Reese’s position is based on much more than he “does not recall” signing any
    arbitration agreement. Thus, the three cases defendants cite—Brookwood v.
    4 Reese’s citation to other cases distinguishing Condee is inappropriate,
    as the other cases are unpublished.
    16
    Bank of America (1996) 
    45 Cal.App.4th 1667
    , Pinnacle Museum Tower
    Assn. v. Pinnacle Market Development (2012) 
    55 Cal.4th 223
    , and Madden v.
    Kaiser Foundation Hospitals (1976) 
    17 Cal.3d 699
    —are distinguishable.
    And, as noted, defendants’ bold-faced “C”—the trial court “misapplied
    the facts and erred in relying on Ruiz . . . .” is simply wrong. The trial court
    got it right.
    DISPOSITION
    The order denying the motion to compel arbitration is affirmed. Reese
    shall recover his costs on appeal.
    17
    _________________________
    Richman, Acting P. J.
    We concur:
    _________________________
    Miller, J.
    _________________________
    Mayfield, J. *
    Reese v. Enjoy Technology, Inc. (A161662)
    *Superior Court of Mendocino County, Judge Cindee Mayfield,
    sitting as assigned by the Chief Justice pursuant to article VI, section 6
    of the California Constitution.
    18
    

Document Info

Docket Number: A161662

Filed Date: 5/18/2022

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 5/18/2022