Arnold v. Dignity Health

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 13, 2020
DocketC087465
StatusPublished

This text of Arnold v. Dignity Health (Arnold v. Dignity Health) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arnold v. Dignity Health, (Cal. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Filed 7/17/20; Certified for Publication 8/12/20 (order attached)

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT (Sacramento) ----

VIRGINIA M. ARNOLD, C087465

Plaintiff and Appellant, (Super. Ct. No. 34-2015- 00182733-CU-OE-GDS) v.

DIGNITY HEALTH et al.,

Defendants and Respondents.

Plaintiff and appellant Virginia M. Arnold appeals from summary judgment in favor of her employer, defendant and respondent Dignity Health (Dignity) and other individually named defendants. Arnold, an African-American woman who was employed as a medical assistant, alleged defendants engaged in discrimination, harassment, and retaliation based on her age and her association with her African-American coworkers, including by terminating her employment in violation of the Fair Employment and Housing Act (FEHA).

1 On summary judgment, the trial court concluded defendants provided evidence of legitimate reasons for plaintiff’s termination and, in rebuttal, plaintiff failed to offer any evidence that defendants’ actions were discriminatory, harassing, or retaliatory. On appeal, plaintiff contests the grant of summary judgment. She adds that the current law should be re-examined. We disagree and affirm the judgment. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS Plaintiff’s Disciplinary History The following facts are taken from the evidence set forth in the papers filed in connection with the summary judgment motion, except that to which objections were properly made and sustained. (Yanowitz v. L’Oreal USA, Inc. (2005) 36 Cal.4th 1028, 1037 (Yanowitz).) We summarize the evidence in the light most favorable to plaintiff, the party opposing summary judgment, resolving any doubts concerning the evidence in her favor. (Ibid.) Plaintiff was hired to work as a medical assistant in 2003, when she was either 55 or 56 years old. Plaintiff transferred to a different office in August 2007; Shelley Noyes was the executive director at that location. Plaintiff’s duties included handling pregnant women’s urine specimen cups, including throwing the cups in the trash. In August 2008 plaintiff received a “written verbal warning” for failing to wipe a patient’s identifying information off a urine cup.1 Another employee witnessed plaintiff’s refusal to accept the warning. That warning was written on plaintiff’s performance evaluation, which she signed.

1 Although plaintiff points out that the evidence did not show a written rule reflecting the required removal of all writing from the cup, the evidence showed plaintiff was aware of this requirement at least after she received a written verbal warning.

2 In October 2011 Roxanne Slaugh, plaintiff’s supervisor, met with plaintiff and told her she was not permitted to work off the clock. Slaugh also instructed plaintiff and other employees regarding the process of marking a task “done” only after the task was actually completed. In June 2012 Slaugh issued plaintiff a “written warning” for inappropriate conduct following a report that plaintiff acted in a disruptive, disrespectful, and aggressive manner toward a coworker. The disciplinary letter does not specify what conduct precipitated the disciplinary action. Another employee witnessed plaintiff’s refusal to acknowledge receipt of notice of the warning. In September 2012 Slaugh issued plaintiff a “final written warning” and a three- day suspension for additional misconduct; Slaugh contended plaintiff failed to follow the clinic process for addressing scheduling errors or concerns by alerting Slaugh as she had been instructed. At her deposition, Slaugh did not recall the event precipitating the discipline. Plaintiff grieved both the June 2012 written warning and the September 2012 final written warning through her union. Dignity and the union reached an agreement stipulating to reclassifying the June 2012 written warning as a verbal warning, the September 2012 final written warning as a written warning, and issuing a new final written warning with a three-day suspension regarding additional instances of misconduct that occurred while the grievance was pending. Plaintiff was unaware of the reclassification. Plaintiff’s Termination In June 2013 Denise Boroughs-Fitch replaced Slaugh as plaintiff’s supervisor. In July 2013 Boroughs-Fitch and Tiffany Tidwell, senior employee and labor relations consultant, met with plaintiff concerning a urine cup found in the trash they contended still contained patient health information. Tidwell and Boroughs-Fitch found that plaintiff was responsible for not wiping the urine cup clean. They also found that

3 plaintiff was not willing to take responsibility for her actions and was not being honest in the investigation because she blamed her coworker for the incident. Plaintiff was not permitted to see the offending cup. Tidwell and Boroughs-Fitch then learned that plaintiff had a picture in a cupboard near her desk of a male model with his shirt unbuttoned, exposing his chest and abdomen. Plaintiff alleged that during the investigatory meeting, Tidwell threw the picture on the table and said, “I’m going to get you for this.” Tidwell and Boroughs-Fitch found that the picture was an inappropriate item to have in a workplace. Because plaintiff was on a final written warning and had previously been disciplined regarding patient privacy, Tidwell and Boroughs-Fitch decided termination was the appropriate next step.2 Boroughs-Fitch set forth the reasons for plaintiff’s termination in a letter. The letter stated plaintiff’s employment was being terminated for her (1) failure to safeguard personal health information, a HIPAA violation, (2) display of inappropriate materials in the workplace, (3) careless performance of duties, (4) failure to communicate honestly and be truthful during the course of the investigation, and (5) failure to take responsibility for her actions. Additionally, the letter stated that while the current violations independently warranted termination, Boroughs-Fitch also considered the August 2008 written verbal warning, the June 2012 written verbal warning, the September 2012 written warning, and the February 2013 final written warning with three- day suspension. Noyes’s and Slaugh’s Comments to Plaintiff About Her Age Plaintiff asserts there were three instances in which Noyes commented on her age. The first occurred sometime between 2011 and 2013. Noyes had learned that it was recently plaintiff’s birthday, and she said to plaintiff, “Oh, I never knew you were that

2 Plaintiff does not contest that Tidwell and Boroughs-Fitch reached that conclusion, although she contests that termination was necessary.

4 old.” Next Noyes said, “Oh, how come you haven’t retired?” Then Noyes and plaintiff discussed working into their eighties. The second comment occurred in 2013. Noyes was surprised plaintiff had not retired, asked why plaintiff was still working, and said, “ ‘Gosh, I can’t believe you are that old.’ ” In the third instance,3 plaintiff inquired about withdrawing funds from her retirement account. Another employee informed plaintiff that she would be taxed for withdrawing the funds, but plaintiff replied she would not have to pay taxes due to her age. A week or two later, that employee said to Noyes, “ ‘I can’t believe she’s that age,’ ” and Noyes responded, “ ‘Yeah. I didn’t know she was that old, either.’ ” Plaintiff stated there were no other instances in which Noyes mentioned plaintiff’s age.4 In her declaration opposing summary judgment, plaintiff stated Noyes’ spoke to her in an “intimidating” and “threatening” manner in 2013. She did not specify which of Noyes’s three comments, if any, were made in an intimidating or threatening manner. Plaintiff also recalled that Slaugh made three comments about her age. In the first instance, Slaugh said, “ ‘Oh, I can’t believe you turned 65,’ ” and then, “ ‘My mom retired at your age. And I can’t believe you [sic] retired.

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Arnold v. Dignity Health, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arnold-v-dignity-health-calctapp-2020.