Boctor v. Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transit Authority

48 Cal. App. 4th 560, 55 Cal. Rptr. 2d 861, 96 Daily Journal DAR 9939, 96 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 6101, 1996 Cal. App. LEXIS 777
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 14, 1996
DocketB094456
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 48 Cal. App. 4th 560 (Boctor v. Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transit Authority) 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
Boctor v. Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transit Authority, 48 Cal. App. 4th 560, 55 Cal. Rptr. 2d 861, 96 Daily Journal DAR 9939, 96 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 6101, 1996 Cal. App. LEXIS 777 (Cal. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

Opinion

ALDRICH, J.

Plaintiff and appellant, Alfred F. Boctor, appeals from the judgment of the superior court denying his petition for writ of mandate to compel the chief executive officer (CEO) of the Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transit Authority (MTA) to vacate his decision demoting Boctor from his position as a manager of vehicle operations to bus operator. (Code Civ. Proc., § 1094.5.)

Boctor’s contentions the MTA’s CEO lacked the authority to reject the hearing officer’s findings and recommendations, and the CEO’s final opinion failed to meet jurisdictional procedural requirements, are without merit. Also without merit is his assertion the trial court committed prejudicial error by applying an improper standard when reviewing the MTA’s decision. Our review of the record indicates the trial court properly and independently judged the evidence and found the MTA’s findings to be supported by the weight of the evidence. Finally, we conclude the MTA’s CEO properly exercised his discretion when he imposed a penalty more serious than that recommended by the hearing officer. Accordingly, the judgment is affirmed.

*564 Factual and Procedural Background

On September 6, 1991, Boctor was employed as a vehicle operations manager for the Southern California Rapid Transit District. 1 During a meeting held that day, Louise Bumes, one of Boctor’s subordinate employees, alleged Boctor had engaged in improper behavior by using profanity in the presence of bus drivers, subordinates and other employees, and by sexually harassing her. In particular, Bumes stated that on one occasion, in the presence of other employees, Boctor entered the room, greeted Bumes by kissing her on the hand, then told her, “You know, I woke up at 1:00 this morning wondering what you were doing.” Boctor’s comment made Bumes and the other employees very uncomfortable.

On another occasion, Boctor, Bumes and another employee, Fausto Brito, were out in the field at the comer of Pico Boulevard and Flower Street. When Bumes informed Boctor she was applying for a “senior position,” Boctor replied, “Maybe Brito will be senior, but not you. . . .You have to go to lunch with me if you want to be a senior.” When Bumes told Boctor she did not go out with persons she worked with, Boctor replied, “Do you think I’m too ugly? . . . What if I told you you’d be fired if you didn’t go out with me?” A short time later, Boctor told Bumes the “measurements he liked,” then asked Bumes to ask a blonde woman if she would go out with him.

At other times, Boctor had interfered with Bumes’s work in the field and acted in an unprofessional manner to members of the public and bus patrons. During one incident, Boctor, addressing a member of the public, said, “The next time you see a Godamn [MTA] bus, you’re not going to try to ma[ke] a right in front of it, huh?” On another occasion, when a bus patron approached Boctor with a complaint about the irregularity of service, he replied, “So what.... Why don’t you catch the train?”

After listening to Bumes’s allegations, Boctor rose to his feet, loudly interrupted her and stated, “I’ve been sitting here listening to this shit without saying a word! It’s all bullshit! “When the acting assistant director of transportation, Daniel Ibarra, told Boctor to sit down, Boctor replied, “I’m sorry man, but I just can’t sit here listening to this bullshit any longer! She’s a damn liar! It’s all bullshit!” When Bumes then became upset, rose to her feet and said, “You can’t talk to me like that,” Boctor told her to *565 “Shut up,” took a step toward her and, while making a gesture toward her said, “My ass.” Boctor then left the room.

In view of Bumes’s allegations, Ibarra conducted further investigation. Ibarra interviewed Fausto Brito, who both Boctor and Bumes stated had witnessed the incident during which Boctor allegedly told Bumes she would not be promoted. Brito corroborated Bumes’s statements and indicated Boctor had “said those things.”

Ibarra also interviewed an employee, Willem Siedenburg, who Bumes stated witnessed Boctor kissing her on the hand. Siedenburg, however, denied any knowledge of the incident.

When Ibarra interviewed Clayton Flournoy, a supervisor who Boctor had indicated witnessed the incident during which he allegedly used vulgar language while speaking with a bus patron, Flournoy stated he had no knowledge of the incident and denied being present. Flournoy, however, indicated he had heard mmors of Boctor’s “advances toward two other supervisors in the work group: Veray Smith and Cynthia Garrett.”

Smith told Ibarra, although Boctor had not made sexual advances toward her, she had witnessed him using vulgar language on several occasions. On one such occasion, Boctor arrived at the scene of a traffic accident involving a bus and yelled out to several bystanders, “Get your motherfucking asses out of the street!” Smith indicated such conduct was “commonplace” for Boctor.

Cynthia Garrett, who had been recently appointed a supervisor, stated Boctor had, for a period of years, repeatedly harassed her sexually. Garrett indicated Boctor had repeatedly asked her out on “dates,” and had invited her to his house to “go swimming” after indicating he and his wife had an “understanding.” During another incident, Boctor offered Garrett a banana and, in a lewd manner, said, “I’ve got something for you. I want you to have this big, long banana.” 2 When her polite refusals of Boctor’s advances proved ineffective, Garrett decided to have nothing to do with Boctor and told him that she thought his “mouth [was] filthy.” Garrett indicated that at times Boctor’s conduct was so offensive she “dreaded coming to work.” In addition, Garrett was convinced that when she applied for a senior position, Boctor, who helped grade the written portion of the relevant examinations, intentionally failed her in retaliation for her refusal of his advances.

*566 Ibarra also interviewed employee Frances Williams. Williams stated that on July 15, 1990, Boctor, while on assignment at the Pico passenger station, approached her and asked her to meet him at the Biltmore Hotel for a drink. Williams initially refused the invitation, but decided to accept when Boctor told her that he wished to discuss company business. At the bar, Boctor told Williams, “I want you to go to bed with me.” At a later date, when Williams was considering applying for a senior position, Boctor told her, “I could probably help you with that.” Williams declined Boctor’s offer of help and he asked her to “reconsider.” After Williams declined Boctor’s repeated offers of assistance, he told her, “Don’t be disappointed if you don’t get it.” Williams stated she believed Boctor’s offers of help were actually offers to trade sexual favors for special consideration in the selection process, and that her failure to pass the written test could be attributed to Boctor’s retaliation for her refusal of his advances. Although Williams had previously passed a written test of a “higher grade,” she chose not to apply for a promotion during a later recruitment period because she feared Boctor’s influence.

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48 Cal. App. 4th 560, 55 Cal. Rptr. 2d 861, 96 Daily Journal DAR 9939, 96 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 6101, 1996 Cal. App. LEXIS 777, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boctor-v-los-angeles-county-metropolitan-transit-authority-calctapp-1996.