Chen v. County of Orange

116 Cal. Rptr. 2d 786, 96 Cal. App. 4th 926
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 14, 2002
DocketG027307
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 116 Cal. Rptr. 2d 786 (Chen v. County of Orange) 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
Chen v. County of Orange, 116 Cal. Rptr. 2d 786, 96 Cal. App. 4th 926 (Cal. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

Opinion

SILLS, P. J.

I. Introduction

Victoria Chen was hired by the Orange County District Attorney’s Office as a level I deputy district attorney in 1990, and by 1993 had been promoted to level in. In July 1995 she went on leave because of complications with a pregnancy, but did not return to work until April 1997.

During her time on leave she earned, as she would later admit in court, in the “neighborhood” of $100,000 a year as a bond trader. She also tried a career in acting. She appeared “in an unpaid infomercial” and two commercials.

Then, after a short, and by all accounts unhappy, stint working in Orange County’s North Court, she went on medical leave for stress in July 1997, and *930 never came back to work. In the fall of that year, while still on stress leave, she decided to apply, along with about 40 or so other deputy district attorneys in the office, for some 10 openings for level IV.

She contacted Vickie Hix, who was a management-level deputy district attorney (level V rank) and asked Hix if she would nominate her for promotion to level IV at the upcoming promotional meeting. Hix was rather reluctant to take up the task, since Chen had never worked for Hix and Hix had no personal knowledge of her background. Hix then mentioned that there was one question all of the people at the meeting would be interested in having answered: When would Chen come back to work, because “people we promote we need to have on the job.”

Chen said that if she got the promotion, she’d be back. But “if not,” she would “probably be stressed out for a while longer.”

Chen did not get the promotion, and continued to be ostensibly “stressed out” for a great deal longer. Actually, indefinitely. She never returned to work. She filed this suit in March 1998, alleging marital status, race, and gender discrimination against her by the Orange County District Attorney’s Office. She also asserted a cause of action for retaliation. (She had filed a complaint with the Department of Fair Employment and Housing in October 1997—before her 1997 promotion request was turned down).

In November 1998, still not having returned back to work, she applied again for promotion to level IV. Again, she did not receive a promotion, and her lawsuit was subsequently amended to allege that the promotion denial was also taken in retaliation for her complaints.

Her marital status claim was based on allegations that she had received unfavorable assignments during her career because, beginning in late 1990, she began dating, and in May 1993 married, Devallis Rutledge, a high-level management attorney in the office. Rutledge was supposedly not in the good graces of then Orange County District Attorney Michael Capizzi, and Chen’s unfavorable assignments were allegedly a manifestation of the Capizzi faction’s lack of approval of her relationship with, and marriage to, Rutledge.

The race and gender discrimination causes of action went to a jury, who returned defense verdicts. The marital status and retaliation claims were dismissed on motions for nonsuit after Chen rested her case. Chen has now appealed the verdicts. In sum, here is what we conclude:

(1) The trial court did not err in dismissing the marital status discrimination claim. The salient fact is that the origin of any animus was the political *931 disfavor Rutledge was in at the time, not any antipathy toward Chen’s status as a married or single person. There was not even any antipathy toward her being married to (or even romantically involved with) a coworker. Any “adverse action” taken by her employer (which mostly consisted of not getting plum assignments) was at most only the result of antipathy toward a particular coworker with whom she had, married or not, a relationship.
(2) The trial court did not err in dismissing the retaliation claim. As we explain, it is well established that a plaintiff in a retaliation suit must show, as part of his or her prima facie case, some causal connection between an adverse employment action and the original complaint of discrimination. Mere sequence is not enough—that would be the classic logical fallacy of “post hoc ergo propter hoc” (after the fact, therefore because of the fact). In this case, Chen showed nothing but sequence in a context where there were obviously good and legitimate reasons not to promote her, not the least of which was the fact that anybody who was promoted had to be available for work, not on indefinite stress leave.
(3) None of Chen’s miscellaneous claims of evidentiary error have any merit.

II. The Facts: The History of Chen’s Career in the Orange County District Attorney’s Office 1

A. 1990-1993: Paying Dues and Eventual Promotion to the Felony Panel

Victoria Chen started with the district attorney’s office in July 1990. Of 75 attorneys hired in the years 1989, 1990, and 1991, only 20 initially received trial assignments. Trial assignments, at least according to Chen’s testimony, were generally more coveted by newly hired deputy district attorneys than assignments in juvenile delinquency or family support, and Chen was one of the 20 or so who received one. Within five months of her *932 hiring, Chen began dating Devallis Rutledge, a high-level management attorney in Capizzi’s administration.

Chen was transferred to juvenile court in April 1991. She thought the transfer might be a form of discrimination, and discussed the matter with her beau Rutledge, but did not complain about the assignment. 2 While at juvenile court she complained that another coworker, Karen Whetmore, was “abusing taxpayer money by using county time to slander me, to say scurrilous things about me,” specifically that Chen was “a troublemaker, ... a backstabber, ... a gossip.” 3 Her supervisor, Kathi Harper, replied that “she was not going to get involved in a catfight.”

In July 1991, one year after her hiring, Chen was promoted to deputy level n. She also didn’t have to spend too much time in juvenile court. In September 1991 she was assigned to Central Municipal Court, where she did jury trials and preliminary hearings.

In July 1992, she was promoted again, to level III. That summer she also applied for a felony panel assignment. Thirty-one attorneys applied; Chen was third from the bottom in terms of seniority. She didn’t get the assignment, nor did any of the applicants with less seniority. All the applicants who did make it were women.

Disappointed with not having received the felony panel assignment, Chen had a talk with one of the senior management attorneys, Brent Romney. Romney gave her what was known in the office as the “butterfly speech.”

*933

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Bluebook (online)
116 Cal. Rptr. 2d 786, 96 Cal. App. 4th 926, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chen-v-county-of-orange-calctapp-2002.