Filed 11/20/20
CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
DIVISION TWO
SARAH COUGHENOUR,
Plaintiff and Respondent, E072772
v. (Super.Ct.No. CIVDS1831552)
DEL TACO, LLC, OPINION
Defendant and Appellant.
APPEAL from the Superior Court of San Bernardino County. John M. Pacheco,
Judge. Affirmed.
Manatt, Phelps & Phillips, Andrew L. Satenberg and Benjamin G. Shatz for
Valiant Law, Raymond Babaian and Semarnpreet Kaur for Plaintiff and
Respondent.
Plaintiff and respondent Sarah Coughenour worked for defendant and appellant
Del Taco, LLC, starting when she was 16 years old. When she was first employed by
Del Taco, she signed a “Mutual Agreement to Arbitrate” (Agreement). After
1 Coughenour reached the age of 18, she continued working for Del Taco for four months.
Coughenour quit and filed a lawsuit against Del Taco for sexual harassment committed
by one of their employees, wage and hour claims brought pursuant to the Labor Code,
and other claims under the Fair Housing and Employment Housing Act (Complaint). Del
Taco filed a motion to compel arbitration against Coughenour (Motion). The trial court
denied the Motion, finding that Coughenour’s filing of the lawsuit was a disaffirmance of
the Agreement within the meaning of Family Code section 6710, which allows a person
upon reaching majority age to disaffirm a contract entered into while a minor.
Del Taco appeals the denial of the Motion arguing that by working for Del Taco
for four months after she reached the age of majority, she ratified the Agreement, which
estopped her power to disaffirm the Agreement. In the alternative, Del Taco argues that
Coughenour did not disaffirm the Agreement within a “reasonable time” after reaching
the age of 18 as required by Family Code section 6710.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
A. COMPLAINT
On December 6, 2018, Coughenour filed the Complaint alleging: sexual assault;
battery, hostile work environment, failure to prevent harassment and aiding and abetting
(Govt. Code, § 12940); wrongful constructive termination; negligent hiring, retention and
supervision; failing to provide meal and rest breaks (Lab. Code, § 226.7); failure to
provide accurate wage statements (Lab. Code, § 226); waiting time penalties (Lab. Code,
§ 203); violation of Business and Professions Code section 17200; intentional infliction
of emotional distress; and negligent infliction of emotional distress.
2 Del Taco was a limited liability company doing business in California.
Coughenour had exhausted her administrative remedies by filing a complaint with the
Department of Fair Employment and Housing and receiving a “right to sue” letter.
Coughenour worked at a Del Taco restaurant located in Rancho Cucamonga. She
was hired in 2016, when she was 16 years old. She alleged that she was subjected to
severe sexual harassment, sexual assault and sexual battery by the restaurant’s manager.
She alleged that she was not provided meal and rest breaks. Coughenour resigned in
August 2018. Coughenour sought economic damages, attorney’s fees, and injunctive
relief.
Del Taco filed an answer to the Complaint denying the allegations.
B. DEL TACO’S MOTION TO COMPEL ARBITRATION
On March 6, 2019, Del Taco filed its Motion. Del Taco alleged that Coughenour
signed the Agreement, which required arbitration of all claims against Del Taco,
including the claims in the Complaint. Coughenour refused to submit the matter to
binding arbitration.
Del Taco alleged that Coughenour electronically signed the Agreement on May
11, 2016. She commenced work with Del Taco on May 25, 2016. Counsel for Del Taco
contacted Coughenour on February 5, 2019, advising her of the Agreement she had
signed, but she refused to arbitrate her claims. Del Taco claimed that arbitration was
compelled under Code of Civil Procedure section 1281.2 because there was a valid
agreement to arbitrate.
3 The Agreement included the following language: “To the maximum extent
allowed by law, the Company and I mutually consent to the resolution by binding
arbitration of all claims or causes of action that the Company may have against me or that
I may have against the Company. . . . [¶] The claims covered by this Agreement include,
but are not limited to: . . . claims for discrimination or harassment . . . all claims arising
under . . . the California Fair Employment and Housing Act (and other state’s anti-
discrimination laws), [and] the California Labor Code.”
C. COUGHENOUR’S OPPOSITION
Coughenour filed opposition to the Motion on April 2, 2019. She responded that
despite the fact she signed the Agreement, since she was only 16 years old at the time she
was not capable of contracting and consenting to the Agreement; she was entitled to
disaffirm the Agreement pursuant to Family Code section 6710; and the Agreement was
unconscionable.
Coughenour alleged that she was not capable of contracting and consenting to the
Agreement because she was 16 years old at the time she signed it. No one from Del Taco
explained the documents she was signing. Although Coughenour acknowledged that in
California a minor has the capacity to contract, Family Code section 6710 provides for a
minor’s “right of disaffirmance” allowing for a minor to disaffirm a contract before
reaching majority age or within a reasonable time afterward. Coughenour claimed that
the filing of the instant lawsuit was a disaffirmance of the Agreement made within a
reasonable time after she reached majority age. As such, the trial court should accept that
4 Coughenour disaffirmed the Agreement and was not required to submit her claims to
arbitration.
Further, the Agreement was procedurally unconscionable because it was a contract
of adhesion. Coughenour had no opportunity to negotiate or change the terms of the
Agreement. Coughenour was forced to sign the Agreement or she would not be hired.
Del Taco never explained the Agreement to Coughenour despite her being 16 years old
and it being her first job. Del Taco made an effort to obscure and prevent knowledge of
the Agreement because it was wordy and was hidden in the middle of numerous other
documents.
The Agreement was also substantively unconscionable because it was “unfairly
one-sided.” The Agreement required arbitration of claims that are more commonly
brought by employees and not those brought by employers. The Agreement in totality
was confusing, convoluted and fundamentally unfair.
Coughenour signed a declaration. She began her employment with Del Taco
when she was 16 years old. Working at Del Taco was her first job. She was subjected to
sexual harassment, assault and battery by her supervisor while working for Del Taco.
She filed a formal complaint before she quit and was assured that she would not have to
work with the supervisor, but she was scheduled with him. She formally resigned on
August 2018. She had turned 18 years old on April 20, 2018. She had to electronically
sign her employment documents at a kiosk in the Del Taco store and was never given
copies of the documents or the Agreement. The employment documents were never
5 explained to her and she believed that if she did not sign the documents, she would not be
hired.
D. REPLY TO OPPOSITION
Del Taco filed their reply on March 25, 2019. Del Taco insisted that Coughenour
ratified her consent to arbitrate after she reached the age of 18 by continuing to work for
Del Taco.
Del Taco relied upon Hastings v. Dollarhide (1864) 24 Cal.195 (Hastings) to
support its claim that by working for Del Taco after Coughenour reached majority age,
she ratified the Agreement. Moreover, even if she was not found to have ratified the
Agreement, she did not disaffirm the Agreement within a reasonable time as required by
Family Code section 6710. Again, relying on Hastings, Del Taco argued that a
“reasonable time” depended upon the circumstances of each case. Del Taco argued that
eight months after reaching majority was not a reasonable time. Finally, she had not met
her burden of establishing the Agreement was unconscionable.
E. HEARING AND RULING
The hearing was conducted on April 2, 2019, after the trial court had issued a
tentative ruling to deny the Motion. Del Taco argued that the trial court needed to
address ratification of the Agreement by Coughenour, because of her continuing to work
for Del Taco. Disaffirmation could not take place after ratification. Coughenour’s
counsel argued that Coughenour was unaware of the Agreement based on it never being
explained to her, and she never received a copy of the Agreement that she signed. Del
6 Taco disagreed that she never received a copy of her employment documents; they were
emailed to her. She was not denied access to her employment documents.
The trial court questioned whether Coughenour would be automatically subject to
an employment contract she signed as a minor by continuing her employment.
Coughenour’s counsel argued that her disaffirmance of the Agreement was made in a
reasonable time because she was only working part time at Del Taco and was
inexperienced. The matter was taken under submission.
The trial court issued a written ruling denying the Motion. It first noted an
unpublished California district court case found that disaffirmance of an arbitration
agreement within one month after reaching the age of majority was reasonable. The trial
court found, “However, this does not mean that a longer period of time than one month is
unreasonable.”
The trial court further explained, “Here, the declaration of Coughenour reflects she
was made to sign all initial hiring documents in a kiosk and was never given any
electronic documents to take home, nor were the documents explained, and she was not
given the opportunity to read and understand the documents or negotiate the terms.
(Coughenour Decl. at 6-7.) There is no evidence in either the declaration of Coughenour
or of the Del Taco representative that Coughenour was requested to reaffirm her
agreement to the arbitration provision upon reaching the age of majority. Del Taco does
not argue, and there would be no basis for such an argument, that the arbitration
agreement falls under the exclusion of certain types of contracts from disaffirmance
under Family Code section 6712. [¶] Based on the arguments of the parties, the court
7 finds Coughenour has disaffirmed the arbitration agreement within a reasonable time, and
therefore will deny the motion to compel arbitration. Based on the courts ruling to deny
the motion to compel arbitration due to Coughenour’s disaffirmance of the arbitration
agreement, the court need not consider whether the agreement is unenforceable for other
reasons such as unconscionability, lack of mutuality or failure to meet the Armendariz
standards.”
DISCUSSION
Del Taco claims the trial court erred by failing to first consider whether by
continuing to work for Del Taco for four months after she turned 18 years old,
Coughenour impliedly ratified the Agreement estopping her from disaffirming the
Agreement signed as a minor. Further, Coughenour did not disaffirm her employment
contract within a reasonable time by filing her lawsuit eight months after she reached
majority age, and four months after she terminated her employment. Finally, policy
reasons justify holding minors to arbitration provisions.
A. STANDARD OF REVIEW
An order denying a motion to compel arbitration is an appealable order. (Code of
Civ. Proc, § 1294, subd. (a).) “ ‘ “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.” ’ “ (Franco v. Greystone Ridge Condominium (2019)
39 Cal.App.5th 221, 227.)
8 Here, the trial court’s denial of the Motion was based on the sole ground that
Coughenour filing her lawsuit eight months after reaching the age of 18 disaffirmed the
Agreement within a reasonable time. “ ‘ [R]easonable time’ [is] a question of fact
necessarily depending on the circumstances of each particular case” (Hastings, supra, 24
Cal. at p. 215) and therefore we review this claim for abuse of discretion. We will review
Del Taco’s claim regarding ratification de novo.
B. FAMILY CODE SECTION 6700
Family Code section 67001 provides “Except as provided in [Family Code] section
6701,[2] a minor may make a contract in the same manner as an adult, subject to the
power of disaffirmance under Chapter 2 (commencing with [Family Code s]ection 6710)
and subject to Part 1 (commencing with [Family Code s]ection 300) of Division 3
(validity of marriage).” Family Code section 6710 provides “Except as otherwise
provided by statute, a contract of a minor may be disaffirmed by the minor before
majority or within a reasonable time afterwards or, in case of the minor’s death within
that period, by the minor’s heirs or personal representative.”
“Sound policy considerations support this provision: ‘The law shields minors
from their lack of judgment and experience and under certain conditions vests in them the
right to disaffirm their contracts. Although in many instances such disaffirmance may be
1Family Code section 6710 is nearly identical to former Civil Code section 35. (See Doyle v. Giulicci (1965) 62 Cal.2d 606, 609.)
2Family Code section 6701 provides restrictions on a minor’s ability to contract, which are not relevant here.
9 a hardship upon those who deal with an infant, the right to avoid his contracts is
conferred by law upon a minor “for his protection against his own improvidence and the
designs of others.” It is the policy of the law to protect a minor against himself and his
indiscretions and immaturity as well as against the machinations of other people and to
discourage adults from contracting with an infant. Any loss occasioned by the
disaffirmance of a minor’s contract might have been avoided by declining to enter into
the contract.’ ” (Berg v. Traylor (2007) 148 Cal.App.4th 809, 818; see also Eriksson v.
Nunnink (2015) 233 Cal.App.4th 708, 720-721.)
“No specific language is required to communicate an intent to disaffirm. ‘A
contract (or conveyance) of a minor may be avoided by any act or declaration disclosing
an unequivocal intent to repudiate its binding force and effect.’ ” (Berg v. Traylor, supra,
148 Cal.App.4th at p. 820.) The filing of a lawsuit is sufficient disaffirmance. (Celli v.
Sports Car Club of America, Inc. (1972) 29 Cal.App.3d 511, 517 (Celli).)
C. RATIFICATION
Del Taco first contends that the trial court did not consider its argument that
Coughenour ratified the Agreement by continuing to work at Del Taco for four months
after reaching the age of majority. Del Taco insists that the California Supreme Court has
made it clear that once a minor reaches the age of majority, and ratifies a contract signed
as a minor, that the minor can no longer disaffirm a contract.
In Hastings, supra, 24 Cal. 195, the court held, “But it is clear that if an infant,
after arriving at adult age, ratifies a conveyance made by him during his infancy, he will
have no power to revoke the ratification and disaffirm such conveyance thereafter.” (Id.
10 at p. 211.) It further recognized, however, that such assent cannot be implied from “mere
silence or inaction, no matter how protracted.” (Id. at p. 213.) It adopted the rule that
ratification was to be found if there was “express ratification” after reaching the age of
majority; performance of acts from which an affirmance might be reasonably implied;
and by an act of “omission,” e.g. failing to disaffirm the contract within a reasonable
time. (Id. at pp. 213-214, 217.)
Coughenour never expressly ratified the Agreement after she reached the age of
majority. Moreover, the fact that Coughenour continued to work at Del Taco after
reaching majority age for four months does not show her performance of acts from which
affirmance might be reasonably implied. As noted by the trial court, the evidence does
not establish that Coughenour was aware of the significance of the Agreement she signed
when she was 16 years old. She did not receive a copy of the Agreement. The trial court
noted, “There is no evidence in either the declaration of Coughenour or of the Del Taco
representative that Coughenour was requested to reaffirm her agreement to the arbitration
provision upon reaching the age of majority.”
Coughenour’s continued employment does not constitute a ratification of the
Agreement and an acknowledgment that she was giving up her right to disaffirmance.
“ ‘[I]t is an inherent element of ratification that the party to be charged with it must have
fully known what he was doing . . . . “[T]he very essence either of an election or
ratification is that it is done advisedly, with full knowledge of the party’s rights.” ’ ”
(Fergus v. Songer (2007) 150 Cal.App.4th 552, 571.) It cannot be said on this record that
Coughenour, by continuing to work for Del Taco after she reached the age of majority,
11 did so with the awareness that she would be still subject to the Agreement, but more
importantly, that she had a right to disaffirm the Agreement pursuant to Family Code
section 6710. Nothing in Coughenour’s declaration establishes that she was aware of her
right to disaffirm the Agreement once she was 18 years old. To hold that Coughenour
impliedly ratified the Agreement by continuing to work at Del Taco for four months after
she turned the age of 18 would go against the policy “of the law to protect a minor
against himself and his indiscretions and immaturity.” (Berg v. Traylor, supra, 148
Cal.App.4th at p. 818)
As for the possible third factor for finding ratification—disaffirming the contract
within a reasonable time of reaching the age of majority—we find for the reasons stated
post, that Coughenour disaffirmed the Agreement within a reasonable time.
D. REASONABLE TIME TO DISAFFIRM AGREEMENT
As stated, pursuant to Family Code section 6710, a contract of a minor made while
under the age of 18 may be disaffirmed by the minor himself or herself either before he
or she reaches the age of majority or within “a reasonable time” thereafter. Here, Del
Taco, relying on intermediate appellate court cases from other states, contends that the
filing of the lawsuit in this case eight months after Coughenour reached the age of
majority was not a reasonable time to disaffirm the Agreement. We disagree.
Family Code section 6710 does not provide a definition of “reasonable time.”
‘[R]easonable time’ [is] a question of fact necessarily depending on the circumstances of
each particular case.” (Hastings, supra, 24 Cal.at p. 215.) In Celli, supra, 29 Cal.App.3d
511, nine-year-old Ribbs was in the pit area during a car race and was struck and injured
12 by a car during a test race on September 13, 1964. Ribbs possessed a pit pass, which
included an acknowledgement of the assumption of the risk of being in the pit, and a
waiver of liability. (Id. at pp. 514-515.) Jury verdicts were entered in favor of Ribbs and
two other victims. Defendants appealed arguing that the pit passes, which included the
waiver of liability, were improperly excluded at trial. (Id. at p. 517.) On appeal, the
court stated, “the release agreements in any event were invalid and unenforceable as to
plaintiff Ribbs who at the time of the accident in 1964 was 9 years old.” It found that the
filing of the lawsuit was enough to disaffirm the pit passes.
The court in Celli did not specify the time period between the accident and the
filing of the lawsuit but the accident occurred in 1964 and the appeal was not decided
until 1972. It is reasonable to assume that there was a period of time between the
accident and filing of the lawsuit that was similar to, or exceeded, the time period in this
case. Del Taco has provided no California statute or case defining the term “reasonable
time” or any case that establishes as a matter of law that eight months was not a
reasonable time.
Here, Coughenour worked for almost two years for Del Taco until she reached the
age of 18. After she reached majority age, she quit her position after four months and
filed her lawsuit within four months of quitting. The filing of the lawsuit was notice that
she disaffirmed the Agreement. (Celli, supra, 29 Cal.App.3d at p. 517.) The trial court
did not abuse its discretion by concluding that Coughenour disaffirmed the Agreement
within a reasonable time.
13 Further, Del Taco’s policy reasons in support of not affirming the denial of the
Motion are not persuasive. Del Taco argues that arbitration agreements are favored and
that the defense of infancy should serve as a “shield for the protection of vulnerable
minors, not as a sword.” Further, all Del Taco employees were required to sign the
Agreement; accordingly, the Agreement was not designed to take advantage of
Coughenour’s immaturity or inexperience.
DISPOSITION
We affirm the trial court’s order denying Del Taco’s motion to compel arbitration.
Costs of appeal are awarded to Coughenour as the prevailing party.
MILLER J.
We concur:
McKINSTER Acting P. J.
FIELDS J.