De La Cruz v. Cal-Pac Sonoma CA1/4

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 4, 2013
DocketA129889
StatusUnpublished

This text of De La Cruz v. Cal-Pac Sonoma CA1/4 (De La Cruz v. Cal-Pac Sonoma CA1/4) 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
De La Cruz v. Cal-Pac Sonoma CA1/4, (Cal. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

Filed 2/28/13 De La Cruz v. Cal-Pac Sonoma CA1/4 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 FOUR

SHANNEN DE LA CRUZ, Plaintiff and Respondent, A129889, A130141, A131134 v. CAL-PAC SONOMA, LLC et al., (Sonoma County Super. Ct. No. SCV244297) Defendants and Appellants.

Plaintiff Shannen De La Cruz sued defendants Cal-Pac Sonoma, LLC, dba The 101 Casino (Cal-Pac Sonoma) and Cal-Pac Group, Inc., dba The 101 Casino (Cal-Pac Group), for sexual harassment and retaliation arising out of her employment at The 101 Casino (the casino). A jury found in plaintiff‘s favor and awarded her a total of $15,487 in economic damages, $500,000 in noneconomic damages, and $1,500,000 in punitive damages. The trial court reduced the punitive damage award to $750,000, and awarded plaintiff $1,109,142 in attorney fees. In their appeal, defendants contend the trial court erred in admitting the testimony of another worker at the casino, and that the noneconomic damages, punitive damages, and attorney fees awarded were excessive. In her cross-appeal, plaintiff challenges the reduction in the punitive damage award. We shall affirm the judgment and orders.

1 I. BACKGROUND A. Evidence at Trial1 Plaintiff began to work at the casino as a card dealer in September 2004, working the morning shift. She had not had regular work for a year, and had sole responsibility for her young son. With her earnings, she could afford to send her son to preschool. Plaintiff was a proficient dealer, and was known for taking extra duties. A floor supervisor, Mabel Conti, testified that plaintiff was conscientious and fairly reliable. Conti never saw her act inappropriately with a customer and never wrote her up for misconduct. It appears that at the time plaintiff worked at the casino, Cal-Pac Sonoma operated The 101 Casino, and that Cal-Pac Sonoma was a wholly owned subsidiary of Cal-Pac Group. After plaintiff stopped working for the casino, Cal-Pac Sonoma was acquired by new owners, and became separately owned and operated. 1. The Harassment At Christmastime in 2004, one of the floor supervisors at the casino, Bill Bundensen, was giving out gift bags. He gave plaintiff a bag and told her, ―I got you a candle . . . [T]his is my favorite smelling candle.‖ He went on, ―I want you to take it home and take a bubble bath and think of me.‖ Plaintiff considered his remark inappropriate, but did not report it. Bundensen made similar suggestions over the next couple of weeks. When he asked plaintiff if she had taken a bath, she answered in the negative, and eventually told him she did not take baths and did not like candles. Bundensen did not mention the subject again. In 2005, Bundensen began making inappropriate comments that appeared to refer to plaintiff‘s chest. The dealers carried their chips in trays called ―racks.‖ Once when

1 Defendants‘ opening brief on appeal contains numerous factual assertions unsupported by citations to the appellate record, and for its recitation of the underlying facts relies heavily on the allegations of the complaint rather than the evidence introduced at trial. We remind defendants‘ counsel of their duty to provide adequate record citations. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.204(a)(1)(C); see also Bernard v. Hartford Fire Ins. Co. (1991) 226 Cal.App.3d 1203, 1205.)

2 plaintiff asked Bundensen to help her get more chips for her rack, he looked at her and told her ―[O]h, your rack looks good to me,‖ while looking down at her. Once he told her, ―[Y]our rack looks good today,‖ although she did not have her tray of chips with her. He made similar comments sporadically over a period of months. Plaintiff was offended, and would tell him the comments were not funny, or that he was being rude and disgusting. In his testimony, Bundensen denied the inappropriate behavior and comments about which plaintiff testified. In approximately mid-2005, since Bundensen‘s inappropriate comments had not stopped, plaintiff reported to Maxanne McKinnie, the human resource manager at the casino, that Bundensen kept referring to her chest as a rack. She also told McKinnie about Bundensen‘s gift of the candle and his ensuing comments. She told McKinnie she wished to remain anonymous, but that Bundensen should be told to behave more professionally. Plaintiff testified that McKinnie told her she was not the first person to complain. She also said that Bundensen was a friend of Randy Yaple, the general manager of the casino, that Yaple was aware of the complaints about Bundensen, and that no action had been taken after someone had previously complained about Bundensen. McKinnie promised to bring the matter to Yaple‘s attention. She later told plaintiff that Yaple was angry about the complaint, wanted to find out who had made it, and said he would check the security cameras to see who had visited McKinnie‘s office. Afterward, McKinnie gave plaintiff a ―heads-up‖ that Yaple knew she was the person who had made the complaint. McKinnie also told plaintiff that Yaple was sexually harassing her. McKinnie testified that she was concerned Yaple would retaliate if he knew of plaintiff‘s complaints. She was aware that Bundensen and Yaple were good friends. Yaple later told McKinnie he had looked at the security cameras to see if she and plaintiff were talking, and told her he ―wanted to remind [her] . . . that he has eyes everywhere. He knows all and he sees all.‖ He did not ask what the two were talking about, and she

3 did not tell him. McKinnie felt that her hands were tied in dealing with plaintiffs‘ complaints. McKinnie testified that Yaple had harassed her by hugging her in a manner she found offensive, kissing her on the forehead, calling her at different hours throughout the night and on the weekends, suggesting they have dinner or go for a drink, and once telling her he wanted to go to her house and cuddle. McKinnie knew Yaple was married, and found his invitations inappropriate. He continued calling for several months, although she told him she was not interested. On two or three occasions, Yaple called McKinnie into his office when he was undressing, wearing only his underwear and a T- shirt, and tried to talk with her. Yaple would also share with McKinnie emails and pictures from a dating site. McKinnie told him his behavior was not welcome, and he stopped showing her the pictures and emails, but continued to do so with another employee, Nicole P. He also commented vulgarly to McKinnie about his sexual attraction to another woman. 2. The Retaliation Bundensen became less friendly to plaintiff after she complained to McKinnie about his conduct. He stopped making the suggestive comments, but started ―riding‖ her and ―threatening [her] constantly.‖ He would criticize plaintiff‘s work, sometimes for things she had not done, such as failing to ―clear her hands,‖ or show the security cameras that she did not have chips in her hand. When the casino was quiet in the morning, plaintiff would sometimes get a cup of coffee or read an article from the newspaper, as other dealers did, or help the other dealers with crossword puzzles. Bundensen told plaintiff not to do those things, although other dealers continued to do so. He once refused to allow plaintiff to leave the floor to use the restroom, and disciplined her by giving her a ―write-up‖ when she did so, although the custom was that a dealer

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De La Cruz v. Cal-Pac Sonoma CA1/4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/de-la-cruz-v-cal-pac-sonoma-ca14-calctapp-2013.