Doe v. Dept. of Corrections and Rehabilitation

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 19, 2019
DocketE071224
StatusPublished

This text of Doe v. Dept. of Corrections and Rehabilitation (Doe v. Dept. of Corrections and Rehabilitation) 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
Doe v. Dept. of Corrections and Rehabilitation, (Cal. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

Filed 11/27/19; Certified for Publication 12/19/19 (order attached)

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION TWO

JOHN DOE,

Plaintiff and Appellant, E071224

v. (Super.Ct.No. BLC1600160)

DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS OPINION AND REHABILITATION,

Defendant and Respondent.

APPEAL from the Superior Court of Riverside County. Burke Strunsky, Judge.

Affirmed.

Law Offices of Frank S. Moore and Frank S. Moore for Plaintiff and Appellant.

Xavier Becerra, Attorney General, Chris A. Knudsen, Assistant Attorney General,

Celine M. Cooper and Michael J. Early, Deputy Attorneys General, for Plaintiff and

Respondent.

1 John Doe, who used to work as a psychologist at Ironwood State Prison

(Ironwood), sued his former employer, the California Department of Corrections and

Rehabilitation (CDCR), under the California Fair Employment and Housing Act (FEHA)

(Gov. Code, § 12900 et seq.),1 alleging discrimination, retaliation, and harassment based

on disability. Doe also alleged CDCR violated FEHA by failing to accommodate his two

disabilities, asthma and dyslexia, by relocating him to a cleaner and quieter office and

providing him with requested computer equipment. Finding no triable issues of material

fact, the trial court granted summary judgment in favor of CDCR. We affirm.

I

FACTS

The parties submitted the following evidence in support of their arguments at the

summary judgment stage.

In August 2007, Doe submitted an employment application with CDCR for a

permanent psychologist position. The application asks applicants to check the boxes that

apply to them, one of which is for disabled individuals, and states, “DISABLED—A

person with a disability is an individual who . . . has a physical or mental impairment or

medical condition that limits one or more life activities, such as . . . learning . . . or

working; . . . has a record or history of such impairment or medical condition; . . . or is

regarded as having such an impairment or medical condition.” Doe did not check the

1 Unlabeled statutory citations refer to the Government Code. 2 disabled box, and, at his deposition in this case, acknowledged he had signed the

application under penalty of perjury.

Doe began working as a psychologist at Ironwood in 2012. In 2013, he submitted

an accommodation request using CDCR’s standard form. He requested “Time to read and

write in a work space that’s quiet to help w/focus and concentration.” In response to the

form’s question, “What are your limitations?” he wrote, “(LD NOS) reading, written

expression.” The parties agree that LD NOS stands for “learning disorder not otherwise

specified.”

On January 9, 2013, Doe met with a staff member of CDCR’s “Return to Work,”

the department that handles accommodation requests. They requested Doe provide

medical documentation of the nature and extent of his limitations in order for CDCR to

determine which accommodations, if any, it could provide. Doe received a memo dated

January 16, 2013 from Return to Work stating his request remained pending “due to lack

of medical substantiation.” Doe submitted a note from his physician, Dr. Kim, dated

January 24, 2013, which said: “Please provide [Doe] with a quite [sic] workplace that

will help with attention and concentration. He is easily distracted and, under stress, can

become disorganized. Extended time should also help him by reducing the pressure and

allowing him to successfully complete assignments.”

3 Dr. Bresee, Doe’s supervisor at the time, submitted a written response to Doe’s

accommodation request on March 7, 2013. The response says, “By the time I met with

[Doe] in early February [2013], we had already done all that we were able to do . . . to

provide an appropriate work space that was as free from distraction as was possible.” Dr.

Bresee explained that all mental health offices had two work stations and all clinicians

had to share their offices with another clinician. He said Doe’s office mate had agreed to

switch desks so Doe could have the desk he found less distracting. But Doe was not

satisfied after the switch and complained to Dr. Bresee that he felt like he was the only

psychologist who didn’t have a private office.

Dr. Bresee added, “Ideally, as we move forward, [Doe] will be able to spend more

of his time doing almost all of his work in the Mental Health offices on the yards. We are

temporarily sharing them, but that should be ending soon. That is what we are moving to.

In this way he will see an inmate and when that is done he can use the office as a solo

office to finish his paperwork.” Dr. Bresee’s remark about private offices “on the yards”

was a reference to Ironwood’s upcoming transition to the “complete care model,” a way

of organizing the prison’s work spaces so its various healthcare professionals (e.g.,

psychologists, nurses, and dental practitioners) are located closer to the inmates they

serve.

According to Doe, switching desks with his office mate did not solve the

distraction problem and, at his doctor’s direction, he took a three-month medical leave

“due to stress.” Doe said when he returned to work, he was given a quieter, less

4 distracting office but, because he knew the arrangement was temporary, that “made it

very hard for me to organize my work.” He said it was still taking him too long to

complete his assignments because he wasn’t allowed to have a thumb drive and he hadn’t

been trained to use Ironwood’s shared server. He said that in order to get access to his

patients’ records he had to ask the psychologist who worked next to him for copies. Doe

said he felt he was being “discriminated against” because other Ironwood clinicians were

using thumb drives at work.

In October 2013, Doe settled a different harassment lawsuit he had brought against

CDCR. In exchange for a payment of $120,000, Doe dismissed the suit and released any

claims he may have had against CDCR at the time, including FEHA claims.

According to Doe, the retaliation and harassment began in 2014 and was

perpetrated by his supervisor at the time, Dr. Castro. Doe identified the following

incidents as support for his discrimination, retaliation, and harassment claims.

On February 11, 2014, Dr. Castro had an hour-long meeting with Doe about his

job performance that “felt . . . like an interrogation” because he was criticizing Doe’s

work. Doe said Dr. Castro got “angry and hostile” when Doe couldn’t understand his

“heavy accent.” Doe said the meeting made him feel anxious and caused his asthma

symptoms to increase. An Ironwood employee who transcribed the meeting said Dr.

Castro criticized two progress report notes Doe had submitted, saying the notes appeared

to be “cut and pasted” and incomplete.

5 On February 19, 2014, Doe did not come into work, and CDCR called to check on

him. A watch commander at CDCR left a message saying if they didn’t hear back from

him they would send the police to his house for a “wellness check.” At his deposition,

Doe said he had sent a text message notifying CDCR he would be out that day, but

learned later the text had not been received. Although he was home that day and no one

ever knocked on his door, Doe believed the police had come to his property and that Dr.

Castro had sent them.

On May 20, 2014, Doe wrote Dr.

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