Fisher v. Cal. School Employees Assoc. CA4/1

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 18, 2015
DocketD066884
StatusUnpublished

This text of Fisher v. Cal. School Employees Assoc. CA4/1 (Fisher v. Cal. School Employees Assoc. CA4/1) 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
Fisher v. Cal. School Employees Assoc. CA4/1, (Cal. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Filed 9/18/15 Fisher v. Cal. School Employees Assoc. CA4/1 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION ONE

STATE OF CALIFORNIA

CAROLYN FISHER, D066884

Plaintiff and Appellant,

v. (Super. Ct. No. 37-2013-00039356-CU- WT-CTL) CALIFORNIA SCHOOL EMPLOYEES ASSOCIATION,

Defendant and Respondent.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of San Diego County, Ronald L.

Styn, Judge. Affirmed.

Carolyn Fisher, in pro. per., for Plaintiff and Appellant.

The Davis Law Firm, Timothy C. Davis and Barbara Lyons; Davis Wang,

Timothy C. Davis, Shirley C. Wang and Barbara Lyons, for Defendant and Respondent.

Carolyn Fisher was terminated from her clerk position with the San Diego Unified

School District (District). She then sued her labor union, California School Employees

Association (CSEA), alleging it did not adequately represent her in her efforts to remain in her job and/or be reinstated. After providing Fisher with several opportunities to state

a cause of action and excusing numerous procedural deficiencies in her filings and

opposition papers, the court sustained CSEA's demurrer to Fisher's second amended

complaint without leave to amend. Fisher appeals. We affirm.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL SUMMARY

We summarize the facts based on the complaint's factual allegations and assume

the truth of those allegations. (See Crowley v. Katleman (1994) 8 Cal.4th 666, 672, fn. 2.)

We also base our summary on a factual narrative filed by Fisher in the superior court.

Although Fisher did not include this narrative in the operative complaint, we consider

these facts under our obligation to liberally construe the pleadings.

Factual Allegations

In September 2011, when Fisher was working as a clerk at a District child

development center, she received a negative performance evaluation. The evaluator

stated that Fisher had caused the District to lose revenue.

On September 28, 2011, Sylvia Alvarez, the CSEA local chapter president,

accompanied Fisher to a meeting with District administrator Josephine Condra to discuss

the performance evaluation. Alvarez asked Condra to provide documentation of the

asserted revenue loss, but Condra was unable to do so. Alvarez claimed Condra was

retaliating against Fisher because Fisher contacted the union regarding an excessive

and/or inappropriate workload. Condra responded that she believed Fisher should be

"fired from [her] job."

2 Shortly after the meeting, Condra placed Fisher on administrative leave. Without

giving any reason, Condra instructed Fisher to collect her belongings and to go home.

Fisher informed Alvarez of these facts.

During her administrative leave, Fisher received a letter from the District's human

resources officer, Cate Neale. The letter stated that Fisher was not meeting the job

requirements. Neale asked Fisher to meet with her, and to bring a union representative

to the meeting.

Alvarez accompanied Fisher to an October 4 meeting with Neale. At the meeting,

Alvarez again requested documentation of the asserted performance issues, which Neale

promised but never supplied. During the meeting, Neale claimed that Fisher had

threatened Condra.

Four days later, Alvarez told Fisher to return to work on Monday, October 10.

Alvarez said Fisher was a permanent employee and had passed her probationary period.

However, when Fisher reported for work that day, she was told she should not be at work

and should go to the District's human resources office. Alvarez advised her to comply

with these instructions and said the matter would be resolved by the end of her shift.

The next day, Alvarez intervened with the District's human resources director,

Lamont Jackson, to negotiate Fisher's transfer to a different school site. However,

Lamont later "reneged on [the] deal," and Fisher was terminated from her job.

In October 2011, CSEA filed a grievance on Fisher's behalf, but that grievance

was denied. About three months later, in January 2012, Alvarez and CSEA labor

relations representative Kent Buchholz accompanied Fisher to a meeting with a

3 mediator. During the meeting, Fisher was told she had done nothing wrong and would

be returning to her job. However, the District did not rehire Fisher after speaking with

the mediator.

During the next several months, Alvarez, Buchholz, and another CSEA

representative (Mike Wallace) attempted to resolve the issue with the District and then

began preparing arbitration paperwork. In August 2012, Buchholz told Fisher that

nothing had been resolved. Two months later, in October 2012, Alvarez informed Fisher

that CSEA had concluded arbitration "will be a losing case."

Pleadings and Demurrers

Based on this series of events, Fisher brought an action against CSEA. After the

court sustained CSEA's demurrer to the original complaint, Fisher filed an amended

complaint asserting that she was terminated from her job based on her race and CSEA

failed to properly investigate the District's treatment of her, failed to "fight" for her job,

failed to appropriately represent her, and failed to obtain documentation pertaining to

the grounds for her termination. Fisher claimed the "Union sold me out." She asserted

breach of contract, wrongful termination, and discrimination causes of action.

CSEA demurred to the first amended complaint, arguing the allegations were

vague and uncertain, and the complaint failed to allege facts sufficient to constitute a

valid cause of action. CSEA argued that Fisher had failed to identify a contract between

the parties, and CSEA could not be held liable for wrongful termination or discrimination

because it was not Fisher's employer. CSEA also argued there were no allegations

showing it discriminated against Fisher.

4 Fisher did not file an opposition. In its tentative ruling, the court granted the

demurrer, finding Fisher's complaint did not state a cognizable cause of action against

CSEA. However, after Fisher appeared at oral argument, the court gave Fisher three

weeks to file an amendment.

In her second amended complaint, Fisher identified four causes of action: breach

of contract, wrongful termination, discrimination, and retaliation. On her contract claim,

Fisher attached two pages from a larger document, and alleged these pages were from her

"Union handbook." The pages, entitled "Performance Evaluation Procedure," stated that

the District's performance evaluation reports "shall include supporting documentation and

a written action plan . . . ." (Capitalization omitted.) Fisher alleged she was never

provided with documentation regarding her alleged inadequate performance or an action

plan. Fisher also alleged that CSEA breached an agreement "[b]y failing to com[ply]

with the rules that are in [a] collective negotiation contract between the . . . District and

the [CSEA]." Fisher additionally claimed she suffered damages based on wrongful

termination, retaliation, and discrimination, but did not include facts supporting or

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