Gupta v. Trustees of the Cal. State University

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 26, 2019
DocketA151763
StatusPublished

This text of Gupta v. Trustees of the Cal. State University (Gupta v. Trustees of the Cal. State University) 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
Gupta v. Trustees of the Cal. State University, (Cal. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

Filed 9/26/19 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION THREE

RASHMI GUPTA, Plaintiff and Respondent, A151763 v. TRUSTEES OF THE CALIFORNIA (City & County of San Francisco STATE UNIVERSITY, Super. Ct. No. CGC-15-544050) Defendant and Appellant.

The Trustees of the California State University for San Francisco State University (SFSU) appeals from a judgment entered after a jury found SFSU retaliated against its professor, Dr. Rashmi Gupta1, in denying her tenure and terminating her employment. SFSU contends the trial court erred in: (1) allowing Gupta to present evidence of a “comparator professor” without requiring her to show her qualifications were “clearly superior” to that professor’s qualifications; (2) refusing to give a special jury instruction regarding comparator evidence; and (3) “interven[ing] in the questioning of witnesses before the jury in a manner that favored [Gupta].” We reject SFSU’s contentions and affirm the judgment.2

1 For ease of reference, and with no disrespect intended, we will initially refer to the parties and witnesses by their professional titles and full names and thereafter by their last names only. We also affirm the court’s post-judgment attorney fees order from which SFSU 2

has filed a notice of appeal. SFSU has not raised any arguments challenging that order.

1 FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND Gupta is an American woman of Indian national origin and ancestry. In 2006, SFSU hired her as a “tenure track assistant professor” in the School of Social Work, College of Health and Social Sciences. Each year, SFSU conducts a review and decides whether to retain the professor for another year. Typically, an assistant professor is hired to a six-year term and, during the sixth year, SFSU determines whether to promote the professor to associate professor and award lifetime tenure. In her first three semesters at SFSU, Gupta had some difficulty adjusting to her new job and received Student Evaluation of Teaching Effectiveness (SETE) scores that were lower than the department mean. Her second year review explained: “Dr. Gupta’s lower SETE scores may be attributed, in part, to the standards and expectations she sets for students. She gives students substantial assignments and demands results . . . One must commend her for holding firmly to the principles and standards she establishes for all courses, even if students complain about the rigors she presents.” The review praised Gupta for being “a valued contributing member of the social work faculty,” for being “actively engaged in research, scholarship, and publication,” and for “jump[ing] in” “[d]espite being a new faculty member” and “actively contribut[ing] to the campus and community.” Gupta made some adjustments to her teaching style, and in her third-year review, she received positive reviews from all three faculty members who conducted teaching performance evaluations. Her SETE scores began to improve and, each year, SFSU decided to retain her as an assistant professor. On November 9, 2009, Gupta and several other women of color in the School of Social Work wrote a letter to SFSU Provost Dr. Sue Rosser to request a meeting with Rosser and the Dean of Faculty Affairs, Dr. Wanda Lee, to discuss “faculty concerns in the School of Social Work” relating to “abus[e] of power and authority, excessive micromanagement, bullying, and the creation of a hostile work environment.” At a meeting attended by the complainants, Lee, and the Dean of the College of Health and

2 Social Sciences, Dr. Don Taylor, the parties discussed problems they were having with the Director of the School of Social Work, Dr. Rita Takahashi.3 The parties also discussed, more generally, their concerns about discrimination against people of color. SFSU instructed the complainants to work out their differences with Takahashi and to meet with Taylor again if their efforts were unsuccessful. Less than two months later, on January 5, 2010, Gupta received a fourth-year review that was critical of her performance in all three areas used to evaluate tenure— teaching effectiveness, professional achievement and growth, and contributions to campus and community. The review also criticized Gupta for several things, including purported defects in her syllabi, which turned out to be inaccurate. The review only briefly mentioned Gupta’s SETE scores, all of which were significantly better than the department mean, and made no positive comments regarding her scholarship despite the fact that she had published enough articles to meet the requirements of tenure. Shortly thereafter, Gupta sent emails to a colleague complaining that her workplace was hostile towards women of color and that Taylor and Takahashi were responsible for creating a hostile work environment. In March 2010, at a meeting held between Taylor and the School of Social Work faculty, Taylor became angry at Gupta for sending the emails and said, “I know about [the emails]” and “I’m going to get even with you.” Another professor who attended the meeting testified that Taylor was “red in the face” and pointing his finger at Gupta as he called her out. When Gupta responded that she “just saw it as part of bathroom conversation,” Taylor responded that there are “consequences” to “those sort of conversations.” The professor testified that Taylor was “[l]oud and animated” as he made these statements and that the incident stood out because it was “not typically how I witnessed Dr. Taylor interact or behave.”

3 Several months before signing this letter, Gupta had grieved a letter of reprimand from Takahashi on several grounds including discrimination. The letter of reprimand was removed from Gupta’s file as a result of the grievance.

3 During the 2010–2011 academic year—Gupta’s fifth year at SFSU—Gupta was eligible to request early tenure and received support from the departmental and campus wide tenure committees and the interim director of the School of Social Work. She submitted peer teaching evaluations and references from students and faculty members at SFSU and at other institutions. Taylor recommended denial of Gupta’s early tenure, stating she had not demonstrated “sustained progress” in the three areas used to evaluate tenure—teaching effectiveness, professional achievement and growth, and contributions to campus and community. Gupta filed a complaint with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) identifying Taylor by name, and filed a federal lawsuit alleging SFSU denied her early tenure as a result of discrimination and retaliation. Gupta also grieved the denial of her tenure. The matter went to arbitration and an arbitrator ordered SFSU to review Gupta for tenure the following year. Gupta voluntarily dismissed her federal lawsuit. Gupta came up for regular tenure during the 2011–2012 academic year. Students praised her teaching, stating for example: “Gupta is one of the most knowledgeable professors in the Social Work program, and holds students to a high academic standard which I appreciate in a Masters level program . . . She holds students accountable which is not what other professors do here. Students described her teaching strengths: “She is a very organized Teacher”; “She is very helpful helping you understand a very difficult subject. I learned so much from her class.”; “Overall a very excellent teacher. I wish all of my teachers would have been like her. I am so glad I took her class.

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Gupta v. Trustees of the Cal. State University, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gupta-v-trustees-of-the-cal-state-university-calctapp-2019.