Herskovitz v. Snowflake CA1/4

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 15, 2025
DocketA171051
StatusUnpublished

This text of Herskovitz v. Snowflake CA1/4 (Herskovitz v. Snowflake 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
Herskovitz v. Snowflake CA1/4, (Cal. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Filed 10/15/25 Herskovitz v. Snowflake 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NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

STEVEN HERSKOVITZ, Plaintiff and Appellant, A171051 v. (San Mateo County SNOWFLAKE, INC., Super. Ct. No. 21CIV00580) Defendant and Respondent.

Steven Herskovitz appeals from the trial court’s entry of judgment in favor of Snowflake, Inc. (Snowflake), his former employer. The court dismissed Herskovitz’s two age discrimination claims after granting Snowflake’s renewed motion for summary judgment. Herskovitz alleged Snowflake terminated him based on his age in violation of both the California Fair Employment and Housing Act (FEHA) (Gov. Code, § 12900 et seq.) and public policy. For the same two reasons, Herskovitz argues the trial court erred: In dismissing, the court (1) applied the wrong legal standard for evaluating whether he met his burden in opposing Snowflake’s motion, and (2) exceeded its authority to determine factual merit on summary judgment. We conclude these arguments are without merit. The court applied the correct legal standard and properly granted summary judgment because of

1 the lack of any evidence from which it can be permissibly inferred that, in terminating Herskovitz’s employment, Snowflake was motivated by age discrimination. Accordingly, we will affirm. I. BACKGROUND A. Heskovitz’s Complaint Allegations In February 2021, Herskovitz filed a complaint alleging three causes of action against Snowflake1—two for age discrimination under the FEHA (one for disparate treatment because of his age and one for disparate impact because of stock options he held) and a third for age discrimination in violation of public policy. He alleged he was one of the founding employees at Snowflake, incorporated in 2012, and that he rose to the position of Snowflake’s Vice President of Global Sales Engineering because of his outstanding work, which management repeatedly recognized and rewarded. Herskovitz further alleged that a new Chief Executive Officer (CEO) took over Snowflake in April 2019. A day or two later, the CEO told everyone the previous management had been too generous with stock options. A week later, Herskovitz, then 62 years old, was demoted to “ ‘VP Global Expansion’ ” and replaced by Eve Besant, a much younger employee whom he had hired and trained. Moreover, Snowflake did not provide sufficient support for Herskovitz’s first assignment in his new position, which was to move to Japan to develop a market for Snowflake’s products there. Then, when he

1 Herskovitz also sued Snowflake Computing, Inc., but alleged that it

and Snowflake, Inc. might function as one. Only Snowflake, Inc. moved for summary judgment and it alone is referred to in the trial court’s judgment and by the parties on appeal. Therefore, we do not discuss Snowflake Computing, Inc.

2 returned to the United States, he was told he had to find another position within the company. Despite his diligent search, and the availability of positions for which he was highly qualified, no one hired him. He was terminated in May 2020 and his unvested stock options, worth over $17 million, were cancelled. Herskovitz alleged his age and stock options were substantial factors in Snowflake’s adverse employment actions against him, and that Snowflake fired him while disguising these true motives for doing so. He sought compensatory damages in excess of $15 million dollars and punitive damages. B. Snowflake’s Motions for Summary Judgment In June 2023, Snowflake moved for summary judgment or, in the alternative, summary adjudication. It contended that it replaced Herskovitz with Besant because she was experienced in scaling a sales engineering organization and more suited for its new management’s priorities. According to Snowflake, Herskovitz’s search for a new assignment was unsuccessful for non-discriminatory reasons, including challenges brought about by the outbreak of the COVID-19 global pandemic. After Herskovitz was unable to find another position within the company, his employment was terminated. Herskovitz opposed summary judgment on the grounds that he established a prima facie case for age discrimination, Snowflake’s proffered reasons for its actions against him were pretextual, and substantial evidence supported the inference that its actions were motivated by age discrimination. He contended he was well qualified from his years of growing Snowflake’s Sales Engineering organization to scale it—more so than Besant; that his work in Japan failed because Snowflake had not

3 properly supported it; and that he was well qualified for other positions within Snowflake but was not hired for any of them. The trial court denied Snowflake’s motion for summary judgment. It granted Snowflake’s motion for summary adjudication on the second cause of action (for age discrimination based on disparate impact regarding the stock options) and otherwise denied it.2 While the court concluded Snowflake met its initial burden of showing it acted for nondiscriminatory reasons, it ruled that Herskovitz raised a triable issue of fact regarding whether Snowflake’s stated reasons for its actions were pretextual, which permitted an inference of age discrimination. In October 2023, Snowflake filed a “renewed” motion for summary judgment or summary adjudication based on Herskovitz’s tardy discovery production of a text message he sent to another Snowflake employee on May 7, 2020, shortly before his employment termination, in which he stated he was a “builder,” not a “scaler.” Snowflake challenged Herskovitz’s remaining two causes of action on much the same grounds as it did in its initial motion. Herskovitz opposed the motion on much the same grounds as he did before, and contended his May 2020 text message did not show anything material. At the hearing on Snowflake’s renewed motion, the trial court explained that it had applied an incorrect burden-shifting standard. Upon Snowflake meeting its initial burden as movant, the court said, the correct standard called for Herskovitz to put forward “evidence of discrimination besides the fact that Mr. Herskovitz was replaced by a younger employee.”

2 Herskovitz does not challenge the trial court’s dismissal of his second

cause of action, so we do not discuss it further.

4 Finding no such evidence this time, the court granted Snowflake summary judgment.3 In its written order, originally issued as a tentative ruling, the trial court further explained its decision: “The court . . . sua sponte reconsiders its ruling on defendant’s previous motion . . . . During the argument . . . Plaintiff argue[d] that he need[ed] to establish only falsity. [¶] . . . [T]he court agreed with plaintiff at the first hearing, [but] the court now believes that it was incorrect. Plaintiff has the burden of demonstrating evidence that the reason was false and [a product] of discrimination. (Hicks v. KNTV Television, Inc. [(2008)] 160 Cal.App.4th 994, 1003.) Here, plaintiff shows that he is in a protected classification and that he was replaced by a younger person. That fact alone is insufficient to defeat this summary judgment motion. There is no other evidence that can support, either directly or inferentially, that there was discrimination.” The court found Snowflake met its initial burden to show nondiscriminatory reasons for its actions.

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