Holland v. UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD COMPANY

65 Cal. Rptr. 3d 145, 154 Cal. App. 4th 940
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 29, 2007
DocketC052833
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 65 Cal. Rptr. 3d 145 (Holland v. UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD COMPANY) 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
Holland v. UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD COMPANY, 65 Cal. Rptr. 3d 145, 154 Cal. App. 4th 940 (Cal. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

Opinion

DAVIS, Acting P. J.

Plaintiff Tim Holland filed this action alleging employment discrimination. Defendant Union Pacific Railroad Company (UPRR) successfully moved for summary judgment. In his timely appeal from the ensuing judgment, plaintiff first contends that the court commissioner who heard the motion lacked jurisdiction as a judge pro tempore over the matter. In the interests of judicial economy, we decline to reach the issue because the substantive issue will only return to us after remand. On the merits, he asserts that his failure to file a timely, verified administrative complaint was excusable. We conclude that under the established doctrine of equitable estoppel, his untimely administrative complaint is not a bar to his action at law because he diligently pursued his administrative remedy and reasonably relied on the conduct of administrative officials in believing that the limitations period was not a concern. We also conclude that the judge pro tempore erred in sustaining hearsay objections to the evidence documenting this conduct, because plaintiff was not introducing it as proof of the matters asserted therein, but as proof of the basis for his failure to file a timely administrative complaint. We therefore shall reverse the judgment and remand the matter to address the other grounds in the motion for summary judgment.

Facts

In light of the narrowness of the dispositive issue, the complaint’s allegations—ordinarily the starting point in our review de novo of a motion for summary judgment (Rio Linda Unified School Dist. v. Superior Court (1997) 52 Cal.App.4th 732, 734-735 [60 Cal.Rptr.2d 710])—are largely irrelevant. Plaintiff is a machinist in UPRR’s repair shops in Roseville. He contended that UPRR failed to make proper accommodations for his chemical brain disorder, “to wit: Bypolar [sic] Disorder and depression with acute episodic anxiety,” in the period between July and October 2002 and instead refused to allow him to work at all. He filed a timely administrative complaint with the Department of Fair Employment and Housing (DFEH), which issued a letter allowing him to pursue his legal remedies.

*943 In moving for summary judgment, UPRR asserted the following undisputed facts. Plaintiff completed his apprenticeship as a machinist, apparently in 2002, the duties of which include locomotive maintenance. The performance of these duties requires a machinist to move locomotives. In July 2002, he was asked for the first time to become certified to move locomotives. He said his medications made this an unsafe activity for him to perform. UPRR asserted that it was not aware of this restriction until that time, when plaintiff gave it a copy of a letter from a doctor dated February 11, 1999. On July 2, UPRR placed him on a medical leave of absence while it evaluated his fitness for duty. After completing various evaluations, UPRR allowed plaintiff to return to work in October 2002 with the restriction that he could not move locomotives. Plaintiff filed an administrative complaint with DFEH on July 15, 2003, received notice of his right to pursue legal remedies in July 2004, and filed the present legal complaint in November 2004.

Plaintiff did not dispute these facts in any manner pertinent to the present appeal. 1 As additional facts, he asserted that after consulting with present counsel (whom he did not retain until after receiving permission to pursue his legal remedies), he had met with a DFEH representative in May 2003, who told him that he would receive a letter scheduling a formal interview. When he expressed concern over the imminent one-year deadline for filing his complaint (as measured from the date that UPRR suspended him from work), the DFEH representative assured him that completing a precomplaint questionnaire would satisfy this deadline. He later met with the DFEH representative again in late June 2004, providing her with the completed questionnaire. The DFEH mailed him a completed administrative complaint in mid-July 2004, which he promptly signed and returned to the agency. The statements of the DFEH representative appeared in plaintiff’s declaration in opposition to the motion.

UPRR’s notice had set the motion for department 1 of the trial court, which apparently was the courtroom of a court commissioner. Plaintiff filed an objection to a commissioner hearing the matter, and requested an assignment to a judge.

In its reply, UPRR objected to consideration of the hearsay statements of the DFEH representative. In opposition to the evidentiary objection, plaintiff asserted that the hearsay statements were admissible under Evidence Code section 1250 (the “state of mind” hearsay exception).

At the hearing, plaintiff asserted his objection to the court commissioner adjudicating the motion, contending that this was the first assignment to the *944 commissioner. The commissioner stated that plaintiff had appeared by telephone at a case management conference in May 2005 2 at which plaintiff had failed to raise any objection after the court clerk announced that the commissioner would be presiding. 3 Plaintiff’s attorney did not have an independent recollection of the conference from the previous year. She asserted, however, that even if she had failed to object to the court commissioner’s exercise of jurisdiction over the matter at the time, the case management conference was an ancillary proceeding to the present motion, and therefore her previous deemed stipulation did not apply. UPRR did not provide any evidence or argument on the issue, other than to mention an ex parte motion to continue trial that plaintiff had submitted to the presiding judge. 4

In her ruling, the court commissioner rejected the theory that the case management conference was ancillary to the present matter, and therefore assumed jurisdiction as a judge pro tempore. On the substance of the motion, the judge pro tempore sustained the hearsay objection to the statements of the DFEH representative, which eviscerated the evidentiary support for plaintiff’s invocation of an equitable excuse for his tardy administrative complaint, and also ruled that plaintiff had not provided any authority for such a doctrine in proceedings involving the DFEH.

Discussion

I

On appeal, plaintiff again contends there is no evidence in the record that a May 9, 2005, hearing was held, notwithstanding the judge pro tempore’s apparent resort to an entry in the court record not included in the record on appeal. Plaintiff, however, does not discuss the remarks of his counsel in the stipulation supporting the motion for a continuance of the trial date (to which defense counsel referred at the hearing on the motion for summary judgment); “Plaintiff brought these pre-existing trial dates to the Court’s attention in his . . . Case Management Statement, and at the . . . Case Management Conference, plaintiff’s counsel again informed the Court that [the designated] trial [date] would conflict with trials already set in other cases.” (Italics added.)

*945

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
65 Cal. Rptr. 3d 145, 154 Cal. App. 4th 940, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holland-v-union-pacific-railroad-company-calctapp-2007.