Joseph v. Cal. Dept. of Corrections CA4/2

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 25, 2021
DocketE074481
StatusUnpublished

This text of Joseph v. Cal. Dept. of Corrections CA4/2 (Joseph v. Cal. Dept. of Corrections CA4/2) 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
Joseph v. Cal. Dept. of Corrections CA4/2, (Cal. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Filed 10/22/21 Joseph v. Cal. Dept. of Corrections CA4/2 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION TWO

VICTOR JOSEPH,

Plaintiff and Appellant, E074481

v. (Super.Ct.No. RIC1607364)

CALIFORNIA DEPARTMENT OF OPINION CORRECTIONS et al.,

Defendants and Respondents.

APPEAL from the Superior Court of Riverside County. Chad W. Firetag, Judge.

Affirmed.

Mark S. Ravis, for Plaintiff and Appellant.

Xavier Becerra and Rob Bonta, Attorneys General, Chris A. Knudsen, Assistant

Attorney General, Celine M. Cooper and Evan R. Sorem, Deputy Attorneys General, for

1 In this employment retaliation case, the trial court granted summary judgment to 1 the defendants. Plaintiff and appellant Victor Joseph contends that he produced

sufficient evidence to survive summary judgment as to three of the defendants on his 2 claim under the California Whistleblower Protection Act (WPA) (Gov. Code , § 8547 et 3 seq.) by demonstrating that the reasons for his termination were pretextual. We disagree

that he produced such evidence and therefore affirm the judgment.

I. FACTS

Joseph was fired from his position as a staff dentist at the California Rehabilitation

Center (CRC), a CDCR prison, in March 2014. His dismissal was preceded by a series of

lesser adverse actions, including (1) a March 2012 denial of a merit salary adjustment

(MSA); (2) a 30-day suspension in November 2012; (3) an April 2013 MSA denial; (4)

an October 2013 MSA denial; and (5) a salary reduction (a 5 percent reduction for nine 4 months) imposed in January 2014. During the relevant time period, Beltz was CRC’s

1 The named defendants include the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation (CDCR), James Beltz, James Elliot, and six other individuals. Only CDCR, Beltz, and Elliot, however, are respondents in this appeal. 2 Undesignated statutory references are to the Government Code. 3 The trial court separately granted summary judgment in favor of the other six defendants, and it granted CDCR summary adjudication in its favor on a second claim under Labor Code section 1102.5, but those rulings are not at issue here. 4 An April 2013 settlement with CDCR reduced the November 2012 suspension to 20 days. As part of the settlement, Joseph agreed to release any claims existing as of the time of the agreement against CDCR or its employees. The March 2012 MSA denial and November 2012 suspension therefore would be barred as independent bases for the [footnote continued on next page]

2 supervising dentist and Joseph’s direct supervisor, while Elliot was chief executive

officer of the medical, dental and mental health departments at CRC. Beltz is the

supervisor who issued the MSA denials; Elliot was responsible for the formal disciplinary

actions of suspension, salary reduction, and dismissal.

Joseph contends that his dismissal was retaliation for his oral and written 5 objections to CRC practices that he believed to be violations of a federal court order.

That order, arising out of the settlement of a class action lawsuit regarding CDCR inmate

dental care, is referred to by the parties as the Perez order, after the lead plaintiff’s name.

The Perez order, among other things, set timelines for how long, at a maximum, it should

take for inmates to receive various types of dental care. Beginning in early 2011, Joseph

repeatedly complained to Beltz, Eliot, CDCR managers, the federal judge overseeing

implementation of the Perez order, and others up to and including “the Governor and

Attorney General,” that CRC’s dental department was improperly circumventing those 6 timelines in various ways.

whistleblower claim at issue here, though those adverse actions remained part of Joseph’s employment history, and thus part of the factual background underlying the termination that Joseph has characterized as his “principal concern” in the present lawsuit. 5 Although Joseph’s complaint alleges that all of the adverse actions against him were retaliatory, he has focused his appellate arguments on the dismissal. As noted, however, that dismissal was the last step in a series of progressively more punitive adverse actions, based in part on Joseph’s disciplinary history. 6 Joseph contends the timelines were being circumvented by (1) “simply re-setting the clock” by bringing inmates in for appointments to “simply re-write already- established diagnoses,” rather than to provide treatment; and (2) “referring patients to the [footnote continued on next page]

3 Defendants, in contrast, contend that the adverse employment actions taken

against Joseph were all legitimate and non-retaliatory, triggered by Joseph’s repeated

refusal to follow various CDCR policies. In a declaration submitted in support of the

summary judgment motion at issue here, Beltz stated that his March 2012 decision to

deny Joseph a MSA was based on policy violations including, “[a]mong other things,”

(1) “incidents of Joseph rescheduling inmate dental visits” without notifying or obtaining

approval from supervisors; (2) Joseph “fail[ing] to inform his dental clinic that he was

unavailable to treat inmates [on a day in March 2012] due to training . . . resulting in

cancellation of seven inmate dental appointments”; (3) in March 2012, Joseph giving an

“incorrect advisement to an inmate that the inmate may not receive dental care if he

proceeded with the scheduled examination . . . which misled the inmate, causing him to

decline the dental examination”; and (4) Joseph’s “consistent failure to comply with

instructions from [Beltz and other CDCR managers] to provide mandatory examinations

of patient inmates—rather than Joseph’s own determination of what dental treatment to

dental [authorization] review committee (DAR) for referral to outside oral surgeons for conditions that in-house dentists could treat.” Both of these practices, according to Joseph, had the effect of removing the patient from the “dental backlog list,” even though they remained untreated “for additional and substantial periods of time.” Joseph also complained that some medical records were changed to indicate that the inmate-patient was subject to a longer treatment timeline, without any treatment being provided or other documented change in the patient’s condition.

4 7 provide.” In his declaration and in his notice to Joseph, Elliot identified essentially the

same factors as underlying his decision to suspend Joseph in November 2012.

Regarding the April 2013 MSA denial, Beltz cited new instances of similar policy 8 violations. The October 2013 MSA denial, however, was based on new and different

reasons why Joseph’s performance was inadequate. On August 2, 2013, Joseph injected

an inmate who was another dentist’s patient with a local anesthetic, and he failed to

inform the treating dentist or note in the inmate’s dental chart that he had done so. After

this was discovered, on August 13, 2013, Beltz instructed Joseph to make a “‘late entry

progress note,’” meaning an entry in the patient’s medical records showing both the date

treatment had been performed and the actual date the notation in the records was made,

but Joseph instead entered a progress note backdated to the treatment date.

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