Knapp v. Diestel Turkey Ranch CA5

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 20, 2022
DocketF082999
StatusUnpublished

This text of Knapp v. Diestel Turkey Ranch CA5 (Knapp v. Diestel Turkey Ranch CA5) 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
Knapp v. Diestel Turkey Ranch CA5, (Cal. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Filed 12/20/22 Knapp v. Diestel Turkey Ranch CA5

NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

FIFTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

LISA OLMSTEAD KNAPP, F082999 Plaintiff and Appellant, (Super. Ct. No. CV62536) v.

DIESTEL TURKEY RANCH, OPINION Defendant and Respondent.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Tuolumne County. Kevin M. Seibert, Judge. Dumont Law Offices and Mary T. Dumont for Plaintiff and Appellant. Jackson Lewis, James T. Jones and Dylan B. Carp for Defendant and Respondent. -ooOoo- Plaintiff and appellant Lisa Olmstead Knapp brought a lawsuit against defendant and respondent Diestel Turkey Ranch (Diestel), alleging that her former employer misclassified her as an exempt employee and therefore violated various provisions of the Labor Code. She appeals from a June 14, 2021 judgment of the Tuolumne County Superior Court entered in favor of Diestel. For the reasons set forth below, we affirm the judgment. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY I. Background Headquartered in Sonora, Diestel raises, processes, and sells turkey products. Its clients include Del Monte, Draeger’s, Jackson Whole Grocer, Lunardi’s, Market of Choice, Newport Meat, New Seasons, Plymouth Poultry, Raley’s, Rock Island, Safeway, Tony’s Fine Foods, and Whole Foods. Tony’s Fine Foods is Diestel’s main distributor. In 2012, Knapp applied for a position at Diestel. She noted in her resume that she “ha[d] been employed in the same field for over 30 years.” Specifically, Knapp worked at Tambellini Meat Company between 1980 and 1990; Queen City Farms Produce between 1990 and 1994 as “Assistant to the President”; Facciola Meat Company between 1995 and 2011 as “Director of Sales Service”; and Sysco in 2011 as “Meat and Seafood Representative.” Thereafter, Knapp was hired by Joan Diestel (Joan), Diestel’s founder, to be the director of quality assurance and customer service.1 The “Employment Offer” letter stated that the job was “Full Time” and “Exempt” and paid an annual salary of $70,000. Knapp’s direct supervisor was Heidi Orrock, née Diestel (Heidi), Joan’s daughter and the wife of Diestel’s president Jared Orrock (Jared).2

1 Knapp’s job title varied throughout her employment. 2 For the sake of clarity, we refer to members of the Diestel and Orrock families by their first names. No disrespect is intended.

2. Prior to the hiring, Joan sent Knapp an e-mail dated March 15, 2012, summarizing some of the latter’s forthcoming work duties:

“TOUCHING THE CUSTOMER

“-Acct Exec

“-Frequency of contact (visit, phone) established

“-Tasks—contacting decision maker, phone

“Contacting store/unit, phone

“NEW PRODUCT INTRODUCTION-Customer Side

“-Samples

“-Placement of product

“-Follow-up of sustained sales

“SAMPLES

“-send, confirm, follow-up, placement

“HOLIDAY SERVICE to Customers

“-worksheet/‘letters’

“-Holiday orders in, on schedule—it’s Thanksgiving all year long!

“-Customer delivery needs-date/time—customer drives the delivery schedule

“-the ranch IS the Holiday Order Contact

“INVENTORY

“-address overstocks, [less than optimum], etc[.]—making sure all is sold/handled

“NEW STORE OPENINGS

“-[Point of sale], trainings, demos, etc.

“Tony’s [Fine Foods] Communication

3. “-facilitate with [Tony’s Fine Foods customer service] and sales teams.” On October 23, 2017, Diestel reclassified Knapp as a customer service representative, a nonexempt employee. On November 17, 2017, Knapp resigned. II. The complaint In a complaint filed January 16, 2018, Knapp claimed that Diestel failed to pay “compensation for overtime as required by law”; failed to provide “either uninterrupted meal or rest breaks”; failed to provide “timely and accurate wage and hour statements”; and engaged in “unlawful, unfair and fraudulent business practices.” In an answer filed November 7, 2018, Diestel asserted—among other things—that Knapp’s complaint “is barred, in whole or in part, to the extent [she] was exempt from such pay pursuant to the exemptions contained in the applicable wage and hour laws . . . .” III. Bench trial a. Diestel’s affirmative defense At the outset of trial, Diestel appeared to advance two separate exemptions: (1) the outside sales exemption; and (2) the administrative exemption. Diestel’s counsel later clarified that “[Diestel’s] position all along is that outside sales was a job title” and “wasn’t the exemption”; instead, “[i]t’s [the] administrative exemption that [Diestel] believe[s] applies here.” b. Knapp’s testimony Knapp testified that she performed the duties enumerated in Joan’s March 15, 2012 e-mail, save for inventory, trainings, and demonstrations. These duties essentially remained the same until her resignation in 2017. Over the course of her employment, Knapp managed many of Diestel’s major accounts, including those of Del Monte,

4. Draeger’s, Newport Meats, Raley’s, Safeway, and Tony’s Fine Foods. She “didn’t do a lot with production . . . .”3 Knapp provided a description of her typical workday in a response to an interrogatory. It read:

“My typical days involved the following tasks: Answering phones, which were either redirected or if a customer service issue addressed by me; responding to emails from customers and sales representatives, doing appropriate research to answer said emails; review Tony[’s] Fine Foods sales report, respond to new customers therein, write thank you notes, discuss with my manager, discuss back orders and other ordering issues with appropriate personnel; responding to customer complaints, including consulting with management on appropriate responses; log customer complaints; log new customer inquiries, consult with management as to follow up; update customer service contact lists daily; pack merchandise, etc. for trade shows as approved by management; physically procuring and preparing for shipment customer samples; prepared summaries for management of promotional dollars spent weekly, new product sales, retail slice sales, key account sales, major distributor accounts; prepared promotional material for customers; in addition, I supported as needed all other customer service employees and sales employees.” At trial, Knapp elaborated further:

“Well, the first thing I would typically do in the mornings would be to – I’d get an email from Tony’s Fine Foods, and it would show all the sales for that day that went out. We would look to see if there was any – I would look to see if there was any back orders for a customer, like if they weren’t going to get what they ordered. That would give me time to call the customer, let them know it wasn’t coming, because I don’t think Tony’s called their back orders, let them know when it would be back in stock so that – I mean, I could ask Casey Overmier[4] to check the inventory. I think she was more into the inventory part, when it would be back in stock at Tony’s.

3At trial, Jared testified that Diestel’s “production departments” “would be everything from feed milling and live operations or turkey farming.” 4Overmier had been Diestel’s customer service manager. At the time of trial, she was a customer service sales analyst.

5. “I would look through it to see if there was anything that was new that was sold, like, if a customer first time ever bought turkey tails. I had thank-you cards with little feathers, so I would – and so I would write the customer a thank-you note with a little feather saying we appreciate you bringing a new item aboard.

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