McEnroe v. AT&T Mobility Services CA1/3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 27, 2015
DocketA136272
StatusUnpublished

This text of McEnroe v. AT&T Mobility Services CA1/3 (McEnroe v. AT&T Mobility Services CA1/3) 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
McEnroe v. AT&T Mobility Services CA1/3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Filed 2/27/15 McEnroe v. AT&T Mobility Services CA1/3 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 THREE

SARA MCENROE, Plaintiff and Appellant, A136272 v. AT&T MOBILITY SERVICES LLC et al., (Sonoma County Super. Ct. No. SCV-249116) Defendants and Respondents.

Sara McEnroe sued her former employer, AT&T Mobility Services LLC (AT&T), and Farooq Syed, an AT&T assistant manager under the Fair Employment and Housing Act, for gender harassment and failure to accommodate the disability caused by the harassment. Summary judgments were entered for defendants based on the statute of limitations. McEnroe contends that her suit was timely filed because the running of the statute of limitations was equitably tolled for the time it took for her union to assert a grievance on her behalf against AT&T. We hold that the grievance did not toll the statute for a sufficient period to save McEnroe’s suit from being untimely, and affirm the judgment for defendants. I. BACKGROUND A. McEnroe’s Employment and Termination In November 2007, McEnroe went to work as a sales consultant for AT&T at a retail store in Santa Rosa. In April 2008, Farooq Syed became her supervisor. McEnroe’s complaint alleges that Syed made inappropriate sexual comments to her, said that he wanted to torture her and see her buried alive, and hit her in the face with papers

1 he was holding in his hand. As a result of his behavior, she suffered “anxiety attacks, emotional breakdowns and inability to sleep.” Despite her repeated requests, AT&T failed to reassign her or Syed to a different location, and failed to provide her a safe and hostility free work environment. McEnroe was off work on leave under AT&T’s disability benefits plan and the Family and Medical Leave Act from late September 2008 to late March 2009. She returned to work from March 31, 2009 to April 10, 2009. She was granted additional disability leave through May 17, 2009, and did not thereafter return to work. In July 2009, McEnroe’s psychologist informed the claims administrator of AT&T’s disability benefits plan that McEnroe could return to work “ ‘but not in the same work environment with this assistant manager [Syed].’ ” Further disability benefits were denied, and AT&T terminated McEnroe’s employment in September 2009 for “job abandonment.” B. Facts Relating to the Statute of Limitations In August 2008, McEnroe’s union, the Communication Workers of America (the union) filed a grievance with AT&T over sexual harassment on her behalf. The collective bargaining agreement (CBA) between the union and AT&T provided for a three-step grievance procedure, followed by arbitration if requested by the union. The grievance was denied at step two on or before December 9, 2008. On that date, the union sent a letter to Thomas Conway, AT&T’s Lead Labor Relations Manager for the California region, who was responsible for addressing McEnroe’s grievance at step three. The letter requested a step-three meeting, but Conway did not receive the letter because it was sent to the wrong fax number.1 Under Article 7, Section 3 of the CBA, if the union was dissatisfied with the outcome of step two, it was required to appeal the grievance within 15 working days, in writing, to step three. Article 7, section 2 required that grievances be delivered by a

1 The union later filed another grievance over McEnroe’s termination. The termination grievance was denied at all three steps of the grievance process, and McEnroe takes the position that this grievance is “on hold” pending the outcome of this lawsuit, which does not include a cause of action for wrongful termination.

2 union representative to the designated company representative as provided in section 3. Article 7, section 8 provided: “Failure to submit or pursue a grievance under the conditions and within the time and manner stated in Section 2 above shall be construed to be a waiver by the employee and the union of the formal grievance.” Under article 9, sections 1 and 2, the union could pursue arbitration of a rejected grievance, but only as to “matters processed through all steps of the formal grievance procedure.” On April 14, 2009, McEnroe filed claims for discrimination with the Department of Fair Employment and Housing against AT&T and Syed, stating: “I have been forced to work in the presence of an employee who has created a hostile work environment with threats of violence and threats of a sexual nature. Despite requests for accommodations, my employer has not remedied the situation, and I am unable to fulfill my employment obligations because of the situation.” That same day, McEnroe was given a right-to-sue notice stating that civil actions against AT&T and Syed had to be filed within one year. On August 12, 2009, union representative Steven Estes sent Conway an email and asked to schedule a meeting on McEnroe’s grievance. Conway responded the next day: “[T]here is unfortunately a very long history of my repeated notification to your Local . . . of my correct contact information, my non-receipt of any step three grievances since late 2007, and my repeated requests for reconciliation of grievances as shown in your records. . . . [¶] Regarding this specific step 3 grievance escalation for Ms. McEnroe, I have never received it to-date. Please fax it to me ASAP to my fax number below and I will review it. [¶] I need to be very clear with you up front that, because of the potentially large number of untimely grievances currently pending in your Local which I have never received, I cannot commit to hearing it in the formal grievance process as it is likely timed out at this point. However, I am willing to meet with you at least informally to review any pending grievances you may have, review them for timeliness and see what we can do with them—including this one on behalf of Ms. McEnroe.” After further messages setting a time and place for their meeting, Estes sent Conway an email on August 19 stating, “I have faxed a copy of the Sara McEnroe Step III letter and some of the other Step one notifications. I am aware that we will be discussing these outside of

3 the grievance process. Most of these are old issues and I am sure we will be able to close most of them out.” McEnroe testified in her deposition that she contacted Estes “a lot” about the status of her harassment grievance. She said Estes “just let me know of meetings that he was having with human resources, I believe with Thomas Conway, and that things were moving very slow. That there were several grievances in process, and he was doing his best to work on mine. [¶] . . . [¶] . . . He let me know about meetings that he was having, and that things weren’t going anywhere; that they were stuck. There was no good; there was no bad; there was nothing, is what I was told.” On March 25, 2010, McEnroe sent Estes an email saying, “I still have not received an Email from you regarding what exactly was sent to arbitration and where we stand now. If you could please send that information over at your earliest convenience that would be greatly appreciated.” On March 29, Estes replied: “Both of your grievances, Termination and the Sexual Harassment were sent on 3/12/10 to our Paramount office for final review before referring to the National. When that happens, which should be by the end of the week, I will be hand delivering them to the National to be considered for arbitration.

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McEnroe v. AT&T Mobility Services CA1/3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcenroe-v-att-mobility-services-ca13-calctapp-2015.