McGie v. Super. Ct. CA3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 24, 2014
DocketC074901
StatusUnpublished

This text of McGie v. Super. Ct. CA3 (McGie v. Super. Ct. CA3) 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
McGie v. Super. Ct. CA3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Filed 9/24/14 McGie v. Super. Ct. CA3 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published,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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT (Glenn) ----

NANCY McGIE, C074901

Plaintiff and Respondent, (Super. Ct. No. 10CV00791)

v.

GLENN COUNTY SUPERIOR COURT,

Defendant and Appellant.

The Trial Court Employment Protection and Governance Act (Gov. Code § 71600 et seq.) requires each trial court to “establish a trial court employment protection system that shall become the minimum employment protection system for all trial court employees and shall become part of the sole trial court employee personnel system.” (Gov. Code, § 71650, subd. (a).) Such a system must include (among other things) “a process for conducting an evidentiary due process hearing to review disciplinary decisions that by law require an evidentiary due process hearing.” (Id., § 71653.)

1 At the times pertinent to this case, the personnel manual for the Glenn County Superior Court (the court) provided that “[a]ll employees are subject to the Trial Court Employment Protection and Governance Act (Government Code section 71600 and following) except those employees who are employed ‘at will’. The Court has the right to terminate the employment of an ‘at will’ employee at any time and for any reason not prohibited by law.” When the court terminated the employment of plaintiff Nancy McGie without providing her with an evidentiary due process hearing, McGie brought this mandate proceeding to compel the court to provide her with both a due process hearing and an award of back pay until she received that hearing. Following a jury determination that McGie was not an at-will employee, Yolo County Superior Court Judge Daniel Maguire granted McGie the relief she sought.1 On appeal, the court contends Judge Maguire did not have the authority to make an award of back pay here or, in the alternative, erred in not limiting the extent of the award. Finding no merit in the court’s arguments, we affirm. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND Beginning in February 2007, McGie was employed by the court as the court’s family law facilitator and as the managing attorney for the court’s self-help assistance referral program (SHARP). On September 28, 2009, McGie was summarily dismissed from her position without prior notice, apparently based on the court’s belief that she was doing private legal work on court time. McGie requested an evidentiary hearing and the other rights provided to trial court employees under Government Code section 71650 et

1 Hereafter, we will refer to Judge Maguire, rather than the court, as the adjudicator of this proceeding to avoid confusion with the court (Glenn County Superior Court) that is a party to this proceeding.

2 seq.,2 but the court refused, presumably based on its later asserted position that McGie was employed at will and therefore not entitled to any statutory due process rights. In February 2010, McGie commenced the present proceeding by filing a petition for a traditional writ of mandate to compel the court to provide her with her statutory due process rights. McGie also sought to compel the court to pay her full salary and benefits from the day she was terminated until such time as the court provided her with those rights. McGie took the position that she was entitled to those rights as a permanent employee of the court. In March 2010, the court’s attorney communicated to McGie’s attorney that the court was agreeable to providing McGie with a due process hearing to obviate the need for the mandamus proceeding. On July 2, 2010, the court’s attorney sent a letter purporting to memorialize the agreements the parties had reached in this regard. Specifically, the court’s attorney stated that the parties agreed to arbitrate the propriety of the court’s termination of McGie’s employment,3 McGie was going to dismiss her mandamus petition, and McGie would not raise any other procedural objections with respect to her termination. After noting these agreements, the court’s attorney wrote that

2 For ease of reference, we will refer to these rights as statutory due process rights. 3 Such arbitration was consistent with the procedures set out in the court’s personnel manual, which provided that “if disciplinary action is imposed, [the employee] may appeal such action to a qualified arbitrator in accordance with Government Code Section 71653 b through f.” Indeed, the letter specified that “the use of the arbitral process will serve as the exclusive method of resolution of this dispute as if [McGie] was entitled to a Due Process hearing as a non-At Will employee of the court.”

In his letter, the court’s attorney also set forth a “Notice of the Charges” on which the termination of McGie’s employment was based. Therein it was asserted that McGie was fired for “doing legal work as a private attorney preparing and filing conservatorship cases for Far Northern Legal Services, on Court time, and while supposedly performing services as an employee for the Court.”

3 “[t]he court reserves the right to present to the arbitrator the issue of whether Ms. McGie was an at will employee in the first instance and if the [arbitrator] finds that she is not, proceed to the issue of good cause [for the termination].” McGie’s attorney objected to having the arbitrator decide if McGie was an at-will employee and insisted that if the court did not drop this point, McGie would simply proceed with her mandamus petition. Thereafter, on July 6, 2010, the court’s attorney sent a new letter to McGie’s attorney memorializing the parties’ agreements. This new letter did not include the line about the arbitrator deciding whether McGie was an at-will employee. Based on the parties’ agreements, McGie dismissed her mandamus petition with prejudice later in July 2010. A year after that, on July 6, 2011, the parties finally met for the arbitration. The court’s attorney told the arbitrator that the issues to be arbitrated included whether McGie was employed at will. McGie’s attorney disagreed. The court’s attorney tried to justify his position by reference to his July 6 letter, even though that letter did not provide for arbitration of McGie’s employment status. Ultimately, the arbitrator determined the arbitration could not go forward since there was no agreement as to the issues to be arbitrated. In August 2011, McGie moved to set aside the voluntary dismissal of this mandamus proceeding. Both judges on the Glenn County Superior Court recused themselves, and the case was assigned to Judge Maguire. Thereafter, in September 2011, the parties stipulated to set aside the dismissal. The court filed its answer to McGie’s petition in November 2011. At a status conference in April 2012, Judge Maguire set a hearing on the merits of the petition for August following the submission of evidence and points and authorities. In September 2012, after Judge Maguire took the matter under submission following the August hearing, Judge Maguire decided to order a jury trial on the disputed

4 factual issue of “whether the parties . . . had an actual understanding on whether McGie was an at-will employee, and if so, what that understanding was.” A three-day jury trial was held in March 2013. The jury found that McGie was not an at-will employee. Subsequently, Judge Maguire ordered both parties to submit briefs on the provisions that should be included in the writ of mandate.

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Bluebook (online)
McGie v. Super. Ct. CA3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcgie-v-super-ct-ca3-calctapp-2014.