Mcveigh v. Recology San Francisco

213 Cal. App. 4th 443, 152 Cal. Rptr. 3d 595
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 31, 2013
DocketNo. A131833
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 213 Cal. App. 4th 443 (Mcveigh v. Recology San Francisco) 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
Mcveigh v. Recology San Francisco, 213 Cal. App. 4th 443, 152 Cal. Rptr. 3d 595 (Cal. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

Opinion

SIGGINS, J.

Plaintiff Brian McVeigh appeals following the grant of summary judgment in favor of his former employer Recology San Francisco.1 Recology provides waste collection, recycling and disposal services to San Francisco residents and businesses. McVeigh’s complaint alleged that Recology fired him in retaliation for his reporting possible fraud in connection with California redemption value payments made by and to Recology for recycled materials.

McVeigh’s whistleblower causes of action were brought under Government Code section 12653, part of California’s False Claims Act (CFCA) (Gov. Code, § 12650 et seq.), and Labor Code section 1102.5. Government Code section 12653 prohibits an employer from discriminating against an employee for acts taken to expose false claims presented to the government. Labor Code section 1102.5, subdivision (b), prohibits an employer from discriminating against an employee for reporting unlawful conduct to the government.

In reviewing whether summary judgment was proper under the CFCA, we will discuss whether the state was harmed by the alleged fraud reported by McVeigh and whether his report of possible fraud was protected conduct under the statute. In order to determine whether summary judgment was proper under the Labor Code provision, we will consider whether the statute [448]*448protects an employee from discrimination for reporting illegal acts by fellow employees or only illegal acts of his or her employer.

We reverse the summary judgment on three of McVeigh’s causes of action, and affirm the judgment for Recology on two others. Because McVeigh did not demonstrate that the fraud alleged in one of his causes of action under the CFCA involved possible financial harm to the state, summary judgment was proper on that claim. We conclude as to his other CFCA cause of action that McVeigh alleged possible fraud on the government that caused it economic harm and that his reporting of fraud was protected conduct. We also conclude that the Labor Code protects an employee from discrimination for reporting claims of illegal conduct by fellow employees as well as by an employer.

L BACKGROUND

McVeigh began working for Recology in 2000. From late 2004 through late November 2005, he was an operations supervisor at Pier 96, a Recology facility where recyclables collected from various sources are sorted for processing and sale to vendors. Recology also operated two buy-back centers, one at Pier 96 and one at 501 Tunnel Road in Brisbane, where employees weighed customers’ recyclables presented for redemption, such as glass bottles and aluminum cans. The employee who weighed the material would write the weight on a tag and give the tag to the customer. The customer brought the tag to a cashier, who logged the material and weight into a computer showing the date and time, and paid the customer the California redemption value (CRV) in cash for the weight shown on the tag.

In addition to buy-back center purchases, Recology collected CRV recyclables from various sources, including “curbside” collection. Recology aggregated, processed, and weighed the recyclables from all sources at Pier 96 and shipped them to third party purchasers with a form DR-6 that showed their weight. Bales of recyclables collected from the different sources were commingled before they were shipped from Pier 96. The sources of the materials were not shown on the bales, but the weight of recyclables purchased at the buy-back centers was distinguished from the weight of other recyclables on the DR-6 forms. The purchasers verified the weights they received, recorded them on a form DR-7, and the DR-6 and DR-7 forms were submitted to the Department of Conservation, which reimbursed Recology the CRV. Recology was reimbursed at a higher rate for recyclables purchased at the buy-back centers than for recyclables collected from other sources.

Around September 2005, Pier 96 supervisor Bo Duong received a tip that an employee was engaged in “tag inflation” fraud and asked McVeigh to investigate. Tag inflation fraud occurs when an attendant records more weight [449]*449on the tag than the weight of the recyclables actually bought back by Recology, resulting in an overpayment by Recology to the customer, and possibly a kickback to the attendant. The suspected employee admitted committing tag inflation in collaboration with a buy-back attendant. McVeigh reported this information to Pier 96 general manager John Jurinek, who directed him to call the San Francisco police, and the employees were arrested. McVeigh also received tips from coworkers that tag inflation was occurring at Tunnel Road. In September 2005, McVeigh reported information about tag inflation at Pier 96 and Tunnel Road to San Francisco Police Officer James Lewis.

While he was assigned to Pier 96, McVeigh worked under Jurinek and operations manager Joe Dámele. McVeigh was counseled by Jurinek and Dámele because they were concerned about his “overly aggressive” management style. Pier 96 employees complained that McVeigh seemed intent on finding wrongdoing and said he was “witch-hunting” or “stalking.” Numerous union members filed grievances against him, and Jurinek said McVeigh had a “cop mentality.”2 In November 2005, Dámele gave McVeigh a performance rating of three on a scale going from a low of one to a high of five. The rating reflected satisfactory job performance and Dámele had never given anyone a four or five. '

That same month, McVeigh transferred from Pier 96 to Tunnel Road. In addition to a buy-back center, Tunnel Road houses a public waste dumping area and an industrial material recycling facility (IMRF). McVeigh was assigned to supervise the IMRF, where recyclable materials are separated from industrial waste. He worked under operations manager Ken Stewart.

McVeigh told Stewart that he had reported tag inflation to Officer Lewis, and informed Stewart that Lewis had a business that supplied video surveillance equipment that could be used by Recology to detect and deter the fraud. In January 2006, Stewart told McVeigh that video equipment would not be installed, and ordered him “to stay out of the CRV Buy Back business” and “only mind . . . the IMRF.” Thus, from January 2006 to September 2007, when McVeigh was made supervisor of the Tunnel Road buy-back center, he did not report his “concerns of CRV theft scams of State funds” even though he continued to receive tips of ongoing fraud.

[450]*450In November 2006, Stewart also gave McVeigh an overall annual performance rating of three. Toward the end of that month or in early December 2006, an employee accused McVeigh of, among other things, “[mjisuse of authority” and “causing] turmoil amongst employees.” A human resources specialist investigated the accusations and determined that McVeigh had acted “unprofessionally” in his dealings with employees. He was placed on a 90-day “Performance Improvement Plan,” which included “a training course on dealing effectively with others.”

In September 2007, when McVeigh was put in charge of the Tunnel Road buy-back center, Stewart told him that he was to “straighten out the facility,” and McVeigh understood his duties to include preventing tag inflation. He suspected that tag inflation was occurring, and that “management was involved in some type of coverup” of the problem. He reported his suspicions to Sergeant Thomas Lynn of the Brisbane Police Department.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
213 Cal. App. 4th 443, 152 Cal. Rptr. 3d 595, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcveigh-v-recology-san-francisco-calctapp-2013.