Montes v. SPS Technologies CA2/7

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 15, 2025
DocketB334509
StatusUnpublished

This text of Montes v. SPS Technologies CA2/7 (Montes v. SPS Technologies CA2/7) 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
Montes v. SPS Technologies CA2/7, (Cal. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Filed 5/15/25 Montes v. SPS Technologies CA2/7 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION SEVEN

JAVIER MONTES, B334509

Plaintiff and Appellant, (Los Angeles County Super. Ct. No. 21STCV47068) v.

SPS TECHNOLOGIES LLC et al.,

Defendants and Respondents.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, Thomas D. Long, Judge. Reversed with directions. Law Offices of Allison M. Schulman and Allison M. Schulman for Plaintiff and Appellant. Fisher & Phillips, Caroline S. Scala, Regina A. Petty, and Megan E. Walker for Defendants and Respondents SPS Technologies LLC and Hector Pelayo. INTRODUCTION

Javier Montes, a maintenance mechanic at SPS Technologies LLC dba PB Fasteners (PB Fasteners), went on medical leave after he was injured at work. When Montes asked to return to work with physical restrictions 14 months later, PB Fasteners terminated his employment, stating that Montes’s physical restrictions prevented him from performing the maintenance mechanic job and that PB Fasteners did not have another vacant position Montes could perform. Montes filed this action against PB Fasteners and one of Montes’s supervisors, Hector Pelayo, for disability discrimination and harassment under the Fair Employment and Housing Act (Gov. Code, § 12900 et seq. (FEHA)) and related causes of action.1 The trial court granted a motion by PB Fasteners and Pelayo for summary judgment. We reverse.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

A. Pelayo Harasses Montes After Montes Returns from Medical Leave In 1993 Montes began working for PB Fasteners, a manufacturer of aerospace structural nuts and bolts, or fasteners. In 2002 he became a maintenance mechanic. Montes repaired equipment, including grinding machines, hydraulic pumps, ovens, 100-ton presses, and computerized numerical control machines. In 2008 Hector Pelayo became Montes’s supervisor.

1 Undesignated statutory references are to the Government Code.

2 In August 2018 Montes had a heart attack, was hospitalized, and went on medical leave for four months. When Montes returned to work he requested temporary accommodations: no bending, going up stairs, or lifting more than 15 pounds. PB Fasteners temporarily assigned Montes to less physically demanding work in the shipping department, where he could package bolts while seated. While Montes worked in the shipping department and reported to the shipping supervisor, Pelayo (who at the time was not Montes’s supervisor) told Montes: “Man, you’re old. You’ve really gone to hell.” Pelayo called Montes an “asshole” and an “idiot” for requiring accommodations and insinuated Montes was faking the need for the accommodations. Pelayo also demanded to see the medication Montes was taking. Pelayo told Montes to “stop fucking around like a little bitch and go back to work” in the maintenance department. Pelayo asked another employee to tell Montes “to stop talking like an idiot and like a little bitch and to get back to doing normal work,” to “stop messing around like a dummy,” and that Pelayo “needed [him] working in the ovens.” When Montes said the human resources department instructed him to work in the shipping department, Pelayo yelled at Montes and told him to do what Pelayo said, not what human resources said. Montes went to speak with human resources administrator Sandra Calderon. While they were talking, Pelayo approached and said, “What the fuck are you doing over here? Why haven’t you gone where I told you to? You know what, go to hell. I don’t want you anymore.” Montes asked Calderon: “Do you see how he treats me in front of you?” Calderon said, “I never knew that he treated you that way. Why haven’t you come by before?” Montes

3 said, “I never come by, because everyone that does come by gets fired. And I need this job. That’s why I didn’t want to come to report this, this man. He always treats [me] like this, like trash, he humiliates me. How can I do my work with love, since I’m being mentally and emotionally destroyed?”2 A few weeks later, while Montes was still assigned to the shipping department, Pelayo began instructing him to do maintenance work. Pelayo told Montes to clean restrooms while the janitor was on medical leave. After one week Montes told Pelayo the janitorial work was hurting him. Pelayo said, “Well, what the fuck do you want to do? If you don’t want to do anything, just go home.” Montes said, “I came so that I could do whatever I’m able to do. Whatever is allowed in the medical report. I’m reporting to you that I’m getting hurt.” After the janitor returned from leave, Pelayo told Montes and the janitor to clean the restrooms and polish the floors with a heavy electric cleaning machine. Montes said, “I can’t use that heavy machine. . . . I can’t do pushing or pulling per the medical recommendations.” Pelayo said, “Well, what the fuck are you going to do? What the fuck can you do? You tell me what are you doing here? You tell me.” Montes tried to push the machine, but he felt he was getting hurt. He told Pelayo, “You’re pushing me to do things I cannot do.” Pelayo said, “Well, do whatever you want,” and left. When Montes told Pelayo that he was struggling physically and that the work was even more physically challenging than the maintenance mechanic job, Pelayo mocked Montes and called him “lazy.”

2 Calderon denied Montes complained to her about Pelayo.

4 On another occasion Pelayo made Montes come to Pelayo’s upstairs office, even though Montes said he could not climb stairs. Montes had to slowly go up the stairs, backward. When he got to Pelayo’s office, Montes said, “You know I cannot go up the stairs. You know what sacrifice it took me to get up here?” Pelayo said, “Well, damn, if you can’t do anything, then just go home.” Montes did not complain about Pelayo to human resources because he “didn’t think that it would get that far” and because, Montes said, “the people that went to complain, they would get fired and I was afraid that that would happen to me.”

B. Montes Goes on a Second Medical Leave In July 2019 an electrician asked Montes to repair a clutching machine, which Montes said he could not do because it was too high. The electrician said Montes could use a lift and a stool, and the electrician’s supervisor asked Montes to “do it as a favor, just do it slowly, carefully.” Montes agreed. While he was fixing the machine, Montes injured his foot. He returned to work for one or two days, but was placed on medical leave starting July 15, 2019. In July 2019 Montes also saw his doctor for chest pain, and the doctor ordered a cardiac procedure. In October 2019 Armand Contreras became human resources director at PB Fasteners. In the spring of 2020 Contreras discovered Montes and four other employees had been on medical leave for an extended time. Contreras began to enforce PB Fasteners’ policy of providing a maximum of 16 weeks of unpaid leave. On June 15, 2020, after Montes had been on leave for 11 months, Contreras sent Montes a letter stating: “At this point, we cannot continue providing approved leave of absence under our company policy.” Contreras asked Montes to

5 have his doctor report whether Montes would be able to return to work in July and perform his duties with or without accommodations, and if not, when the doctor anticipated Montes would be able to return to work.

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Montes v. SPS Technologies CA2/7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/montes-v-sps-technologies-ca27-calctapp-2025.