Moore v. JMK Golf CA6

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 18, 2015
DocketH039522
StatusUnpublished

This text of Moore v. JMK Golf CA6 (Moore v. JMK Golf CA6) 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
Moore v. JMK Golf CA6, (Cal. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Filed 11/18/15 Moore v. JMK Golf CA6 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

AMY MOORE, H039522 (San Benito County Plaintiff and Respondent, Super. Ct. No. CU-11-00162)

v.

JMK GOLF, LLC,

Defendant and Appellant.

Amy Moore, discharged from employment in her third trimester of pregnancy, sued her former employer, defendant JMK Golf, LLC, alleging an unlawful termination under the Fair Employment and Housing Act (FEHA). (Gov. Code, §§ 12940, 12945.) Plaintiff claimed she was terminated because of her pregnancy; defendant did not want to keep her job open or pay her medical insurance while she was on maternity leave. By special verdict the jury found defendant’s decision to discharge plaintiff was motivated at least in part by plaintiff’s pregnancy but was not a substantial factor in causing harm to plaintiff, and it awarded no compensatory damages. By separate special verdict, the jury found defendant acted with “malice, oppression, or fraud,” and awarded plaintiff $150,000 in punitive damages. 1 Defendant appeals from the judgment, arguing that the trial court erred by denying its motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict to set aside the punitive damages

1 Plaintiff also alleged violations of the Labor Code regarding meal breaks, overtime, and recordkeeping. The jury returned defense verdicts on those claims which are not part of this appeal. award. Specifically, defendant argues that the trial court erred by upholding the jury’s $150,000 punitive damages award because plaintiff failed to prove harm or damages resulting from defendant’s discharge decision. We will reverse the judgment because plaintiff failed to prevail on any requisite cause of action to support the award. I. TRIAL COURT PROCEEDINGS A. PLAINTIFF’S CASE On May 31, 2011 plaintiff was terminated from her server position at the Ridgemark Golf and Country Club (Ridgemark). She was 38 weeks pregnant and ten days shy of a scheduled three-month maternity leave. Plaintiff had worked at Ridgemark for eight years where she was well known and well liked by the clientele. Plaintiff’s grandparents were members at Ridgemark, and her wedding took place there. In June 2009, JMK Golf, LLC, owned by John and Alex Kehriotis, purchased Ridgemark. In late March or April 2011, Anthony Ybarra, the new food and beverage director, told plaintiff that defendant was eliminating full-time employees and, as a result, she would be losing her medical insurance. Plaintiff was so upset by this news that management agreed to extend plaintiff’s insurance coverage through her June due date. Plaintiff was terminated for failing to charge customers for a pack of cigarettes and a round of drinks during a busy Memorial Day shift. According to plaintiff, her action was inadvertent and unintentional, and the bartender, Janis Cunningham, was equally at fault. Plaintiff was serving several tables, both in the lounge and on the outside patio. A group seated at an outside table asked for a pack of cigarettes. Plaintiff was friends with the group. She retrieved the cigarettes from behind the bar because Cunningham had stepped away. Afterwards, a customer from the same table shouted to plaintiff on his way to the restroom: “Amy, I need three shots immediately of Jaegermeister outside.” Cunningham poured the shots, and plaintiff, who had been standing at the bar, delivered the drinks to the outside table, where her attention immediately turned to the 15 or 20 other people on the patio. She also was busy with 2 inside tables and, as a result, she forgot to ring up the shots and the cigarettes. At 5:00 p.m., she turned her friends’ table over to another server, foregoing any tip she may have received on the tab exceeding $100. She never prepared drinks or took drinks from behind the bar. The shots and pack of cigarettes were the only items she failed to charge for that day. The next day plaintiff met with Ybarra, Lori Castello, who worked under Ybarra, and human resources manager Denise Garcia. Although the managers were discussing three shots of Jaegermeister and a pack of cigarettes, plaintiff had no idea what they were talking about until they showed her a video and asked her if it showed her serving the shots. Plaintiff admitted serving the shots and cigarettes to her friends, but she denied that her failure to charge for the items was intentional. She testified that the video showed Cunningham pouring the shots. She begged to keep her job, offering to pay for the items, which sold for $6 each, but Ybarra terminated her. Plaintiff, her floor supervisor Tiffany MacIntosh, fellow server Katie Scoggin, and former food and beverage director Sandra Weis each testified to the protocol in place for insuring that drinks were charged to customers. When a server would input a drink order into the computer, the computer would charge the customer and generate a ticket for the bartender. When the bartender would pour a drink for a server without a ticket, the bartender would be equally responsible for seeing that the drink was charged to the customer by hand writing a ticket and giving it to the server or taping it to the monitor so the server would see it. The server would later input the order into the computer with a notation that the drink had already been poured. Each witness testified that everyone at some point had failed to ring up a drink and no one had ever been fired for such conduct. Plaintiff’s witnesses testified that the shared responsibility protocol was posted in two employee areas. When Scoggin learned of plaintiff’s discharge, she was upset that nothing had happened to Cunningham who, by failing to write a ticket for the Jaegermeister, was equally responsible for the failure to charge the customer. After 3 plaintiff was discharged, Scoggin and MacIntosh noticed that those postings had been removed. Scoggin also testified that the day after plaintiff was terminated, Castello had told her that they fired plaintiff because they could not keep her on through her maternity leave, and, within a week’s time, Scoggin overheard Garcia tell Castello “[i]t’s better this way. Now we don’t have to worry about her pregnancy.” Plaintiff testified that she was a “loyal, dedicated and really hard worker” at Ridgemark for eight years and that her termination was probably the worst thing that had ever happened to her. Thirty-eight weeks into her pregnancy, she worried about having her baby with no insurance, and about how she and her husband would pay bills and raise a baby on his income alone. She enjoyed her newborn less because she was stressed about not having a job to return to, and the memories of the termination would resurface when she would run into her former customers in the community. Although she had applied to local restaurants, she had not worked since her discharge. She had intended to return to Ridgemark in September 2011, and she sought damages in the form of lost wages based on her full-time schedule. Defendant disputed plaintiff’s claim for unemployment insurance benefits. Plaintiff prevailed at a hearing before an administrative law judge (ALJ) and the ALJ’s written decision was entered into evidence.

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Moore v. JMK Golf CA6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-jmk-golf-ca6-calctapp-2015.