Oggel v. Cal. Dept. of Fish and Wildlife CA2/6

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 20, 2024
DocketB331264
StatusUnpublished

This text of Oggel v. Cal. Dept. of Fish and Wildlife CA2/6 (Oggel v. Cal. Dept. of Fish and Wildlife CA2/6) 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
Oggel v. Cal. Dept. of Fish and Wildlife CA2/6, (Cal. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Filed 11/20/24 Oggel v. Cal. Dept. of Fish and Wildlife CA2/6 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 SIX

GRANT J. OGGEL, 2d Civil No. B331264 (Super. Ct. No. 56-2019- Plaintiff and Appellant, 00525114-CU-WM-VTA) (Ventura County) v.

CALIFORNIA DEPARTMENT OF FISH AND WILDLIFE,

Real Party in Interest and Respondent.

The question presented here is whether the Department of Fish and Wildlife (the Department) owes backpay and other compensation to appellant Grant J. Oggel, a former game warden who was suspended from his position for disciplinary reasons, then medically demoted and then terminated after he failed to report to work at the new, demoted position. While his appeal to the California State Personnel Board (SPB) regarding the disciplinary action was pending, appellant pursued a worker’s compensation claim. The worker’s compensation claim resulted in a monetary award and in work restrictions that the Department concluded would prevent appellant from performing his duties as a game warden. The Department medically demoted appellant to an office technician position at a location more than 80 miles from appellant’s home. Between the end of appellant’s disciplinary suspension and the date of his medical demotion, the Department paid appellant $301,000 in backpay and other compensation. Appellant never reported for work at the demoted position or at his former workplace. The SPB found that the Department did not present sufficient evidence to support the medical demotion. It further found, however, that appellant was not entitled to additional compensation because he did not report for work after the medical demotion. The superior court agreed, and on that basis denied appellant’s petition for writ of mandate. We affirm. Facts Appellant’s dispute with the Department stretches back to 2007. He had been employed as a game warden in the Camarillo office for about four years when the Department found that appellant committed several forms of misconduct while operating a personal side business.1 It terminated appellant’s employment in August 2007. Appellant appealed his termination to the SPB. In December 2010, the SPB dismissed the charge of dishonesty after

1 Appellant sold used medical equipment on eBay, using his state-issued computer and cell phone. In communications with a disgruntled customer, appellant denied being a game warden. The customer reported this conduct to the Department, prompting it to investigate appellant’s conduct.

2 concluding that appellant’s false statements had no connection with his employment. However, the SPB also found that the remaining charges for neglect of duty, misuse of state property, discourteous treatment of the public and other failure of good behavior had been established. The SPB found appellant’s serious misconduct merited discipline, but that the penalty of termination was too harsh. Instead, it concluded, “a 24-month suspension is adequate and reasonable for the proven misconduct . . . .” The SPB further ordered the Department to pay appellant all back pay and benefits that would have accrued to him. While the SPB appeal was pending, appellant filed a claim for worker’s compensation benefits, alleging both physical and psychiatric work-related injuries. This proceeding resulted in a monetary award and in work restrictions that precluded appellant from “heavy lifting and carrying,” lifting over 45 pounds, “prolonged positioning or repetitive rotation of the neck,” and “very prolonged sitting.” The work restrictions also included “a preclusion against emotionally stressful work situations,” “wearing a uniform during the performance of his job,” and working in a “hostile work environment.” Appellant’s work restrictions have not been lifted by his treating physicians. Appellant requested accommodations that would allow him to return to work. The Department informed him that it would require a medical opinion clarifying the job duties he would be able to perform without accommodation and providing guidance on his reasonable accommodation requirements. In other communications, the Department presented appellant with options to return to work in other, non-law enforcement positions.

3 Appellant did not supply any clarification of his work restrictions or accept any of the alternative positions offered. Instead, in June 2013, he filed a claim with the SPB for backpay. In January 2014, the Department served appellant with a Notice of Medical Action (NOMA), notifying him that he had been demoted from his position as a game warden for medical reasons and transferred to a position as an Office Technician at an office in Ontario, California. Appellant was directed to report for work in Ontario in February 2014. He did not report for work in Ontario, or at his previous work location. The Department later terminated appellant’s employment for being absent without leave (AWOL). (Gov. Code, § 19996.2, subd. (a).)2 Appellant filed another appeal with the SPB, challenging the medical demotion. That matter and his 2013 claim for backpay were consolidated and scheduled for evidentiary hearing in July 2014. Before the hearing, the parties entered into a settlement agreement. The Department agreed to withdraw the AWOL termination, to pay backpay and other damages, and to make contributions to appellant’s retirement account. Appellant agreed to voluntarily resign from the Department and to release all of his other claims. The Department later notified appellant that it could not fulfill its obligations under the settlement agreement because the California Personnel Retirement Board (CalPERS) refused to accept contributions made on appellant’s behalf. CalPERS explained that appellant was not entitled to accrue additional service credit because he never reported back to work after his

2All statutory references are to the Government Code unless otherwise stated.

4 suspension ended and before the order that he return to work after the medical demotion. Appellant obtained a judgment rescinding the settlement agreement and related SPB order on the grounds of mutual mistake. His claim for backpay and his appeal of the medical demotion were revived. At some point after his AWOL termination, the Department paid appellant $301,000 representing backpay for the period between the end of his disciplinary suspension and the date he was ordered to return to work. After hearings in 2018, the SPB concluded that the Department did not present sufficient evidence at the hearing to support the medical demotion. It concluded, however, that appellant was not entitled to additional backpay. Fifty-four months elapsed between the date his disciplinary suspension ended and the date of his medical demotion. However, the Department had already paid appellant sixty-three months’ of backpay. Relying on a previous SPB decision, In the Matter of the Appeal by Dianna Henning (2005) SPB Dec. No. 05-01 [2005 WL 516182] (Henning), the SPB found that appellant was not entitled to additional backpay because he never reported for work at the new location. Appellant filed a petition for writ of mandate in the superior court. He contended the Henning decision was distinguishable because the employee in that case had not been demoted to a job in a remote location. By contrast, it would have been impossible or unreasonable for appellant to report to his new work assignment because it required a commute of over eighty miles each way. Appellant contended he was at least

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Bluebook (online)
Oggel v. Cal. Dept. of Fish and Wildlife CA2/6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oggel-v-cal-dept-of-fish-and-wildlife-ca26-calctapp-2024.