Osborne v. Pleasanton Automotive Co., LP

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 31, 2024
DocketA167118
StatusPublished

This text of Osborne v. Pleasanton Automotive Co., LP (Osborne v. Pleasanton Automotive Co., LP) 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
Osborne v. Pleasanton Automotive Co., LP, (Cal. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Filed 10/31/24 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION TWO

EVA OSBORNE, Plaintiff and Respondent, A167118 v. (Alameda County PLEASANTON AUTOMOTIVE Super. Ct. No. RG20058903) COMPANY, LP, et al., Defendants; BOB SLAP, Defendant and Appellant.

In March 2020, Plaintiff Eva Osborne sued Defendants Pleasanton Automotive Company, LOP Automotive Company LP, HAG Automotive Investments LP (collectively, HAG), and its Executive General Manager and Market Area Vice President, Bob Slap. The suit asserted eight causes of action for discrimination, retaliation, harassment, failure to prevent harassment and retaliation and wage and hour violations arising from alleged workplace misconduct by Slap during four years when Osborne was working as Slap’s executive assistant. Two-plus years into the litigation, Slap filed a cross-complaint against Osborne, alleging statements in a letter she submitted to HAG’s human resources director three months before she filed suit constituted libel, slander, intentional infliction of emotional distress, intentional interference with contractual relations and negligence. In response, Osborne filed a special motion to strike (the motion) under the anti-SLAPP law (Code Civ. Proc., § 425.16),1 contending Slap’s claims against her arose out of protected activity she undertook in anticipation of litigation. She asserted Slap could not show he would likely prevail on the merits because, among other reasons, her statements were absolutely privileged by Civil Code section 47, subdivision (2). In a thorough, well-reasoned opinion, Alameda Superior Court Judge Eumi Lee granted Osborne’s motion, concluding her statements were protected activity under the anti-SLAPP statute and rejecting Slap’s arguments that they were extortionate and illegal as a matter of law. The court held Slap could not establish minimal merit in his claims, as required to withstand an anti-SLAPP challenge, because Osborne’s statements were both absolutely and conditionally privileged under Civil Code section 47 and Slap failed to overcome the conditional privilege with a showing of malice. Slap appealed. Applying de novo review, we likewise reject Slap’s attempt to invoke an exception to the anti-SLAPP statute for activity that is illegal as a matter of law and conclude the litigation privilege bars Slap’s claims, preventing him from meeting his burden under the second step of the anti-SLAPP analysis to show his claims have minimal merit. We therefore affirm the trial court’s decision granting Osborne’s motion. We need not reach Osborne’s alternative arguments that the conditional privilege applies, that Slap has failed to show malice or that Slap has failed to make a prima facie showing on his claims.

1 All further statutory references are to the Code of Civil Procedure unless otherwise indicated. 2 BACKGROUND We take the following facts from the pleadings and the parties’ evidence on the special motion to strike. I. The Human Resources Letter and the Underlying Litigation HAG employed Slap in 1993 and promoted him several times over the years. Slap was serving as HAG’s Market Area Vice President in 2015, when HAG hired Osborne to serve as his executive assistant. HAG paid Osborne on an hourly basis. It is uncontested that, in addition to her professional duties, Slap had Osborne perform personal errands and tasks for him. Slap alleged these personal tasks were part of her job duties, which HAG authorized because they “allowed Slap to focus on his duties as Market Area Vice President.” Osborne alleged Slap “required her to perform demeaning personal tasks such as carry his bags, launder his gym clothes, shine his shoes, cut up his food [and] get up from her desk and come into his office for the purpose of refilling his water glass” and she was “routinely not paid for all hours worked and required to work overtime for which she received no overtime compensation.” Osborne alleged she had repeatedly complained to HAG’s controller and Human Resources (HR) director, Nancy Cassity, about these matters, leading Slap to retaliate against her and that HAG took no action to investigate or remediate Slap’s conduct. In 2019, Osborne again complained to Cassity that she was not being properly compensated for personal tasks that Slap asked her to perform. Cassity instructed her to log all her time—for both business- related tasks and the personal errands Slap required her to perform—and to file any workplace-related complaints in writing.

3 According to Slap, around that same time Osborne “essentially blackmailed” him by threatening to report his misuse of her time and function unless he made her a salaried employee. Slap, in turn, reported this alleged incident to Cassity. On December 20, 2019, Osborne emailed Cassity a four-page, single spaced letter (the HR letter), which she referred to as a “Formal Complaint,” documenting Slap’s alleged misconduct. In it, she stated that Cassity had recently directed her to put her concerns in writing before any action could be taken or her concerns could be addressed, and, accordingly, she was “sending you this letter in a final effort to have my concerns acknowledged, addressed and resolved.” We describe the letter more fully below in the analysis section of this opinion. In brief, the letter described at length instances of Slap’s alleged misconduct, accused him of repeatedly making inappropriate and demeaning requests of her, stated he refused to allow her to log all of her time and repeatedly failed to ensure she was paid for all the work he asked her to do, stated she had discussed Slap’s behavior with Cassity “on numerous occasions” hoping Slap’s behavior would improve, stated he had retaliated against her when she complained and said she “now” found her working conditions “unbearable and intolerable.” At around the same time, she contacted and retained counsel, who the following month sent an email to HAG’s counsel inquiring about the state of the investigation HAG had told Osborne it would undertake, demanding documents and giving notice of the obligation to preserve evidence.

4 In March 2020, three months after sending the HR letter,2 Osborne sued Defendants. She asserted claims solely against HAG for discrimination; retaliation; failure to prevent harassment, discrimination, and retaliation; and failure to pay wages and overtime. She asserted a claim for hostile work environment harassment based on sex against all Defendants, including Slap. Among other facts, the complaint alleged, “[i]n 2017 when Plaintiff complained to Slap that a coworker was sexually harassing her, including touching her inappropriately, Slap refused to investigate or take remedial action to address her concerns. Slap then promoted the coworker to Parts Manager and, in a subsequent lawsuit filed by the coworker, ordered Plaintiff to lie under oath.” It also alleged that Slap “repeatedly expressed that . . . he hated all women.” In August 2022, Slap filed his cross-complaint, contending twenty-five statements in the HR letter, as well as one oral statement Osborne made to Cassity, were false. Based on the allegedly false statements, he asserted claims against Osborne for libel, slander per se, intentional infliction of emotional distress, intentional interference with contractual relations, and negligence. Those allegedly false statements include: (1) that Slap told Osborne he hated all women;3 (2) that Osborne had complained to Slap that a coworker was sexually harassing her;

2Osborne filed the suit on March 16, 2020, shortly after having filed a complaint and received a right to sue letter from the Department of Fair Employment and Housing (DFEH). 3 The HR letter does not contain this statement, but Osborne allegedly said this to Cassity in a December 2019 meeting.

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Osborne v. Pleasanton Automotive Co., LP, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/osborne-v-pleasanton-automotive-co-lp-calctapp-2024.