Phillips-Kerley v. City of Fresno Fire Department

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. California
DecidedDecember 4, 2019
Docket1:18-cv-00438
StatusUnknown

This text of Phillips-Kerley v. City of Fresno Fire Department (Phillips-Kerley v. City of Fresno Fire Department) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Phillips-Kerley v. City of Fresno Fire Department, (E.D. Cal. 2019).

Opinion

1 2 3 4 5 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT 6 EASTERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA 7 8 DAVID PHILLIPS-KERLEY, CASE NO. 1:18-CV-00438-AWI-BAM

9 Plaintiff, ORDER ON DEFENDANT’S MOTION 10 v. TO DISMISS SECOND AMENDED COMPLAINT; FOR MORE DEFINITE 11 CITY OF FRESNO, et al., STATEMENT; AND TO STRIKE PORTIONS OF THE SECOND 12 Defendants. AMENDED COMPLAINT

13 (Doc. No. 50) 14

16 INTRODUCTION 17 David Phillips-Kerley brings nine causes of action against the City of Fresno in his Second 18 Amended Complaint (“2AC”), arising from harassment, retaliation and other forms of wrongdoing 19 that he allegedly experienced over a span of several years as a firefighter with the City of Fresno 20 Fire Department (“Fresno Fire Department”). Doc. No. 47. 21 The City of Fresno now moves for dismissal of three of the causes of action in the 2AC. 22 Doc. No. 50-1. The City of Fresno also moves the Court to strike portions of the 2AC and to order 23 a more definite statement. Id. 24 For the reasons that follow, the Court will grant the motion to dismiss, grant the motion for 25 a more definite statement, and deny the motion to strike as moot. Plaintiff will be afforded one 26 opportunity to amend certain claims. The Court instructs counsel for Phillips-Kerley to give due 27 consideration to the findings in this Order in any amended pleading. 28 1 FACTUAL BACKGROUND 2 Phillips-Kerley has been employed by the Fresno Fire Department since 2004. Doc. No. 47 3 ¶¶ 10-12. In August 2010, as he was preparing to go off-duty, Phillips-Kerley asked a co-worker 4 to remove his towels from the dryer when they were done and left a post-it note on the dryer to 5 notify others that the towels belonged to him. Id. ¶16. When Phillips-Kerley returned to work the 6 following week, he found “post-it notes left for him everywhere with messages placed throughout 7 the kitchen.” Id. Phillips-Kerley reported the incident to Captain Ron Caldwell, but Caldwell 8 dismissed the incident as a “joke” and refused to investigate. Id. ¶¶ 17, 99. Shortly thereafter, in 9 September 2010, Caldwell and Phillips-Kerley’s supervisor, Captain Mike Gill, subjected Phillips- 10 Kerley to questioning without allowing Phillips-Kerley representation or giving him “notice of the 11 subject of their investigation.” Id. ¶ l7. Phillips-Kerley, for his part, “notified … Gill and 12 Caldwell,” in the course of these interactions, that “he opposed their disparate treatment of [him] 13 based on his prior opposition to their discriminatory and unlawful practices.” Id. ¶ 99. The day 14 after he was questioned by Gill and Caldwell, Phillips-Kerley met with Chief Bruegman “to report 15 that Gill and Caldwell had investigated him without following the proper procedures” and 16 Bruegman “advised [Phillips-Kerley] that he should ‘move forward with caution.’” Id. ¶ 18. 17 Bruegman resigned in October 2010, and the day after his resignation, Battallion Chief 18 Charles Tobias “questioned [Phillips-Kerley] about his report to Chief Bruegman.” Doc. No. 47 ¶ 19 20. Tobias told Phillips-Kerley that “someone ‘did that to him once and they regretted it.’” Id. 20 Phillips-Kerley “understood this comment to be a threat of retaliation” and requested a transfer “in 21 order to avoid harassment by” Gill, Caldwell and Tobias. Id. ¶¶ 20-21. In the course of the ensuing 22 years, Phillips-Kerley was subjected to various forms of retaliation on multiple occasions, 23 including unwarranted disciplinary action. 24 PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND 25 Phillips-Kerley filed this action on March 28, 2018. Doc. No. 1. The original Complaint 26 alleged 21 causes of action under federal law, state statutes and common law against the Fresno 27 Fire Department and more than 20 individual defendants. Id. 28 On May 15, 2018, the City of Fresno filed a motion to dismiss, a motion for a more 1 definite statement and motion to strike portions of the Complaint. Doc. No. 10. Shortly thereafter, 2 the Court issued an order, based on a stipulation between Phillips-Kerley and the City of Fresno, 3 granting Phillips-Kerley leave to file a First Amended Complaint (“1AC”) “attempt[ing] to cure 4 the defects raised in [the City of Fresno’s] motion.” Doc. No. 14. The 1AC, as filed on June 18, 5 2018, alleged 21 causes of action against the City of Fresno (in place of the Fresno Fire 6 Department) and more than 20 individual defendants. Doc. No. 13. On July 6, 2019, the City of 7 Fresno filed a motion under Rule 12 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedures as to the 1AC. Doc. 8 No. 16. As relevant here, the City of Fresno sought dismissal of all six of Phillips-Kerley’s causes 9 of action under the Firefighter’s Procedural Bill of Rights Act (the “FPBORA”), Cal. Gov. Code 10 §§ 3250-3262, for being duplicative, failing to state a claim and violating the applicable statute of 11 limitations. Id. at 3:7-4:5. 12 In opposing the City of Fresno’s motion, Phillips-Kerley conceded that many of his causes 13 of action were duplicative, barred by the statute of limitations, or legally baseless, in addition to 14 conceding dismissal of his prayer for punitive damages. Doc. No. 19, p. 3 of 17, lines 5-18. 15 Specifically, Phillips-Kerley acknowledged “that the statutes of limitations had expired on his 16 tenth, eleventh, thirteenth and fourteenth causes of action” (under Sections 3253(e)(1), 3253(i), 17 3254(b) and 3255 of the California Government Code, respectively) and stated that he would 18 voluntarily dismiss those claims with prejudice. Id., p. 3 of 17, lines 5-10. Further, Phillips-Kerley 19 conceded that “the twelfth and fifteenth causes of action [under Sections 3254(a) and 3256.5(b) of 20 the California Government Code, respectively] [were] duplicative of the sixteenth cause of action” 21 and agreed to “dismiss the twelfth and fifteenth causes of action with prejudice and seek remedy 22 for [those] claims under the sixteenth cause of action.” Id., p. 3 of 17, lines 8-10. The sixteenth 23 cause of action was under Section 3260 of the California Government Code, which broadly 24 provides a cause of action and a full complement of remedies for violations of “rights and 25 protections guaranteed by” the FPBORA. See Cal. Gov. Code § 3260. 26 On October 19, 2018, the Court granted in part and denied in part the City of Fresno’s 27 motion to dismiss, granted the City of Fresno’s motion for a more definite statement and denied, 28 as moot, the City of Fresno’s motion to strike as to the 1AC. Doc. No. 24. In doing so, the Court 1 granted Phillips-Kerley leave to amend but “instruct[ed] the parties to consider the reasoning of 2 [the] Order as applied to the Second Amended Complaint” in filing an amended pleading. Doc. 3 No. 24 at 1:20-21. Specifically, the Court stated: 4 Now that [Phillips-Kerley] has conceded that nearly two-thirds of his claims and his prayer for punitive damages are not cognizable, and that incidents prior to 5 December 2015 are time-barred for his Title VII claims, it is highly likely that [Phillips-Kerley’s] statement of facts contains numerous orphaned allegations 6 irrelevant to this case. 7 Id. at 3:17-20. 8 Moreover, the Court noted that several causes of action incorporated irrelevant paragraphs from 9 the fact section of the 1AC, id. at 3:21-22, and expressly directed Phillips-Kerley to “make sure 10 any incorporations in the 2AC reference the proper paragraphs.” Id. at 5:7-9. Finally, the Court 11 relied on Phillips-Kerley’s representation that he had elected not to pursue certain claims and, 12 thus, did not address such claims (including claims under the FPBORA) in deciding the City of 13 Fresno’s motion to dismiss as to the 1AC. Id. at 5:18-25.

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