Pomeroy v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.

834 F. Supp. 2d 964, 2011 WL 2636162, 2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 71646
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. California
DecidedJuly 5, 2011
DocketCase No. CV F 09-2209 LJO GSA
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 834 F. Supp. 2d 964 (Pomeroy v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.) 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
Pomeroy v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., 834 F. Supp. 2d 964, 2011 WL 2636162, 2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 71646 (E.D. Cal. 2011).

Opinion

SUMMARY JUDGMENT DECISION (Doc. 27.)

LAWRENCE J. O’NEILL, District Judge.

INTRODUCTION

Defendant Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. (“WalMart”) seeks summary judgment in the [967]*967absence of evidence to support plaintiff Betty J. Pomeroy’s (“Ms. Pomeroy’s”) breach of contract claims arising from termination of her long-time employment which Wal-Mart characterizes as at-will. Ms. Pomeroy responds that her length of service, management’s oral assurances of security, and the absence of good cause for her termination raise factual issues to defeat summary judgment. This Court considered Wal-Mart’s summary judgment motion on the record without a hearing, pursuant to Local Rule 230(g).1 For the reasons discussed below, this Court GRANTS Wal-Mart summary judgment.

BACKGROUND

Summary

Wal-Mart employed Ms. Pomeroy in various positions for more than 31 years and terminated her for “gross misconduct” after she failed to pay for a replacement watch band. Ms. Pomeroy pursues breach of implied contract of continued employment and breach of implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing claims to challenge her termination “without good and just cause.” Wal-Mart contends that Ms. Pomeroy’s employment was at will and that she lacked an implied-in-fact contract for continued employment to support her claims.

Ms. Pomeroy’s Wal-Mart Employment

In 1976, a Wal-Mart store in Carthage, Missouri hired Ms. Pomeroy as a sales associate. At that store, Ms. Pomeroy also worked as sporting goods and automotive department heads and as a receiving department associate. All positions were hourly.

In 1989, Wal-Mart transferred Ms. Pomeroy to a Webb City, Missouri store and promoted her to receiving department manager, an hourly position.

In 1990, Ms. Pomeroy requested a transfer to a Bakersfield Wal-Mart store and was assigned to store number 1574 in Bakersfield. Since the store was not constructed, Ms. Pomeroy initially assisted in hiring several hundred store associates. After the store opened, Ms. Pomeroy worked as an invoice clerk and was responsible for incoming and outgoing monies. Later, Ms. Pomeroy worked as an associate in the cash office. She was hired as receiving manager when the position opened. These positions were hourly.

In August 1998, Ms. Pomeroy transferred to store number 2557 in Bakersfield to work in a direct store delivery position, also hourly. Ms. Pomeroy remained in this full-time position until her December 5, 2007 termination at which time Ms. Pomeroy received a $20.31 hourly rate and other employee benefits.

Ms. Pomeroy notes that she consistently received performance appraisals in which she was rated as “exceeds expectations” and including her last November 26, 2007 appraisal. Wal-Mart notes that during her 31-year employment, Ms. Pomeroy received performance evaluations, pay raises and promotions based on her performance evaluations.

[968]*968 Watch Repair

On December 3, 2007, Ms. Pomeroy took her husband’s watch to her store’s jewelry department and asked jewelry department manager Vicky Knox (“Ms. Knox”) if Ms. Knox could repair the watch’s broken band. Ms. Pomeroy instructed Ms. Knox that if the watchband needed repair, to repair it and that Ms. Pomeroy would pick it up when she left work that day.

After work on December 3, 2007, Ms. Knox went to the jewelry department and was informed that Ms. Knox was at lunch. Jewelry department sales associate Sara Bustamante (“Ms. Bustamante”) located the watchband and handed it to Ms. Pomeroy who claims that the watchband was in the original packaging which Ms. Pomeroy had delivered the watchband to the jewelry department and that the package did not have a second watchband to indicate that the broken watchband had been replaced. Ms. Pomeroy further claims that the package lacked a UPC sticker.

Ms. Pomeroy asked Ms. Bustamante if she owed anything for the repairs. Ms. Bustamante looked briefly around the jewelry department counter and told Ms. Pomeroy that she could not locate anything to indicate repairs or charges for repairs for the watchband. Ms. Pomeroy provided Ms. Bustamante her cell phone number and told Ms. Bustamante to ask Ms. Knox on her return from lunch to telephone Ms. Pomeroy if there were watchband charges and inform Ms. Knox that Ms. Pomeroy would return to pay the charges. Ms. Pomeroy claims that Ms. Knox never contacted her during the remainder of December 3, 2007 and that Ms. Pomeroy was not advised of any service repair. Ms. Pomeroy testified: “I just told her if there was any questions have [Ms. Knox] call me because she said as far as she was concerned it looked like [Ms. Knox] had just fixed it and that there was no charge.” Ms. Pomeroy attributed Ms. Bustamante to indicate no charge.

Ms. Pomeroy took the watch home with her without making a payment.

Wal-Mart’s Investigation

On December 4, 2007, receiving associate Kristi Swan (“Ms. Swan”) told assistant manager Mario Esparza (“Mr. Esparza”) that Ms. Pomeroy had left work with a new, unpaid for watchband. Mr. Esparza and/or asset protection coordinator Michael Downes (“Mr. Downes”), now deceased, obtained statements from Ms. Knox, Ms. Bustamante, Ms. Swan, receiving department employee Benita Medrano (“Ms. Medrano”), and claims associate Silvia Ponce de Leon (“Ms. Ponce de Leon”).

Ms. Knox told Mr. Esparza and/or Mr. Downes that on December 3, 2007, Ms. Pomeroy gave her a watch to fix and that Ms. Knox informed Ms. Pomeroy that she could not repair the watchband and that the watch needed a new band. Ms. Knox attributes Ms. Pomeroy to have agreed to replace the watchband and to acknowledge that Ms. Pomeroy would be required to pay for the new watchband and would pick it up before she left work that day. Ms. Knox placed in a bag the watch with the new band affixed, the old band, and a note that read: “Betty’s Watch Receiving New Watch Band. Not Pd. For.” Ms. Knox also told Mr. Esparza and/or Mr. Downes that Ms. Pomeroy wrote her cell phone number on a piece paper for Ms. Knox.

Ms. Bustamante told Mr. Esparza and/or Mr. Downes that Ms. Pomeroy retrieved the repaired watch from her on December 3, 2007, that Ms. Bustamante told Ms. Pomeroy that Ms. Bustamante did not know if money was owed for the repair, and that Ms. Pomeroy said she would speak with Ms. Knox on December 4, 2007.

[969]*969Claims associate Ms. Ponce de Leon told Mr. Esparza and/or Mr. Downes that Ms. Knox had spoken to Ms. Ponce de Leon about Ms. Pomeroy not paying for the new watchband. Ms. Ponce de Leon telephoned receiving for Ms. Pomeroy, who was at lunch, and left a message with coworker Ms. Medrano to inform Ms. Pomeroy to telephone Ms. Ponce de Leon and to pay for the watchband. Ms. Medrano told Mr. Esparza and/or Mr. Downes that Ms. Medrano had told Ms. Pomeroy about Ms. Ponce de Leon’s message after Ms. Pomeroy returned from lunch and that Ms. Pomeroy needed to pay for her things. Ms. Medrano attributes Ms. Pomeroy to acknowledge that she knew she needed to do so.

Ms. Swan, Ms. Pomeroy’s receiving coworker, told Mr. Esparza and/or Mr. Downes that she had informed Ms. Pomeroy that she needed to pay for the watchband and that Ms. Pomeroy acknowledged that she knew she needed to do so. In her deposition, Ms. Pomeroy testified that Ms.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
834 F. Supp. 2d 964, 2011 WL 2636162, 2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 71646, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pomeroy-v-wal-mart-stores-inc-caed-2011.