Sartipi v. Travis Credit Union CA1/3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 20, 2026
DocketA174058
StatusUnpublished

This text of Sartipi v. Travis Credit Union CA1/3 (Sartipi v. Travis Credit Union CA1/3) 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
Sartipi v. Travis Credit Union CA1/3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

Filed 3/20/26 Sartipi v. Travis Credit Union CA1/3

NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT DIVISION THREE

ALI SARTIPI, Plaintiff and Appellant, A174058 v. TRAVIS CREDIT UNION, (Solano County Super. Ct. No. FCS057314) Defendant and Respondent.

Ali Sartipi sued Travis Credit Union (Travis) for gender discrimination under the Fair Employment and Housing Act (FEHA), alleging it fired him because he is male. (Gov. Code, § 12900 et seq.) The trial court granted Travis’s motion for summary judgment. Sartipi appeals from that order and from the denial of his request for a continuance of the summary judgment hearing. We affirm. BACKGROUND Travis is a nonprofit cooperative offering various financial products and services. Many of its employees have personal member accounts at the cooperative. The employee handbook governs access to those accounts. It acknowledges employees “ ‘may need access to member information throughout the workday for [Travis] business.’ ” (Italics added.) It emphasizes the importance of “ ‘maintaining the security and confidentiality

1 of member information.’ ” It also warns that Travis “ ‘reviews and monitors the activities for all member accounts, including employee-member accounts,’ ” and that its auditors and employees, such as tellers and loan officers, may review personal information associated with the accounts “ ‘in the normal course of business.’ ” Employees are required to sign a statement that “ ‘failure to adhere to the employee handbook may result in disciplinary action, up to and including termination of employment.’ ” And the handbook notes that employment at Travis is at-will — that it may terminate employment “ ‘any time, with or without a reason and with or without notice’ ” and without cause. Travis hired Sartipi in 2010, and he later became the Veranda branch manager in 2018 or 2019. In that role, he supervised approximately five to 10 employees while Mark Castro, the regional manager, in turn supervised him. Sartipi acknowledged receiving the employee handbook and that accessing a member’s financial information was only authorized for business purposes. He also understood the importance of maintaining the security of confidential member information. In June 2021, Travis received an anonymous complaint requesting an investigation of the departure and subsequent resignation of a former Veranda branch supervisor, Jocelyn Gutierrez. The complaint speculated that she resigned due to a confrontation with Sartipi regarding an ongoing issue. Based on the complaint, two Travis human resources representatives — both female — initiated an investigation. One investigator learned about an allegation that Sartipi showed Giovanni Chamberlain, a subordinate employee, an explicit photo of another female Travis employee. But during human resources interviews, Chamberlain stated variously that he did not recall being shown any explicit photo or that

2 it absolutely did not happen. The human resources representatives ultimately concluded Chamberlain was being dishonest and it was more likely than not that Sartipi showed the photo to him. Human resources uncovered an additional allegation that Sartipi accessed certain employees’ personal financial accounts without permission or a business purpose. Data logs revealed he accessed the accounts of four women, including Gutierrez and Vicki Vasquez, a financial services representative. From September 2020 through July 2021, he accessed Gutierrez’s account once, Vasquez’s account 37 times, another woman’s account 29 times, and the last woman’s account six times. Gutierrez was particularly upset, stressed, and angry that he looked at her account. Sartipi admitted improperly accessing Gutierrez’s account without her permission in 2020. He explained he simply checked her confidential financial information to verify she was taking a sick day rather than vacation time. Upon learning of this, Castro warned that accessing employee accounts in the absence of a business purpose was grounds for termination. Regarding Vasquez’s account, Sartipi testified Castro asked him to monitor the account because the compliance department discovered she was overdrafting and not properly managing her account. But Sartipi also admitted it was a mistake to access her account so often. Travis formally terminated Sartipi for accessing employee account information without authorization or a justified purpose — Gutierrez’s account once, Vasquez’s account 14 times, and the other two women 12 and three times, respectively. In October 2021, Sartipi filed a complaint against Travis, alleging it violated FEHA by using his gender as a substantial factor

3 in his termination.1 In a deposition, a former employee — the one of which Sartipi allegedly had an explicit photo — testified she never had nude photos of herself, that Sartipi never accessed her phone and would not have found any nude photos, and she never had any personal, social or romantic relationship with him. During his deposition, Sartipi admitted that he did not observe any discriminatory treatment in the human resources investigation or corrective action process. Rather, he believed that Travis treated him differently than all other employees, male and female. Others, for instance, were first given a documented, formal warning and then a final warning before being terminated. But he also acknowledged being given a verbal warning regarding accessing employees’ accounts. And he further conceded employees could be immediately terminated in the absence of any formal termination process. Notably, Travis had previously terminated a female employee for accessing a member’s account information without permission or a legitimate business purpose. In November 2024, Travis moved for summary judgment in the three consolidated cases. The following month, and as discussed further below, Sartipi unsuccessfully sought an ex parte order to continue the hearing to accommodate, among other things, an appointment for counsel’s necessary medical procedure, additional time for opposing the three summary judgment motions, and time for opposing Travis’s two motions to disqualify counsel and for evidentiary sanctions. While the trial court denied the motion to continue, it ultimately continued the hearing for three weeks to February 20,

1 Castro and Chamberlain were also terminated and, represented by

Sartipi’s counsel, initiated separate lawsuits against Travis. His counsel stipulated to consolidating those cases for “all purposes, including trial.”

4 2025. Later, the court granted Travis’s motion for summary judgment after concluding it terminated Sartipi for the legitimate reason of his improperly accessing member accounts, and that he failed to respond with substantial evidence raising a triable issue of pretext or gender discrimination. DISCUSSION I. Sartipi contends the trial court erroneously granted Travis’s motion for summary judgment. He argues he established a prima facie case of gender discrimination — that the two female human resources representatives developed a discriminatory animus against him because he is male and allegedly showed a subordinate employee an explicit photo of a female employee. He insists the proffered reason for his termination — improper access of employee member financial accounts — is false or a pretext for gender discrimination. A trial court must grant summary judgment if the moving party shows there are no triable issues of material fact and it is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. (Duffey v.

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Sartipi v. Travis Credit Union CA1/3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sartipi-v-travis-credit-union-ca13-calctapp-2026.