Shabazz v. West Hills Hospital etc. CA2/1

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 28, 2026
DocketB332570
StatusUnpublished

This text of Shabazz v. West Hills Hospital etc. CA2/1 (Shabazz v. West Hills Hospital etc. CA2/1) 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
Shabazz v. West Hills Hospital etc. CA2/1, (Cal. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

Filed 1/28/26 Shabazz v. West Hills Hospital etc. CA2/1 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 ONE

SCOTT SHABAZZ, B332570

Plaintiff and Appellant, (Los Angeles County Super. Ct. No. 20STCV45585) v.

WEST HILLS HOSPITAL AND MEDICAL CENTER et al.,

Defendants and Respondents.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, Michael L. Stern, Judge. Affirmed. Ivie McNeill Wyatt Purcell & Diggs, Byron Michael Purcell, Julio C. Navarro for Plaintiff and Appellant. Sheppard, Mullin, Richter & Hampton, Richard J. Simmons, Jason W. Kearnaghan, Khesraw Karmand, Melanie M. Hamilton for Defendants and Respondents. _______________________________ Plaintiff Scott Shabazz appeals from a judgment entered against him after the trial court granted the summary judgment motion of defendants West Hills Hospital and Medical Center (the hospital) and three hospital employees in this action asserting employment-related causes of action. Shabazz alleges in his complaint, among other things, that defendants discriminated against him based on his race when the hospital placed him on an investigatory suspension after a vial of morphine went missing from the emergency department while he was working there as a medical technician. Defendants stated that the reason for the suspension was their understanding that Shabazz was the only person within arm’s reach of the vial at the time it disappeared other than a nurse who reported it missing. After a 23-day suspension and an investigation that was deemed inconclusive, Shabazz returned to work at the hospital, where he remained employed for three more years until he voluntarily resigned. Approximately eight weeks after defendants filed their summary judgment motion, and about a week before the opposition was due, Shabazz sought a continuance of the hearing on the motion. The trial court granted the continuance, over defendants’ objection, giving Shabazz an additional seven and a half months to respond to the motion. Shabazz filed most of his opposition papers nearly 24 hours after they were due, including all his written evidence and his response to defendants’ separate statement of undisputed material facts. A couple of days later, he filed an ex parte application seeking either another continuance of the hearing on the motion or an order allowing him to serve the untimely opposition papers. The trial court denied the

2 application in its entirety, and Shabazz does not challenge that ruling on appeal. Shabazz asks us to reverse the judgment, contending primarily that a surveillance video he lodged in this court establishes a triable issue of material fact precluding summary judgment. He asserts the video shows there were other people in the emergency department who could have taken the vial of morphine after a nurse set it down, but defendants targeted and suspended him because of his race. Even if we were to ignore the procedural defects in the opposition papers, including but not limited to the untimely response to defendants’ separate statement of undisputed material facts, we would have no grounds to reverse the summary judgment. The record is devoid of any evidence to assist us in interpreting the distorted and intermittent images in the video. For example, based on the evidence before us, we can only speculate as to (1) which of the multiple women in the video is the nurse who allegedly was the last person to handle the vial before it disappeared, (2) which mobile workstation is at issue, (3) at what point in the 43-minute video the vial went missing, and (4) where Shabazz and other employees were located in relation to the nurse’s mobile workstation at the moment the vial went missing and until the nurse reacted to it being missing. Without any evidence providing such context, the video does not raise a triable issue of material fact that the reason for Shabazz’s suspension was a pretext for discrimination, as he contends. Shabazz has not demonstrated the trial court erred in granting summary judgment. Accordingly, we affirm.

3 BACKGROUND A. Factual Background In 2014, the hospital hired Shabazz as an emergency department medical technician. During his orientation, he acknowledged receipt of the hospital’s written policies, including its drug and alcohol policies. The incident giving rise to this action occurred four years later, on December 12, 2018. On that day, Shabazz was working in the emergency department as were Nurse Evgeniya Krol and others. At some point during her shift, Krol notified the Charge Nurse that a vial of morphine “had gone missing from a Workstation on Wheels (‘WOW’)” in the emergency department. Janeanne Morgan, the Director of Emergency Services at the hospital, and Elizabeth Reid, the Assistant Chief Nursing Officer at the hospital, “immediately commenced an initial investigation.” They stated in declarations supporting the motion for summary judgment that based on their initial investigation, they “understood” that other than Krol, Shabazz was “the only person near the WOW and within arm’s reach of the morphine when it disappeared.” They also stated it “did not seem plausible” to them that Krol “would report suspected diversion of the missing morphine if she had taken it herself.” Hospital policy permits the hospital to search an employee’s pockets, locker, and personal property if a supervisor has a reasonable suspicion that the employee has violated the hospital’s Substance Use in the Workplace policy. During the initial investigation on December 12, 2018, hospital staff conducted a search of Shabazz’s pockets and locker and did not recover any morphine. The same day, the hospital placed Shabazz on an investigatory suspension “pending investigation of

4 the suspected diversion of narcotics.” Krol was not scheduled to work at the hospital immediately after December 12, 2018, and she was not placed on suspension. During the investigation, Morgan, Reid, and Adam Gardner, the hospital’s Labor Relations Director, reviewed “surveillance video.” In a declaration in support of the summary judgment motion, Gardner stated that when he reviewed the surveillance video, he observed that Krol’s “body language suggested concern and disbelief as to where the morphine went.” The investigation also involved “disassembling the WOW where the morphine was last located.” Hospital staff interviewed Shabazz while he was on investigatory suspension. On December 31, 2018, after Krol submitted a notice of resignation from her position at the hospital, Gardner interviewed her regarding the incident. The hospital never located the missing vial of morphine, and it deemed the surveillance video “inconclusive” as to what ultimately happened to the vial. According to the hospital’s payroll records, Shabazz returned to work on January 4, 2019, 23 days after his suspension began.1 He was not terminated or demoted, and his pay was not docked. Nor was he otherwise disciplined. The applicable Collective Bargaining Agreement (CBA) provides, in pertinent part, “No employee will be held in unpaid investigatory suspension for more than ten (10) calendar days.” (Italics added.) The CBA also states, “In the event an investigatory suspension results in no disciplinary action or

1 In his appellate briefing, Shabazz states that he was

suspended for 27 days. However, the hospital’s payroll records show that he clocked in and out of work on January 4, 2019, 23 days after he was placed on suspension on December 12, 2018.

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