St. Hubert v. Fox Corporation CA2/2

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 22, 2023
DocketB322737
StatusUnpublished

This text of St. Hubert v. Fox Corporation CA2/2 (St. Hubert v. Fox Corporation CA2/2) 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
St. Hubert v. Fox Corporation CA2/2, (Cal. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Filed 12/22/23 St. Hubert v. Fox Corporation CA2/2 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 TWO

FRITZGERARD ST. HUBERT, B322737

Plaintiff and Appellant, (Los Angeles County Super. Ct. No. v. 20STCV38145)

FOX CORPORATION,

Defendant and Respondent.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, Jon R. Takasugi, Judge. Affirmed. Valencia & Cywinska, Mark Joseph Valencia and Izabela Cywinska Valencia for Plaintiff and Appellant. Seyfarth Shaw, Candace Bertoldi and Robin E. Devaux for Defendant and Respondent. _________________________________________ A temporary service agency assigned appellant Fritzgerard “Joey” St. Hubert to work at respondent Fox Corporation in information technology (IT). After 10 weeks, Fox told the agency that it no longer wanted his services. The next day, St. Hubert notified Fox that he has epilepsy. Fox ended his services two days later. He sued Fox for failing to accommodate a disability, retaliation, and wrongful termination under the California Fair Employment and Housing Act (FEHA). (Gov. Code, § 12900 et seq.)1 The trial court granted summary judgment to Fox. On de novo review, we conclude that no triable issues of fact exist. There was nothing to accommodate because St. Hubert admitted that epilepsy did not interfere with his work at Fox. His disclosure of epilepsy after Fox decided to end his services belies a claim of retaliation. Coworkers testified that he was let go because he did not get along with others and his performance was unsatisfactory. We affirm the judgment. FACTS St. Hubert’s Agreement With TenTek St. Hubert signed an Agreement For Temporary Employee Services with TenTek Corporation, an IT staffing agency. He was “a temporary, hourly paid, exempt employee of TenTek,” which “arrange[d] to introduce [him] to clients who may require temporary consulting services.” TenTek assigned him to Fox as an “end user support technician.” Fox needed IT staff while adapting to remote work during the COVID pandemic. TenTek billed Fox for its contractors’ time. Fox could end St. Hubert’s assignment at any time, without notice. It had the option to hire him at the end of the six-month

1 Undesignated statutory references are to the Government Code, unless otherwise indicated.

2 consulting term. St. Hubert agreed, in writing and at deposition, that he was “not an employee of Fox, but rather being retained as an independent contractor.” He later testified that he believed he was a Fox employee. St. Hubert Begins at Fox On June 8, 2020, St. Hubert began his assignment at Fox.2 On July 7, he was admonished by Fox supervisor Stuart Bourke and Vice-president of Technology Carl Johnson, for failing to return a computer to a Fox employee. They were concerned by his lack of attention to detail. On July 20, Bourke e-mailed the IT team to commend their “progress on the IT room [ ] and all your efforts to support our end users. There have been a few minor issues with workload distribution and priority and this is where I see a need for a lead to ensure we continue with the great work done so far. I am asking [St. Hubert] to assume team lead responsibilities as we transverse [sic] this ever-changing work environment during these times, this will be reviewed on a monthly basis as we seek to optimize our team’s service delivery.” Bourke would look to St. Hubert “to ensure we are adhering to deadlines and prioritizing workload.” Bourke named St. Hubert as lead person because he was the most experienced person on a new team and claimed expertise in asset management. He was expected to take requests from Fox employees and distribute them to the team evenly. There was no pay increase because he was not a Fox employee. St. Hubert viewed it as a promotion. Bourke referred to it as a promotion in a message to Johnson, saying “the team

2 All dates referenced in this opinion are to the year 2020, unless otherwise indicated.

3 needs direction.” Johnson wrote to compliment the entire team on their work. Fox Receives Complaints About St. Hubert On July 16, End User Support Manager Jared Zabel wrote Bourke about a “ ‘negative workplace interaction’ ” with St. Hubert, who was “ ‘rude and condescending’ ” and made Zabel “ ‘extremely uncomfortable.’ ” Bourke thought they were just “bumping heads” but later saw a pattern of negative interactions between St. Hubert and members of the IT team. Bourke wrote that IT staff “ ‘all hate Joey’ ”—he made their job difficult by insisting they sit in meetings instead of completing tasks. Bourke met with team members John Avila, Jose Gonzalez, Javier Hernandez, and William Nunez. They described the difficulty of working with St. Hubert. Team member Avila avers that St. Hubert was “brash, manipulative, and controlling, for no apparent reason. He did not listen to me and spoke in a condescending way.” He made things so difficult that team members complained to Bourke. Avila told Bourke that St. Hubert made him “uncomfortable and was treating me in a demeaning way.” St. Hubert responds that as Avila’s supervisor, he was entitled to control him; he denies being brash or manipulative. Gonzalez avers that St. Hubert wasted time by requiring long daily meetings to discuss unnecessary issues, spoke “in a mocking, overly exaggerated tone,” and made Gonzalez look bad by preventing him from expediting delivery of computers to Fox employees. St. Hubert micromanaged team members but did not seem to do any work himself or respond to messages. Gonzalez and others complained to Bourke that St. Hubert made their jobs

4 difficult and created a hostile environment. St. Hubert declares that daily meetings were Bourke’s idea. Hernandez declares that St. Hubert did not do day-to-day work or answer questions. It was difficult to work with St. Hubert, who did not listen and rejected ideas even though Hernandez had two years of experience at Fox. St. Hubert led meetings but otherwise sat around. He did not establish a procurement system, respond to requests for equipment, and ignored Bourke’s directions. Hernandez expressed concerns about St. Hubert to Bourke. Fox Decides It No Longer Wants St. Hubert’s Services In August, Bourke decided to end St. Hubert’s work at Fox over concerns about his performance and communication style. He did not complete tasks, follow instructions, or pay attention to detail. Team members complained about him. His resume claimed asset management experience, but Bourke saw no evidence of it. For Bourke, “The main issue [was] his inability to perform the duty that he was sent to us by TenTek to complete.” Bourke wanted Javier Hernandez to take over. On August 11, while on vacation, Bourke e-mailed St. Hubert asking him to train Hernandez on asset management and workflows. On August 12, Fox Vice-president Johnson met with St. Hubert, who “did not have good or correct answers for a lot of my questions.” Johnson sent St. Hubert a list of actions to complete; Bourke was upset because he had already covered the very same action items with St. Hubert. On August 13, Johnson was displeased when St. Hubert failed to execute a simple task for a Fox executive without error. Johnson wrote Bourke, “You can move on from Joey . . . .”

5 On August 14, St. Hubert prepared a spreadsheet after Bourke told him not to do so. Bourke wrote Johnson that he wanted Hernandez to take over from St. Hubert.

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Bluebook (online)
St. Hubert v. Fox Corporation CA2/2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-hubert-v-fox-corporation-ca22-calctapp-2023.