Swanson v. Morongo Unif. School Dist.

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 30, 2014
DocketG050290
StatusPublished

This text of Swanson v. Morongo Unif. School Dist. (Swanson v. Morongo Unif. School Dist.) 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
Swanson v. Morongo Unif. School Dist., (Cal. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Filed 11/26/14; pub. and mod. order 12/23/14 (see end of opn.; received 12/30/14)

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION THREE

LAURALYN SWANSON,

Plaintiff and Appellant, G050290

v. (Super. Ct. No. CIVMS900938)

MORONGO UNIFIED SCHOOL OPINION DISTRICT, et al.,

Defendants and Respondents.

Appeal from a judgment of the Superior Court of San Bernardino County, James J. Hosking, Judge. Reversed. Law Offices of James P. Stoneman II and James P. Stoneman II for Plaintiff and Appellant. Cummings, McClorey, Davis, Acho & Associates and Maurice S. Kane, Jr., for Defendants and Respondents. * * * Plaintiff and appellant Lauralyn Swanson sued defendant and respondent Morongo Unified School District (District) under California’s Fair Employment and Housing Act (Govt. Code, § 12900 et seq.; FEHA)1 after the District chose not to renew her probationary teaching contract for the 2009/2010 school year. Swanson’s complaint alleges the District violated the FEHA by (1) discriminating against her because she was diagnosed with breast cancer and took medical leave to receive treatment; (2) failing to reasonably accommodate Swanson’s cancer-related health conditions by refusing to assign her to teach an available second grade class she believed provided the greatest opportunity for her to successfully teach while recovering from her cancer treatments; and (3) failing to engage in a good faith, interactive process to identify a reasonable accommodation for her cancer-related health conditions. The District sought summary judgment on Swanson’s discrimination claim because it elected not to renew her probationary teaching contract for the legitimate, nondiscriminatory reason she failed to perform to the District’s teaching standards. The District sought summary judgment on Swanson’s other causes of action, arguing it reasonably accommodated Swanson and engaged in an interactive process by changing her teaching assignment from fifth grade to kindergarten when Swanson objected to the fifth grade teaching assignment. The trial court agreed and granted the District summary judgment on all causes of action. We reverse. Swanson established a triable issue of material fact on her discrimination claim by presenting evidence supporting her theory the District changed her teaching assignments and failed to provide her the resources needed to succeed so it would have a basis for not renewing her contract. On the failure to accommodate claim, the District did not meet its initial summary judgment burden because it failed to show

1 All statutory references are to the Government Code unless otherwise stated.

2 the second grade assignment Swanson sought was not a reasonable accommodation or that the fifth grade or kindergarten assignments the District offered were reasonable accommodations. The District also failed to meet its initial burden on the interactive process claim because it failed to present any evidence showing it engaged in an ongoing dialog with Swanson regarding her requested accommodations.

I

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Swanson is an elementary school teacher with more than 30 years experience teaching kindergarten through sixth grade. She holds a lifetime teaching credential, a master’s degree in curriculum and instruction, and several additional teaching certifications. During her career, Swanson has served as a “mentor teacher,” an “intern academy instructor,” the interim coordinator for Claremont Graduate School’s Inter-Teacher Program, a “pilot teacher for state adoptions,” a workshop designer/presenter, a “lead teacher,” and a principal designee. She also is a published curriculum writer in several subject matter areas and a successful grant writer. In August 2006, the District hired Swanson as a technology/reading specialist and computer laboratory teacher at Yucca Valley Elementary School. During the 2006/2007 school year, Swanson taught in the school’s computer laboratory and received excellent performance evaluations from her principal, Jeffrey Turner. Turner told Swanson she would keep the same teaching assignment for the 2007/2008 school year, but he left for another school and the new principal, John Lowe, made a last minute change to Swanson’s teaching assignment, assigning her to be a “‘LANGUAGE!’ Reading Specialist.” In July 2007, Swanson was diagnosed with breast cancer and underwent a mastectomy. She immediately informed Lowe of her diagnosis and spoke with him again shortly after her surgery about the upcoming school year. Swanson expressed concern to

3 Lowe about her new teaching assignment because she lacked the necessary training. Lowe told her not to worry because she could attend a week-long training session during mid-August 2007 if she felt up to it. Although the training occurred just two weeks after her surgery, Swanson attended the five-day training. Near the end of the final day, the trainer sent Swanson to the emergency room because of complications from her surgery. Swanson’s doctors scheduled her for radiation and chemotherapy treatments during the fall of 2007. She delayed those treatments so she could prepare lesson plans and the instructional materials for the substitute teacher who would take her place while she was on leave. Swanson began her treatments in October 2007, and was on medical leave until early March 2008. Because she missed so much of the 2007/2008 school year, Lowe did not submit a performance evaluation, but instead wrote her a positive recommendation. In June 2008, Lowe informed Swanson he would not assign her to the reading specialist position she held during the 2007/2008 school year, but instead offered her a fifth grade teaching assignment for the 2008/2009 school year. Swanson objected this would be her third different assignment in three years, and explained her precarious health would prevent her from doing the necessary work required for a new assignment. If she was to be reassigned, Swanson requested Lowe assign her to an opening at the second grade level because she recently had taught that grade at a different school. Lowe, however, assigned another teacher to the second grade opening and assigned Swanson to teach a kindergarten class even though he knew she had not taught kindergarten in nearly 30 years. Swanson expressed concern about teaching kindergarten-age children because her cancer treatments damaged her immune system and she feared exposure to the many illnesses of kindergarten children would pose further health risks. Lowe nonetheless refused to change Swanson’s teaching assignment. In late September 2008, Swanson was forced to take a medical leave from her kindergarten teaching assignment when she was hospitalized for eight days with

4 pancreatitis, pneumonia, and liver issues that she attributed to her kindergarten teaching assignment. She did not return to teaching until the beginning of December 2008. In January 2009, Lowe scheduled Swanson’s annual teacher evaluation, which included observing her teach three lessons to her kindergarten class on three separate dates. Before the observation dates, Swanson asked Lowe to provide her with the District’s preevaluation format for the lessons she would teach. The preevaluation format provides the District’s expectations for each lesson and is customarily given to teachers before they are observed. Lowe promised to provide the preevaluation format, but he failed to do so until after he completed all three observations. Lowe evaluated Swanson’s performance on each lesson as poor and gave her the option to either resign her teaching position or accept a remediation plan to correct the deficiencies in her teaching performance. Swanson selected the remediation plan, which included three additional observations.

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Swanson v. Morongo Unif. School Dist., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/swanson-v-morongo-unif-school-dist-calctapp-2014.