Taylor v. Tesla, Inc.

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 8, 2024
DocketA168333
StatusPublished

This text of Taylor v. Tesla, Inc. (Taylor v. Tesla, Inc.) 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
Taylor v. Tesla, Inc., (Cal. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Filed 8/8/24

CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION FOUR

SHARONDA TAYLOR et al., Plaintiffs and Respondents, A168333 v. (Alameda County Super. Ct. TESLA, INC., No. 23CV028922) Defendant and Appellant.

In this Private Attorneys General Act of 2004 (PAGA) (Lab. Code, § 2698 et seq.) action, Tesla Inc. (Tesla) appeals from the denial of a motion under the anti-SLAPP statute (Code Civ. Proc., § 425.16).1 Seeing no merit to any of Tesla’s arguments, we affirm. I. Plaintiffs Sharonda Taylor, Shaka Green, Tatianna Smith and Zenobia Milligan worked for Tesla for different periods between July 2015 through March 2022. Through their counsel, Bryan Schwarz Law (BSL), they each requested that Tesla provide them with certain personnel records pursuant to the California Labor Code. BSL serves as counsel for the plaintiffs in Vaughn v. Tesla, Alameda County Superior Court No. RG17882082 (Vaughn), a class action filed

1 All undesignated statutory references are to the Code of Civil

Procedure.

1 against Tesla on November 13, 2017. As alleged, the Vaughn class consists of “all African-Americans who were employed on the production floor at the Tesla Factory at any time from November 9, 2016 to the final disposition of [the Vaughn] action.” During the pendency of this appeal, a class certification order issued in Vaughn.2 Taylor, Green, Smith, and Milligan are members of the Vaughn class. On behalf of the class, the Vaughn complaint alleges racial discrimination and racial harassment claims against Tesla under the Fair Employment and Housing Act. These allegations of race discrimination in Vaughn have been closely watched and widely reported on by the press. Prior to certification of the Vaughn class, considerable discovery activity took place. This discovery activity included a series of motions to compel and an associated motion for a protective order in the summer 2020. The motions focused generally on BSL’s attempt to obtain witness contact information, internal complaints and investigation materials pertaining to incidents of racial harassment at Tesla. In June 2020, the Vaughn court issued orders addressing the issues raised in these discovery motions, including the manner in which privacy notices to absent class members should be handled.3 In its orders, the Vaughn court suggested “by way of observation” that the parties “might consider” including “an opt-in privacy waiver for review of complaint and personnel files.” This suggestion was designed to confine the universe of

2 On our own motion, we take judicial notice of the May 17, 2024 class

certification order in Vaughn. (Evid. Code, § 452, subds. (c)–(d).) 3 See Belaire-West Landscape, Inc. v. Superior Court (2007)

149 Cal.App.4th 554, 561 (approving privacy waiver opt-in procedure in pre- certification class discovery where defendant employer was being required to provide confidential personnel information about absent class members).

2 “files to be reviewed” to those who signed privacy waivers, thus limiting the pre-certification discovery burden on Tesla. A few months later, the Vaughn court ordered Tesla to produce complaints pertaining to incidents of racial harassment (including investigation and resulting discipline), but only for those complaining workers who signed a privacy waiver. In accordance with this order, from October to November 2020, BSL sent Tesla privacy waivers in five batches, after which Tesla was to produce the waivants’ race harassment complaints. Beginning in October 2020, on behalf of hundreds of Tesla employees for whom privacy waivers were provided, BSL sent Tesla a series of statutory personnel records requests under Labor Code sections 226, 432, and 1198.5. The requestors included Milligan, Taylor, Green and Smith. BSL resubmitted the personnel records requests for Taylor and Milligan in early 2021, apparently after Tesla questioned whether the digital signatures on the privacy waivers accompanying the first set of requests for these two individuals were adequate. Later in 2021, other procedural events in Vaughn impacted the timetable for Tesla’s compliance with these discovery and Labor Code records requests. In September 2021, the Vaughn court granted in part and denied in part Tesla’s motion to compel arbitration of the claims brought by two Vaughn plaintiffs, and Tesla appealed. The court then stayed all trial court proceedings in Vaughn until the appeal was resolved. In February 2022, Tesla’s counsel wrote to BSL and took the position that the Vaughn stay suspended any obligation to respond to the pending Labor Code records requests. In line with that position, Tesla produced nothing in response to these requests. Having received no responses to its information requests under the Labor Code, on April 19, 2022, BSL sent a

3 letter to the California Labor and Workforce Development Agency (LWDA) on behalf of Taylor, Green, Smith, and Milligan alleging PAGA violations. In its letter to LWDA, BSL argued that “internal complaints made by an employee and evidence of an ensuing non-attorney investigation are included within the definition of personnel files.” It also argued that Tesla had “repeatedly provided deficient personnel files in violation of Labor Code § 1198.5” by not “includ[ing] any record of internal complaints that were made by the requesting employee or former employee or any resulting investigation.” BSL further asserted that Tesla’s productions of personnel records were deficient because Tesla “routinely omitted requestors’ job applications and any of the documents that the requestor signed at the start of employment” and had produced some documents, such as “performance reviews . . . in unintelligible formats, such as tables that are split across dozens of pages with no indication of their actual organization.” In January 2023, Division Five of this court affirmed the Vaughn court’s partial denial of Tesla’s motion to compel arbitration. (Vaughn v. Tesla, Inc. (2023) 87 Cal.App.5th 208.) Following the issuance of the remittitur in that appeal, the stay on proceedings in Vaughn was lifted. The allegations of Labor Code violations in BSL’s notice letter to the LWDA remained live, however, since by then Tesla had been delinquent in responding to the statutory records requests for the better part of a year. This PAGA action followed. On March 7, 2023, represented by BSL, plaintiffs filed their PAGA complaint seeking penalties for Tesla’s failure to respond to Labor Code personnel records requests. The complaint alleges a single cause of action alleging as predicate violations Tesla’s refusal to comply with Labor Code sections 1198.5, 226, and 432. Tesla answered and filed a special motion to strike pursuant to the anti-SLAPP statute.

4 The trial court denied Tesla’s anti-SLAPP motion on July 7, 2023. The court found that “Tesla did not meet its initial burden as the movant to make a ‘threshold showing that [Plaintiffs’] claims arise from petitioning activity within the purview of the anti-SLAPP statute.’ ” “On this record,” the court ruled, “Plaintiffs were merely exercising their statutory rights under the Labor Code to inspect and copy wage statements, signed instruments, and personnel files, independent of anything happening in Vaughn.” Now before us is Tesla’s appeal from the denial of its anti-SLAPP motion in the PAGA case. II. We assume familiarity with the two-step framework of analysis under the anti-SLAPP statute. (See, e.g., Wilson v. Cable News Network, Inc. (2019) 7 Cal.5th 871, 884–885; Area 51 Productions, Inc. v. City of Alameda (2018) 20 Cal.App.5th 581, 593–594; id. at pp. 594–601 [first prong], 602–604 [second prong].) Our review is de novo at both steps. (Area 51 Productions, at pp. 593–594.) A.

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