Thomas v. The Regents of the University of Cal.

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 29, 2023
DocketA164550
StatusPublished

This text of Thomas v. The Regents of the University of Cal. (Thomas v. The Regents of the University of Cal.) 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
Thomas v. The Regents of the University of Cal., (Cal. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Filed 11/29/23 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION TWO

RENEE THOMAS, Plaintiff and Appellant, A164550 v. THE REGENTS OF THE (Alameda County UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA et Super. Ct. No. RG20073375) al., Defendants and Respondents.

Renee Thomas was recruited to play on the women’s soccer team at the University of California, Berkeley (UCB), played on the team during her freshman year and, in the spring of that year, was released from the team. She sued UCB, the head coach of the women’s soccer team, and the Director of Athletics (collectively, defendants), first in federal court and then in state court. The present appeal is from the judgment in favor of the defendants entered after the trial court sustained demurrers to all Thomas’s causes of action without leave to amend. As we will explain, we conclude Thomas sufficiently pleaded a cause of action for sexual harassment in violation of Civil Code section 51.9 against the head coach and UCB and should have been granted leave to amend her complaint to clarify the statutory basis of this claim. In all other respects, we will affirm the trial court’s decision.

1 BACKGROUND I. Factual Background The following is the factual background as alleged in Thomas’s first and second amended complaints. Thomas is a “well-regarded soccer player” who was recruited by head coach Neil McGuire to play in the 2018-2019 season. McGuire knew at the time that Thomas had already committed to play for the University of Colorado, which had offered her a scholarship. At a meeting with Thomas and her mother in February 2018, McGuire “assured” Thomas that she would be on UCB’s women’s soccer team for four years. McGuire told Thomas she was “the missing piece that their staff had overlooked during recruitment that year” and he “diagrammed for her and her mother the ways in which he would utilize a player like her.” McGuire knew at the time that he had “allowed women who were not qualified athletes to become part of the team, which would put [Thomas’s] spot on the team in jeopardy,” and that factors beyond her performance and compliance with the program’s expectations “would impact her continued status as a team member.” He failed to disclose that Thomas “could be removed from the team for reasons beyond her failure to play competently and in accordance with his instructions and meet his standards of behavior.” McGuire represented that he was “a coach who was kind and encouraging and who valued his athletes for both their athletic and their academic dedication,” and “intentionally” kept from Thomas that his coaching style “included hostile berating of young women, inquiry into their sex lives, and psychological abuse.” McGuire had become “enraged with

2 women athletes and behaved erratically and abusively towards his team in documented incidents since at least 2009.” Thomas turned down her scholarship to the University of Colorado to accept a non-scholarship spot on UCB’s team based on McGuire’s “assurances that she was joining a four-year soccer program, that she would play on the team as long as she met the reasonable performance expectations of the program, and that she would be coached in a caring and encouraging manner.” She reasonably relied on McGuire’s representation that “nothing outside of her performance and her compliance with the expectations of the program would result in her dismissal,” and she had “every reason to trust” McGuire would keep his commitment since “[p]layers are not commonly released from University-level athletic teams” and “there is no external limit on team size for the women’s soccer team, so even under-performing players do not need to be released to create room for other, stronger performers.” McGuire’s failure to disclose that factors beyond Thomas’s performance and compliance with the program’s expectations “would impact her continued status as a team member” induced her to join the team “at the expense of her commitment to the University of Colorado or any other program in which she could have participated.” Thomas joined the team as one of six non-scholarship players, performed well, complied with the expectations McGuire laid out for her and “participated in every opportunity available to her to improve her performance.”1 McGuire told her she was “promising enough to rival the

1 Thomas alleged that she played 304 minutes during the 2018-2019 season, which was “far more than any other non-scholarship freshman that year” and “more than several of her upper classmen teammates,” and of 29 offensive players on the team, “ranked 20th in playing time and tied for eighth in points for goals and assists.”

3 best-performing forward on the team” and she was honored at the team’s annual banquet as the most improved player. In the spring of 2019, McGuire instructed Thomas to show potential recruits around campus and told her a new recruit would be her teammate the next year, which reassured Thomas “that she had performed well, was still a valued member of the team, and could look forward to playing during the 2019-2020 season.” During the 2018-2019 season, Thomas “experienced and witnessed” abusive behavior by McGuire. McGuire lost his temper at the athletes “on many occasions,” “[i]n fits of rage, he singled out athletes and berated them in front of the team, sometimes nonsensically, to make an example of them and strike fear in the witnessing athletes,” he “called young female athletes names, cursed at them, and degraded them with personal insults both related and unrelated to athletic performance,” and he “tormented them psychologically and punished them with grueling workouts.” His “behavior was described to [UCB’s] athletics administration as creating a culture of fear and intimidation.” Thomas was present for “tirades” in which McGuire “degraded the entire team.” He “belittled the physique of one player in front of the team and called her ‘weak’ despite her compliance with the training program,” “made unwelcome and inappropriate comments about players’ bodies,” and “berated a young woman for having what he perceived as a hickey on her neck.” He “tormented the athletes psychologically” and on one occasion told them they “needed to perform better or his children and the children of other coaches would suffer.” Once, after a pre-season loss, “without provocation,” McGuire stopped practice to yell at Thomas in front of the team, then kicked her off the field and told her she did not belong in the program; on another occasion, he “berated” her for not being disciplined “despite her commitment

4 at practices and her initiative to perform supervised drills after practice.” His “outbursts” made Thomas feel she had to be “absolutely perfect” and “any error would cause him to turn his back on her.” She and others would try to “tread extremely lightly” around McGuire “to avoid drawing his anger or retaliation,” which caused them “extreme stress and anxiety.” Players and their parents complained about McGuire’s conduct to Jim Knowlton, UCB’s Athletic Director, and other administrators.

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Thomas v. The Regents of the University of Cal., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-v-the-regents-of-the-university-of-cal-calctapp-2023.