Thornbrough v. Western Placer Unified School District

223 Cal. App. 4th 169, 167 Cal. Rptr. 3d 24, 2013 WL 7045577, 2013 Cal. App. LEXIS 1081
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 23, 2013
DocketC068317
StatusUnpublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 223 Cal. App. 4th 169 (Thornbrough v. Western Placer Unified School District) 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
Thornbrough v. Western Placer Unified School District, 223 Cal. App. 4th 169, 167 Cal. Rptr. 3d 24, 2013 WL 7045577, 2013 Cal. App. LEXIS 1081 (Cal. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

Opinion

DUARTE, J.

Michael Thornbrough appeals from a judgment denying his mandamus petition, which sought to overturn his dismissal as an assistant director of maintenance for the Western Placer Unified School District (District). On appeal, Thornbrough raises a number of issues, including principally claims of notice violations at the underlying administrative hearing, bias by the hearing officer, and the improper use of legally protected expressive conduct (protected speech) to support discipline.

The record shows that Thornbrough was involved in raising public awareness of problems arising from District construction projects. However, the record also shows he displayed blatant insubordination to a newly appointed female supervisor, Cathy Allen, used a District computer for private purposes—including storing pornography—in violation of District rules, and retaliated against employees who had filed a prior sexual harassment claim against him. Three witnesses, District Superintendent Scott Leaman, Allen, and a management psychologist, opined he should be terminated.

We conclude Thornbrough has not established any due process notice violations, because the record supports the trial court’s finding that he was offered continuances to meet amended charges as they arose and, contrary to Thornbrough’s view, no statute or rule precluded the filing of amended charges.

*174 We also agree with the trial court that the record shows Thornbrough’s challenge to the neutrality of the hearing officer was both untimely and meritless.

We sustain the trial court’s finding that even if any of the disciplinary charges arose from Thornbrough’s protected speech, the separate and extensive evidence of his wrongdoing amply justified termination.

We reject Thornbrough’s subsidiary contentions of error, and affirm.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Procedure

The original disciplinary charges against Thornbrough were filed on June 16, 2008. After a 15-day administrative hearing, the hearing officer issued a 22-page decision on April 26, 2009, recommending that the District terminate Thornbrough. The District adopted the recommendation. 1

Thornbrough then filed the instant mandamus petition. On January 25, 2011, the trial court issued a 57-page statement of decision rejecting his arguments. Thornbrough appealed from the ensuing judgment. 2

Facts

The trial court confirmed the bulk of the hearing officer’s factual findings. We provide a brief summary of relevant facts here. 3

The District hired Thornbrough in 1997, and his day-to-day work was competent. As assistant director of maintenance, he supervised some employees and was required to “maintain effective working relationships” with other staff, and obey “all district requirements and Board of Trustee policies.”

*175 In 2006, Thornbrough and his immediate supervisor, Director of Maintenance Frank Nichols, reported suspected wrongdoing in connection with District construction projects, and Leaman testified the District had to engage in litigation involving past projects, which is why he reorganized the administration and chose Allen to oversee construction projects.

In August 2007, Thornbrough and the District settled a prior disciplinary action. In part, the prior action accused Thornbrough of referring to David Zinzun, Jr. (David), 4 a subordinate of Mexican ancestry, as “Paco” and “Pepe,” in a derisive manner. The prior action also accused Thornbrough of making an offensive comment about the breasts of David’s wife, District employee Rhia, the daughter of former District employee Richard Noyes, in the presence of David and Noyes, conduct Thornbrough admitted in his testimony in this case. The settlement called for Thornbrough to be placed on. unpaid leave for 15 days and undergo sexual harassment prevention training.

When Thornbrough returned to work on August 15, 2007, Leaman ordered him not to contact Rhia and not to go to the District office without explicit permission from specified employees. Leaman viewed this order as part of his management powers, not as discipline. Thornbrough sent an e-mail from his District computer to a former District employee, Jay Stewart, discussing this order, showing that he understood it. 5

Nonetheless, the next day, August 16, 2007, Thornbrough went to the District office without proper permission and spoke with Rhia, claimed he shut the door at her request, and claimed he apologized to her. Her testimony was less benign: She testified he sent her an e-mail asking to meet and she agreed, expecting him to apologize. Instead, he came in, the door shut and accidentally locked, and Thornbrough tried to justify his comment about her breasts, said “negative things” about David and Noyes, suggested he had been instrumental in having her hired, and mentioned favors he had done for *176 her and her mother, to make her feel guilty about having filed a complaint, which made her so upset that she cried. She later learned Thornbrough claimed she had falsified personnel records of David, when in reality all she had done was mistakenly place a document pertaining to David in the personnel file for David Zinzun, Sr. (David Sr.), David’s father and Rhia’s father-in-law.

Thornbrough testified he referred to Rhia’s breasts to show David and Noyes the inappropriateness of comments they had made, and claimed he met her to apologize to her, at David’s suggestion and with the approval of another employee, albeit not one with authority to approve the meeting. He was found to lack credibility.

Also on August 16, 2007, Thornbrough and Nichols submitted a “binder” to the District’s board, a copy of which was given to the grand jury, raising purported improprieties regarding District construction projects.

At a meeting on September 18, 2007, the District’s board promoted Allen to assistant superintendent of facilities and maintenance services, an action openly opposed at the meeting by Thornbrough, who accused Allen of “intentionally deceiv[ing]” the superintendent and the board and the community, and claimed a current grand jury investigation was partly due to Allen’s “intentional sabotage” of the relationship between the maintenance department and the District. Thornbrough later stated he did not need Allen to tell him his job, called her a “fucking bitch,” accused her of a “lack of brightness,” and in a letter to her dated December 15, 2007, he criticized her abilities, claimed she was sending “our department backwards,” and that “we do not need more bureaucrats,” among other insubordinate comments and actions, leading the trial court to find Thornbrough “simply did not respect lines of authority in the workplace and, apparently, he did not care who knew that.”

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Bluebook (online)
223 Cal. App. 4th 169, 167 Cal. Rptr. 3d 24, 2013 WL 7045577, 2013 Cal. App. LEXIS 1081, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thornbrough-v-western-placer-unified-school-district-calctapp-2013.