Showing posts with label indemnification. Show all posts
Showing posts with label indemnification. Show all posts

Sunday, September 08, 2013

Court of Appeal: No Duty to Pay for Defendant Employee's Choice of Lawyer

Several years ago, a radio station conducted a contest that involved consuming water. The one who "held it in" the longest would win a prize.  Unfortunately, one contestant died from drinking too much.

Anyway, the contestant's representative sued the radio station as well as Matt Carter, an individual who helped with the contest.  Carter hired a lawyer and tendered his defense to his  employer's insurance company. The insurance company appointed its own defense counsel to represent Carter.  ]
Carter refused to change lawyers and sued his employer for indemnification under Labor Code Section 2802. Carter sought over $800,000 in attorney's fees for his attorneys' representation.

The insurance company settled with the plaintiff on behalf of all individuals.  The plaintiff recovered millions against the radio station.

Carter's indemnity claim went to trial to the court. The court decided that Carter's attorney's fees were not covered under Labor Code Section 2802, except for about $1980 he spent before the insurance company offered counsel.

The Court of Appeal clarified what Labor Code Section 2802 requires employers to do when individual employees are sued for actions undertaken within the course and scope of employment:

Subdivision (a) of section 2802 provides that “[a]n employer shall indemnify his  or her employee for all necessary expenditures or losses incurred by the employee in direct consequence of the discharge of his or her duties, or of his or her obedience to the directions of the employer, even though unlawful, unless the employee, at the time of obeying the directions, believed them to be unlawful.”
***
As the court explained in Grissom v. Vons Companies,  Inc. (1991) 1 Cal.App.4th 52, “Section 2802 does not say that an employer must ‘defend’ an employee. The word ‘defend’ does not appear in section 2802. The statute merely requires the employer to indemnify the employee for all that the employee necessarily expends in direct consequence of the discharge of the employee’s duties. The focus of the actual words of the statute is on the employee’s expenditure. If that expenditure is necessarily in direct consequence of the discharge of the employee’s duties, then the employer must ‘indemnify’ (i.e., reimburse) the employee.” (Grissom, at pp. 57-58, fn. omitted; see also Cassady v. Morgan, Lewis & Bockius LLP (2006) 145 Cal.App.4th 220, 236 [“Section 2802 does not impose a duty to defend upon an employer”].)

The Court emphasized that an employer that does not offer to pay for counsel up front will be responsible for necessary expenses the employee incurs.  In this case, though, the employer did make that offer.

The Court rejected Carter's claim that he had a "right" to choose his own counsel.  True enough, said the court. In fact, Carter did so. The issue here, though, was whether the employer had to pay for that right.  The Court of Appeal also rejected Carter's argument that the insurance company's lawyer was insufficient because of the potential for punitive damages liability or criminal charges against Carter.

So, employers (and their carriers) may appoint a lawyer to defend an employee involved in employment litigation.  It may be that conflicts of interest or competence issues will cause disputes between employees and employers over whether the appointment is adequate to conduct the defense.  If representation is not adequate, employees likely can request different counsel or seek their own and argue that the related expense is "necessary."

This case is Carter v. Entercom Sacramento LLC and the opinion is here.













Saturday, December 13, 2008

Court of Appeal: No Defense Attorneys' Fees for Frivolous Claims?

The Court of Appeal agreed with the district court that Laura Young's FEHA claim for harassment against her former supervisor was frivolous, vexatious, etc. The trial court, however, awarded only one dollar in attorneys' fees against Young. The court's rationale was that since employer Exxon was going to pay the supervisor's fees, and since Exxon did not complain that the action against Exxon itself was frivolous, the court should not award fees that Exxon would ultimately recover.

Does that make a lot of sense? Yes, but only if you're gutting the attorneys' fees statute. Employers are responsible to pay for employees' defense costs under Labor Code section 2802, unless the employee is found to have engaged in actual unlawful harassment. So, a frivolous claim against an employee by implication is part of the claim against the employer, no? And given most claims against individual managers are barred as a matter of law, and given awards of attorneys' fees are as rare as hen's teeth anyway, one would think that a court would want to give effect to the Legislature's decision to permit an award of attorneys' fees when claims are frivolous. Right?

No. The court of appeal agreed with the trial court and held that where, as in this case, the employer is paying an individual employee's defense costs, the trial court need not award attorneys' fees if the claim against the employer is not frivolous. You don't believe me? Here's the quote:
In short, despite its finding that Young’s case against Lopez was frivolous and vexatious, the trial court had the discretion to deny attorney fees to Lopez. Because the award would benefit only Exxon, a defendant which was not otherwise entitled to an award and which did not show it incurred any significant fees on Lopez’s behalf that it would not have incurred in any event, we see no abuse of discretion in the trial court’s decision.

By the way, the attorneys' fees statute, Government Code section 12965(b) is very simple and says nothing about differing standards for employers and employees.
In actions brought under this section,the court, in its discretion, may award to the prevailing party reasonable attorney's fees and costs, including expert witness fees, except where the action is filed by a public agency or a public official, acting in an official capacity.
The statute says nothing about basing awards on who pays the fees. I know it says "discretion," but the courts have held that prevailing plaintiffs are generally entitled to fees as a matter of right, while prevailing defendants have a heavy burden to establish the claims were "frivolous, unreasonable, or without foundation." I think the courts may have lost sight of the plain language of the statute over the years.

While I'm complaining, the Court of Appeal also decided not to publish its analysis of Young's claims on the merits. That means the bar will not benefit from the court's detailed analysis of Young's claims for discrimination, harassment, retaliation, etc. The decision should be published if only because Young claimed a mental disability and that her outbursts and conduct in violation of policy were attributable to the disability. The Court distinguished Gambini v. Total Renal Care, discussed here, and held that Young's disability did not exempt her from termination for her misconduct.

Anyway, I'm sure Exxon is happy to have won the case. But there was a dark lining in a silver cloud that may affect employment litigation for the rest of us. The opinion in Young v. Exxon is here.

Thursday, August 07, 2008

California Supreme Court Says "no" to "Limited" Non-Compete Agreements, but "yes" to Broad Releases

The California Supreme Court issued its opinion in Edwards v. Arthur Andersen - read here -

The Court flatly rejected the "limited" or "narrow" non-competition agreement as unlawful under Bus. and Prof. Code section 16600. The court said that California's unfair competition law bans all non-compete agreements, even when they only restrict the employee's right to work for a limited number of employers. So, bid a sad goodbye to Ninth Circuit cases recognizing the "limited" non-compete such as International Business Machines Corp. v. Bajorek (9th Cir. 1999) 191 F.3d 1033 and General Commercial Packaging v. TPS Package (9th Cir. 1997) 126 F.3d 1131.

Below the fold, but perhaps more importantly, the court upheld a release that covered "any and all" claims. The lower court held that the release was invalid because it included unwaivable claims such as for reimbursement of expenses under Lab. Code section 2802. The court said that general release language such as at issue in Edwards impliedly did not include the release of claims that are not capable of being released:
We apply this rule in holding that a contract provision releasing “any and all” claims, such as that used in the TONC in the present case, does not encompass nonwaivable statutory protections, such as the employee indemnity protection of section Labor Code 2802. In so holding, we interpret the TONC such that it does not violate Labor Code section 2804. As a consequence, the TONC is neither unlawful nor null and void.

So, that's really good news for those of us employment lawyers who don't carve out all unwaivable claims from our releases.

DGV