Showing posts with label unclean hands. Show all posts
Showing posts with label unclean hands. Show all posts

Friday, June 27, 2014

California Supreme Court Washes Unclean Hands. And After Acquired Evidence, Too

The defense of "after acquired evidence" is a variation on the equitable defense of "unclean hands." A party's "unclean hands" are supposed to "close the courthouse door" to those guilty of wrongdoing directly related to the heart of his or her claims.  "Unclean hands" is supposed to apply only when the wrongdoing goes to the heart of the claims the employee is asserting.

After-acquired evidence is a broader concept, in that the focus is on whether the employer would have denied employment to the employee, had the employer known about the misconduct during the hiring process or before termination.  As the Supreme Court explained:
The doctrine of after-acquired evidence refers to an employer‟s discovery, after an allegedly wrongful termination of employment or refusal to hire, of information that would have justified a lawful termination or refusal to hire.
Unlike unclean hands, the after-acquired information may not have to cut to the heart of the employee's case. But the employer must prove that the employee would not have been hired or would have lost his or her job.

In the employment law context, for example, a California court once held that someone who lied on his employment application, that he was not convicted of a crime, was not permitted to sue for martial status discrimination under the Fair Employment and Housing Act. The court reasoned the employee was not entitled to the job in the first place because of his misconduct, because he never would have been hired. (Camp v. Jeffer Mangels et al.) Another court held that an employee who was unauthorized to work in the U.S. could not proceed on termination-based claims because she was not entitled to the job in the first place.  (Murillo v. Rite-Stuff Foods).

Under federal employment laws, such as Title VII, however, these defenses can limit damages available, but are not complete bars to liability. McKennon v. Nashville Banner Publishing Co. (1995) 513 U.S. 352.  That is, if the employer proves it would have fired an employee had it known about information acquired after the termination, the employer can argue that damages should be reduced, but cannot assert a complete defense.

The California Supreme Court just decided in Salas v. Sierra Chemical that the federal rule is the better one.

Vicente Salas intentionally and repeatedly used someone else's social security number to obtain employment with Sierra Chemical Company. He signed an I-9 form under penalty of perjury, attesting to the documents he submitted in support of his eligibility to work in the U.S.  Because his job with Sierra was seasonal, Salas repeatedly misrepresented his social security number, every time he re-applied for seasonal work.

Mirabile dictu, the social security bureaucracy figured out that Salas's social security number was bogus. Of course, that was the social security office of many years ago; the one that issued "no-match" letters and required an explanation from the employees whose numbers did not match their names.  Sierra Chemical apparently didn't do anything about the employees with no-match letters.  They allowed Salas and the other employees to continue working.

Meanwhile, in 2006, Salas injured himself  He returned to work the next day, with restrictions, which Sierra honored.  He returned to full duty a couple of months later, in June. But in August, he hurt himself again, and required modified duty until December, when he was laid off for the season (as he had been in the past).

Salas went to work for another company after the layoff.  But then his Sierra managers called him and asked if he wanted to return to work. They then told him he would have to have a release from his doctor - to full duty - before he could return. (Spot the issue, accommodation mavens).

Salas told his boss he would try to get the release by June 2007. The boss said he would hold open Salas's job.  But Salas did not contact the boss again.  Instead, he sued.  He claimed denial of reasonable accommodation under the Fair Employment and Housing Act, and retaliation for filing a workers' compensation claim, in violation of public policy.

As the trial date approached, both parties filed motions in limine regarding evidence.  Salas acknowledge it is a crime (illegal) under federal and state law:
for a person to use false identification documents to conceal the person‟s true citizenship or resident alien status. Plaintiff stated that he would testify at trial and assert his privilege against self-incrimination under the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution if asked about his immigration status. He asked that he be allowed to assert the privilege outside the jury's presence and that the court and counsel not comment at trial on his assertion of the privilege. 
So, Salas' disclosure for the first time prompted the defense to investigate the bona fides of Salas' immigration status.  The defendant found out that Salas' social security number actually belonged to a person on the East Coast.

Sierra moved for summary judgment on the ground that Salas falsified his employment authorization paperwork. The company submitted a sworn statement from the real owner of the social security number and of the company's president, who said they would have fired Salas had they known of his deception.

Yet the trial court denied Sierra's motion for summary judgment.  The Court of Appeal, on the other hand, held Salas's claims were barred. Per the Supreme Court:
The Court of Appeal reasoned that the doctrine of after-acquired evidence barred plaintiff‟s causes of action because he had misrepresented to defendant employer his eligibility under federal law to work in the United States. It also held that plaintiff‟s claims were subject to the doctrine of unclean hands because he had falsely used another person's Social Security number in seeking employment with defendant, he was disqualified under federal law from working in the United States, and his conduct exposed defendant to penalties under federal law.
The lower court's decision was entirely consistent with California law up to this point.

But the California Supreme Court disagreed with the Court of Appeal and held that "after-acquired evidence" or "unclean hands" defenses are not complete bars to liability under FEHA.  Rather, the Court decided, these defenses in some cases may be used only to limit damages. As a result, summary judgment based on the defenses no longer is an option.

California law protects  immigrant workers who are unauthorized to work by guaranteeing them access to the same employment laws that protect those legally entitled to work.  So, Salas argued, if late-discovered unauthorized status resulted in application of unclean hands, these worker would be barred from bringing wrongful termination claims.

The Court agreed with Salas. First, the Court decided that federal immigration laws do not preempt California's laws preserving illegal aliens' employment-based claims. If federal law preempted California law, the California statutes would not impede the application of unclean hands. The Court engaged in a lengthy analysis of federal preemption jurisprudence, concluding that California was free to pass laws guaranteeing illegal aliens the right to benefit from employment law on the same terms as authorized workers.

The Court could have limited its discussion to whether unclean hands / after acquired evidence may be applied to hose who lie about their immigration status / identification documents.  But no.

The Court then examined, and gutted, the application of after-acquired evidence / unclean hands in FEHA cases generally.  The Court decided that the defenses are not complete bars in Fair Employment and Housing Act cases because employers should not be insulated from liability for making unlawful employment decisions, even those taken against employees who should never have been employed in the first place.  The Court reasoned that the employer made the challenged decisions without knowing of the employee's misconduct that would have led to termination or refusal to hire.

The Court then decided that, like under the federal rule, employees found to have engaged in misconduct that would have disqualified them from employment should be limited in their potential remedies:
Generally, the employee's remedies should not afford compensation for loss of employment during the period after the employer‟s discovery of the evidence relating to the employee‟s wrongdoing. When the employer shows that information acquired after the employee‟s claim has been made would have led to a lawful discharge or other employment action, remedies such as reinstatement, promotion, and pay for periods after the employer learned of such information would be “inequitable and pointless,” as they grant remedial relief for a period during which the plaintiff employee was no longer in the defendant‟s employment and had no right to such employment. (McKennon, supra, 513 U.S. at p. 362.)

The remedial relief generally should compensate the employee for loss of employment from the date of wrongful discharge or refusal to hire to the date on which the employer acquired information of the employee‟s wrongdoing or ineligibility for employment. Fashioning remedies based on the relative equities of the parties prevents the employer from violating California‟s FEHA with impunity while also preventing an employee or job applicant from obtaining lost wages compensation for a period during which the employee or applicant would not in any event have been employed by the employer. In an appropriate case, it would also prevent an employee from recovering any lost wages when the employee's wrongdoing is particularly egregious.

The lower courts apparently are left to decide what an "appropriate case" or "egregious" means in this context.

The significance of the Court's no-preemption holding now becomes clear.  If preemption applies, it is likely that federal law would preclude any post-termination or back pay to an employee who falsifies employment documents to obtain employment.  Given the California Supreme Court decided state law is not preempted, its holding under state law is viable.  But if the U.S. Supreme Court hears this case and decides federal immigration law applies, it could be that unauthorized workers are entitled to no post-termination pay, but could still recover for pre-termination damages due to unlawful harassment, for example.

The Court then separated the "unclean hands" defense from the "after-acquired evidence" analysis.  But then the Court simply said that the defense of unclean hands, normally a complete bar, would not apply in FEHA cases either, but again authorized trial courts to fashion appropriate equitable remedies.  It's hard to tell, but it seems like the courts will apply the same analysis whether the defense is expressed as "unclean hands" or "after-acquired evidence."  Again, "unclean hands" likely will apply only when the misconduct relates to serious application fraud, but it appears not to matter anymore.

Retired Justice Joyce Kennard wrote the opinion for 5 justices; her final gift to the plaintiffs' bar.  Retiring Justice Baxter wrote a concurrence/dissent, joined by Justice Ming Chin, the editor of the "leading employment law treatise" in the words of a recent court opinion.  Justice Baxter opined that federal immigration law indeed precludes any remedy to employees who falsify eligibility to work in the U.S. And Justice Baxter pointed out that the "unclean hands" defense, when applicable, generally is a complete bar to a plaintiff's access to court.

The opinion in Salas v. Sierra Chemical Co. is here.


Sunday, August 14, 2011

Court of Appeal: False Social Security Number = Unclean Hands = No Case

Vicente Salas worked for Sierra Chemical Company. He was seasonal, and was repeatedly laid off and re-hired.  Along the way, he injured himself.  The company allegedly denied him re-hire after he did not produce a release from his doctor. Salas claimed he was told he had to be 100% healed, which is one of those ADA no-nos.  He sued for a variety of employment based claims, including disability discrimination, failure to provide reasonable accommodation, etc.

But Sierra found out that Salas used a false social security number and obtained summary judgment because of the "unclean hands" / after acquired evidence defenses.  (The trial court actually denied the motion, but the court of appeal issued an order to show cause in response to a petition for a writ, resulting in the trial court's changing its mind.)

Salas's use of another person's Social Security number to obtain employment with Sierra Chemical went to the heart of the employment relationship and related directly to his claims that Sierra Chemical wrongfully failed to hire him following his seasonal lay off and discriminated against him by failing to provide a reasonable accommodation for his back injury. Because Salas was not lawfully qualified for the job, he cannot be heard to complain that he was not hired. This is so even though he alleges that one reason for the failure to hire was Sierra Chemical's unwillingness to accommodate his disability.
In light of the nature of the misrepresentation, the fact that it exposed Sierra Chemical to penalties for submitting false statements to several federal agencies, and the fact that Salas was disqualified from employment by means of governmental requirements, we conclude that Salas‟s claims are also barred by the doctrine of unclean hands.

The court also rejected Salas' claim that the Legislature foreclosed the unclean hands/ after acquired evidence defense by passing SB 1818, which provides in pertinent part:
"The Legislature finds and declares the following: [¶] (a) All protections, rights, and remedies available under state law, except any reinstatement remedy prohibited by federal law, are available to all individuals regardless of immigration status who have applied for employment, or who are or who have been employed, in this state. [¶]
(b) For purposes of enforcing state labor, employment, civil rights and employee housing laws, a person‟s immigration status is irrelevant to the issue of liability...
The court noted that SB 1818 was intended to be "declarative of existing law," and so it did not abrogate existing defenses to employment law actions.

The upshot is that this case denies relief to employees who falsify their employment credentials, resulting in a violation of law if the employer continues to employ the employee.  The employer will have to show as well that the employer's settled policy is to discharge / refuse to hire employees who commit the type of violation at issue.

The case is Salas v. Sierra Chemical Co. and the opinion is here.

DGV

Saturday, November 21, 2009

Another Non-Solicit Bites the Dust

The Court of Appeal took up a complex lawsuit involving claims and cross-claims of unfair competition, including strong agreements not to compete or solicit and choices of law and forum clauses. The Court expanded on the decision this summer in The Retirement Group v. Galante, posted here.

Basically, Dowell, other employees and their new employer, St. Jude, sued Biosense Webster, which was attempting to enforce a non-compete agreement, which included broad non-solicitation clauses. The Court of Appeal agreed with the trial court that the agreements were unenforceable. Here is some language from the opinion:

Biosense contends that the clauses are valid because they were tailored to protect trade secrets or confidential information, and as such satisfy the so-called trade secret exception, citing cases such as Thompson v. Impaxx, Inc. (2003) 113 Cal.App.4th 1425, 1429–1430; Whyte v. Schlage Lock Co. (2002) 101 Cal.App.4th 1443, 1462; Metro Traffic, supra, 22 Cal.App.4th at p. 860; and American Paper & Packaging Products, Inc. v. Kirgan (1986) 183 Cal.App.3d 1318, 1322. Plaintiffs counter that in light of our Supreme Court’s recent decision of Edwards, supra, 44 Cal.4th 937, a common law trade secret exception no longer exists.The Court in Edwards concluded that section 16600 “prohibits employee noncompetition agreements unless the agreement falls within a statutory exception.” (Edwards, supra, 44 Cal.4th at p. 942.) . . . .

* * *
Although we doubt the continued viability of the common law trade secret exception to covenants not to compete, we need not resolve the issue here. Even assuming the exception exists, we agree with the trial court that it has no application here. This is so because the noncompete and nonsolicitation clauses in the agreements are not narrowly tailored or carefully limited to the protection of trade secrets, but are so broadly worded as to restrain competition. ...
Biosense argues that the clauses in the agreements are narrowly tailored to protect trade secrets and confidential information because they are “tethered” to the use of confidential information, and are triggered only when the former employee’s services for a competitor implicate the use of confidential information. As such, to the extent that no confidential information was disclosed or made known to Dowell and Chapman during their employment with Biosense, the noncompete clause would never be triggered. But this argument ignores the broad wording of the agreements. The noncompete clause prohibits an employee from rendering services, directly or indirectly, to a competitor where those services could enhance the use or marketability of a conflicting product through the use of confidential information to which the employee had access at Biosense. “Confidential information” is broadly
defined as information disclosed to or known by the employee, including such
information as the number or location of sales representatives, the names of customers, customer preferences, needs, requirements, purchasing histories or
other customer-specific information. Given such an inclusive and broad list of confidential information, it seems nearly impossible that employees like Dowell and Chapman, who worked directly with customers, would not have possession of such information. The prohibition here is not unlike the noncompete clause found facially invalid by the court in D’Sa, supra, 85 Cal.App.4th at p. 930. . . . .


We also reject the argument of Biosense that the nonsolicitation clause is narrowly tailored to protect trade secrets and confidential information. The same argument was rejected by the Galante court, which noted: “However, Edwards rejected the claim that antisolicitation clauses could be exempt from section 16600 if the conduct covered by such clauses fell within the ‘narrow-restraint’ exception discussed in Campbell (Edwards, supra, 44 Cal.4th at pp. 948–950), and we decline TRG’s implicit invitation to engraft that exception onto this case.” (Galante, supra, 176 Cal.App.4th at p. 1241.) Moreover, the clause at issue here goes well beyond prohibiting active solicitation by prohibiting departing employees from selling or rendering any services to Biosense customers or directly or indirectly assisting others to do so—even if it is the customer who solicits the former employee. (See
Morris v. Harris (1954) 127 Cal.App.2d 476, 478 [invalidating restraint that
prohibited employee from providing services to former customers who sought him
out without any solicitation].)

St. Jude, though, lost on its attempt to enjoin Biosense from enforcing its non-compete agreement against all employees in California. The court said that St. Jude had no standing under the UCL to enforce an injunction in favor of plaintiffs not before the court.

Biosense cross-claimed against St. Jude for "raiding" by hiring Dowell and other employees. The Court of Appeal again affirmed summary judgment against Biosense, holding there was no evidence of unlawful conduct by St. Jude, which by default has the right to hire away St. Jude employees.

Biosense argued St. Jude used similar agreements to prevent competition by its own former employees. Therefore, Biosense reasoned, St. Jude came into court with "unclean hands." No sale. St. Jude's alleged unfair practices with respect to their own employees did not go to the heart of the matter with respect to Dowell's suit against Biosense. Therefore, unclean hands did not apply.

So, lots to read. Bottom line, though, is that a non-solicit probably is not going to be enforced except as a remedy for trade secret violations, not as a prophylactic measure where there is no finding of actual or threatened misappropriation under the UTSA. The agreement here was too broad, but there does not seem to be much room left for clauses that prohibit solicitation merely because an employee is exposed to "confidential" information and might use them some day.

The case is Dowell v. Biosense Webster, Inc. and the opinion is here.