Filed 9/24/14 Allen v. WCAB CA3
NOT TO BE PUBLISHED
California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
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or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.
IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT
(San Joaquin)
----
TINA ALLEN, C071912
Petitioner, (Super. Ct. No. ADJ3147570)
v.
WORKERS' COMPENSATION APPEALS BOARD
and AT&T,
Respondents.
In this writ proceeding, we conclude the Workers’ Compensation Appeals Board
(the Board) correctly denied petitioner Tina Allen’s claim she was not rehired by her
former employer on discriminatory grounds in violation of Labor Code section 132a
(section 132a). The Board’s previous determination that Allen’s termination was lawful
was res judicata, and thus section 132a could not apply to Allen’s request for
reinstatement, as no employment relationship existed at the time the employer denied her
request.
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FACTS
Respondent AT&T employed Allen as a service representative in Dublin. In
February 2007, AT&T notified Allen she was in violation of company standards for
having too many absences from work. It told Allen she would be dismissed if she had an
additional absence.
On March 8, 2007, Allen fell while attempting to sit in her chair at work. She
injured her right hip and buttocks, lower back, and left hand. On April 7, 2007, she
apparently aggravated the injury while dancing, and she returned to her Stockton doctor,
Dr. David Clarence Rodgers of Kaiser Permanente, on April 9, 2007. Dr. Rodgers placed
her on temporary disability on April 9 and 10, 2007, but directed she return to work at
modified duty on April 11, 2007.
On April 11, 2007, Allen did not return to work, but visited a different Kaiser
Permanente doctor, Dr. Sidhartha Gurung, at Kaiser Permanente in Tracy. Allen alleges
Dr. Gurung placed her on temporary disability from April 11 through April 19, 2007,
when she was to return to meet with Dr Rodgers.
On April 19, 2007, Allen met with Dr. Rodgers. He concluded Allen was able to
return to work that day. He also advised her he would not approve any additional time
off. Allen asked to see another doctor for a second opinion.
Allen returned to work the following day, April 20. She was immediately
suspended from work and scheduled for dismissal pending an investigation into her April
19 absence.
On May 3, 2007, Dr. Rodgers added an addendum to his earlier reports. He stated
Allen’s pain for which she was placed on temporary disability for April 9 and April 10
occurred because she had been dancing on April 7. As a result, he determined the time
off on April 9 and 10 was nonindustrial.
By letter dated May 8, 2007, AT&T informed Allen it was accepting liability for
her worker’s compensation injury. However, it could not pay her temporary disability
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payments at that time because her physician stated she could return to work as of April
19. Therefore, it considered the absences on April 9, April 10, and April 19 as
nonindustrial.
Allen filed a claim with the Board on May 31, 2007. She alleged she was
temporarily and totally disabled on the dates of April 9 through April 13, 2007, and April
19, 2007, as a result of her March 8 injury.
On July 2, 2007, AT&T welcomed Allen back to work because it had received a
disability approval notice. However, it informed her the April absences were still under
investigation, and if it determined they were not workers’ compensation absences, it
would terminate her employment.
Eight days later, on July 10, AT&T informed Allen she was being terminated. It
had “re-confirmed” her absences of April 9 through April 13, 2007, and April 19, 2007,
were “Final WC denied.” She was therefore deemed not to be in compliance with the
company’s absence policy and was dismissed.
Allen amended her claim before the Board to allege she had been dismissed based
on an industrially-caused disability, a form of discrimination in violation of Labor Code
section 132a.1 She asserted AT&T wrongfully dismissed her on the basis of her April
absences being denied workers’ compensation coverage, as those absences were the
subject of her earlier filed claim with the Board and no determination had been made that
they were or were not work related.
Allen underwent a qualified medical examination on August 9, 2007. The doctor,
Dr. Bruce E. Thompson, concluded Allen was completely healed from her fall. He also
stated there was “no reasonable medical evidence to support the conclusion that the
dancing of 7 April significantly aggravated her condition.” The report indicated the
1 Subsequent undesignated references to sections are to the Labor Code.
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entirety of Allen’s medical condition and any resultant disability were solely related to
the work injury.
Thereafter, the parties entered into a settlement. By agreement dated January 16,
2008, and approved by order of the workers’ compensation judge (WCJ) on that date,
AT&T agreed to pay Allen $1,080. The settlement agreement stated: “This resolves the
dispute of TD for the period of 4-9-07, 4-10-07, 4-11-07, 4-12-07, 4-13-07 & 4-19-07.”
Allen alleges she requested AT&T to reinstate her after the settlement was
reached. Presumably, AT&T did not, as Allen’s claim for discrimination in her
termination went to trial before a WCJ in 2009. Following trial, the WCJ ruled in favor
of Allen. He found AT&T had wrongfully terminated her in violation of section 132a
because the issue of whether her absences in April 2007 were workers’ compensation
absences, the issue that led AT&T to terminate Allen, was still in dispute when she was
dismissed. The WCJ ordered AT&T to reinstate Allen.
AT&T filed a petition for reconsideration. The WCJ granted the petition, reversed
its prior ruling, and ruled in favor of AT&T. The WCJ expressly found Allen was unable
to work on the dates of her April 2007 absences because of her work-related injury.
However, the WCJ effectively concluded he had applied an improper standard in his
earlier decision for determining whether AT&T had discriminated against Allen in
violation of section 132a when it terminated her. On reconsideration, he applied the
standard announced in Department of Rehabilitation v. Workers’ Comp. Appeals Bd.
(2003) 30 Cal.4th 1281, 1298 (Lauher), and determined Allen had failed to establish
AT&T discriminated against her in violation of section 132a when it terminated her.
The WCJ read Lauher to require Allen, in order to establish a violation of section
132a, to prove AT&T treated her differently in a detrimental way because she sustained
an industrial injury, not simply that an action taken as a result of her injury caused her
detriment. The WCJ held Allen could not make that showing. AT&T terminated Allen
because she failed to comply with the company’s absence policy. Even though AT&T
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may have incorrectly determined she violated that policy by counting temporary
disability absences against her, there was no evidence AT&T treated her differently on
account of her industrial injury. The WCJ ruled AT&T simply followed its policy.
Allen petitioned for reconsideration. The WCJ prepared a report and
recommendation for the Board recommending reconsideration be denied. He again
reasoned Allen had failed to establish section 132a discrimination under the Lauher
standard. However, in a comment that set up this action, the WCJ gratuitously referred to
his earlier finding that Allen’s April 2007 absences had in fact been for temporary
disability. He wrote that with that finding having been made, “if [Allen] were to re-
approach her employer regarding termination, there may be a different result if the
employer continues to consider the dates for which it has now been determined the
[Allen] was temporarily and totally disabled. That issue, however, is not properly before
the court.”
On January 13, 2011, the Board approved the WCJ’s recommendation and denied
reconsideration.
Allen did not seek review of the Board’s decision in this court. (See § 5950.)
Instead, she “re-approached [AT&T] regarding [her] termination” by sending several
letters to AT&T requesting she be reinstated to her employment on account of the WCJ’s
determining her April 2007 absences were for work-related temporary disability. AT&T
never responded to her requests and did not reinstate her.
Allen filed a second claim with the Board on or about January 19, 2011, alleging
AT&T violated section 132a by not reinstating her after the Board found her April 2007
absences were due to temporary disability.
In May 2012, the same WCJ who had heard her first claim denied Allen’s latest
claim, ruling AT&T’s refusal to reinstate Allen did not violate section 132a. First, the
WCJ ruled the Board had no jurisdiction to act on Allen’s claim. Allen made her
requests for reinstatement when no employment relationship existed between her and
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AT&T. Under the Fourth District Court of Appeal’s ruling in City of Anaheim v.
Workers’ Comp. Appeals Bd. (1981) 124 Cal.App.3d 609 (City of Anaheim), the lack of
an employment relationship or any other type of nexus between the two parties precluded
application of section 132a, leaving the Board with no jurisdiction to address the claim.
Second, even if there were a nexus between Allen and AT&T when she sought
reinstatement, Allen still could not recover under section 132a. She did not show
AT&T’s refusal to rehire her was related to her earlier workers’ compensation claim, and
she did not satisfy the other requirements of Lauher.
Allen petitioned for reconsideration. The WCJ filed his report recommending the
petition be denied. He repeated his reasoning from his original decision. He particularly
noted the Board had previously determined Allen’s termination by AT&T was valid, and
that decision was final. Because her termination was valid, there was no employment
relationship or any kind of nexus or reservation of rights by Allen at the time she sought
reinstatement. Thus, the Board lacked jurisdiction to provide her relief.
In July 2012, the Board agreed with the WCJ’s report, and it denied Allen’s
petition for reconsideration.
Allen filed a petition for review. She alleged the Board erred as follows:
1. The Board’s decision that no employment relationship or nexus existed at
the time Allen sought reinstatement lacked substantial evidence and was based on errors
of law. She contends an employment relationship is presumed to exist when an employee
seeks reinstatement where the discharge violated section 132a. Alternatively, she asserts
a sufficient nexus existed due to the Board’s factual finding that her April 2007 absences
were for temporary disability.
2. The Board’s decision that Allen failed to satisfy Lauher’s requirements for
establishing discrimination under section 132a was erroneous as a matter of law and was
not supported by substantial evidence. She contends both her discharge and the decision
not to reinstate her violated section 132a under Lauher, and that AT&T is bound by the
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Board’s finding that her April 2007 absences were in fact work related. She asserts she
did not waive these arguments by entering into the settlement agreement with the Board
for payment of compensation for her April absences.
We issued a writ of review, and now proceed to address her claims.
DISCUSSION
Our resolution of this case hinges on Allen’s failure to seek judicial review of the
Board’s January 13, 2011 decision on her first claim denying reconsideration and finding
Allen’s termination did not violate section 132a.2 The Board’s decision was a final order
subject to judicial review. The failure to seek review within the time allotted by statute
renders that order final and immune from legal attack. As a result, we cannot disturb the
Board’s finding that AT&T did not violate section 132a when it terminated Allen.
Because her termination is deemed lawful, Allen cannot bring a second claim demanding
reinstatement.
“[A] petition for review of an order by the [Board] lies when the order
conclusively determines, for purposes of the compensation proceeding, a substantial issue
basic to the employee’s entitlement to benefits. [Citation.]” (Maranian v. Workers’
Comp. Appeals Bd. (2000) 81 Cal.App.4th 1068, 1078.) Such an order is a final order
“whether or not it resolves all the issues in the proceeding or represents a decision on the
right to benefits. (Id. at p. 1075.) If the Board hears a petition for reconsideration, “the
Board’s subsequent decision is ‘final’ for purposes of appellate review. [Citation.]”
(Kosowski v. Workers’ Comp. Appeals Bd. (1985) 170 Cal.App.3d 632, 636, fn. 2.)
In this matter, the Board on January 13, 2011, conclusively determined not just a
substantial issue basic to Allen’s claim, but in fact her entire claim. After the parties
executed the settlement agreement, the only issue left to be resolved was whether AT&T
2 We requested, and received, supplemental briefing by the parties on this issue.
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had terminated Allen in violation of section 132a. The Board resolved this issue on
reconsideration in favor of AT&T. As a result, that decision was final and ripe for
appellate review.
“The characterization of an order or decision as final and susceptible to judicial
review has critical consequences. The failure of an aggrieved party to seek judicial
review of a final order of the [Board] bars later challenge to the propriety of the order or
decision before either the [Board] or the court. [Citations.]” (State Farm General Ins.
Co. v. Workers’ Comp. Appeals Bd. (2013) 218 Cal.App.4th 258, 268.)
To obtain judicial review, a party must petition the Court of Appeal for a writ of
review “within 45 days after a petition for reconsideration is denied.” (§ 5950.) The 45-
day time limit to file a petition for writ of review “is jurisdictional.” (Malloy v. Workers’
Comp. Appeals Bd. (1991) 1 Cal.App.4th 1658, 1661.)
Allen did not file a petition for a writ of review within 45 days after the Board
issued its January 13, 2011 decision denying reconsideration. As a result, that decision
and the issues it decided are final and have res judicata effect, and we have no
jurisdiction to review them, even though the petition asks us to do so. (Azadigian v.
Workers’ Comp. Appeals Bd. (1992) 7 Cal.App.4th 372, 376-377.) Accordingly, it is
now beyond Allen’s reach to contest the Board’s ruling that AT&T did not discriminate
against her in violation of section 132a when it terminated her in 2007. Her termination
is deemed lawful, and we do not address the question raised by the writ petition of
whether AT&T must reinstate Allen due to allegedly terminating her in violation of
section 132a.
Allen argues AT&T is bound by the Board’s factual finding that the absences on
which AT&T based her termination were in fact work-related absences. Even if that is
so, the Board still concluded the termination was not discriminatory under section 132a
and that the issue of reinstatement on account of AT&T’s treatment of her absences was
not before it. If Allen believed those conclusions were in error, she was obligated to seek
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judicial review within 45 days of the decision. She did not seek review, and now she and
we are bound by the Board’s decision.
Allen asserts the Board retained continuing jurisdiction to review its January 13,
2011 order by suggesting Allen might receive a different outcome if she applied for
reinstatement and AT&T continued to consider the April 2007 absences as industrial
related. Any so-called continuing jurisdiction the Board may have had existed only if the
Board chose to exercise it. (§§ 5803, 5804.) Here, the Board did not take any steps to
modify its January 13, 2011 order. And its ruling on Allen’s second claim was not an
invocation of continuing jurisdiction on Allen’s first claim, as Allen’s second claim was
limited to a new alleged discriminatory act – AT&T’s refusal to reinstate her after it had
terminated her and she had reapplied for employment.
In any event, Allen may not seek to cure her failure to seek judicial review of the
Board’s January 13, 2011 order by filing a new petition or claim, and basing her right to
review on the denial of that claim, when in fact she is also seeking review of the original
final decision. (Royster v. Workmen’s Comp. Appeals Bd. (1974) 40 Cal.App.3d 412,
414.)
Because we cannot review the Board’s decision that Allen was lawfully
terminated, we are thus left to review Allen’s remaining claim, whether AT&T violated
section 132a when it refused to rehire her after the Board issued its January 13, 2011
order. We conclude section 132a does not apply in this instance because at the time of
the alleged act of discrimination – refusing to rehire Allen after the Board issued its order
– Allen was not an employee of, and had no employment relationship with, AT&T.
To recover under section 132a, Allen must show she was an employee at the time
of the discriminatory act. (City of Anaheim, supra, 124 Cal.App.3d at pp. 612-613.)
Here, Allen was not an employee when she sought reinstatement. She had been lawfully
terminated. She thus has no remedy under section 132a.
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Allen contends the rule of City of Anaheim applies only when the posttermination
discrimination occurs after a lawful termination, citing Barns v. Workers’ Comp. Appeals
Bd. (1989) 216 Cal.App.3d 524 (Barns). Barns, however, is distinguishable. In that
case, the injured worker, after he was terminated and denied reinstatement, filed a claim
seeking reinstatement and benefits under section 132a. The employer defended by
arguing it had terminated the employee lawfully. The WCJ and the Board, on petition for
reconsideration, determined the employer had not terminated the employee in violation of
section 132a and thus was not obligated to reinstate him. (Id. at pp. 529-530.)
The employee filed a petition for review from the Board’s decision and, unlike in
this case, the Court of Appeal annulled that decision. The court wrote: “The critical
distinction between City of Anaheim and the present case is that the employment
relationship there had been unequivocally and lawfully terminated before any of the
allegedly discriminatory acts took place. Here the purported termination was itself
discriminatory. It cannot provide a basis for immunizing the employer’s later
discriminatory conduct.” (Barns, supra, 216 Cal.App.3d at p. 539.)
In Barns, however, the issue of res judicata barring consideration of the
termination’s legality was not before the court. Because the opinion is silent on the issue,
we presume the employee in Barns timely petitioned for review from the Board’s denial
of his petition for reconsideration, and thus the Court of Appeal had jurisdiction to
consider whether the employer had terminated the employee in violation of section 132a.
In our case, as already explained, Allen did not timely file a petition for review
from the Board’s January 13, 2011 denial of her petition for reconsideration. As a result,
the Board’s decision that Allen’s termination did not violate section 132a, and was thus
lawful, is final and no longer subject to judicial review. We therefore cannot rule on
whether her termination was lawful, and must assume it was, as found by the Board.
Because the termination was lawful, no employment relationship existed at the time
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AT&T refused to rehire Allen, and section 132a does not apply to AT&T’s decision not
to rehire her.
Allen asks us for leniency because she was in pro per at the time the Board issued
its decision. Unrepresented parties are still “held to the same restrictive procedural rules
as an attorney. [Citation.]” (Bistawros v. Greenberg (1987) 189 Cal.App.3d 189, 193.)
We cannot excuse noncompliance with jurisdictional rules.
DISPOSITION
The decision of the Board is affirmed. Each party shall bear their own costs in this
original proceeding.
NICHOLSON , Acting P. J.
We concur:
ROBIE , J.
DUARTE , J.
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