Filed 12/21/20 Lave v. Charter Communications CA4/1
NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
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COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
DIVISION ONE
STATE OF CALIFORNIA
ANTHONY LAVE, D076206
Plaintiff, Respondent, and Cross-
Appellant
(Super. Ct. No. RIC1508865)
v.
CHARTER COMMUNICATIONS, LLC,
Defendant, Appellant, and Cross-
Respondent.
APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Riverside, John
Vineyard, Judge. Affirmed.
Kabat Chapman & Ozmer, Kristapor Vartanian, and C. Celeste
Creswell, for Defendant, Appellant, and Cross-respondent.
Pine Tillet Pine, Norman Pine, Scott Tillet, Chaya M. Citrin; The Rager
Law Firm, and Jeffrey Andrew Rager, for Plaintiff, Respondent, and Cross-
appellant.
Charter Communications, LLC (Charter) appeals a judgment in favor
of its former employee, Anthony Lave, following a jury trial on Lave’s causes
of action arising from his claim that he was wrongfully terminated after
taking sick leave, medical leave, and due to a disability. In a special verdict,
the jury rejected Charter’s defense that it fired Lave for a different reason
and instead found that Charter wrongfully retaliated against, and ultimately
terminated, Lave in violation of state law and awarded him noneconomic
damages. Subsequently, the trial court awarded Lave $400,800 in attorney
fees.
On appeal, Charter challenges the judgment on multiple grounds. It
contends the court erred in excluding certain documents without redactions
at trial and in instructing the jury; that portions of the verdict are not
supported by substantial evidence; and that the jury’s verdict is
irreconcilably inconsistent. On cross-appeal, Lave challenges the trial court’s
award of attorney fees, contending the court’s calculation was incorrect and it
abused its discretion in determining the appropriate amount of fees to award.
Finding no reversible error in either regard, we affirm both the judgment and
the order.
I.
Charter’s Appeal
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
“As required by the rules of appellate procedure, we state the facts in
the light most favorable to the judgment.” (Orthopedic Systems, Inc. v.
Schlein (2011) 202 Cal.App.4th 529, 532, fn. 1.) Additional facts will be
discussed where relevant in the following section.
In 2008, Charter hired Lave as a “broadband tech.” Approximately two
years after he was hired, Lave injured his back while working. He filed a
workers’ compensation claim and, although he continued to work, Lave
ultimately received a permanent disability rating of 30 percent.
2
Years later, in September 2014, Lave asked for time off, claiming he
needed to take his wife to a medical appointment. Lave’s supervisor, Eugene
Bereal, failed to respond for over a week. Frustrated with the lack of a
response, Lave complained to a human resources employee but eventually
abandoned his request for time off. Lave testified he was devastated that he
could not be with his wife for the appointment.
Shortly thereafter, Lave requested another day off—again to
accompany his wife to a follow-up medical appointment—and, again, Bereal
ignored the request for several days. Lave raised the issue of his request for
leave with the same human resources employee he had previously consulted,
and Bereal finally granted Lave’s request the evening before the
appointment.
Lave claimed that his relationship with Bereal worsened after Lave
bypassed Bereal and went to human resources regarding his leave requests.
Lave testified that Bereal would “stare[] [him] down,” disciplined him for
minor infractions, and continued to delay his responses to Lave’s leave
requests.
Shortly thereafter, Lave’s preexisting back injury “flare[d] up” in early
January, leading him to take one day of sick leave on January 5, 2015. When
Lave returned, Bereal told Lave he was going to issue a “milestone” to Lave
for taking a sick day off. As described by Lave, a “milestone” was the
documentation Charter used to memorialize employee discipline. Any
milestones in Lave’s personnel file would adversely affect his ability to
receive pay increases or promotions.
Believing he was being unfairly disciplined for taking sick leave to
which he was entitled, Lave complained to another human resources
employee and then, days later, filed a formal complaint against Bereal. He
3
was eventually told that the local human resources department would
“handle the situation.”
Lave’s back pain increased, leading him to reopen his workers’
compensation claim and visit a medical clinic run by Charter. He was
diagnosed with lower back pain and prescribed pain medication. Lave then
filed a claim for medical leave and did not work from January 9 through
January 22. Lave testified that he was also feeling “[a] lot of stress” at this
time based on his belief that Bereal was retaliating against him.
When Bereal received an e-mail informing him that Lave was taking
medical leave, Bereal replied with a one-word response: “ ‘Wow.’ ” When he
received a follow-up e-mail stating that Charter’s own clinical physician had
placed Lave on medical leave in January, Bereal remarked that he was
“ ‘speechless’ ” and added the acronym “SMH,” which he explained meant
“[s]haking my head.”
Lave returned to work on January 25, but was suspended less than a
month later on February 10. Lave was told that he was being suspended
based on a customer complaint that he used profanity inside the customer’s
house and used his work phone to receive personal calls while working. At
trial, Lave denied ever using profanity in a customer’s home and, after seeing
a photograph of the complaining customer, denied ever working in her home.
Bereal testified that the customer complaint regarding Lave was “totally
foreign” to Lave’s general demeanor, but he nonetheless believed the
customer complaint was accurate. Although he was “no where [sic] part of
the investigation” regarding the customer complaint, Bereal testified that he
believed the customer’s account based on what he “read and interactions that
[Lave] had in the past with coworkers.” Bereal testified about a prior
4
incident in May 2014 when Lave was disciplined with a warning for using
profanity with a coworker.
Lave filed another complaint with human resources, claiming his
suspension was in retaliation for taking time off work. Lave never received a
response to his complaint and was terminated on February 17.
Lave claimed his firing caused him to feel stressed and angry, and
caused sleep problems. He was able to find a new job within about three
months of his termination.
Following his termination, Lave filed this lawsuit against Charter,
alleging he was retaliated against based on his disability related to his back
injury; for taking time off to accompany his wife to her medical appointment;
for taking sick leave; for taking medical leave; and for filing complaints
arising from his disability accommodation and leave requests. His operative
complaint alleged 13 causes of action, but several causes of action were
dismissed following Charter’s motion for summary adjudication. The court’s
order on the summary adjudication motion also dismissed Lave’s prayer for
punitive damages.
The case proceeded to jury trial on Lave’s causes of action for
(1) retaliation in violation of the California Family Rights Act (Gov. Code,
§ 12945.2 et seq., CFRA); (2) retaliation in violation of Labor Code
sections 233 et seq.; (3) retaliation in violation of the Fair Employment and
Housing Act (Gov. Code, § 12900 et seq., FEHA); (4) failure to make
reasonable accommodation in violation of FEHA; (5) wrongful termination in
violation of FEHA; (6) wrongful termination in violation of public policy;
(7) failure to remedy or prevent discrimination and retaliation; and
(8) intentional infliction of emotional distress.
5
The jury found in favor of Lave on six of his causes of action and in
favor of Charter on two of the causes of action.1 In its special verdict on
Lave’s second cause of action for retaliation in violation of the CFRA, the jury
found that Lave’s taking of medical leave in January 2015 was a substantial
motivating reason for the decision to discharge Lave. On his third cause of
action for violation of Labor Code section 233 et seq., the jury found that
Charter retaliated against Lave for taking sick leave or complaining about
retaliation for taking sick leave when it discharged him. On his eighth cause
of action for disability discrimination, the jury found that Lave’s physical
condition was a substantial motivating reason for Charter’s decision to
terminate Lave. On his ninth cause of action for wrongful termination in
violation of public policy, the jury concluded that Lave’s complaint of
retaliation for taking sick leave was a substantial motivating reason for his
discharge. On his eleventh cause of action for failure to prevent
discrimination and retaliation, the jury found Charter failed to take all
reasonable steps to prevent discrimination and retaliation. Finally, the jury
found in favor of Lave on his thirteenth cause of action for intentional
infliction of emotional distress. The jury found all these actions were a
substantial factor in causing harm to Lave and awarded him $575,000 in past
noneconomic damages.
The trial court denied Charter’s motions for judgment notwithstanding
the verdict and motion for new trial. It granted Lave’s postjudgment motion
for attorney fees, awarding $400,800 rather than the requested amount of
$1,064,062.70.
1 The jury found that Charter did not retaliate in violation of FEHA by
discharging Lave for requesting a disability accommodation and that even
though it failed to provide a reasonable accommodation for his disability, that
failure was not a substantial factor in causing harm to Lave.
6
Charter timely appealed from the judgment and the court’s
postjudgment orders. Lave cross-appealed from the order denying in part his
request for attorney fees.
DISCUSSION
Charter challenges the judgment on multiple grounds. Its chief defense
at trial was that it terminated Lave based on a customer complaint, not
because of his leave requests and disability. Charter’s first argument on
appeal centers on the trial court’s orders excluding certain evidence
regarding the customer complaint, which Charter contends precluded it from
establishing its valid reason for terminating Lave. We conclude the court did
not err in excluding Charter’s evidence on the basis that Charter failed to
produce the documents in discovery. Moreover, Charter’s remaining claims
attack certain causes of action, but do not address every cause of action on
which the jury based its verdict and award of damages. Thus, even accepting
Charter’s claims of error, Charter fails to undermine the jury’s ultimate
finding in Lave’s favor and award of damages.
A. Exclusion of Charter’s Unredacted Records at Trial
Before trial, Lave sought in discovery all documents “evidencing and/or
reflecting the reasons” for Lave’s termination and any witness statements
relating to any investigation leading to Lave’s termination. In response,
Charter provided documents suggesting that the incident resulting in a
customer complaint occurred on January 30, 2015. Relying on this incident
date, Lave requested all documents relating to every employee that
performed work at the customer’s house on January 30, 2015, and all
documents evidencing which employees provided service to the complaining
customer from January to April 2015.
7
As part of its discovery response, Charter produced a customer account
record for the complaining customer, later to be identified as Trial
Exhibit 128. The document, however, contained multiple redactions,
including the customer’s name and address.
At trial, Lave’s counsel suggested in his opening statement that
because the records demonstrated that Lave did not work on January 30,
2015, “I think we’re going to have a new date for the customer complaint.”
During his own testimony, Lave testified that he never used profanity in a
customer’s home and, after seeing a photograph of the complaining customer,
denied ever working in her home.
As predicted, during cross-examination of a witness, Charter relied on
Exhibit 128 to suggest that the incident with the customer occurred on
December 30, 2014 rather than January 30, 2015. It also introduced Exhibit
129, a redacted customer record log showing a visit to the home of a customer
(whose name was redacted) on December 30, 2014.
After Lave completed his case in chief, Charter sought to introduce two
documents, which were ultimately identified as Exhibit 152A, a copy of
Lave’s dispatch call tracker, and Exhibit 155A, his route list for December 30,
2014.2 Charter acknowledged these documents were not produced in
discovery and claimed it found the documents only after the start of trial.
Lave objected, asserting that because the documents were responsive to
his discovery requests but not produced, Charter should not be permitted to
admit them as evidence at trial. The trial court sustained the objection,
finding that the documents should have been produced during discovery, and
2 These documents, in their unredacted form, were first introduced as
Exhibits 152 and 155. Later, the court ordered them to be referred to as
Exhibits 152A and 155A.
8
noted that the new alleged incident date contradicted all documentation
Charter had produced in discovery regarding the date of the incident
involving Lave. However, the trial court allowed the same documents to be
admitted in a redacted form for the limited purpose of demonstrating that
Lave worked on the date at issue.
Later, Charter also attempted to admit unredacted copies of Exhibits
128 and 129, which were produced in discovery but only with heavy
redactions. The trial court again sustained Lave’s objection to the
introduction of these documents in an unredacted form on the basis that they
were not produced in that form before trial.
Charter now contends the trial court abused its discretion in sustaining
Lave’s objections to the admission of these four unredacted documents. It
contends the exclusion of these documents without redactions resulted in a
denial of its due process right to a fair trial. It also relies upon a federal law,
the Cable Privacy Act (47 U.S.C. § 551 et seq.), which it asserts required the
redaction of the customer’s identifying information. (See id., § 551,
subd. (c)(1).) While acknowledging these documents were either not produced
in discovery or only produced in a redacted form that hid material
information, Charter contends that Lave could not have been surprised at
trial with this new evidence because he already knew the customer’s name
and that he was present at her house on December 30, 2014.
A trial court may impose an evidentiary sanction precluding a party
from introducing documents as evidence when those documents were
responsive to a discovery request by the opposing party but were not
disclosed and the issue arises for the first time at trial despite assurances
that all responsive documents had been produced. (Pate v. Channel Lumber
Co. (1997) 51 Cal.App.4th 1447, 1454-1455 (Pate).) The trial court has broad
9
discretion in deciding whether to grant or deny discovery sanctions, and its
decision is subject to reversal on appeal only if there is no reasonable basis
for the decision. (Westside Community for Independent Living, Inc. v. Obledo
(1983) 33 Cal.3d 348, 355.)
Although Charter acknowledges this general rule, it relies on Kelly v.
New West Federal Savings (1996) 49 Cal.App.4th 659 (Kelly) to support its
contention that the court erred in excluding these documents despite its
failure to produce them in discovery. In Kelly, plaintiffs were injured when
they fell out of an elevator in a building owned and operated by defendant
due to an uneven exit. (Id. at p. 664.) At a deposition, one of the two
plaintiffs testified they were riding in the “ ‘small’ ” elevator, not the “large”
elevator. (Id. at p. 665.) However, the parties subsequently discovered new
evidence demonstrating that it was the “large” elevator that was uneven on
the date of the incident. (Ibid.)
At trial, plaintiff acknowledged she was mistaken at her deposition and
intended to testify that she now knew she was riding in the large elevator.
(Kelly, supra, 49 Cal.App.4th at p. 666.) The trial court granted defendant’s
motion in limine to preclude plaintiffs or their expert from testifying they
were riding in the large elevator because it would contradict the deposition
testimony before trial. (Id. at p. 667.) Because plaintiffs were barred from
introducing any evidence regarding the true location of their injury, the trial
court found plaintiffs could not establish their claim and granted a nonsuit.
(Id. at p. 669.)
The Court of Appeal reversed, holding that a trial court “abuses its
discretion when it precludes a party from trying a case on a theory consistent
with existing evidence, even though the pretrial testimony of the party
relating to how the accident occurred is contrary to the theory.” (Kelly, supra,
10
49 Cal.App.4th at pp. 672-673.) The court further held that the exclusion of
all evidence completely prevented plaintiffs from offering any evidence to
establish their case, “meaning the error is reversible per se.” (Id. at p. 677.)
The situation presented in Kelly, where the trial court’s ruling
completely precluded plaintiffs from introducing any evidence at trial, is
distinguishable from the present situation. Although the trial court
precluded Charter from introducing some evidence at trial, the exclusion did
not completely prevent Charter from establishing its defense. Charter was
still able to elicit testimony establishing its claim that Lave was the employee
that was the subject of the customer’s complaint in December 2014. Most
critically, Charter called the customer to testify at trial. The customer
unequivocally testified that a Charter technician visited her house at the
“end of December” 2014 and that she later called to complain that the
technician used profanity in front of her family, made personal phone calls,
and otherwise acted unprofessionally. At trial, the customer directly
identified Lave as the technician.
Additionally, Charter’s human resources employee testified that she
spoke with the complaining customer on the telephone regarding the incident
with Lave. She testified the customer identified the technician’s name as
“Anthony.” She further testified that other Charter employees had confirmed
that Lave was present at the customer’s house on the December 2014 date of
service.
Another Charter employee testified that he reviewed a report
indicating that Lave was the employee who was present at the complaining
customer’s residence on the date of the incident. Another employee testified
that he personally confirmed that Charter’s records showed that Lave was
the technician present at the complaining customer’s residence.
11
Unlike the plaintiffs in Kelly, Charter was able to fully present its case.
Although the court excluded certain discrete documents, Charter was able to
introduce ample evidence to support its claim that Lave was present at the
customer’s house in December 2014. Charter’s due process claim premised on
the application of Kelly therefore has no merit. (See Tudor Ranches, Inc. v.
State Comp. Ins. Fund (1998) 65 Cal.App.4th 1422, 1432 (Tudor) [rejecting
claim of error where trial court’s evidentiary “rulings simply precluded
certain arguments or discrete items of evidence,” but “none of the challenged
rulings . . . foreclosed [the plaintiff’s] essential theory of liability”].)
Based on the record before us, we conclude that the trial court did not
abuse its discretion in excluding the unproduced documents in their
unredacted form at trial. Before trial, Lave requested all documents relating
to the customer complaint, including documents establishing that Lave
visited the complaining customer, yet Charter did not produce the documents
at issue. It was only after Lave had rested at trial that Charter attempted to
introduce these documents. Given the “late date on which the issue arose,”
the trial court did not abuse its discretion in making an implied finding that
“no other sanction—i.e., monetary, continuance, etc.—would have served any
useful purpose.” (Pate, supra, 51 Cal.App.4th at p. 1454.) Charter contends
the trial court never concluded it abused the discovery process, and it had a
right to withhold the documents based on the Cable Privacy Act. But the
trial court has the inherent authority to control the admission of evidence in
order to guarantee a fair trial. (Peat, Marwick, Mitchell & Co. v. Superior
Court (1988) 200 Cal.App.3d 272, 288 [“The court’s inherent power to curb
abuses and promote fair process extends to the preclusion of evidence. Even
without such abuses the trial court enjoys ‘broad authority of the judge over
the admission and exclusion of evidence.’ ”].) The Cable Privacy Act generally
12
prohibits cable operators from disclosing personally identifiable information
concerning subscribers (47 U.S.C. § 551(c)(1)), but the act also allows for
disclosure of that information when made pursuant to a court order and the
service provider notifies the subscriber. (Id., § 551(c)(2)(B).) Charter offers
no valid reason why these procedures could not have been followed if it
intended to use this evidence at trial. Under these circumstances, the trial
court did not abuse its discretion by prohibiting the use at trial of evidence
which was readily available and clearly relevant to the incident in question,
but was not provided in discovery. (See Tudor, supra, 65 Cal.App.4th at
p. 1431 [the test for abuse of the trial court’s discretion in ruling on the
admissibility of evidence is whether the court “ ‘ “exceeded the bounds of
reason” ’ ”].)
Even assuming the trial court abused its discretion, Charter fails to
show it was prejudiced by the exclusion of these documents at trial. As
discussed ante, the evidence was merely cumulative of other, more direct
evidence. Charter introduced testimony from numerous witnesses, including
the complaining customer herself and the employees responsible for creating
the documents at issue, establishing that Lave was the subject of the
customer’s complaint. It is unlikely that the additional documents—difficult-
to-decipher logs maintained by Charter—would have persuaded the jury that
Lave was the employee in question if the jury did not believe the direct
testimony of the customer or the Charter employees that created and
13
maintained those same logs.3 Thus, even assuming error, Charter has not
met its burden on appeal to show a more favorable result would have been
reached if the court had allowed the four unredacted documents to be
admitted as evidence. (Tudor, supra, 65 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1431-1432; see
also Agosto v. Bd. of Trustees of Grossmont-Cuyamaca Community College
Dist. (2010) 189 Cal.App.4th 330, 346 [trial court’s purported evidentiary
error did not provide a basis for reversal where appellant did not meet
burden of showing a more favorable result would have been achieved “or that
a miscarriage of justice occurred because of [the evidence’s] exclusion”].)
B. Charter’s Remaining Claims
Charter raises multiple other contentions on appeal directed at specific
causes of action. It contends that the trial court erred in declining to direct a
verdict on Lave’s third cause of action (which the parties refer to as the “kin
care” claim), because Lave could not request sick leave to attend a medical
3 As Lave notes, Charter did not request a special verdict finding as to
whether Charter had a legitimate reason to terminate Lave, meaning we do
not know whether the jury accepted Lave’s denial that he was present at the
complaining customer’s residence or, instead, concluded that Charter used
the customer complaint as a pretext to terminate Lave. Lave presented
evidence at trial, including expert opinion testimony, suggesting that his
termination—based on a customer complaint after a cursory investigation
with no prior history of complaints regarding his demeanor—was unusual
and likely pretextual. The jury could have concluded that Lave was the
subject of the customer complaint, but that this was not a substantial
motivating factor for Charter’s decision to terminate him.
14
appointment with his “ ‘wife’ ” because they were not married at the time.4
Charter also argues that the evidence was insufficient to support the jury’s
finding that Lave was disabled, undermining his eighth cause of action
related to disability discrimination. It attacks the causes of action premised
on retaliation for taking sick leave by arguing the court improperly instructed
the jury to presume retaliation given the timing of Lave’s complaint and his
subsequent termination. It also contends the evidence does not support the
jury’s finding on the thirteenth cause of action for intentional infliction of
emotional distress. Charter contends that if we agree with its contentions,
considered singularly or cumulatively, this court must reverse the entire
judgment.
Charter’s arguments on appeal, however, challenge the jury’s verdicts
as to all causes of action except the jury’s finding in favor of Lave on his
second cause of action, in which the jury found that Charter terminated Lave
for taking medical leave. To overcome this obstacle, Charter suggests this
court should reject Lave’s argument that his claims regarding medical leave
are distinct from his separate claims regarding sick leave. Charter argues
that if we instead accept that sick leave and medical leave are
indistinguishable, the jury’s verdict was inconsistent, requiring reversal of
the entire judgment.
Charter asserts that this court should reject any distinction between
the types of leave underlying the jury’s verdict because it would be
4 At trial, Lave first claimed he married his wife in 2013. When
confronted with a copy of his marriage certificate showing otherwise, he
admitted he did not marry his wife until October 2014—after his request for
time off to accompany her to the medical appointments. In a footnote in his
respondent’s brief, Lave apparently concedes he does not have a valid claim
on his third cause of action.
15
unreasonable to presume that “the jury (a) painstakingly parsed [Lave’s]
January 2015 leave into sick leave and medical leave based on their precise
legal definitions; and (b) applied the definitional nuances to determine
Charter fired him in retaliation for his January 8 medical leave (about which
he never complained) but not his January 5 sick leave (the only leave
mentioned in his Ethics Point complaint).” Charter further contends that
because the jury was not specifically instructed regarding the distinction
between sick and medical leave, it was impossible for the jury to draw such a
distinction.
We reject Charter’s claim that Lave’s claims regarding sick leave and
medical leave, and the jury’s related findings, are indistinguishable.
Although Charter correctly notes that the jury instructions did not
specifically define sick leave and medical leave, Charter has not
demonstrated that the lack of definitions constitutes reversible error. The
parties consistently distinguished between the two terms and it was
undisputed at trial that Lave took both sick leave and medical leave. Lave
presented evidence at trial that he took sick leave on January 5, 2015. After
taking one day of sick leave, Lave took medical leave from January 11 to 22,
2015. Charter’s human resources employee testified that Lave took both sick
leave and medical leave in January 2015. This distinction between types of
leave was also plainly recognized by counsel at trial. During closing
argument, Lave’s counsel distinguished between the two terms, repeatedly
suggesting that Lave’s use of both types of leave was proper and undisputed.
Reviewing the verdict form during closing argument, Lave’s counsel told the
jury that “obviously he was eligible for medical leave because it was classified
as medical leave on his time sheet. He took medical leave. Should be
16
undisputed.”5 Turning to the claims premised on sick leave, Lave’s counsel
again told the jury that “[w]e all know he took sick leave on January 5; that’s
undisputed.”
In response, Charter’s counsel did not counter the assertion that it was
undisputed that Lave took both sick leave and medical leave. Charter’s
counsel likewise consistently distinguished between medical leave and sick
leave during closing argument. When reviewing the special verdict form with
the jury, Charter’s counsel did not argue the jury should find that Lave did
not take medical leave or sick leave, but rather argued the jury should simply
find that Charter did not decide to terminate Lave for taking such leave,
regardless of whether it was medical leave or sick leave.
Considered altogether, the record reveals that the parties consistently
distinguished between Lave’s sick leave and medical leave. As a result, the
jury could reasonably recognize the undisputed distinction between the types
of leave to reasonably find that a substantial motivating factor in Charter’s
decision to terminate Lave was his use of medical leave but not his sick leave.
This distinction demonstrates the jury’s verdict is not inconsistent. Among
the causes of action presented to the jury, the jury found that on Lave’s third
and ninth causes of action, Lave was not terminated for taking sick leave, but
rather that he was terminated for complaining about retaliation for taking
sick leave. The jury also found in Lave’s favor on his second cause of action,
finding that he took medical leave and this taking of leave was a substantial
motivating reason for Charter’s decision to discharge Lave, which in turn was
5 Additionally, when discussing the claim regarding medical leave during
closing argument, Lave’s counsel did not rely on the presumption of
retaliation that purportedly applies to Lave’s sick leave claim, but instead
detailed the circumstantial evidence he believed proved that Charter
retaliated against Lave for taking medical leave.
17
a substantial factor in causing him harm. In other words, the jury found
Charter did not terminate Lave for taking a single day of sick leave, but did
terminate him for taking an extended medical leave thereafter.
Accordingly, we reject Charter’s argument on appeal that the two types
of leave are indistinguishable. As a result, Charter’s arguments on appeal do
not challenge the jury’s finding on Lave’s second cause of action, which was
premised on his claim that he was retaliated against for taking medical
leave. Critically to the outcome of this appeal, the jury’s finding in favor of
Lave on his second cause of action for retaliation in violation of the CFRA is
sufficient, standing alone, to support the award of damages even if the jury’s
verdicts on the other causes of action were erroneous. “Where a special
verdict was rendered on two causes of action and sufficient evidence exists to
sustain it on the issue unaffected by error, it should not matter that the
evidence was insufficient to sustain a verdict in favor of the successful party
on the other cause of action or that reversible errors were committed
regarding that other cause of action. ‘[T]he special verdict rendered is
indistinguishable from a general verdict in which a jury finds in favor of a
party on more than one cause of action.’ ” (Roberts v. Ford Aerospace &
Communications Corp.(1990) 224 Cal.App.3d 793, 799, quoting Mouchette v.
Bd. of Education (1990) 217 Cal.App.3d 303, 315.)
When a jury’s verdict awards damages but does not distinguish among
the various theories of liability, an appellate court’s conclusion that one cause
of action is supported by substantial evidence renders the remaining
contentions of an appellant moot because “nothing we would do with respect
to those counts would have any effect on the amount of the judgment
awarded by what, in essence, was a general verdict when there is no reason
18
to believe the jury apportioned the damages.” (Horsford v. Board of Trustees
of California State University (2005) 132 Cal.App.4th 359, 368.)
As the appellant, Charter bears the burden of overcoming the
presumption of correctness on appeal. (Jameson v. Desta (2018) 5 Cal.5th
594, 608-609 (Jameson).) In light of our conclusion that the jury’s verdict
distinguishing between medical leave and sick leave was not inconsistent, the
jury’s finding in Lave’s favor on his second cause of action is not undermined
even if we were to accept all of Charter’s other challenges to the judgment on
appeal. By failing to make any challenge to the jury’s finding in favor of Lave
on his second cause of action, which by itself can support the award of
damages, Charter fails to establish a basis for reversal of the judgment.
II
Lave’s Cross-appeal
In a cross-appeal, Lave challenges the court’s calculation of attorney
fees awarded after entry of judgment. He contends the order must be
reversed because the court made a mathematical error in calculating the
lodestar amount of fees and failed to properly consider the relevant factors in
determining whether to apply an enhancement to the lodestar amount in its
award of fees. We disagree.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Following the jury’s verdict in his favor, Lave moved for an award of
attorney fees pursuant to Government Code section 12965, subdivision (b).
In his motion, Lave requested an award in the total amount of $1,064,062.70,
consisting of a “lodestar” fee amount of $532,031.35 and an enhancement to
double the total award. In support of the motion, Lave submitted
declarations from two of his attorneys detailing their billing records and
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explaining why the circumstances of this case warranted the application of
an enhancement to the lodestar to increase the total award.
In a tentative ruling, the trial court found the claimed hourly rate for
Lave’s counsel to be inflated for the region and instead found a reasonable
hourly rate to be $300 per hour for associates and $450 per hour for partners.
The court reduced the claimed billable hours by 1.2 hours for one of the
attorneys and excised an entry for the cost of parking found in the billable
hour records for another attorney. The court also declined to apply a lodestar
enhancement, finding that Lave did not meet his burden to warrant an
enhancement. In so finding, the court quoted case law holding that such an
enhancement is warranted only when the prevailing party receives
“ ‘exceptional representation.’ ” Based on these findings, the tentative ruling
was to grant the motion and award a total of $400,800.
At the hearing on the motion, Lave’s counsel indicated that he wished
to reserve his right to respond to the arguments by Charter but that he would
“stipulate to the tentative.” Following argument by Charter’s counsel, Lave’s
counsel made no other argument or objection. The court affirmed the
tentative ruling and awarded a total of $400,800. Lave filed a cross-appeal
from that postjudgment order.
DISCUSSION
Lave argues the court’s fee order is premised on a mathematical error
and that the court’s ruling on his request for a lodestar enhancement
erroneously ignored the relevant factors that must be considered by the trial
court when considering whether to apply a lodestar enhancement. Lave
acknowledges that we review the trial court’s ruling under the abuse of
discretion standard of review. (Laffitte v. Robert Half Internat. Inc. (2016)
1 Cal.5th 480, 488 (Laffitte).)
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In challenging the trial court’s calculation of an award of reasonable
fees, Lave does not establish the amount itself is inherently unreasonable or
the result of any abuse of discretion. If the trial court simply stated it found
a total award of $400,800 to be reasonable without any accompanying
explanation of its mathematical calculation, such an award would clearly be
within the trial court’s discretion. (See, e.g., Save Our Uniquely Rural
Community Environment v. County of San Bernardino (2015)
235 Cal.App.4th 1179, 1189 (SOURCE) [trial court is not required to support
an award of attorney fees with a precise explanation of its mathematical
calculation].)
Instead, Lave relies on what he claims is a mathematical error in the
trial court’s calculation of the lodestar amount to suggest it is possible the
trial court erred. However, because Lave did not raise this issue in the trial
court, the court had no opportunity to explain its reasoning or to correct any
possible error. “ ‘An appellate court will not consider procedural defects or
erroneous rulings where an objection could have been, but was not, raised in
the court below.’ [Citation.] It is unfair to the trial judge and to the adverse
party to take advantage of an alleged error on appeal where it could easily
have been corrected at trial.” (Children’s Hospital and Medical Center v.
Bonta (2002) 97 Cal.App.4th 740, 776.) “ ‘Appellate courts are loath to
reverse a judgment on grounds that the opposing party did not have an
opportunity to argue and the trial court did not have an opportunity to
consider.’ ” (In re Marriage of Falcone & Fyke (2008) 164 Cal.App.4th 814,
826; see also Doers v. Golden Gate Bridge etc. Dist. (1979) 23 Cal.3d 180, 184,
fn. 1.) By failing to raise an issue he believed was obvious on the face of the
trial court’s tentative ruling, Lave has forfeited his challenge to the
calculation of the fee award and cannot raise it for the first time on appeal.
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Thus, even assuming he did not acquiesce in the order by stipulating to the
tentative (cf. Mundy v. Lenc (2012) 203 Cal.App.4th 1401, 1406), Lave cannot
challenge the trial court’s calculation on appeal.
Lave also contends the court’s ruling on his request for a lodestar
enhancement erroneously ignored the relevant factors that must be
considered by the trial court in a ruling on whether to apply a lodestar
enhancement. Lave also did not raise this issue in the trial court and,
accordingly, has forfeited the assertion. Even if we were to consider the
merits of his challenge, we see no basis for reversal.
Lave’s challenge to the trial court’s ruling disregards the “fundamental
principle of appellate procedure that a trial court judgment is ordinarily
presumed to be correct and the burden is on an appellant to demonstrate, on
the basis of the record presented to the appellate court, that the trial court
committed an error that justifies reversal of the judgment.” (Jameson, supra,
5 Cal.5th at pp. 608-609.) Following this principle, “[a]ll intendments and
presumptions are made to support the judgment on matters as to which the
record is silent” and “[w]e presume the trial court followed applicable law.”
(Cahill v. San Diego Gas & Electric Co. (2011) 194 Cal.App.4th 939, 956
(Cahill).) In the context of an attorney fee award, “[f]ees approved by the
trial court are presumed to be reasonable, and the objectors must show error
in the award.” (Consumer Privacy Cases (2009) 175 Cal.App.4th 545, 556.)
Lave primarily argues that the trial court’s tentative ruling neglected
to discuss several factors that would support the application of a lodestar
enhancement, including the risk to Lave’s counsel for taking the case on
contingency and counsel’s preclusion from other work due to taking on Lave’s
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case.6 In essence, Lave asks this court to presume that the trial court failed
to consider these factors because it did not discuss them in its written ruling.
Such a presumption violates the principles of appellate review. Instead
of presuming error, we presume the trial court followed the applicable law.
(Cahill, supra, 194 Cal.App.4th at p. 956.) Under the abuse of discretion
standard of review, the appellant bears the burden of affirmatively showing
the court failed to properly apply the law. (Safeco Ins. Co. of America v.
Superior Court (2009) 173 Cal.App.4th 814, 832-833; Mejia v. City of Los
Angeles (2007) 156 Cal.App.4th 151, 158.) As noted ante, a trial court is not
required to issue a statement of decision in regard to an attorney fee award
and, accordingly, has no duty to explain every possible basis for its decision
with specific findings. (See Ketchum v. Moses (2001) 24 Cal.4th 1122, 1140
(Ketchum).) Absent affirmative evidence to the contrary, we presume the
court considered and rejected the factors in favor of applying an enhancement
to the lodestar amount. Lave presents no such affirmative evidence. Thus,
“we cannot reverse an attorney fee award solely for lack of an explanation by
the trial court.” (SOURCE, supra, 235 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1189-1190.)
Moreover, as Lave recognizes, the trial court’s decision with respect to
whether to apply a lodestar enhancement is entitled to deference. (In re
Vitamin Cases (2003) 110 Cal.App.4th 1041, 1051-1052.) “ ‘The only proper
basis of reversal of the amount of an attorney fees award is if the amount
6 The trial court “ ‘may increase or decrease [the lodestar] amount by
applying a positive or negative “multiplier” to take into account a variety of
other factors, including the quality of the representation, the novelty and
complexity of the issues, the results obtained, and the contingent risk
presented.’ ” (Laffitte, supra, 1 Cal.5th at p. 489.) “[A]pplication of a lodestar
multiplier is discretionary; that is, it is based on the exercise of the court’s
discretion after consideration of the relevant factors in a particular case.”
(Nichols v. City of Taft (2007) 155 Cal.App.4th 1233, 1240.)
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awarded is so large or small that it shocks the conscience and suggests that
passion and prejudice influenced the determination.’ ” (In re Tobacco Cases I
(2013) 216 Cal.App.4th 570, 587.)
Lave does not demonstrate that the trial court’s award of fees is so low
that the award shocks the conscience. Simply showing the possible presence
of factors supporting the application of a multiplier does not require the trial
court to apply a fee enhancement. “Of course, the trial court is not required
to include a fee enhancement to the basic lodestar figure for contingent risk,
exceptional skill, or other factors, although it retains discretion to do so in the
appropriate case. . . .” (Ketchum, supra, 24 Cal.4th at p. 1138.) Although
Lave points to several factors that he believes warrant a larger award, the
presence of these factors alone does not suggest the trial court’s ruling
declining to apply a multiplier was influenced by passion and prejudice.
Ultimately, the trial court was in the best position to evaluate the
professional services rendered in this case (id. at p. 1132), and Lave has
failed to establish the trial court abused its discretion under the applicable
standard of review here. (Espejo v. The Copley Press, Inc. (2017)
13 Cal.App.5th 329, 385 [“The court did not abuse its discretion in denying
plaintiffs’ request to enhance the lodestar.”]; Keep Our Mountains Quiet v.
County of Santa Clara (2015) 236 Cal.App.4th 714, 741 [“Nothing in the
record convinces us the trial court’s decision to deny a multiplier was
‘ “clearly wrong.” ’ ”].)
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DISPOSITION
The judgment and postjudgment order awarding attorney fees are
affirmed. The parties shall bear their own costs on appeal.
GUERRERO, J.
WE CONCUR:
BENKE, Acting P. J.
HALLER, J.
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