Opinion
—Plaintiff appeals a judgment against her on two causes of action for sexual discrimination and tortious constructive discharge. We reverse, holding the trial court: (1) prejudicially abused its discretion in denying plaintiff’s motion during trial to amend the discrimination cause of action to allege a different factual basis; (2) prejudicially erred in instructing that constructive discharge required employer intent to cause the employee to quit.
Denial of Amendment
Plaintiff brought her cause of action for sexual discrimination under the California Fair Employment and Housing Act (FEHA). 1 Plaintiff, a division manager of defendant Elixir Industries (Elixir), alleged Elixir paid her less than its male division managers over nearly a four-year period ending in January 1980 with her resignation caused by Elixir’s sexual discrimination. In a hearing pursuant to Evidence Code section 402 2 held just before trial began, the trial court ruled plaintiff’s salary could not be compared with salaries of the other division managers because she could not establish the preliminary fact that her position was substantially similar to their positions. Plaintiff does not contest this ruling.
Because this ruling excluded the factual basis that plaintiff had pleaded for her sexual discrimination cause of action, she moved, after presentation of a portion of her case, to amend that cause of action to allege Elixir paid plaintiff’s
male subordinates and predecessors
more than she was paid. The trial court denied the motion because of the late stage of the proceedings and the variance between the current and proposed allegations. The trial court later granted Elixir’s motion for a nonsuit as to the sexual discrimination cause of action, Plaintiff correctly contends that the amendment’s denial was a prejudicial abuse of discretion.
Elixir does not contend now, nor did it contend below, that the unamended pleadings misled it or that the amendment unfairly prejudiced its defense, nor could it reasonably have so argued. Plaintiff’s allegations about her subordinates and predecessors were the subject of ample discovery and Elixir’s opening statement. The trial court recognized that Elixir “was prepared for all of them, so nobody’s claiming surprise.” The record further manifests the trial court’s abuse of discretion in that, although denial of the amendment prevented plaintiff from proving the sexual discrimination cause of action by showing that her subordinates and predecessors had received higher pay, paradoxically the trial court allowed plaintiff to prove these facts to show sexual discrimination as the public policy violation necessary to sustain her cause of action for tortious constructive discharge. Thus, the effect of the trial court’s denial of the amendment was to admit facts to establish one cause of action while denying their admission to establish another cause of action, even though the facts and the causes of action were well known to Elixir prior to trial. Clearly, the trial court abused its discretion in denying the amendment.
Elixir argues the error did not prejudice plaintiff since the evidence concerning the subordinate and predecessor pay differentials were admitted on the tortious constructive discharge cause of action. Elixir reasons the plaintiff would have prevailed on that cause of action if the jury believed the evidence established sexual discrimination.
This argument is spurious. Proof of tortious constructive discharge according to the jury instructions would have required not only convincing
Furthermore, plaintiff presented significant evidence of sexually motivated discrimination. Plaintiff presented her own testimony and that of several of her superiors who no longer worked for Elixir. This testimony indicated that, because of her sex, plaintiff was not as highly paid as she merited and was otherwise unfairly treated. Two men who were arguably her subordinates received pay substantially equal to or greater than she received. Elixir did present evidence on these issues which contradicted plaintiff’s evidence. However, given the substantial character of the evidence plaintiff presented, we must conclude in the words of
Estate of Kime
(1983)
Erroneous Instruction
On the sole remaining cause of action for tortious constructive discharge, the trial court instructed the jury as follows: “In order for plaintiff to recover for constructive discharge due to unlawful sexual discrimination, plaintiff must prove by a preponderance of the evidence the following:
“1. There was, in fact, discrimination based on sex,
“2. Which discrimination existed at the time of discharge, and
“3. Which discrimination persisted after the employee protested the same to the employer, and
“4. The employer failed to eliminate the discrimination within a reasonable time after notice thereof.
“In order for the discrimination to be sufficient to amount to a constructive discharge, it must be such conduct by the employer, made with the intent to cause the employee to resign, and which sex discrimination [sic] conduct made working conditions so intolerable that the employee, as a reasonable person, is forced to resign.”
Although none of this state’s courts have addressed the issue of what facts and circumstances will constitute a constructive discharge,
3
federal district and appellate courts including the Ninth Circuit, the California Fair Employment and Housing Commission (FEHC), and a number of other state courts have dealt with this issue in statutory as well as common law contexts. AJI of these authorities agree that a tortious constructive discharge
4
5
requires proof of a violation of public policy, such as unlawful discrimination, plus circumstances so aggravated or intolerable that a reasonable employee would feel compelled to resign. However, federal and state case and administrative law have taken divergent views as to whether a third element concerning the mental state of the employer must be proved by an employee to establish constructive discharge. The majority does not require a third element, while the minority has required proof of intent, knowledge, or foreseeability on the employer’s part that the employee would resign because of those circumstances.
(Nolan
v.
Cleland, supra,
While the majority correctly take the position that requiring intent or actual knowledge is too stringent (see
Nolan,
(4) Accordingly, we hold that, to establish a tortious constructive discharge, an employee must show:
(1) the actions and conditions that caused the employee to resign were violative of public policy;
(2) these actions and conditions were so intolerable or aggravated at the time of the employee’s resignation that a reasonable person in the employee’s position would have resigned; and
(3) facts and circumstances showing that the employer had actual or constructive knowledge of the intolerable actions and conditions and of their impact on the employee and could have remedied the situation.
Applying this approach to the jury instruction before us, we conclude that the instruction given by the court imposed an unnecessarily heavy burden on the plaintiff. While the four required proofs listed in the first paragraph of that instruction would certainly establish a tortious constructive discharge, points 3 and 4 preclude consideration of facts and
Prejudicial Nature of Erroneous Instruction
Elixir contends that whatever error the trial court made in instructing the jury was harmless. We disagree.
While recognizing that no precise formula could measure the effect of an incorrect instruction in all cases, the California Supreme Court in
LeMons
v.
Regents of University of California
(1978)
In this case counsels’ arguments to the jury were not transcribed, the jury requested no rereading of related evidence and were provided with all of the instructions when they commenced their deliberations; However, we find the first, fourth and fifth factors Usted in LeMons conclusive on the harmless error issue.
Respecting the fifth factor, no instructions lessening the improperly heavy burden imposed by the erroneous instruction were given. As to the fourth factor, the verdict in favor of Elixir was reached by nine of the twelve jurors. If the less burdensome instruction would have affected the thinking of just one of those jurors, defendant would not have prevailed. (Cf.
LeMons,
Concerning the first factor listed in
LeMons,
the parties presented a great deal of conflicting evidence on the crucial issues in this case. As mentioned in the first section of this opinion, plaintiff presented significant evidence that Elixir discriminated against her because of her sex by paying her no more than or less than men who were arguably her subordinates during a
Plaintiff asserted as an additional cause of her resignation her treatment by a vice president who had become her new supervisor several months before her resignation. In a meeting which included subordinates, Brady testified that he told her he did not like the hours she kept and berated plaintiff’s accounting clerk who was at the meeting, causing the clerk to cry. The vice president attacked the plaintiff’s character, performance, and competency in a sarcastic manner. The vice president told her that at first some and then later all of her division responsibilities would be moved from Gardena, California, to Elixir’s location in Elkhart, Indiana, despite the fact that Gardena was the corporate headquarters. On other occasions this vice president had overriden her decisions concerning the administration of her division and pay increases for her subordinates. When plaintiff complained to other management-level officers of Elixir, they refused to help plaintiff against her supervising vice president, although they did offer her positions within their areas of the company. A former president of Elixir testified that the vice president supervising her preferred men in managment positions, indicating his conduct toward plaintiff was motivated by her sex.
Elixir presented evidence conflicting with plaintiff’s version of the facts. Current Elixir officials testified that the eventual moving of plaintiff’s division from Gardena to Elkhart was for business related reasons and not intended to force plaintiff to resign. Their version of the meeting involving Brady and her managing vice president was low key and inoffensive. Elixir’s evidence tended to show that the two men plaintiff alleged were her subordinates were not under her supervision and that their pay was based on their technical knowledge, their experience, and labor market factors rather than their sex.
Given the erroneously heavy burden imposed by the jury instructions, the nine-of-twelve-juror verdict, and the conflicting evidence on key issues, we decline, as did the Supreme Court in
LeMons,
to speculate upon the basis for the jury’s general verdict and hold that the improper instruction constituted reversible error. (
The judgment is reversed.
Hews, J., and McDaniel, J., concurred.
Respondent’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied February 24, 1988.
Notes
Government Code section 12900 et seq. See, in particular, sections 12940, 12960, and 12965. Plaintiff received the notice in section 12965 permitting her to file this action.
Evidence Code section 402 provides in relevant part: “(a) When the existence of a preliminary fact is disputed, its existence or nonexistence shall be determined as provided in this article. [f ] (b) The court may hear and determine the question of the admissibility of evidence out of the presence or hearing of the jury;. . .”
Duerksen v. Transamerica Title Insurance Co. (Cal. App.), an opinion of the First Appellate District, Division Four, on this issue was depublished.
We note the recent issuance of BAJI No. 10.02 requiring in part for constructive discharge . . that a reasonable person in the employee’s position would have felt compelled to resign as a result of conduct of the employer undertaken for the purpose of forcing the employee to resign. . . .” (West’s CaLRptr. Adv. Pamp. No. 42 (Oct. 9, 1987) p. 21.) According to the comment, Civil Code sections 1567, 1568 and 1575, as well as
Moreno
v.
Cairns
(1942)
In this case we deal with a tortious constructive discharge as opposed to a constructive discharge in a breach of employment contract or bad faith context. (See
Koehrer
v.
Superior Court
(1986)
See also, e.g.:
Watson
v.
Nationwide Insurance Co.
(9th Cir 1987)
Elixir attempts to make much of the small amount by which one subordinate’s salary exceeded Brady’s ($14 per week) and of the discretionary bonuses given Brady which raised her total compensation slightly above her subordir te’s. Elixir ignores the obvious inference of discrimination that paying a female supervis- r little more than a male subordinate implies, and disregards the difference between a salary which can be counted on and a bonus which may not materialize.
