ORDER
Plaintiff, a former dispatcher for the City of Rio Vista Police Department, brought this action alleging sexual harassment and a retaliatory constructive discharge. She predicated the jurisdiction of this court upon 28 U.S.C. § 1343, and appends to her 42 U.S.C. §§ 1983, 1985 and 1986 claims a variety of state claims.
See United Mine Workers v. Gibbs,
The narrow question that is tendered is whether plaintiff’s cause of action sounding in tort, and described under the rubric “wrongful discharge,” has been displaced by FEHA. 4 Two questions are thus tendered: (1) does plaintiff allege a cause of action within the “wrongful discharge” doctrine, and (2) is it displaced by FEHA? 5
*671 I
WRONGFUL DISCHARGE
By California statute, employment contracts, absent an express term, are terminable at will. California Labor Code section '2922. 6 The California courts, however, have developed three distinct legal theories falling within the- rubric of “wrongful discharge,” which constitute exceptions to the statute’s provisions. A person who has been discharged despite one of the three exceptions has an action lying in tort, contract, or both. The three branches of California’s doctrine are briefly described below.
First, persons who have been retaliatorily terminated for reasons which violate the state’s public policy may maintain a tort cause of action in wrongful discharge against their employers.
See Tameny v. Atlantic Richfield Company,
A second branch of the “wrongful discharge” doctrine arises where an employee is terminated in violation of the implied in law covenant of good faith and fair dealing. A defendant breaches the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing found in all contracts where an employee is discharged without just cause, but instead for “extra contractual reasons,” and considerations of the plaintiff’s job longevity, the “ ‘common law of the job’ ” (as, for instance, expressed by the employer’s written employment policies), or the existence of separate consideration limit the employer’s right to fire to instances “ ‘for cause or with economic consideration.’ ”
Cleary v. American Airlines, Inc.,
Finally, the term “wrongful discharge” may indicate that an employee has been terminated in violation of implied contractual rights. While as noted above, California employment contracts are generally terminable at will in the absence of any express provision indicating their duration, the employer’s conduct may nevertheless give rise to an implied promise that it will not terminate an employee absent good cause.
Pugh v. See’s Candies, Inc.,
Even at this late date in the life of this case, and the motion for summary judgment, it is not entirely clear under which *672 branch of the doctrine plaintiff claims — it may be that she claims under all three. 8 Thus, plaintiff claims that by virtue of California’s Prohibition against employment discrimination and retaliatory discharge, her discharge was in violation of California public policy. Alternatively, she appears to be claiming that by virtue of that same policy her termination was without “good cause,” despite the policies of her employer guaranteeing an only “good cause” discharge. Finally, she may be claiming that by virtue of her four years of employment, the employment policies of the City and the totality of the circumstances, there was an implied contract of employment, and discharge under the circumstances alleged violated that contract.
The first question is whether a discharge motivated either by gender discrimination or in retaliation for complaining about sexual harassment violates California’s public policy and thus gives rise to a claim for wrongful discharge. Although the answer may seem self-evident, one California Court of Appeals has “decline[d] to extend the tort concept of breach of implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing into the field of racial discrimination in employment,”
Robinson v. Hewlett-Packard Corporation,
It is, of course, clear that the pronouncements of the California Supreme Court as to California law are binding on this court.
Minnesota ex rel. Pearson v. Probate Court,
In
Tameny,
the Supreme Court of California held that “when an employer’s discharge of an employee violates fundamental principles of public policy, the discharged employee may maintain a tort action and recover damages traditionally available in such actions.”
In the instant case, plaintiff alleges that she was constructively discharged either because she was the victim of sexual harassment, or in retaliation for her reporting her victimization, or both. California’s fundamental law prohibits employment discrimination because of sex. California Constitution, art. I, section 8;
Sail’er Inn, Inc. v. Kirby,
II
DISPLACEMENT
I now turn to the question of whether plaintiff's common law cause of action in “wrongful discharge” has been displaced by the California Legislature’s adoption of FEHA. I begin, as I must, with the words of the statute. 12 The legislature provided that FEHA did not displace preexistent statutory rights. The statute provides “[n]othing contained in this part shall be deemed to repeal any of the provisions of the civil rights law or of any other law of this state, relating to discrimination because of ... sex.” Cal.Gov’t Code § 12993(a). 13 Another subsection of the *674 same statute makes clear the legislature’s intent to preempt local ordinances. Cal. Gov’t Code § 12993(c). The statute is silent, however, on its relationship to common law claims. The statute’s affirmative preservation of statutory rights may suggest that its silence should be construed as a sign of legislative intent to displace non-statutory rights. On the other hand, it is equally reasonable to argue that the legis- ' lature’s specific preemption of local ordinances suggests that the common law causes of action were not affected by FEHA. As I explain, however, either method of implying legislative intent from the structure of the statute is unnecessary, given California’s doctrine of cumulative remedies.
California’s courts have developed a very specific method of construing the relationship between remedial statutes and preexisting common law rights. As the leading commentator on California law puts the doctrine, “[i]f a right was established at common law or by statute before the new statutory remedy was created, the statutory remedy is usually regarded as merely cumulative, and the older remedy may be pursued at the plaintiff’s election.” 3 Wit-kin,
California Procedure
§ 8 at 39 (3d ed. 1985);
see also Hentzel v. Singer Company,
Although recognizing the authority of
Hentzel,
and conceding the well-fixed standards of California statutory construction noted above, another district of the California Court of Appeals has held that FEHA was the sole remedy for age discrimination.
Strauss v. A.L. Randall Company,
In holding that FEHA created new rights, the
Strauss
court seized upon certain language in
Gay Law Students Association v. Pacific Tel. & Tel. Co.,
Upon analysis, and despite the impressive chain of authority cited above, I do not believe such cases are dispositive of the matter at bar. However correct it may be that FEHA is the exclusive state remedy for an age discrimination claim, the same argument simply cannot be maintained as to employment discrimination predicated upon gender, or as to discharges of public employees in retaliation for their complaining about the conditions of employment.
I begin by observing that when read in its context, the broad application of the
Gay Law Students’
language, applying it to all groups protected by FEHA, is unjustified. The language relied upon in
Strauss
and its progeny was expressed in the context of the employment rights of homosexuals. The Court explained that the California statute did not incorporate a preexisting common law right to be free from employment discrimination based on sexual preference, because no preexisting right
*676
existed. Accordingly, the statute’s prohibition of discrimination based on “sex” “did not contemplate discrimination against homosexuals.”
Id,.,
As noted above, California’s Constitution protects against gender-based employment discrimination, art. I, § 8, and has done so long prior to the enactment of FEHA. Indeed, the California constitutional provision was relied upon to strike down a gender discriminatory local ordinance in 1881.
See Matter of Maguire,
Neither Robinson, Hudson, nor Ficalo-ra examines the preexisting California cases despite their reliance on Strauss, which requires such an examination in order to resolve the question of whether a statutory remedy is exclusive or cumulative. 17 It thus appears relatively clear to me that however correct Strauss may be relative to age discrimination, it is inapplicable to questions of sex discrimination or public employee retaliatory discharge, and the governing California law in regard to those issues is not found in Strauss, but in Hentzel. Under the Hentzel analysis then, *677 FEHA’s remedy must be regarded as cumulative to the common law remedy rather than as displacing it.
For all of the above reasons, I conclude that California law prohibited gender-based employment discrimination and protected public employees who properly complained of the conditions of their employment. Since both rights preexisted the passage of FEHA, the adoption of that statute provided a cumulative remedy and did not displace a plaintiff’s right to sue under California’s doctrine of wrongful discharge.
Accordingly, defendants’ motion to dismiss plaintiff’s causes of action predicated upon wrongful discharge based upon the assertion that FEHA is the exclusive remedy for the conduct complaint of is DENIED.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. My reasons for limiting publication to a particular issue are explained in
Kouba v. Allstate Ins. Co.,
. Both plaintiff and defendants describe the problem as one of preemption. Such a description, while it is in accordance with conventional nomenclature, appears inaccurate to me. Preemption implicates notions of a hierarchal character, i.e., federal law preempts state law, or state law preempts county ordinances. The real question at bar is one of exclusive remedy or displacement, i.e., did the legislature in enacting a particular statute intend to provide an exclusive remedy and thus displace the common law cause of action. For the sake of clarity, this opinion will describe the problem as one of "displacement,” rather than preemption.
. Ordinarily, this court would not publish an opinion which exclusively resolves a matter of state law. Nonetheless, this particular question has been addressed in published opinions by a number of judges in the Northern District of California; since I must respectfully disagree with them, it appears that publication is not inappropriate. Moreover, the issue is a recurring problem for district judges because claims such as those considered in the opinion are routinely appended to Title VII and section 1983 claims.
. Defendants also challenge plaintiffs theory of constructive discharge, contending that plaintiffs proof does not satisfy the requirements of
Nolan v. Cleland,
. I have very recently articulated my understanding of the standards applicable to motions for summary judgment,
see Bhan
v.
NME Hospitals, Inc.,
. California Labor Code section 2922 provides ”[a]n employment, having no specified term, may be terminated at the will of either party on notice to the other. Employment for a specified term means an employment for a period greater than one month.”
. The
Pugh
court held that the grant of a non-suit was in error where there were facts from which a jury could determine the existence of such an implied promise. Thus, in
Pugh,
plaintiffs evidence concerning the duration of employment, the commendations and promotions he received, the apparent lack of any direct criticism of his work, the assurance he was given of continued employment, and the employer's acknowledged policies of refraining from arbitrary employment decisions were sufficient to require that the issue be decided by a jury.
Id.
at 329,
. Plaintiff captioned the relevant causes of action in her complaint as "Breach of Covenant of Good Faith and Fair Dealing.” Clearly such a characterization is not dispositive. The federal rules do not permit legal argument in the complaint, but rather require a short and plain statement of the grounds for relief, Fed.R.Civ.P. 8, and thus plaintiffs characterization of her complaint is surplusage. Moreover, the rules specifically provide for the granting of the relief the facts demonstrate, whatever the pleading may pray for, Fed.R.Civ.P. 54(c).
. I note in passing that the binding character of California Courts of Appeal decisions upon state courts is relatively weak. Thus, under California’s system of stare decisis, the various district courts of appeal are not bound by the opinions of their sister courts, or indeed, even by decisions of panels of the same court of appeal.
Los Angeles Police Protective League
v.
City of Los Angeles,
. I need consider here only the public policy branch of California’s "wrongful discharge” doctrine. A discharge in violation of the state's public policy certainly would be without "good cause” within the meaning of Cleary. That is to say all Tameny discharges also violate Cleary, though the reverse is not necessarily so. Moreover, it is undisputed that defendants’ regulations permit discharge only for cause.
. Article I, section 8, presently reads: "A person may not be disqualified from entering or pursuing a business, profession, vocation, or employment because of sex, race, creed or national or ethnic origin." The original constitutional provision related to sex exclusively. Although no California case appears to have addressed the question in terms of the California constitutional provision, the courts have generally recognized that sexual harassment is a form of sexual discrimination.
See, e.g., Meritor Savings Bank FSB v. Vinson,
. Although it is clear that the California courts do not apply the "plain meaning rule” with the fervor of federal courts,
see Silver v. Brown,
. Plaintiff has also brought an action directly under California Constitution, art. I, section 8. It has long been held that California’s Constitution is "self-executing,”
Winchester v. Howard,
*674
. FEHA also prohibits discrimination based upon age. California Government Code section 12941.
.
Cancellier v. Federated Stores,
. The
Mahoney
decision also relies upon the asserted comprehensive character of FEHA as "a strong indication that the legislature intended the remedy to be exclusive.”
. Indeed, the
Ficalora
court proceeds from the express premise that the state’s public policy against retaliatory discharge for protesting gender discrimination was "expressed” in FEHA,
id.,
