Opinion
Stаte Labor Commissioner Arthur S. Lujan appeals from the judgment dismissing his action against Shala Minagar for retaliatory job termination under the state’s Occupational Safety and Health Act. (Lab. Code, § 6310.) For the reasons set forth below, we reverse and remand with directions to enter a new and different judgment in favor of the Labor Commissioner, including a determination of the amount of damages, if any.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Shala Minagar owns a beauty salon in Malibu. On September 7, 1999, Minagar’s shop was inspected and cited for several minor workplace safety violations under the California Occupational Safety and Health Act. (Lab. Code, § 6300 et seq. (Cal-OSHA).) 1 The inspection came in response to a complaint by Susan Grana, who worked as a facialist at the salon. Minagar fired both Grana and hair stylist Noelle Dianella that same day.
*1043 In response, the state Labor Commissioner (the Commissioner) cited Minagar for firing Dianella in retaliation for the Cal-OSHA complaint. (§ 6310.) 2 Minagar’s appeal to the Department of Industrial Relations was rejected and Minagar was ordered to rehire Dianella with backpay. When Minagar refused to comply, the Commissioner sued to enforce his order. (§ 98.7, subd. (c).) At trial, Grana and Dianella testified that Dianella played no part in contacting Cal-OSHA insрectors. According to Dianella, salon manager Pam Evans told her she had been fired because it was believed Dianella assisted Grana with the complaint. Dianella testified that after speaking with Evans, she phoned Minagar, who told Dianella she must have known of the investigation because she was Grana’s good friend and should have warned Minagar about it. Minagar testified, however, that she knew Dianella had not filed the Cal-OSHA complaint. Instead, Minagar testified that Dianella had been an incompetent and troublesome employee. According to Minagar, she fired Dianella “because she did too many mistakes in my shop and I [was] afraid she will be next one to report me.”
Section 6310 makes it unlawful to fire or otherwise retaliate against an employee who makes a workplace safety complaint with government agencies. 3 At the close of the trial, Minagar moved to dismiss the Commissioner’s action on two grounds: (1) because Dianella was an independent contractor, not an employee protected by Cal-OSHA; and (2) on jurisdictional grounds, because it was undisputed that Dianella had not made any complaint with Cal-OSHA. The trial court found that Dianella was an employee, not an independent contractor. It found that she wаs fired in “retaliation for the conduct of Susan Grana.” The court also found that Grana’s complaint to Cal-OSHA was a substantial factor in the decision to fire Dianella and that Dianella would not have been fired but for that complaint. Even so, because Dianella herself had not made a Cal-OSHA complaint, the court found that the jurisdictional prerequisites of section 6310 had not been satisfied, dismissed the action, and еntered judgment for Minagar. On appeal, the Commissioner contends that section 6310 should be liberally construed to cover an employee such as Dianella, who did not personally report suspected workplace safety violations, but who was fired because her employer feared she might soon do so.
*1044 DISCUSSION
1. Section 6310 Applies to Employers Who Retaliate Against Employees They Fear Might File a Complaint
The Commissioner acknowledges that section 6310, by its terms, does not apply to Dianella because she did not make a workplace safety complaint. Because Cal-OSHA is to be liberally construed
(Rick’s Electric, Inc. v. Occupational Safety & Health Appeals Bd.
(2000)
Only one reported California decision has addressed the jurisdictional prerequisites of section 6310. The court in
Division of Labor Law Enforcement v. Sampson
(1976)
We do not believe that the restrictive approach taken in
Sampson, supra,
We agree with the Commissioner that firing workers who are suspected of planning to file workplace safеty complaints can effectively discourage the filing of those complaints. We also agree that allowing such preemptive retaliation would be at odds with section 6310’s apparent intent—to encourage such complaints and to punish employers who retaliate against employees as a result.
(Sauers, supra,
2. Minagar’s Undisputed Admission of Her Intent Compels Us to Reverse and Enter a New Judgment
At trial, during direct examination by her own lawyer, Minagar testified that she fired Dianella in part because she was afraid Dianella would be the next one to file a complaint. It is the only direct evidence of Minagar’s state of mind when she fired Dianella, and, as the trial court noted after first hearing the statement, it was in the nature of a “confession.” Minagar was not questioned further about her statement by her own counsel or counsel for the Commissioner. During argument on the section 6310 jurisdictional motion, Minagar’s lawyer said Minagar had been “painfully honest” when she “blurted out” her reason for firing Dianella. After a lunch break, however, Minagar’s lawyer contended that becаuse Minagar’s English language skills were poor, she might have misspoken or misunderstood what she said. The trial court rejected that contention, finding that Minagar was a successful business owner who spoke English with clarity and who made the comment without equivocation or ambiguity. It therefore appears that the trial court believed Minagar’s admission that she fired Dianella because she believed Dianella would be the next employee to file a workplace safety complaint.
On this record, we also believe that the trial court had no choice but to accept that testimony. A court may not disregard or reject the uncontradicted and undisputed testimony of a witness unless that testimony is inherently improbable or other circumstances such as the witness’s demeanor, bias, or motives, create a logical basis for doing so.
(Edmondson
v.
State Bar
(1981)
3. Judgment Was Properly Entered on the Preemptive Termination Theory
Minagar contends that judgment for Dianella would be improper because the Commissioner’s pleadings tracked only the language of section 6310, which refers to employees who actually make workplace safety complaints. According to Minagar, such a judgment is not allowed for four reasons: (1) the Commissioner raises the issues for the first time on appeal; (2) citing Code of Civil Procedure section 471, there is a material variance between pleading and proof; (3) because the Commissioner failed to plead the true basis for his claims, a demurrer for failure to state a cause of aсtion may be made for the first time on appeal; and (4) a judgment on those grounds would be without due process. As set forth below, none is well taken.
Incorporated into the Commissioner’s complaint was a copy of the administrative decision which found that Minagar retaliated against Dianella after a workplace safety complaint had been made, along with a finding that it did not matter whether Dianella herself mаde that complaint. The Commissioner’s opening trial brief contended that section 6310 should not be strictly construed and could apply to a retaliatory discharge against an employee mistakenly believed to have made a complaint. Therefore, when the trial began, it was known that the Commissioner would argue for an extension of section 6310 to circumstances outside its literal language. Evidence cаme in without objection that Minagar might have fired Dianella either because Minagar mistakenly believed Dianella had made the complaint, or because Dianella was Ghana’s friend. After this evidence came in, Minagar testified and made her admission about her true reason for firing
*1048
Dianella. During the postevidentiary hearing on Minagar’s jurisdictional motion, the Commissioner contended that all of this evidence supported an extension of section 6310 on several grounds, including evidence that Minagar fired Dianella to prevent her from making her own complaint. Minagar’s lawyer argued against each such ground, but never objected that these legal theories or their supporting evidence fell outside the scope of the pleadings or were otherwise being improperly raised for the first time. In fact, Minagar’s lawyer told the court that she had researched some of those issues that morning and proceeded to address them on the merits. The court specifically asked about the preemptive termination issue, again prompting discussion on the merits, but no objection to the issue itself. On this record, it is clear that the issue was raised at trial, not for the first time on appeal. Because the issue upon which we grant judgment was raised below without objection, because the case was tried on that theory, and because it was based on evidence peculiarly within Minagar’s knowledge that she did not produce until trial, there was no improper variance between pleading and proof.
(Stienback v. Halsey
(1953)
4. Substantial Evidence Supports a Finding that Dianella Was an Employee
Minagar contended at trial that Dianella was an independent contractor, not her employee, and therefore outside the scope of section 6310. (See §§ 6303, subd. (a), 6307 [Cal-OSHA applies to places of employment].) The trial court found that Dianella was an employee, but found for Minagar on the jurisdictional issue. Should all else fail, she asks us to affirm on the basis that the trial court erred in making that finding. There is a rebuttable presumption that one who furnishes services for an employer is an employee. (§ 3357.) The determination of one’s status as employee or independent contractor is one of fact if dependent on the resolution of disputed evidence or inferences, and we will affirm the trial court’s finding if it is supported by substantial evidence.
(Fireman’s Fund Ins. Co. v. Davis
(1995)
Dianella testified that: she had worked at the salon for one year; Minagar made up her work schedule; she was paid weekly, based on a percentage of the money received for her services and product sales; she was given a workstation and paid no rent for it; she did not pay for any of the beauty supplies she used; all appointments were booked through the salon’s front desk; the customers paid the salon, not her; and she was required to use and pay the salon’s shampoo girl. It is also beyond dispute that Dianella’s services as a hair stylist were a regular part of Minagar’s business. Although there were some conflicts in the evidence, such as Dianella’s receipt of a 1099 form instead of a W-2, we believe this evidence was more than enough to support a finding that Dianella was Minagar’s employee, not an independent contractor.
5. Other Grounds for Firing Dianella Are Inapplicable
Minagar and other salon employees testified to numerous deficiencies in Dianella’s job performance, evidence that Minagar contends justified her decision to fire Dianella and compels us to affirm the judgment. Her contention is fatally flawed. The trial court found thаt Dianella was fired in retaliation for the workplace safety complaint, thereby rejecting Minagar’s evidence. Minagar does not address the effect of that finding, or the court’s right to disregard Minagar’s evidence. We therefore deem the issue waived.
(Landry v. Berryessa Union School Dist.
(1995)
DISPOSITION
For the reasons set forth above, the judgment is reversed. The matter is remanded to the trial court with directions to hold a hearing concerning *1050 Dianella’s damages, if any, under section 6310, subdivision (b), then enter a new and different judgment for the Commissioner. Appellant to recover its costs on appeal.
Cooper, P. J., and Boland, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied January 4, 2005, and respondent’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied March 30, 2005.
Notes
All further undesignated section references are to the Labor Code.
The record is silent as to whether such an action was ever filed on behalf of Grana.
Section 6310 states: “(a) No person shall discharge or in any manner discriminate against any employee because the employee has done any of the following: [¶] (1) Made any oral or written complaint to the division, other governmental agencies having statutory responsibility for or assisting the division with reference to employee safety or health, his or her employer, or his or her representative. [¶] (2) Instituted or caused to be instituted any proceeding under or relating to his or her rights or has testified or is about to testify in the proceeding or because of the exercise by the employee on behalf of himself, herself, or others of any rights afforded him or her.”
The court in
Skillsky v. Lucky Stores, Inc.
(9th Cir. 1990)
Pointing to various federal court decisions interpreting similarly worded anti-retaliation provisions, the Commissioner also asks us to reverse based on evidence of three other types of retaliation: (1) Minagar’s retaliation against Dianella because she was Grana’s friend; (2) Minagar’s mistaken belief that Dianella had taken part in making the complaint along with Grana; and (3) Minagar’s belief that Dianella knew about Grana’s complaint ahead of time and failed to warn Minagar. Because we hold that reversal and a new judgment are compelled by Minagar’s admission that she fired Dianella out of fear that Dianella would be the next to complain to Cal-OSHA, we need not reach these other issues.
