MOLLIE VEHLING, Plaintiff and Appellant, v. REGENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, Defendant and Respondent.
B331965 (Los Angeles County Super. Ct. No. 21STCP02031)
IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT DIVISION FIVE
Filed 6/30/25
NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS. California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.
Mary H. Strobel (Ret.), Judge.
Hathaway Parker, Mark M. Hathaway, and Jenna E. Parker for Plaintiff and Appellant.
Quarles & Brady, Sandra L. McDonough, and Isabella Sobalvarro for Defendant and Respondent.
I
The parties are familiar with the facts, and our recitation can therefore be brief. We focus on the procedural history of the case and, in particular, the issues—as framed by Vehling—that the trial court was asked to resolve.
A
In 2018, members of UCLA’s spirit squad travelled to Las Vegas, Nevada in connection with a UCLA basketball game on Thanksgiving Day. Vehling did not travel with the squad. Robbins, the UCLA donor, offered to pay for squad members to attend a show in Las Vegas and sent a list of show options to Vehling, explaining that the show “Absinthe” would be his first choice. Vehling agreed that “Absinthe looks amazing” and offered squad members in Las Vegas the opportunity to attend. They
Separate from the “Absinthe” experience itself, UCLA discovered misconduct by Vehling. She had contravened spirit squad rules by permitting a student to join who did not meet the eligibility requirements and provided an unauthorized payment to the same student in violation of financial aid rules. Vehling had also disregarded a prior instruction from a superior not to permit any contact between donor Robbins and the spirit squad.
B
After the Absinthe affair, UCLA instituted disciplinary proceedings against Vehling. She was alleged to have violated the Policy by arranging for spirit squad members to attend the Absinthe show with Robbins. She was also alleged to have violated her supervisor’s direction not to allow contact between Robbins and the squad and to have violated squad participation and financial aid rules. All these allegations were sustained in the UCLA disciplinary proceedings and Vehling’s employment was terminated as a result. Vehling administratively challenged her termination, including in a six-day evidentiary hearing, but the termination decision was upheld.
C
Vehling thereafter pursued administrative mandamus relief in court. Her writ petition contested only UCLA’s finding that she violated the Policy by “encourag[ing] members of the UCLA Spirit Squad to attend a burlesque show in Las Vegas with
UCLA, through defendant and respondent Regents of the University of California, opposed Vehling’s administrative mandamus petition. UCLA argued Vehling’s conduct in connection with the Absinthe affair was sufficient to constitute a violation of the Policy and justify her termination. But UCLA further argued that “Vehling’s argument about whether her conduct rose to a[ Policy] violation is irrelevant, as non-[Policy] violations can be terminable offenses.” In that regard, UCLA highlighted the squad participation violations and the disregard of a supervisor’s directive that it relied on in terminating her—grounds that Vehling’s writ petition did not challenge. UCLA also contended that arranging for the squad’s attendance at the Absinthe show was misconduct even if it did not rise to the level of a violation of the Policy.
In reply, Vehling reiterated she sought “review of the decision by the UCLA Title IX Office, Title IX investigator/adjudicator Adriana Ovalle-Stevenson, and The Regents of the University of California . . . that . . . Vehling is responsible for violation of the [Policy] and the sexual harassment of several UCLA Sprit Squad members when they attended the ‘Absinthe’ show at Caesar’s Palace in Las Vegas . . . .” Vehling acknowledged UCLA had argued that finding was irrelevant in light of the other misconduct that also justified her determination, but she maintained “the decision cost . . . Vehling her reputation and has impeded her employment at any other educational institution and continues to have
The trial court held an initial hearing on the petition in October 2022 and attempted to understand the scope of the relief Vehling was seeking. The court explained that UCLA was arguing “in support of upholding the termination decision under
After continuing the hearing to permit lodging of the administrative record partially under seal, the parties were again before the court in February 2023 to decide Vehling’s petition for administrative mandamus. The court had posted a tentative ruling expressly concluding no substantial evidence supported UCLA’s finding that Vehling violated the Policy but her
Vehling stated at the outset that she “clearly . . . agrees with the—the finding by the court that substantial evidence does not support the . . . determination by UCLA that [she] violated the . . . Policy, nor does substantial evidence support after the lengthy hearing the decision by the hearing officer that [she] violated the . . . Policy and committed sexual harassment.” But Vehling argued the entire termination decision should be set aside because, contrary to the court’s tentative ruling, insufficient evidence supported the other instances of misconduct relied on by UCLA to terminate her. Unpersuaded, the court adhered to its tentative ruling and adopted it as the final ruling of the court.
The court’s final ruling, issued in a court minute order and memorialized in connection with a later duly entered judgment, expressly finds no substantial evidence supports UCLA’s determination that Vehling violated the Policy: “[S]ubstantial evidence does not support the Hearing Officer’s finding that [Vehling] violated the [Policy]. The Hearing Officer did not identify any conduct of [Vehling] which constituted ‘unwelcome sexual advances, unwelcome requests for sexual favors, and other unwelcome verbal, nonverbal or physical conduct of a sexual nature’ nor is there evidence in the record to support that finding. The Hearing Officer did not find that [Vehling’s] conduct violated the [Policy] under an aiding and abetting theory—nor could he have considering [UCLA] found no evidence Robbins engaged in sexual harassment of the Spirit Squad.” But the trial court concluded defendant’s petition should still be denied because
II
Vehling’s briefs in this court largely track the position she took below.1 She acknowledges and obviously agrees with the trial court’s finding that she did not violate the Policy. She states she does not challenge the trial court’s finding that sufficient evidence supports UCLA’s finding that she engaged in other misconduct (i.e., misconduct other than a violation of the Policy),
Instead, she argues she is entitled to a name-clearing hearing and that we should reverse so, effectively, the trial court can redraft its minute order to find only that she did not violate the Policy—without also finding that her termination stands because she engaged in misconduct.
As framed, Vehling’s appeal is not justiciable because she is not aggrieved. (See generally
DISPOSITION
The appeal is dismissed. Defendant and respondent is awarded costs on appeal.
NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS
BAKER, Acting P. J.
I concur:
KIM (D.), J.
Vehling v. Regents of Univ. of Calif.
B331965
MOOR, J., Dissenting.
I respectfully dissent. When a public employee is terminated based on charges that might seriously damage the employee’s standing in the community or impose a stigma that impairs the freedom to pursue other employment, the employee is entitled to a “name-clearing hearing.” (Katzberg v. Regents of the University of California (2002) 29 Cal.4th 300, 304–305.) This due process right entitles the employee to a name-clearing hearing only, not reinstatement. (Kreutzer v. City and County of San Francisco (2008) 166 Cal.App.4th 306, 320, fn. 9.)
In my view of the record, appellant Mollie Vehling consistently sought to set aside her employer’s finding that she violated the sexual violence and sexual harassment policy (the sexual harassment policy) because of adverse consequences from the stigmatizing finding. Vehling was required to exhaust her administrative remedies and file a writ petition for review of the termination decision containing the stigmatizing finding. She challenged the finding itself, regardless of the impact on the termination decision, in addition to challenging the termination decision that incorporated the finding. Therefore, the issue of a name-clearing hearing has not been forfeited or waived.
The trial court correctly ruled that Vehling did not violate the sexual harassment policy, but then denied Vehling’s petition
MOOR, J.
