©2024 Seyfarth Shaw LLP www.seyfarth.com 2024 Cal-Peculiarities | 111 question about the price of motor oil. The Court of Appeal concluded that this physical eruption, stemming from a customer interaction, could be a predictable risk of retail employment.311 5.10.3 Unintentional torts of employees Under the traditional “going and coming” rule, employers are not liable for torts that their employees commit on their way to and from work, because commuting employees are not acting within the scope of their employment.312 But California courts have created a “required vehicle” exception to the going-and-coming rule, reasoning that an employer derives an incidental benefit from its employee’s use of a vehicle where that use is an express or implied condition of employment. The Court of Appeal has reversed summary judgment for the employer of an employee who hit someone with her car on her way home from work, even though the accident occurred while the employee was deviating from her normal route home to obtain some frozen yogurt and attend a yoga class. The Court of Appeal broadly reasoned: “Because the employer required the employee to use her personal vehicle to travel to and from the office and make other work-related trips during the day, the employee was acting within the scope of her employment when she was commuting to and from work.”313 And “the planned stops [for yoga and yogurt] were not so unusual or startling that it would be unfair to include the resulting loss among the other costs of the employer’s business.”314 But the “required vehicle” exception applies only when the employee is under a duty to bring the vehicle to work— either as a matter of daily duty or as a matter of duty on the day of the accident.315 The Court of Appeal reversed judgment against an employer where the employee was under no such duty: on the day of the accident he was not required to drive, not assigned any job duties outside the workplace, and not using his vehicle for work purposes.316 5.11 Employment Discrimination Litigation California forbids all the kinds of employment discrimination forbidden by federal statutes, plus quite a few more (see § 6.2). Even California, however, recognizes that a worker suing for employment discrimination must first be an employee. A participant in the Adult Offender Work Program (AOWP) thus lost his claim for disability discrimination. Although injured while performing work in the AOWP, he could not sue his employer under the FEHA for his injuries, for failure to accommodate his preexisting physical disability, and for failure to engage in the interactive process. The trial court, affirmed by the Court of Appeal, granted summary judgment against the participant, finding that he was not an employee for purposes of the FEHA. The Court of Appeal affirmed, reasoning that an individual must receive remuneration to be an employee. The Court of Appeal reasoned that remuneration must take the form of a substantial financial benefit and here the participant did not receive any money, health insurance, dental insurance, life insurance, or retirement benefits for participating in the AOWP. Merely being granted the privilege of staying out of jail did not constitute a financial benefit for the participant. Further, although he received workers’ compensation benefits for his injury, these benefits were not paid for his inability to work; they were paid to compensate for his injury. The trial court properly found that the lack of remuneration precluded a finding of employment for FEHA purposes.317 5.11.1 Far greater scope of liability for employment discrimination In many ways California’s discrimination provisions have a greater breadth, provide more remedies, and are easier for plaintiffs to pursue than are the corresponding provisions under federal law (see § 6.1). Under federal law—Title VII, ADA, and the ADEA—monetary remedies for employment discrimination are subject to certain limits, such as caps on compensatory and punitive damages for Title VII lawsuits and the absence of emotional
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