Employer Not Liable For Co-Worker’s Off-Duty Conduct, But Should Have Better Protected Employee

Proskauer - California Employment Law
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Proskauer - California Employment Law

Kruitbosch v. Bakersfield Recovery Servs., Inc., 2025 WL 2600238 (Cal. Ct. App. 2025)

A coworker (Lisa Sanders) of plaintiff Steven Kruitbosch allegedly subjected him to crude sexual advances at his home and via his personal cellphone away from the premises of their employer, Bakersfield Recovery Service, Inc. (BRS). Specifically, Sanders sent Kruitbosch multiple unsolicited nude pictures, showed up uninvited to his house, and repeatedly propositioned him for sex. When Kruitbosch reported the conduct to Human Resources, the HR rep told him there was nothing that could be done, ostensibly because the alleged activity occurred off work premises.

The HR rep later posted a video on social media depicting whining dogs and stated, “‘This is a workday at thr [sic] office . . . lmbo[,]’” which Kruitbosch understood to be mocking him. The HR rep also sarcastically commented to Kruitbosch, “‘I hope you don’t get no more pictures[,]’” presumably referring to the unsolicited nude pictures that Sanders had sent him. At no point did anyone at BRS take any steps to separate Kruitbosch from Sanders or to prevent further harassment, nor did BRS initiate any disciplinary action against Sanders. Although Kruitbosch made efforts to avoid Sanders at work, his distress at the prospect of interacting with her, coupled with BRS’s failure to protect him in the workplace and mocking him for his complaint, allegedly detracted from his work duties and made continuing his employment feel impossible; Kruitbosch resigned a week later.

Kruitbosch filed suit against BRS, alleging sexual harassment, discrimination and retaliation in violation of the California Fair Employment and Housing Act (FEHA). The trial court dismissed Kruitbosch’s second amended complaint with prejudice and without leave to amend. Kruitbosch appealed. The California Court of Appeal reversed in part and affirmed in part. Although the Court found Sanders’s allegedly harassing conduct to be “thoroughly repugnant,” it was not sufficiently work-related to be within the ambit of the FEHA, and it did not occur at the workplace. Therefore, BRS was not liable for Sanders’s allegedly harassing conduct. There were no allegations that Sanders approached Kruitbosch at his home or contacted him via cellphone for any work-related purpose, even pretextually. Specifically, there were no allegations indicating that Sanders’s unwanted sexual advances had anything to do with work — they did not occur in the context of a work-related event, arise from circumstances approved, sanctioned or paid for by BRS, or derive from work-related social circumstances where employees would foreseeably interact and socialize with one another.

However, the Court found the hostile work environment claim against BRS was viable insofar as the employer’s response to Kruitbosch’s complaint about Sanders’s conduct altered Kruitbosch’s work environment in an objectively severe manner. Given the totality of the circumstances presented, the Court held that BRS’s refusal to take any action (i.e., its ratification through inaction) while simultaneously mocking Kruitbosch’s concerns, could indicate to a reasonable person that BRS had no objection to Sanders’s conduct and that Kruitbosch’s concerns about her conduct were literally a (“lmbo”) joke to BRS. The aggressive nature of Sanders’s sexual advances and BRS’s complete inaction could be viewed as having the effect of altering Kruitbosch’s work environment in an objectively severe manner, as Kruitbosch had alleged. 

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