Court Opinion

ID: 9908432
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-12-08 18:02:46.599145+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:49:11.116044
License: Public Domain

Filed 12/8/23 Millan v. City of Yorba Linda CA4/3

                      NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS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 This opinion has not been certified for publication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.

                IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

                                     FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

                                                DIVISION THREE

 ANTONIO MILLAN,

      Plaintiff and Appellant,                                         G061058

           v.                                                          (Super. Ct. No. 30-2017-00964412)

 CITY OF YORBA LINDA,                                                  OPINION

      Defendant and Respondent.

                   Appeal from a judgment of the Superior Court of Orange County, Richard
Y. Lee, Judge. Affirmed.
                   Arthur Kim Law Firm and Arthur Kim for Plaintiff and Appellant.
                   Lozano Smith, Mark K. Kitabayashi and Fabiola M. Rivera for Defendant
and Respondent.
              Plaintiff Antonio Millan appeals from the judgment entered after a jury
found his employer, City of Yorba Linda (the City), did not retaliate against him in
violation of the California Fair Employment and Housing Act (FEHA) (Gov. Code,
§ 12900 et seq.) or section 1102.5 of the Labor Code. Millan argues the trial court
committed evidentiary error in various respects and engaged in judicial misconduct.
              We affirm. For the reasons we explain, Millan has failed to establish any
prejudicial evidentiary error or judicial misconduct during trial.

                                          FACTS
                                              I.
                 OVERVIEW OF THE CITY’S PUBLIC WORKS DEPARTMENT
              Armando Jaime has been the superintendent of the City’s Public Works
Department (Public Works or department) since 2004. Jaime manages a team of 8 to 10
maintenance workers who are employed by the City and also oversees the work of 60 to
100 contract workers retained through outside contractors. Derrick Warren is a
department supervisor who reports to Jaime. Since about 2011, Roldan Serrano has
served as the department’s lead worker; Serrano reports to Jaime and Warren. The
department operates out of a corporation yard known as the “City Yard” which it shares
with the City’s Public Parks Department (Parks or Parks department), although the two
departments do not work together or otherwise coordinate efforts. Supervisory personnel
for both departments have offices in a trailer located at the City Yard.
              Public Works maintenance workers have a general routine by which they
carry out their set duties and responsibilities. Every morning, maintenance workers drive
through the City’s “major arterials” to make sure the public rights of way remain free of
hazards. They pick up trash, branches, and anything that might have been thrown into the
street. They temporarily fill potholes, make sure regulatory signs are up, and confirm
traffic signals are functioning.

                                              2
               After the maintenance workers conduct such “arterial policing,” they move
through their assigned grid area where they clean weeds, pick up trash, perform light
                                 1
trimming, check “catch basins” to make sure no vegetation is growing out of them, and
make sure signs are visible without obstruction. The department assigns one
maintenance worker to maintain each of the six grid areas in the City; the assigned
worker generally works independently at the worker’s assigned grid area with minimal
supervision “[a]ll day long.” However, when cleaning catch basins, maintenance workers
operate in “two-man crew[s].”
               There are times when maintenance workers work with others in a group,
such as in the event of a fire, significant rain and floods, or the declaration of a natural
disaster. On such occasions, the staff comes together to address problems, such as mud
flows, and to remove dead plant material, sandbag vulnerable areas, and assist the
Sheriff’s Department with traffic control.
               Maintenance workers are responsible for laying sandbags in the City. After
working six months to one year in their assigned grid area, maintenance workers are
expected to know the locations within their respective grid areas that require erosion
control. The maintenance worker decides how many sandbags will be needed in the
worker’s assigned area, when to make and deliver sandbags to that area (whether on a
                                                   2
daily or weekly basis), and where to place them.

1
    A catch basin is the portion of a storm drain where water enters.
2
  Areas 1 through 4 typically require more sandbags because they do not have storm
drain inlets or curbing gutters which funnel water to localized areas for the capture of the
rainstorm. “When you get up to the further end of town, which is area 5 and 6, it is
completely developed, master plan as you may call it. And then along with that, about
90, 95 percent of the erosion control out there is implemented by [the City’s] landscape
contractors as part of their . . . maintenance packages through [the City’s] landscape
department.” Although they may require fewer sandbags, areas 5 and 6 have more catch
basins than other areas.

                                               3
                                               II.
                   THE CITY HIRES MILLAN AS A MAINTENANCE WORKER
               In 2006, the City hired Millan to work in Public Works as a Maintenance
Worker I. He was initially assigned to work in area 4, where he worked for the first eight
years of his 11-year tenure in that department.
                                               III.
                   MILLAN’S PERFORMANCE HISTORY FROM 2006–2013
               Millan’s job performance was evaluated every year in November by Jaime,
in conjunction with Warren and Serrano. In his November performance evaluations
given in 2006, 2007, 2008, 2010, 2011, and 2012, Millan received an overall rating of
“competent.” In his 2009 and 2013 performance evaluations, he received an “above
average” rating.
               Plan progress notes accompanying the performance evaluations pointed out
areas in which Millan needed to improve. In 2007, he was informed he needed to focus
on out-of-sight maintenance areas that he had not been maintaining. In 2008 and 2009,
he was told to work on addressing traffic control reporting and sign maintenance.
               In 2010, the performance evaluation’s supplemental comments stated,
“[Y]ou need to control your emotions and anger when spoken, counseled, and are
reprimanded.” Jaime testified regarding the context of those comments: “When items of
deficiencies were brought to [Millan’s] attention or he had a little misstep [in]
damag[ing] some vehicles or maybe he wasn’t getting along with his co-workers,
something of that nature, and Mr. Warren or myself or his immediate supervisor would
have to discuss [it] with him, he became a little bit aggressive, a little bit hostile; his
demeanor changed.” The plan progress comments stated: “‘This up-and-coming year
work on the team building concept. Controlling your emotion, anger when spoken to.’”
               Millan testified he did not believe the 2010 performance evaluation
comments regarding controlling his emotions and anger were appropriate. Millan

                                                4
testified Jaime was the one who engaged in inappropriate conduct. Millan testified that
on one occasion, Jaime called him into his office and said: “How about you help your
co-worker get the day off he requests and just get under the desk and give me a blow
job.” Millan’s statement was corroborated by another maintenance worker, Roy De
Herrera, who testified he witnessed that incident. De Herrera added “there were several
of us [Jaime] would say that to. If you would go in and ask for vacation; if you would
ask for P.P.E., he would say, oh well, get under the desk. And to him it was a joke, but to
us it wasn’t. And you couldn’t really say anything in fear of retaliation, you know, your
job, and him having you do things.” Jaime testified he “never said anything of that nature
to anybody.”
               In 2011, Millan was credited for having improved his cooperation and
attitude toward supervisors and for controlling his anger and emotions. He was also
asked to be conscientious regarding sick leave use and to continue building the team
concept. Millan was promoted to Maintenance Worker II.
               In April 2012, Millan received a written reprimand for insubordinate
behavior. Jaime explained in his testimony Millan had been taking unauthorized breaks
and continued to do so even after Jaime had spoken to him about it. When Jaime brought
him into the office to discuss the matter, Millan “became exceptionally angry and
hostile,” claimed Jaime was harassing him regarding his unauthorized breaks, and stated
he should be able to take a break whenever he felt he needed one. Millan told Jaime “‘I
am done talking to you,’” got up, and started walking out of Jaime’s office. Jaime told
Millan he was being insubordinate and needed to come back and sit down so they could
continue to discuss the problem. By November 2012, when Millan received his annual
performance evaluation, it was noted he had again made improvements in controlling his
anger.
               Millan’s 2013 performance evaluation with an overall rating of “above
average” appeared to be the best evaluation he received while he worked in Public

                                             5
Works. In the plan progress comments, he was asked to continue to improve any high
maintenance standards and to be conscientious about arriving late to work and with sick
leave as he was “having a little issue with both of those at that point.”
                                             IV.
  2014: MILLAN UNSUCCESSFULLY SEEKS A JOB TRANSFER, IS REASSIGNED, FILES AN
   INTERNAL COMPLAINT, AND RECEIVES A NEGATIVE PERFORMANCE EVALUATION
              In 2014, Millan unsuccessfully tried to transfer to the Parks department.
On July 28, 2014, Millan’s grid area assignment changed from area 4 to area 6. Jaime
testified Millan was reassigned because the department hired a new employee who Millan
trained in area 4. He further testified it is the department’s practice to assign a new
employee to the area in which the employee had been trained and to reassign the more
senior employee to a different area.
              In contrast to Jaime’s testimony, Millan testified he had not trained anyone
at the time he was reassigned, no one had been hired to take his position in area 4, and the
department’s practice was to keep workers with seniority assigned to the same grid area.
On September 29, 2014, he submitted a written complaint to City Hall, accusing Jaime
and Warren of bullying and retaliation.
              In November 2014, although Millan received an overall competent rating in
his performance evaluation, it was the first time he received specific negative ratings;
those negative ratings were in the areas of cooperation and attitude toward supervision
and effectiveness under stress.
              His evaluation noted that during the 2013–2014 rating period, Millan had
received seven “notices” regarding the following: (1) lack of maintenance in his area
(two notices); (2) lack of care regarding City property (Millan had lost the City’s fuel
card); (3) “a lot of errors” on one timesheet, requiring Warren to continue calling Millan
back to correct them, followed by a second timesheet that was inaccurate; (4) taking
unauthorized breaks; and (5) outbursts and anger management. Although there is a place

                                              6
to respond to comments in performance evaluations, Millan did not dispute the seven
incidents or otherwise comment on them.
                                            V.
                    MILLAN FILES AN ADMINISTRATIVE COMPLAINT
              On November 3, 2015, Millan filed a complaint with what was then called
                                                            3
the Department of Fair Employment and Housing (DFEH). In the DFEH complaint, he
made accusations against Jaime and Warren; Jaime was a named respondent in the
          4
complaint. The City received notice of the complaint on November 9, 2015. The City
investigated the allegations of the DFEH complaint but did not find them to be true and
imposed no discipline.
              Jaime testified he believed Millan had filed his DFEH complaint after
Jaime finished writing Millan’s 2015 performance evaluation. Millan’s overall
performance rating at this time was “needs improvement.” He received unsatisfactory
ratings in the area of cooperation with fellow employees and supervision.
                                            VI.
       MILLAN’S TESTIMONY REGARDING HOW HIS WORK SITUATION CHANGED
                     AFTER HE FILED THE DFEH COMPLAINT
              Millan testified, after he filed the DFEH complaint, he started receiving
negative reviews and unsafe work assignments and continued to receive unsafe
assignments until he left Public Works one and one-half years later. He stated he was

3
  The DFEH has since changed its name to the Civil Rights Department. Because at all
relevant times the department was referred to as the DFEH, we refer to it as the DFEH for
clarity.
4
  Although not included in the evidence presented to the jury, the DFEH complaint
alleged, inter alia, Millan was subjected to (1) discrimination and harassment based on
his race and national origin (Latino who was born in the United States as opposed to born
in Mexico), (2) gender and perceived sexual orientation discrimination, and
(3) retaliation, all in violation of FEHA.

                                             7
“bullied” by Jaime and Warren, and the whole department was “just laughing at [him].”
He also testified his workload doubled.
              Jaime denied Millan’s claims, including that his work doubled. Jaime
testified Millan continued to be assigned to grid area 6 and his workload did not increase.
              Millan testified that within two weeks of the DFEH complaint, Jaime came
out to his job site and instructed him to create two rows of sandbags, three sandbags high,
for erosion control, which Millan thought was more than needed. Jaime denied directing
Millan about sandbag placement in his grid area. Millan also testified he believed he
received new assignments after he filed the DFEH complaint.
              Millan testified, on one occasion in January 2016, he and his coworkers
were “made [to] work in the rain picking up tumbleweeds” on a hillside following a
resident’s complaint about the tumbleweeds. Millan slipped and fell, hurting his right
buttocks area. Millan testified that after he told Jaime he was in pain and wanted to go to
the doctor, Jaime instructed him to continue working. Millan further testified he saw
Jaime stand on top of the hillside with his arms crossed looking at Millan and grinning
while Millan worked.
              In contrast, Jaime testified Millan had refused Jaime’s offer to stop working
that day and see a doctor; instead, Millan insisted on continuing to work. Jaime further
testified, the following morning, Millan told Jaime he wanted to seek medical attention.
“At that point,” Jaime filled out the paperwork Millan needed to go to a medical clinic.
After Millan went to the clinic, he came back with a doctor’s note which imposed some
work restrictions and was thereafter placed on temporary light duty.
              Millan testified, in 2016, he was not only responsible for providing
sandbags in his assigned grid area but was required to help maintenance workers with
their sandbags in their assigned areas; he contended the extra-area assigned work was
atypical. He testified in 2017 he continued to perform significant sandbag work,
sometimes in the rain which made the sandbags heavier and the work “torture.”

                                             8
              Millan also testified he worked alone in the wilderness on three occasions
(the first time in March 2016). He testified he was only provided with the assistance of
one contract worker to help clean out storm drains when usually there would be a crew of
four people to do storm drain work. He also testified he was required to dig actual inlets
and trenches with a shovel and such assignments were made by his supervisors to torture
him.
              Jaime testified after Millan filed the DFEH complaint, Jaime did not treat
Millan any differently than how he treated any other maintenance worker under his
supervision. He further testified any disciplinary actions issued to Millan after he filed
the DFEH complaint were not given because of the complaint.
                                            VII.
                        THE PERFORMANCE IMPROVEMENT PLANS
              In January 2016, Millan received a written reprimand from Public Works
director Michael Wolfe for writing an inappropriate comment on an official City form
because Millan had done the same thing before and had been previously counseled
numerous times for such conduct.
              In February 2016, Serrano provided Millan with a list of 24 tasks (punch
list) that had been neglected by Millan and directed him to complete all the tasks within
two weeks. Millan returned the punch list to Serrano, claiming he had completed all the
tasks. Serrano went to grid area 6 and found, contrary to Millan’s representation, Millan
had not completed all of the tasks listed on the punch list. Millan was placed on a six-
month performance improvement plan based on his unsatisfactory performance.
              At the conclusion of Millan’s first performance improvement plan term, the
City determined Millan had failed to adhere to his supervisors’ directives and
administrative policies regarding sick leave and filling out time sheets. It was
recommended Millan be given a three-day disciplinary suspension. Millan appealed the
discipline to the assistant city manager who upheld the decision.

                                             9
              The City then placed Millan on a second performance improvement plan.
Millan again failed to meet the performance measures, warranting further discipline.
During the second performance improvement plan term, Millan was involved in two
incidents.
              First, one morning in October 2016, although on call at the time, Millan
failed to respond within one hour of the 4:00 a.m. call he received from the Orange
County Sheriff’s Department dispatch regarding a city sign that had been struck by a car
and fell. The accident also resulted in mud and other debris on the sidewalk and street
which, along with the downed sign, needed to be removed to prevent further accidents
from happening.
              Instead of responding to the call and reporting to the scene, Millan reported
to the City Yard. He claimed he was justified in reporting to the City Yard instead of to
the call scene because the response time was too close to his 6:00 a.m. report time, and he
arrived at work at 5:45 a.m. Jaime testified even if Millan had arrived to work at 5:45
a.m., he “should have immediately activated and responded to the call.” Jaime explained:
“Obviously he could have alerted his immediate supervisor that he was already moving to
the field to respond to the call and it would have been so duly noted.” Millan later
admitted he had arrived at the City Yard by 5:35 a.m. The City determined he had time
to respond to the call but failed to do so and lied about it. In addition, Millan thereafter
submitted paperwork seeking to be paid the two hours of overtime he might have earned
had he responded to the call.
              Second, on December 12, 2016, Millan was again on call when the sheriff’s
department was contacted by a homeowner regarding a broken water line behind the
homeowner’s house. Millan responded to the call and claimed he looked for the shut off
valve for three hours. He did not find the shut off valve and did not contact his
supervisor or the City for assistance. Instead, at 11:00 p.m., he went home, leaving the
water running down the slope all night. Not only did the City pay for the leaking water,

                                              10
but the water also caused erosion on the slope and created mud flow into the storm drain
which the City needed to repair.
             The City decided to impose discipline on Millan for his failure to
appropriately respond to what was considered two serious response calls. It proposed
demoting Millan to the Maintenance Worker I position. Notice was given to Millan of
the intent to demote him. Following a hearing before the city manager, the demotion
recommendation was upheld.
                                          VIII.
  DURING HIS SECOND PERFORMANCE IMPROVEMENT PLAN, MILLAN ANONYMOUSLY
                       FILES A CAL/OSHA COMPLAINT
             In October 2016, Millan anonymously filed a complaint with the Division
of Occupational Safety and Health (Cal/OSHA), complaining “City employees were
entering storm drains without proper protective equipment, without checking air quality,
and without having a confined space program in place.” The City received notice of the
complaint around October 10, 2016. Jamie did not know who filed the complaint,
although the assistant to the city manager speculated Millan might have made the
complaint.
                                           IX.
                             MILLAN TRANSFERS TO PARK
             In August 2017, Millan transferred to the City’s Parks department where he
continued to work as of the date of trial. As an employee of the Parks department, Millan
has been supervised by Brad Skeene. Skeene did not supervise or oversee Millan while
Millan worked in Public Works.
                                            X.
                 MILLAN’S CONTENTIONS OF CONTINUED RETALIATION
             Millan testified he continued to suffer retaliation by Jaime after transferring
to Parks. As an example, he claimed on one occasion, while he was driving home on the

                                            11
freeway, he saw Jaime pull up next to him and stare at him through his sunglasses,
causing Millan to feel afraid. Another City employee, Antonio Munoz, testified he
“observed” the incident which he described as lasting for only a “few seconds” during
which he could not say whether Jaime was driving at an unsafe speed, although he was
driving faster than traffic. Jaime denied chasing Millan down in his car and stated he did
not interact with Millan since he transferred to the Parks department. Millan filed a
complaint about the incident with the City. The investigator concluded there was
insufficient evidence to sustain Millan’s claim. Millan also testified Jaime would stare at
him and spit in his direction.

                                 PROCEDURAL HISTORY
                                             I.
                       MILLAN FILES A LAWSUIT AGAINST THE CITY
              In December 2017, Millan initiated the instant lawsuit. In his first amended
complaint, Millan alleged the City was liable for retaliation in violation of FEHA, failure
to prevent retaliation in violation of FEHA, retaliation in violation of Labor Code section
1102.5, wrongful demotion in violation of public policy, intentional and negligent
emotional distress, and penalties under the Labor Code Private Attorneys General Act of
2004 (Lab. Code, § 2698 et seq.).
              Millan’s claims for wrongful demotion and penalties under Labor Code
section 2698 were dismissed before trial; neither claim is at issue in this appeal. In the
respondent’s brief, the City states that during the jury trial, Millan “voluntarily withdrew
his causes of action for intentional and negligent infliction of emotional distress.” Millan
does not challenge this assertion and does not make any argument in his appellate briefs
regarding his intentional and negligent infliction of emotional distress claims.

                                             12
                                              II.
           THE JURY RETURNS SPECIAL VERDICTS IN FAVOR OF THE CITY AND
                       JUDGMENT IS ENTERED ACCORDINGLY
              Following trial, the jury returned special verdicts in favor of the City on
both the retaliation in violation of FEHA claim and the retaliation in violation of Labor
Code section 1102.5 claim. As to the retaliation in violation of FEHA claim, the jury
found: (1) Millan filed a complaint with the DFEH and (2) the City subjected Millan to
an adverse employment action, but (3) Millan’s complaint to the DFEH was not a
substantial motivating reason for the City’s conduct.
              As to Millan’s claim for retaliation in violation of Labor Code section
1102.5, the jury found: (1) the City was Millan’s employer, (2) Millan “disclose[d] to a
government agency, California Occupational Safety and Health Administration, conduct
by the City,” (3) Millan had reasonable cause to believe the information disclosed a
violation of a state statute, and (4) the City subjected Millan to an adverse employment
action, but (5) Millan’s disclosure of information to the California Occupational Safety
and Health Administration was not a contributing factor in the City’s decision to subject
Millan to an adverse employment action.
              Judgment was entered in favor of the City and against Millan.
                                              III.
           THE MOTION TO VACATE THE JUDGMENT AND GRANT A NEW TRIAL
              Millan filed a motion to vacate judgment and grant a new trial (motion for a
new trial). In his second amended notice of motion, Millan stated he brought the motion
on the following grounds: “‘1. Irregularity in the proceedings of the court, jury or
adverse party, or any order of the court or abuse of discretion by which either party was
prevented from having a fair trial. . . . [and] 7. Error in law, occurring at the trial and
excepted to by the party making the application.’ Code of Civil Procedure Section 657.”

                                              13
              The second amended notice of motion further stated: “Specifically, the
motion is made on the grounds that a miscarriage of justice resulted and Plaintiff was
deprived of a fair trial because: (i) the Court excluded key eyewitness testimony of
retaliation; (ii) the Court excluded key impeachment and rehabilitation testimony; (iii) the
Court excluded me too evidence of retaliatory intent; (iv) the Court excluded evidence of
the underlying complaint that motivated the alleged retaliation; (v) [the trial judge]
prejudiced the jury against Plaintiff by screaming at his representatives in front of the
jury and through other acts of bias; and (vi) the Court excluded evidence of Defendant’s
negligent acts preceding the alleged retaliation, which supported Plaintiff’s failure to
prevent retaliation claim.”
              After Millan filed a notice of appeal from the judgment, the trial court
denied the motion for a new trial, explaining its reasoning as to each of the grounds in a
detailed 30-page ruling.

                                       DISCUSSION
                                              I.
                              APPELLATE REVIEW GENERALLY
              We apply three fundamental principles of appellate review: “(1) a
judgment is presumed correct; (2) all intendments and presumptions are drawn in favor of
correctness; and (3) the appellant bears the burden of providing an adequate record
affirmatively proving error.” (Fladeboe v. American Isuzu Motors Inc. (2007) 150
Cal.App.4th 42, 58.)
              An order denying a motion for a new trial is not directly appealable but is
reviewable on appeal from the underlying judgment. (Walker v. Los Angeles County
Metropolitan Transportation Authority (2005) 35 Cal.4th 15, 18.) In reviewing an order
denying a motion for a new trial, we “‘must fulfill our obligation of reviewing the entire
record, including the evidence, so as to make an independent determination as to whether

                                             14
the error was prejudicial.’” (Ajaxo Inc. v. E*Trade Group Inc. (2005) 135 Cal.App.4th
21, 46–47.) This differs from our review of an order granting a motion for a new trial,
which we review for abuse of discretion. (Lane v. Hughes Aircraft Co. (2000) 22 Cal.4th
405, 412; Sole Energy Co. v. Petrominerals Corp. (2005) 128 Cal.App.4th 187, 194.)
                                             II.
                          CONTENTIONS OF EVIDENTIARY ERROR
              In his opening brief, Millan argues the trial court committed prejudicial
evidentiary error by excluding evidence of Jaime’s and Warren’s retaliatory intent,
relevant to establishing liability under FEHA and Labor Code section 1102.5. For the
reasons we explain, Millan’s contentions of prejudicial evidentiary error are forfeited and
even if they are not forfeited they are without merit.
                                             A.
 Millan’s Claims of Prejudicial Evidentiary Error Are Forfeited Because His Appellate
                Briefs Violate Rule 8.204 of the California Rules of Court
              In this appeal, Millan argues several of the trial court’s evidentiary rulings
constituted prejudicial error. However, Millan fails to provide in his opening brief a
summary of the significant facts (e.g., the trial evidence), as required by rule
8.204(a)(2)(C) of the California Rules of Court, necessary to provide context to consider
his contentions of prejudicial error.
              In his opening brief, under the heading “Summary of Facts and Procedural
History” (capitalization, boldface, and underline omitted), Millan states he filed a DFEH
complaint against Jaime and Warren and then filed a Cal/OSHA complaint alleging
safety violations by Public Works. The “summary” of trial evidence concludes by
stating: “As a result of his complaints, Millan alleged that he suffered retaliation from
the City, in particular from Superintendent Jaime. The retaliation included: (i) a
doubling of Millan’s workload; (ii) physically punishing and unsafe work assignments;
and (iii) unfair scrutiny and discipline including constant writeups, verbal reprimands,

                                             15
yelling, long sessions in Jaime’s office, performance improvement plans, suspension and
demotion.”
              In support of this summary of retaliatory conduct, the opening brief cites to
approximately 200 pages of trial testimony. Rule 8.204(a)(1)(C) of the California Rules
of Court provides each appellate brief must “[s]upport any reference to a matter in the
record by a citation to the volume and page number of the record where the matter
appears. If any part of the record is submitted in an electronic format, citations to that
part must identify, with the same specificity required for the printed record, the place in
the record where the matter appears.” Millan’s block citations do not comply with rule
8.204(a)(1)(C), “and frustrate the court’s ability to evaluate [Millan’s] position.”
(Bullock v. City of Antioch (2022) 78 Cal.App.5th 407, 422; In re Marriage of Fink
(1979) 25 Cal.3d 877, 888 [“It is neither practical nor appropriate for [the appellate court]
to comb the record on [appellant’s] behalf”].) Accordingly, “[w]hen an appellant’s brief
makes no reference to the pages of the record where a point can be found, an appellate
court need not search through the record in an effort to discover the point purportedly
made. [Citations.] We can simply deem the contention to lack foundation and, thus, to
be forfeited.” (In re S.C. (2006) 138 Cal.App.4th 396, 406–407.)
              In light of his failure to provide a meaningful summary of facts with
specific and accurate citations to the record, Millan has forfeited his contentions of
prejudicial evidentiary error.
                                             B.
   Millan’s Forfeited Contentions of Prejudicial Evidentiary Error Are Without Merit
              In his opening brief, Millan argues the trial court committed evidentiary
error by: (1) excluding the testimony of Bradley Skeene; (2) excluding testimony by or
about “me-too victims” De Herrera, Robert Trevino, Cesar Villalpando, and Jessy
Rangel; (3) “preventing impeachment, rehabilitation, and refreshment of witnesses”;
(4) excluding evidence of substantive allegations of the DFEH complaint; and (5)

                                             16
excluding evidence of “negligent acts and omissions leading up to retaliation.”
(Capitalization and boldface omitted.)
              He contends the exclusion of such evidence prejudicially impaired his
ability to prove retaliatory intent on the part of Jaime and Warren in support of his
retaliation claims. Even if Millan’s contentions of evidentiary error have not been
forfeited, for the reasons we explain, they are without merit.
                                             1.
        Governing Legal Standards for Retaliation Claims Brought Under FEHA
                           and Labor Code Section 1102.5
a. Retaliation in violation of FEHA
              “‘[I]n order to establish a prima facie case of retaliation under FEHA, a
plaintiff must show (1) he or she engaged in a “protected activity,” (2) the employer
subjected the employee to an adverse employment action, and (3) a causal link existed
between the protected activity and the employer’s action.’ [Citation.] The requisite
‘causal link’ may be shown by the temporal relationship between the protected activity
and the adverse employment action.” (Light v. Department of Parks & Recreation (2017)
14 Cal.App.5th 75, 91.)
              “‘In order to meet the FEHA standard, an employer’s adverse treatment
must “materially affect the terms, conditions, or privileges of employment.” [Citation.]
“[T]he determination of whether a particular action or course of conduct rises to the level
of actionable conduct should take into account the unique circumstances of the affected
employee as well as the workplace context of the claim.” [Citation.] Such a
determination “is not, by its nature, susceptible to a mathematically precise test.”
[Citation.] “Minor or relatively trivial adverse actions or conduct by employers or fellow
employees that, from an objective perspective, are reasonably likely to do no more than
anger or upset an employee cannot properly be viewed as materially affecting the terms,
conditions, or privileges of employment and are not actionable, but adverse treatment that

                                             17
is reasonably likely to impair a reasonable employee’s job performance or prospects for
advancement or promotion falls within the reach of the antidiscrimination provisions of
sections 12940(a) and 12940(h).” [Citation.] FEHA not only protects against “ultimate
employment actions such as termination or demotion, but also the entire spectrum of
employment actions that are reasonably likely to adversely and materially affect an
employee’s job performance or opportunity for advancement . . . .”’ [Citations.]
              “‘“A change that is merely contrary to the employee’s interests or not to the
employee’s liking is insufficient.” [Citation.] “‘[W]orkplaces are rarely idyllic retreats,
and the mere fact that an employee is displeased by an employer’s act or omission does
not elevate that act or omission to the level of a materially adverse employment action.’”’
[Citation.] For example, ‘“[a] mere oral or written criticism of an employee . . . does not
meet the definition of an adverse employment action under [the] FEHA.”’ [Citation.]
Similarly, ‘[m]ere ostracism in the workplace is insufficient to establish an adverse
employment decision. [Citations.] However, “‘[W]orkplace harassment, if sufficiently
severe or pervasive, may in and of itself constitute an adverse employment action
sufficient to satisfy the second prong of the prima facie case for . . . retaliation cases.’”’”
(Light v. Department of Parks & Recreation, supra, 14 Cal.App.5th at pp. 91–92, fn.
omitted.)

b. Retaliation in violation of Labor Code section 1102.5
                                           5
              Labor Code section 1102.5 “reflects the broad public policy interest in
encouraging workplace whistle-blowers to report unlawful acts without fearing

5
  Section 1102.5, subdivision (b) provides: “An employer, or any person acting on
behalf of the employer, shall not retaliate against an employee for disclosing information,
or because the employer believes that the employee disclosed or may disclose
information, to a government or law enforcement agency, to a person with authority over
the employee or another employee who has the authority to investigate, discover, or
correct the violation or noncompliance, or for providing information to, or testifying

                                               18
retaliation.” (Green v. Ralee Engineering Co. (1998) 19 Cal.4th 66, 77.) It “prohibits
employers from retaliating against employees for ‘disclosing information’ concerning
suspected violations of the law either internally or to government or law enforcement
agencies.” (People ex rel. Garcia-Brower v. Kolla’s, Inc. (2023) 14 Cal.5th 719, 720–
721 [employee who complained to her employer about unpaid wages was promptly fired
and threatened with deportation].)
              The Labor Code first “places the burden on the plaintiff to establish, by a
preponderance of the evidence, that retaliation for an employee’s protected activities was
a contributing factor in a contested employment action. . . . Once the plaintiff has made
the required showing, the burden shifts to the employer to demonstrate, by clear and
convincing evidence, that it would have taken the action in question for legitimate,
independent reasons even had the plaintiff not engaged in protected activity.” (Lawson v.
PPG Architectural Finishes, Inc. (2022) 12 Cal.5th 703, 718, citing Labor Code section
1102.6.) A contributing factor is “‘“‘any factor, which alone or in connection with other
factors, tends to affect in any way the outcome of the decision.’”’” (Lawson, at p. 714.)
                                             2.
                                     Standard of Review

              “The trial court enjoys ‘broad authority’ over the admission and exclusion
of evidence. [Citation.] We review a trial court’s ruling on a motion in limine to exclude
evidence for an abuse of discretion. [Citations.] The trial court’s authority is particularly
broad ‘with respect to rulings that turn on the relevance of the proffered evidence.’”
(McCoy v. Pacific Maritime Assn. (2013) 216 Cal.App.4th 283, 295–296 (McCoy); Coral

before, any public body conducting an investigation, hearing, or inquiry, if the employee
has reasonable cause to believe that the information discloses a violation of state or
federal statute, or a violation of or noncompliance with a local, state, or federal rule or
regulation, regardless of whether disclosing the information is part of the employee’s job
duties.”

                                             19
Farms, L.P. v. Mahony (2021) 63 Cal.App.5th 719, 733 [“Claims of evidentiary error are
reviewed for an abuse of discretion”].)
               “A judgment cannot be reversed ‘unless the court which passes upon the
effect of the error or errors is of the opinion that the error or errors complained of resulted
in a miscarriage of justice.’ [Citation.] An evidentiary ‘“error is not reversible unless ‘“it
is reasonably probable a result more favorable to the appellant would have been reached
absent the error.”’”’” (Coral Farms, L.P. v. Mahony, supra, 63 Cal.App.5th at p. 733.)
                                              3.
                          Exclusion of Skeene’s Trial Testimony
               Millan argues the trial court erred by excluding the testimony of his “star
witness,” Skeene, who was Millan’s supervisor in the Parks department at the time of
trial. The City sought to exclude Skeene’s testimony in its motion in limine No. 2, in
which it requested “an order precluding [Millan] or his counsel from mentioning,
referring to, or introducing at trial any evidence from [Millan]’s current supervisor and
coworkers [George Salsgiver, Johnny Hernandez, and Tom Croom] in the Parks and
Recreation Department related to events which did not occur in [Millan]’s current
supervisor and coworkers’ presence when [Millan] worked in the Public Works
Department.”
               In the motion, the City explained neither Skeene nor Millan’s current
coworkers in the Parks department had ever been supervised by Jaime or Warren and
ever worked with Millan in Public Works. The City argued neither Skeene nor the four
coworkers had personal knowledge (within the meaning of Evidence Code section 702)
of any event alleged to have occurred when Millan was working under Jaime’s and
Warren’s supervision in Public Works. Therefore, the City contended, the court should
preclude testimony as to what those witnesses heard or believed about Millan’s
experiences while working for Public Works as lacking in foundation. Millan opposed

                                              20
motion in limine No. 2, arguing the coworkers at issue had personal knowledge of
retaliatory conduct by Jaime.
              The trial court granted the motion, stating: “The four witnesses who were
not supervised by plaintiff’s supervisors and did not work with plaintiff, those witnesses
will be excluded.” The court rejected the argument Skeene should be allowed to testify
he witnessed Millan and others excessively sandbagging in the City Yard, pointing out it
was undisputed sandbagging was part of the Public Works maintenance worker’s job.
Furthermore, the court explained, Parks employees who had not been involved in Public
Works job assignments, should not be allowed to give “their sort of basically uneducated
opinion of whether [the extent of sandbagging they witnessed was] fair or not.” The
court concluded: “I don’t think the probative value of the evidence you’re proffering is
worth very much at all. What if I was just some random . . . if I drive on the 405 freeway
and I see an individual picking up trash every day on the chain gang on the side of the
freeway, picking up trash as part of their labor, you’re saying that I could just pick that
driver and have that person come to court and say, ‘I saw that person picking up trash
five days a week?’ What probative value does that have?” The court reiterated Parks
employees should not be allowed to opine about the types and amounts of work assigned
to particular Public Works employees solely based on their casual observations.
              The trial court, however, invited Millan to make a motion for
reconsideration of its ruling during the trial. Millan did move for reconsideration near the
end of his case-in-chief. With the exception of allowing certain impeachment evidence to
be introduced, the court denied the motion for reconsideration.
              In his opening brief, Millan abandons his challenge to the court’s ruling on
motion in limine No. 2 as to all witnesses except Skeene. Millan argues the trial court
erred by refusing to allow Skeene to testify: (1) “When someone does something in
[Public Works] that the supervision doesn’t like, they usually will take them out of their
area or give them duties that are undesirable like sandbagging or things like that, just

                                             21
given the crap work”; (2) he saw Millan on an ongoing basis from 2014–2017, and other
Public Works employees at other times, performing undesirable work including excessive
sandbagging in the City Yard; (3) he found Millan’s performance improvement plan not
well-founded; and (4) he has heard Jaime yell at his maintenance workers, once threaten
to fight his lead, and generally “rule by fear and intimidation.” The trial court did not
abuse its discretion by excluding Skeene’s testimony.
              As discussed ante, it appears to be undisputed that, at all relevant times,
Skeene worked in Parks, not Public Works, and did not have personal knowledge of
Millan’s or any other Public Works’ employee’s performance in Public Works. Skeene
testified at his deposition he did not know whether Millan had been treated differently in
terms of how he was disciplined.
              What Skeene considered “undesirable work,” such as filling sandbags and
removing tree stumps, is part of a Public Works maintenance worker’s job. That Millan
filled sandbags in the City Yard was not disputed; Skeene’s testimony that he observed
Millan and certain other employees filling sandbags to a greater extent than he saw other
workers perform that task is not probative. Even if Skeene’s testimony on this point had
any probative value, it is unclear when Skeene observed Millan filling sandbags, and in
particular, whether his observations occurred after the filing of the DFEH complaint
                                   6
and/or the Cal/OSHA complaint.

6
  Skeene also did not have personal knowledge regarding when Public Works employees
would be pulled out of their areas to work elsewhere. He testified he concluded workers
would be pulled out of their areas as a form of retaliation or discipline based on what
“[t]hey would say, or somebody else would say [and] [y]ou would notice they weren’t in
their area. You would see them covering other areas, doing other things.” Skeene
testified at his deposition he never saw Millan digging stumps on his own and did not
often observe him working in general because Millan would be out in the field and
Skeene did not supervise him. Skeene’s impressions of Public Works’ operations in this
regard are largely based on what he happened to observe in the City Yard or his “just
know[ing] the general consensus of what’s been going on.”

                                             22
              It is also undisputed Millan was taken off the performance improvement
plan within a few months after he transferred from Public Works to Parks. Nothing in the
record suggests Skeene would be qualified to opine on whether Millan’s performance in
Public Works warranted putting him on a performance improvement plan in the first
place. Millan’s satisfactory performance in his new role in Parks is neither in dispute nor
relevant to the issue presented here—whether he suffered an adverse employment action
because he filed the DFEH charge and/or the Cal/OSHA charge. Millan therefore fails to
show Skeene’s testimony should have been admitted to impeach the validity of Millan’s
performance improvement plan in Public Works.
              Furthermore, Skeene testified in his deposition he did not recall ever
hearing Jaime yell at Millan, although he heard Jaime yell at other Public Works
employees. While Skeene observed Millan was involved in closed door meetings in
Jaime’s office, he did not know the specifics of what occurred at such meetings. Again,
Skeene’s testimony on this point was not particularly probative of the issues presented at
trial.
              Millan argues Skeene would have testified Jaime ruled by fear and
intimidation to prove the City’s retaliatory intent in taking adverse employment actions
against Millan. While Skeene observed Jaime to supervise in a gruff and intimidating
way, the record does not show he had any personal knowledge that that general gruffness
had any correlation to a retaliatory intent with regard to Millan or any other Public Works
employee. In his deposition, Skeene explained his impression Jaime had tendencies to
retaliate against his subordinates for anything and everything was largely based on
rumors and hearsay combined with his observations of workers performing physically
demanding work. That Skeene once observed Jaime, on an unspecified date, threaten to
fight his lead worker at the time without any further information is not probative of
Jaime’s retaliatory intent to support a finding Millan suffered adverse employment
actions because he filed his complaints.

                                            23
               The trial court, therefore, did not abuse its discretion by excluding Skeene
from testifying at trial.
                                               4.
                               Exclusion of Me-too Evidence
               In its motion in limine No. 8, the City moved to exclude evidence of other
maintenance workers’ alleged experiences of discrimination or harassment in Public
Works. The City argued such evidence was irrelevant to Millan’s retaliation claims.
               In McCoy, supra, 216 Cal.App.4th at pages 296–297, the court explained:
“[T]he relevance of evidence of discrimination or harassment by defendants against
nonparties is ‘fact based and depends on many factors, including how closely related the
evidence is to the plaintiff’s circumstances and theory of the case.’ [Citations.] We
conclude the court was within its discretion to find evidence of discrimination and
harassment based on race and gender had little relation to the surviving retaliation claim,
and was excludable on that ground.” The McCoy court also stated: “[I]f . . . other
employees faced similar retaliation to that alleged by appellant . . . , it cannot be said that
such evidence could be of no relevance to appellant’s retaliation claim. If this ‘me-too
evidence’ was probative of respondents’ intent in retaliating against appellant, as alleged,
it should have been admitted . . . .” (Id. at p. 297.)

a. Trevino
               At the hearing on the motion in limine, Millan’s counsel stated he wished to
present evidence Trevino had complained to the director of Public Works about the
“abuse in general, retaliation” he experienced in the form of “bad work assignments” and
verbal abuse after he tried to leave Public Works. Millan did not suggest Trevino ever
suffered retaliation for opposing unlawful discrimination or harassment under FEHA or
disclosing a violation of law within the meaning of Labor Code section 1102.5. The trial
court did not abuse its discretion by concluding the evidence regarding Trevino’s

                                              24
experiences of retaliation were not sufficiently similar to Millan’s retaliation claims so as
to be probative of whether Millan was retaliated against for filing complaints with
government entities. (See Pinter-Brown v. Regents of University of California (2020) 48
Cal.App.5th 55, 89 [“‘Me too’ evidence is never admissible to prove an employer’s
propensity to harass”].)

b. Herrera, Rangel, and Villalpando
              Millan also sought to present evidence Herrera, Rangel, and Villalpando
had each complained to Jaime about “safety issues” related to storm drains, and thereafter
“experienced retaliation” that included receiving bad work assignments. Stating it “[had]
some difficulty with this one,” the trial court granted the motion, explaining: “Because in
your case, the retaliation occurs before the Cal/OSHA complaint is made, those other
people are all making complaints not relating to being part of a protected category or
seeking protection from unwanted discrimination. Instead, they’re making Cal/OSHA
related violations. [¶] I find that there’s sufficient differentiation between the case at
issue here as well as the proffer of evidence you set forth for the additional witnesses that
you were intending to call. And as a result, I’m granting the motion.”
              In reviewing the trial court’s ruling for an abuse of discretion, we first
observe that unlike Millan, Herrera, Rangel, and Villalpando did not claim to experience
retaliation for filing a DFEH complaint or otherwise opposing discrimination or
harassment in violation of FEHA. (See Pinter-Brown v. Regents of University of
California, supra, 48 Cal.App.5th at p. 89 [“‘me too’ evidence can be admissible only to
prove intent and motive, among other things, with respect to the plaintiff’s own protected
class”].) None of those three workers filed a DFEH complaint or a complaint with
Cal/OSHA.
              Like Millan, those three workers claimed to have been retaliated against
after complaining about Cal/OSHA-type safety violations regarding Public Works’

                                              25
procedures for cleaning storm drains. In Millan’s motion for reconsideration of motion in
limine No. 8, he explained De Herrera and Rangel, like Millan, specifically challenged
those procedures for failing to check for air quality.
              Assuming the trial court erred by failing to admit me-too evidence
regarding Herrera, Rangel, and Villalpando, we conclude any error would not be
prejudicial as a matter of law. A judgment shall not be reversed by reason of the
erroneous exclusion of evidence unless the error “resulted in a miscarriage of justice.”
(Evid. Code, § 354.) A miscarriage of justice exists only when “‘it is reasonably
probable that a result more favorable to the appealing party would have been reached in
the absence of the error.’” (Cassim v. Allstate Ins. Co. (2004) 33 Cal.4th 780, 800.)
              Such evidence would have only been relevant to Millan’s claim he was
retaliated against for filing the Cal/OSHA complaint—a complaint he filed anonymously.
The jury was presented with extensive evidence supporting Millan’s argument he
suffered various adverse employment actions in retaliation for having filed the DFEH
complaint, which was filed a year before the Cal/OSHA complaint. Nevertheless, while
the jury found that Millan suffered adverse employment actions, it did not find his filing
of the DFEH complaint to be a substantial motivating factor for such action. It is not
reasonably probable the jury would have found Millan’s filing of the Cal/OSHA
complaint to have been a contributing factor to the adverse employment actions that
followed that filing, particularly given Millan’s status on a performance improvement
plan at that time.
              We find no prejudicial error.

                                              5.
  Limits on Impeachment, Rehabilitation, and Refreshing the Recollection of Witnesses
              Millan argues the trial court abused its discretion by limiting Millan’s
ability to impeach and rehabilitate the testimony of certain trial witnesses and by refusing
to allow him to refresh the recollection of another. First, Millan argues the trial court

                                              26
erred by excluding Villalpando’s testimony Jaime had questioned Villalpando and gave
him a hard time when he wanted to transfer to the Parks department. Millan intended to
offer such testimony to impeach Jaime’s testimony he did not care whether Public Works
employees sought such a transfer. The issue presented in this case, however, is whether
Millan was retaliated for filing complaints, not for transferring or attempting to transfer
out of Public Works. Villalpando’s proffered impeachment testimony, therefore, had
minimal, if any, relevance. The trial court did not abuse its discretion by excluding it.
              Second, Public Works employees Silvano Garcia and Wilfredo Cruz
testified they had not observed any retaliatory conduct by Jaime against Millan. Millan
argues the trial court should have permitted him to challenge their credibility on this point
by introducing Villalpando’s testimony he once heard Jaime tell Garcia and Cruz they
owed Jaime their jobs and witnessed them respond to that statement by hanging their
heads and voicing their agreement with him.
              The trial court rejected Millan’s argument regarding Villalpando’s
testimony in its ruling denying the motion for a new trial: “Plaintiff attempted to
impeach the testimony of Roldan Serrano, Silvano Garcia and Wilfredo Cruz with the
testimony of another witness, Cesar Villalpando. Plaintiff fails to satisfactorily explain
how the [in]clusion of Mr. Villalpando’s purported evidence would have impeached Mr.
Serrano, Mr. Garcia and Mr. Cruz and even if it somehow did, how it was error to
exclude such evidence. The issue was briefed in the motion for reconsideration . . . at
which Plaintiff proffered that Mr. Villalpando heard Mr. Jaime tell Mr. Serrano, Mr.
Garcia and Mr. Cruz that all three of them owed their jobs to Mr. Jaime. However, such
multiple layered hearsay testimony had little to no impeachment or relevance value and
was properly excluded. (See Rosenbloom v. Western Auto Transports (1953) 120
Cal.App.2d 335, 342 (‘Any claimed impeaching testimony must be relevant and material
to the issue being tried and inconsistent with the prior statement.’)). [¶] Moreover,
nothing prevented Plaintiff from inquiring of those three individuals—Mr. Serrano, Mr.

                                             27
Garcia, and Mr. Cruz—on cross-examination, about the fact that Mr. Jaime was their
supervisor and arguing during summation that their credibility should therefore be
questioned, which to some extent Plaintiff did do.”
               We agree with the trial court’s reasoning and conclude the trial court did
not abuse its discretion in excluding Villalpando’s testimony on this point.
               Millan also argues the trial court erred by barring his counsel’s efforts to
rehabilitate the testimony of De Hererra. De Herrera testified he overheard Jaime make
sexual comments in Millan’s presence and otherwise. On cross-examination, the City’s
counsel asked De Herrera whether his employment with the City had been terminated in
2013 for misuse of city equipment and for lying to his supervisor. De Herrera responded
he had not been terminated but instead quit and also denied having lied. On redirect
examination, Millan’s counsel asked De Herrera if the employment termination referred
to by the City’s counsel had constituted a retaliatory act against him. The court sustained
the City’s counsel’s objection to that question.
               Millan’s counsel’s rather leading question on redirect examination did not
constitute an effort to rehabilitate De Herrera—there was nothing to rehabilitate as De
Herrera denied having been terminated for misuse of city equipment and for lying.
Therefore, the trial court did not abuse its discretion by precluding counsel’s
rehabilitation effort.
               Finally, Millan argues the trial court erred by refusing to allow counsel to
refresh the recollection of Johnny Hernandez who, apparently to the surprise of Millan’s
counsel, testified he had not observed Jaime yell at Millan. Millan’s counsel asked
Hernandez whether it would refresh his recollection if he were to listen to a prior audio
recording when the trial court interjected, “He didn’t say he needs his memory refreshed.
He said he never saw it.” When asked if he recalled telling someone at the City he heard
Jaime chew out Millan, Hernandez responded, “Not that I can remember.” Millan’s

                                              28
counsel again asked to refresh Hernandez’s recollection by having him listen to an audio
recording of a statement he had made years earlier. The trial court denied the request.
              The trial court explained there was nothing in Hernandez’s testimony to
suggest Hernandez needed his memory refreshed. Even if we were to assume the court
abused its discretion, Millan has failed to explain how it is reasonably probable he would
have had a more favorable result at trial if the court had allowed counsel to refresh
Hernandez’s recollection and if thereafter Hernandez testified he had heard Jaime yell at
Millan on an unspecified occasion for an unspecified reason. (See Coral Farms, L.P. v.
Mahony, supra, 63 Cal.App.5th at p. 733 [“In short, the evidence at issue was essentially
irrelevant. Thus, the trial court’s alleged evidentiary errors are not arguably
prejudicial”].)
                                              6.
             Evidence of the Substantive Allegations of the DFEH Complaint
              Millan argues the trial court erred by excluding evidence of the substantive
allegations of his DFEH complaint. He argues “[a]s a result, the jury was left without a
tangible complaint. They were left without the context necessary to draw a causal
connection between the complaint and alleged retaliation because of the complaint. They
lacked the facts to infer motivation such as anger, fear, threat, or self-interest, not only on
the part of Jamie and Warren, but on the part of coworkers who testified against Millan.”
              Millan raised this issue in his motion for new trial. In its ruling denying
that motion, the trial court rejected Millan’s argument, explaining:
              “The basis of Plaintiff’s argument is not that the Court’s ruling was
erroneous, but more that without the underlying allegations which Plaintiff does not
dispute are time barred, the jury was unable to ‘connect with or care about’ the DFEH
complaint. ‘They lacked the facts to infer motivation, such as anger, fear, threat, or self-
interest, not only on the part of Superintendent Jaime and Supervisor Warren, but on the

                                              29
part of Public Works employees, such as Roldan Serrano, Jesus Lopez, Silvano Garcia,
and Wilfredo Cruz . . .’. . . .
                “Unfortunately, Plaintiff’s arguments are again without merit. First, the
Court allowed evidence that the 2015 DFEH complaint was filed as well as the entity to
which Plaintiff complained and the respondent’s name. Moreover, in litigating this issue
during the motions in limine, the Court inquired of Plaintiff’s counsel, ‘the corpus of your
case is, your client is being retaliated against for making a DFEH complaint. And it
doesn’t matter that it was meritorious [or] it was not meritorious. The fact that he made
the complaint alone was the impetus for the retaliation. Have I misunderstood the theory
of the case?’ Plaintiff’s counsel responded that the Court properly understood the theory
of the case. . . .
                “Plaintiff cites to no authority, and the Court is unaware of any, that stands
for the proposition that otherwise time-barred and irrelevant evidence is somehow
admissible so a jury can ‘connect’ and ‘care’. There was no error and, in any event, the
issue was thoroughly briefed, argued, and preserved. [¶] As a final point, even if any of
these so-called errors of law occurred, Plaintiff fails to demonstrate prejudice and, on this
ground as well, Plaintiff’s arguments fail.”
                Millan does not address any of the trial court’s stated reasons for excluding
evidence of the underlying allegations in the DFEH complaint in his appellate briefs or
explain how the exclusion of those allegations constitute an abuse of discretion.
Furthermore, Millan fails to explain how on this record it is reasonably probable the jury
would have found in Millan’s favor had the excluded allegations been admitted at trial.
We find no error.

                                               30
                                             7.
    Exclusion of Evidence of Negligent Acts and Omissions Leading Up to Retaliation
              Millan argues the trial court abused its discretion by excluding evidence
                                                        7
relevant to Millan’s failure to prevent retaliation claim. For the reasons we have
discussed ante, Millan has failed to show the judgment in favor of the City on Millan’s
retaliation claims should be reversed due to prejudicial evidentiary error. Millan’s claim
the City failed to prevent retaliation was dependent upon the occurrence of actual
retaliation. (See Scotch v. Art Institute of California (2009) 173 Cal.App.4th 986, 1021
[An actionable claim for failure to prevent discrimination under Government Code
section 12940, subdivision (k) is dependent upon a claim of actual discrimination];
Trujillo v. North County Transit Dist. (1998) 63 Cal.App.4th 280, 289 [“‘[T]here’s no
logic that says an employee who has not been discriminated against can sue an employer
for not preventing discrimination that didn’t happen, for not having a policy to prevent
discrimination when no discrimination occurred . . . .’ Employers should not be held
liable to employees for failure to take necessary steps to prevent such conduct, except
where the actions took place and were not prevented”].)
              Because the jury did not find the City retaliated against Millan, Millan’s
claim the City failed to prevent retaliation claim fails. Any error in excluding evidence

7
  In his opening brief, Millan argues: “The trial court excluded evidence of the City’s
negligent acts and omissions leading up to the alleged retaliation against Millan, even
though this evidence supported Millan’s failure to prevent retaliation claim. . . . This
included damning evidence about Superintendent Jaime and supervisor Warren gathered
by Assistant City Manager Christian during an investigation in 2014/2015 . . . , a report
about the investigation, and . . . audio recordings of interviews taken during this
investigation . . . [which] were filled with testimony by City employees documenting a
history of aggression by Jaime and Warren and the climate of fear, division and
intimidation that was created. . . . But the City failed to act upon this testimony and
discipline its supervisors. . . . The City’s conduct was grossly negligent and constituted a
failure to take reasonable steps that would have prevented the highly foreseeable
retaliation against Millan from occurring.”

                                             31
showing the City failed to take steps to ensure unlawful retaliation did not occur is
therefore harmless.
                                             II.
                         CONTENTIONS OF JUDICIAL MISCONDUCT
              Millan also contends the trial court engaged in judicial misconduct. In his
opening brief, Millan argues on two occasions, the court screamed at Millan’s
representatives in front of the jury. He contends his argument is “highly credible” given
the trial court’s comments to counsel throughout trial he believes were inappropriate. We
have reviewed the record and have found no instance—individually or cumulatively—of
error.
              Our review of the record shows Millan did not ever object to any alleged
screaming by the trial court or make any statement on the record suggesting the trial
judge ever raised his voice in the courtroom. As a general rule, a claim of judicial
misconduct is not preserved for appellate review if no objections were made on that
ground at trial. (People v. Sturm (2006) 37 Cal.4th 1218, 1237; see Weathers v. Kaiser
Foundation Hospitals (1971) 5 Cal.3d 98, 103 [“The rule is well settled that when . . . a
party or his counsel becomes aware of facts constituting misconduct or irregularity in the
proceedings . . . , he must promptly bring such matters to the attention of the court, if he
desires to object to it, or he will be deemed to have waived the point”].) Nothing in the
record supports Millan’s argument that asserting objections would have been futile.
              In ruling on the motion for a new trial and rejecting, inter alia, Millan’s
argument the trial court engaged in misconduct, the trial judge denied ever screaming at
Millan’s representatives, stating:
              “Preliminarily, the Court does not scream, nor yell. During a trial, it
sometimes will become necessary for the Court to intervene and issue a gentle re-
direction. Sometimes, the Court must issue a stern admonishment. These actions are
well within a court’s discretion. Regardless, the Court does not yell, nor scream. In

                                             32
particular, the Court does not recall yelling or screaming at anyone during this trial, nor is
it the practice of this Court to ever scream or yell while Court is in session.
              “The Court is required to maintain the dignity and proper decorum of the
Court, and to ensure that the parties and trial are proceeding in an efficient manner. A
judge has the power, and the duty to provide for the orderly conduct of the trial. (See
Code Civ. Proc. § 128[, subd.] (a)(3)). To accomplish this, the judge may regulate the
order of proof (Evid. Code § 320), control the interrogation of witnesses (Evid. Code
§ 765[, subd.] (a)), and exclude evidence if its probative value is substantially outweighed
by the probability that its admission will either (1) consume an undue amount of time, or
(2) create a substantial danger of undue prejudice, of confusing the issues, or of
misleading the jury (Evid. Code § 352).
              “Consider the Court of Appeal’s observations in People v. Jackson (1971)
18 Cal.App.3d 504, 509, ‘the administration of justice would greatly benefit if more trial
judges made use of their inherent powers as codified in [Evidence] Code § 352, to
control, and if necessary, terminate repetitious, time consuming and irrelevant testimony.’
There, the Court of Appeal stated that the trial judge ‘must alertly supervise’ the
proceedings and that because of the litigation explosion, ‘the concept of a kindly, benign
trial judge who listens passively and patiently while the lawyers try their cases without
[the judge’s] interference is no longer valid—if it ever was.’
              “Here, the parties declined to submit the entire trial transcript to the Court.
One of the unfortunate consequences of that decision is that the parties and the Court are
denied the opportunity to view the entire trial in context which in the Court’s recollection
would demonstrate that the Court actually exercised significant restraint and allowed the
parties and their lawyers to try their respective cases without interference and within the
boundaries of the law as the Court viewed it. However, to directly address Plaintiff’s
broader contention, Plaintiff is incorrect in his characterization. The Court does not
‘scream’ nor ‘yell’ and did not during this trial.”

                                              33
              In opposition to Millan’s motion for a new trial, the City’s counsel
submitted a declaration stating: “The Declarants make a number of claims in support of
Plaintiff’s Motion that are not grounded in fact. First, each of the Declarants alleges that
[the trial judge] ‘yelled’ or ‘screamed’ at them at various times during trial . . . . These
allegations are simply untrue. At no point during the trial did [the trial judge] engage in
what I would characterize as ‘yelling’ or ‘screaming,’ let alone engage in such conduct
toward Plaintiff or his representatives, nor did the Court ever have an ‘explosion with
anger’ toward Plaintiff’s counsel or anyone else. There were times that [the trial judge]
did raise his voice, but no more so than anyone else during trial due to the muffling
caused by the masks we were all required to wear during the course of the trial as
required by state and local health orders due to the COVID-19 pandemic.”
              In his opening brief, Millan argues that while the City has submitted
declarations denying his allegations, “strong corroboration for Millan’s allegations lies in
the reporter’s transcript of the trial proceedings.” Millan cites portions of the reporter’s
transcript where he claims the trial court (1) referred to certain actions of Millan’s trial
counsel as “‘cute attempts,’” (2) falsely accused Millan’s trial counsel of thinking the
trial court was “intellectually ‘dense’”; and (3) told Millan’s trial counsel he was
“‘singularly difficult.’”
              Millan argued in his motion for a new trial the first two comments by the
trial court constituted an irregularity in the trial within the meaning of section 657,
subdivision (1) of the Code of Civil Procedure. The trial court addressed Millan’s
argument in its ruling denying that motion:
              “Plaintiff’s counsel also complains that the following statements by the
Court constitute an irregularity: ‘I don’t appreciate your cute attempts to try and like
backdoor information either in the trial or through here. Do I look like I am dense or like
unable to comprehend the issues that are coming up here? I said we would table the issue
and return to it. Okay?’ and ‘you really are getting frustrating, Mr. Kim.’. . . Again,

                                              34
these comments were made outside the presence of the jury in the context of settling the
jury instructions.
              “Further, although not set forth in the transcript excerpts by either side, the
Court’s recollection is that the first comment about being ‘cute’ is a reference in part to
the prior session in front of the jury when Plaintiff’s counsel intentionally and willfully
solicited evidence that the Court previously excluded. In addition, the Court noticed
during the jury instruction conference that despite the fact that the Court on multiple
occasions indicated it would table the issue and return to it, Plaintiff attempted to re-
argue the issue, repeatedly. While the Court does not view the Court’s comments as
personal attacks on Plaintiff’s counsel, as opposed to attempts to have counsel focus on
the questions that the Court was asking and not argue in a repetitive fashion, it is
undisputed that these comments were all made outside the presence of the jury and
Plaintiff fails to demonstrate how these comments warrant the granting of a new trial.”
              Millan does not address, much less dispute, the trial court’s description of
                                                                                              8
the context and intent of the court’s use of the words “cute” and “dense” during the trial.
Neither the court’s description, nor anything else in the record, supports Millan’s
contention the court’s use of such words suggest the court had ever screamed at any
member of Millan’s legal team.
              As to Millan’s argument the trial court must have screamed at his
representatives because the court told his counsel he was “singularly difficult,” the record
does not show the trial court ever used that phrase. The record cite provided by Millan
on this point in his opening brief shows the trial court stated, as referenced in the portion

8
  The trial court’s choice of words, “Do I look like I am dense” was unnecessary and
unfortunate, but it is not enough, either alone or in combination with similar instances in
this case, to show the trial judge was biased against Millan or his counsel or otherwise
engaged in prejudicial judicial misconduct.

                                              35
                                                                                       9
of the trial court’s ruling quoted ante, “You really are getting frustrating Mr. Kim.” In
its ruling, the trial court explained the context of that statement and as discussed ante,
Millan has not challenged the court’s explanation. Needless to say, Millan has failed to
substantiate his serious accusations the trial court engaged in misconduct and “corrupted
the trial.”

                                       DISPOSITION
              The judgment is affirmed. Respondent to recover costs on appeal.

                                                  MOTOIKE, J.

WE CONCUR:

O’LEARY, P. J.

BEDSWORTH, J.

9
  We would caution counsel when quoting the trial court in support of an argument of
judicial misconduct to be more accurate.

                                             36