Court Opinion

ID: 9702270
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-25 23:04:18.454554+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:10:22.660477
License: Public Domain

Filed 8/25/23

                            CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

                IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

                              FIFTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

 GLORIA ELIZABETH ROSSI,
                                                                  F085416
          Plaintiff and Appellant,
                                                        (Super. Ct. No. VCU292564)
                  v.

 SEQUOIA UNION ELEMENTARY SCHOOL                                OPINION
 et al.,

          Defendants and Respondents.

         APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of Tulare County. Bret D. Hillman,
Judge.
         Howard Williams, Emilio Martinez and Dana Oviedo for Plaintiff and Appellant.
         Weakley & Arendt, James D. Weakley and Matthew P. Bunting for Defendants
and Respondents.
                                         -ooOoo-
       Plaintiff Gloria Elizabeth Rossi appeals the trial court’s order sustaining the
defendants’ demurrer to her complaint, without leave to amend. Plaintiff was placed on
unpaid administrative leave and then terminated from her employment with defendant
Sequoia Union Elementary School District (the School District) after refusing to either
provide verification of her COVID-19 vaccination status or undergo weekly testing as
required by a then-operative order of the State Public Health Officer.
       Plaintiff brought suit under the Confidentiality of Medical Information Act
(CMIA) (Civ. Code, § 56 et seq.)1 against defendants the School District; Sequoia Union
Elementary School (the School) where she worked; and Ken Horn, the School principal
and superintendent. The complaint asserts two causes of action under the CMIA,
alleging (1) discrimination due to her refusal to authorize release of her medical
information and (2) unauthorized use of her medical information. The trial court
sustained defendants’ demurrer without leave to amend, finding each claim failed as a
matter of law due to certain statutory exceptions.
       This appeal is related to two other contemporaneous appeals (Dennis v. Tulare
City School District (Aug. 25, 2023, F085428) [nonpub. opn.]; Moran v. Tulare County
Office of Education (Aug. 25, 2023, F085385) [nonpub. opn.]) from nearly identical
orders by judges of the Tulare County Superior Court dismissing identical CMIA causes
of action by similarly situated school-worker plaintiffs. The plaintiff-appellants in all
three cases were represented by the same counsel; the cases were argued on the same day
before the same panel of this court; and we now issue opinions affirming the trial court’s
orders on substantially identical grounds in all three cases.
                        FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
       From March 2020 through February 2023, California was in a State of Emergency
due to COVID-19. (Governor’s Proclamation (Feb. 28, 2023) [terminating state of

1      All further statutory references are to the Civil Code unless otherwise stated.

                                                2.
emergency declared Mar. 4, 2020] <https://mclist.us7.list-manage.com/track/
click?u=afffa58af0d1d42fee9a20e55&id=edc0e06ca6&e=0b26ba1b5> [as of Aug. 25,
2023];2 see Gov. Code, § 8627.) Midway through this period, on August 11, 2021, the
State Public Health Officer issued an order requiring K-12 schools to verify the
COVID-19 vaccination status of all school workers (State Dept. of Public Health, State
Public Health Officer Order of Aug. 11, 2021
<https://www.cdph.ca.gov/Programs/CID/DCDC/ Pages/COVID-19/Order-of-the-State-
Public-Health-Officer-Vaccine-Verification-for-Workers-in-Schools.aspx> [as of
Aug. 25, 2023]) (Order or Public Health Order).3 Because this Order forms the basis of
the trial court’s dismissal order, we describe its contents in some detail.
       As described in the prefatory text, the Public Health Order “require[d] verification
of vaccination status among eligible K-12 school workers, and establishe[d] diagnostic
screening testing of unvaccinated workers to minimize the risk that they will transmit
while on K-12 school campuses, where a majority of students are not vaccinated and
younger students are not yet eligible for vaccines.” The Order provided that all covered
schools “must verify [the] vaccine status of all workers” and listed specific modes of
proof of vaccination. (Public Health Order, part II.A.) Further, “[a]symptomatic
unvaccinated or incompletely vaccinated workers [were] required to undergo diagnostic
screening testing” at least once per week, using either PCR (molecular) or antigen tests.

2      On our own motion, we take judicial notice of the dates indicated in the Governor’s
February 28, 2023 Proclamation, a matter which is not of substantial consequence to the
determination of the action. (See Evid. Code, §§ 452, subd. (h), 459, subds. (c), (d).)
3       At defendants’ request, and without objection by plaintiff, the trial court took judicial
notice of the Public Health Order both as to its existence and as to the truth of its statements. On
appeal, plaintiff argues it was improper for the trial court to take judicial notice of the statements
contained in the Order because they are reasonably disputable. We disagree. The statements in
the Order requiring certain actions by certain entities and individuals are not reasonably
disputable, even if their impact on defendants’ legal duties is. On our own motion, we likewise
take judicial notice of the Order both as to its existence and as to the truth of the statements
contained therein. (See Evid. Code, § 459, subd. (a).)

                                                  3.
(Id., part III.A., B., boldface omitted.) Of particular importance to this appeal, the Order
specified that “[w]orkers who are not fully vaccinated, or for whom vaccine status is
unknown or documentation is not provided, must be considered unvaccinated.” (Id.,
part II.C.) The Order also stated that schools whose workers were required to test “must
report results to local public health departments.” (Id., part III.D.) The Order defined
school “ ‘worker[s]’ ” as all paid and unpaid adults serving in K-12 school settings both
public and private, including on-site volunteers. (Id., parts I., IV.F.)
       The Public Health Order, which took effect on August 12, 2021, provided that
“[f]acilities must be in full compliance” by October 15, 2021. (Public Health Order,
supra, part VII.) The Order remained in effect until its rescission, effective
September 17, 2022, about two months after plaintiff’s termination. (See State Dept. of
Public Health, State Public Health Officer Order of Sept. 13, 2022 [rescinding Aug. 11,
2021 Public Health Officer Order effective Sept. 17, 2022] <https://www.cdph.ca.gov/
Programs/CID/DCDC/Pages/COVID-19/Order-of-the-State-Public-Health-Officer-
Vaccine-Verification-for-Workers-in-Schools.aspx> [as of Aug. 25, 2023].)
       When the Public Health Order went into effect, plaintiff was working at the
School, as she had for decades, providing in-person classroom assistance for children
with special needs and children whose primary language is Spanish. The complaint
describes the events leading to plaintiff’s termination by reproducing a series of written
communications (e-mails and letters) between plaintiff and defendant Horn, the School
principal. In summary, defendants began requiring proof of their workers’ COVID-19
vaccination status in September and October 2021; but plaintiff consistently refused to
disclose her vaccination status or undergo weekly testing, informing Horn that she did not
consent to him obtaining or disclosing her medical information. Horn repeatedly
referenced the School’s obligation to comply with the Public Health Order by having
plaintiff either prove vaccination or test weekly. In one of his initial e-mails to plaintiff,
he wrote, “Allowing you to continue work on campus, without verifying your COVID-19

                                              4.
vaccine status nor submitting to weekly testing, would require the [School] [D]istrict to
violate [the] Order, which carries the force of law.” In the same e-mail, Horn directed
plaintiff to remain home in light of her refusals; and at a meeting the next day he offered
her the option of working remotely as a “discretionary accommodation.” Plaintiff
declined, believing that she could not fulfill her job duties remotely.
       Given plaintiff’s rejection of the option to work remotely, Horn directed her to
report to work in person and to at least comply with the weekly COVID-19 testing
requirement or face disciplinary action. Plaintiff continued not to provide proof of
vaccination or weekly test results, and on October 28, 2021, defendants informed plaintiff
she was being placed on unpaid leave until she followed the test-or-vaccinate
requirements. Specifically, Horn informed plaintiff: “As a result of your non-
compliance, you are ineligible to work for [the School District]. Because you are no
longer eligible to work for the [School] District, you have been placed in a
nondisciplinary unpaid status.” Plaintiff responded, “I do not consent to giving up any of
my medical information,” and she asked Horn to reinstate her authorization to return to
work immediately or terminate her employment.
       A few weeks later, still having not complied with the vaccinate-or-test
requirements, plaintiff received another letter from Horn providing a “second warning.”
The second warning letter described the requirement to submit proof of COVID-19
testing as a “new job-related requirement.” The letter stated the School District was
“legally required to consider [plaintiff] not in compliance with [the Public Health] Order”
due to her failure to verify her “vaccination or testing status.” The letter also noted
plaintiff’s “repeated failure to adhere to the law in accordance with [School] District
policies and directives is unprofessional and demonstrates insubordination.” Plaintiff
once again refused to “giv[e] up any of [her] medical information,” requesting that she
either be reauthorized for work or terminated. About one week later, in late November
2021, Principal Horn sent another letter confirming that plaintiff would “remain in unpaid

                                              5.
status unless and until [she] either bec[a]me fully vaccinated against COVID-19 or
submit[ted] to weekly COVID-19 testing.”
       The complaint does not describe any further communications between the two
over the rest of the school year, but plaintiff alleges she received a formal “statement of
dismissal,” signed by Horn on July 7, 2022, terminating her employment. Plaintiff filed
the instant complaint less than two weeks later.
       The complaint asserts two causes of action under the CMIA: (1) discrimination
due to plaintiff’s refusal to authorize a release of her medical information, in violation of
section 56.20, subdivision (b) (section 56.20(b));4 and (2) unauthorized use of her
medical information, in violation of section 56.20, subdivision (c) (section 56.20(c)).5
Demurrer and Trial Court Ruling
       Defendants demurred, arguing the section 56.20(b) discrimination cause of action
failed because defendants “took such action as [was] necessary in the absence of medical
information due to [p]laintiff’s refusal to sign an authorization,” invoking the Public
Health Order and the second sentence of section 56.20(b). Defendants argued the

4      Section 56.20(b) reads in full:

       “(b) No employee shall be discriminated against in terms or conditions of
       employment due to that employee’s refusal to sign an authorization under this
       part. However, nothing in this section shall prohibit an employer from taking
       such action as is necessary in the absence of medical information due to an
       employee’s refusal to sign an authorization under this part.” (§ 56.20(b).)

5      Section 56.20(c) reads, in relevant part:

       “(c) No employer shall use, disclose, or knowingly permit its employees or agents
       to use or disclose medical information which the employer possesses pertaining to
       its employees without the patient having first signed an authorization under
       [s]ection 56.11 or [s]ection 56.21 permitting such use or disclosure, except as
       follows:

              “(1) The information may be disclosed if the disclosure is compelled by
              judicial or administrative process or by any other specific provision of
              law.” (§ 56.20(c).)

                                                   6.
section 56.20(c) unauthorized use cause of action failed because, first, they did not “use”
plaintiff’s medical information, plaintiff never having provided her vaccination or testing
status, and even assuming they had, their use of that information “was compelled by …
[a] specific provision of law” (§ 56.20, subd. (c)(1)), namely, the Public Health Order.
       The trial court issued a tentative ruling sustaining the demurrer without leave to
amend. No party requested oral argument, and the tentative ruling became the order of
the court. At the outset of the ruling, the trial court granted defendants’ unopposed
request for judicial notice of the Public Health Order both as to its existence and as to its
contents, observing, “The truth of the statements contained in the Order do not appear to
be reasonably disputable.” Regarding the sufficiency of the discrimination cause of
action, the trial court found the complaint satisfactorily pleaded all elements of a
section 56.20(b) claim, which it correctly noted were as follows, drawing from CACI
No. 3071:

       “1. That Defendants asked Plaintiff to sign an authorization so that
       Defendants could obtain medical information about Plaintiff from their
       health care providers;

       “2. That Plaintiff refused to sign the authorization;

       “3. That Defendants terminated Plaintiff’s employment;

       “4. That Plaintiff’s refusal to sign the authorization was a substantial
       motivating reason for Defendants’ decision to terminate employment;

       “5. That Plaintiff was harmed; and

       “6. That Defendants’ conduct was a substantial factor in causing Plaintiff’s
       harm.”
       As to the first two elements—request for an authorization and refusal to
authorize—the trial court noted the absence of any literal request for plaintiff to “sign an
authorization” allowing defendants to obtain her medical information from a health care
provider. (§ 56.20(b).) However, the trial court found these elements satisfied based on

                                              7.
two CMIA cases cited in the complaint (Loder v. City of Glendale (1997) 14 Cal.4th 846
(Loder); Kao v. University of San Francisco (2014) 229 Cal.App.4th 437 (Kao)), which
the trial court viewed as treating the plaintiffs’ refusals to take a test or release medical
information as refusals to sign an authorization. The trial court found the remaining
elements clearly satisfied or presumed satisfied on demurrer.
       However, the trial court agreed with defendants that the necessity exception in
section 56.20(b)’s second sentence shielded defendants from liability as a matter of law.
The trial court viewed the Public Health Order as mandating that defendants require
testing of all employees whose vaccination status was unknown. “Following the
requirements of the Order and obtaining full compliance by October 15, 2021 were not
optional steps” for defendants, the court observed. The court found that, in the absence
of the vaccine status or weekly test results required by the Public Health Order,
defendants’ placement of plaintiff on unpaid leave was “ ‘necessary in the absence of the
medical information.’ ” Unlike in Loder, supra, 14 Cal.4th 846 and Kao, supra,
229 Cal.App.4th 437, where the court acknowledged factual questions were essential to
determining business necessity, the court held in this case the exception was rooted in the
Public Health Order and therefore applied as a matter of law. Adopting the language of
defendants’ demurrer, the court explained, “ ‘If … [d]efendants had permitted [p]laintiff
to continue working and not placed her on administrative leave, [they] would blatantly be
violating the [Public Health] Order.’ ”
       The trial court then turned to the unauthorized use cause of action under
section 56.20(c). The court rejected defendants’ argument that because plaintiff never
provided her vaccination status, they could not have used such medical information. The
court reasoned that plaintiff’s refusal to provide her vaccination status resulted in a
determination that plaintiff was unvaccinated, “which is, to a degree, ‘medical
information’ [regarding] [p]laintiff[’s] medical history or treatment as it was in Loder and
Kao.” However, the court agreed with defendants’ alternative argument that

                                               8.
subdivision (c)(1) of section 56.20 (section 56.20(c)(1)) contained a built-in defense for
disclosure of medical information when “compelled by judicial or administrative process
or by any other specific provision of law” (§ 56.20(c)(1)). For the same reasons
discussed for the section 56.20(b) cause of action, the court found “as a matter of law,
that [d]efendants were compelled to take the actions described in the complaint by the
Order and therefore have an applicable defense to this cause of action.”
       In sum, the trial court found defendants “effectively had no choice but to
implement the policies stated in the [Public Health] Order, including weekly testing of
[p]laintiff.” Discerning no set of facts that plaintiff could plead to overcome the effect of
the Order, the court sustained the demurrer without leave to amend. This appeal
followed.6 At our request, the parties filed supplemental briefs addressing certain issues
we deemed relevant.
                                        DISCUSSION
I.     Standard of Review
       On appeal from a final order sustaining a demurrer, we review the record de
novo—without deference to the trial court’s ruling or its reasoning—to determine the
legal question of whether the facts alleged state a claim for relief. (See Bichai v. Dignity
Health (2021) 61 Cal.App.5th 869, 876; Visalia Unified School Dist. v. Superior Court
(2019) 43 Cal.App.5th 563, 568 [describing de novo review].) We accept as true all of
the pleading’s material factual allegations, unless contrary to law or judicially noticed
fact. (City of Dinuba v. County of Tulare (2007) 41 Cal.4th 859, 865; SLPR, L.L.C. v.

6        A judgment of dismissal following defendants’ successful demurrer does not appear in
the record, and “[a]n order sustaining a demurrer is usually not immediately appealable, because
it is not on its face a final judgment. [Citation.] However, it may be treated as a judgment for
purposes of appeal when, like a formal judgment, it disposes of the action and precludes further
proceedings.” (Thaler v. Household Finance Corp. (2000) 80 Cal.App.4th 1093, 1098.)
Because the demurrer was sustained as to all causes of action, without leave to amend, we deem
the order sustaining the demurrer to constitute an appealable judgment of dismissal.

                                               9.
San Diego Unified Port Dist. (2020) 49 Cal.App.5th 284, 317.) An order sustaining a
demurrer must be affirmed if it is correct on any ground asserted in the demurrer,
independent of the trial court’s stated reasons. (Bichai, at p. 877; see Aubry v. Tri-City
Hospital Dist. (1992) 2 Cal.4th 962, 967.)
       “In determining the sufficiency of a complaint against demurrer a court will
consider matters that may be judicially noticed. (Javor v. State Board of Equalization
(1974) 12 Cal.3d 790, 796; Code Civ. Proc., §§ 430.30, 430.70.) ‘Accordingly, a
complaint otherwise good on its face is subject to demurrer when facts judicially noticed
render it defective.’ ” (Joslin v. H.A.S. Ins. Brokerage (1986) 184 Cal.App.3d 369, 374.)
A demurrer may be sustained not only when the complaint fails to plead facts sufficient
to state a cause of action, but also when the complaint includes “ ‘allegations that clearly
disclose some defense or bar to recovery.’ ” (Casterson v. Superior Court (2002)
101 Cal.App.4th 177, 183, italics omitted; accord, California Dept. of Tax & Fee
Administration v. Superior Court (2020) 48 Cal.App.5th 922, 929.)
II.    Analysis
       Plaintiff primarily argues her claims should not have been dismissed on demurrer
because it is a factual question for the jury whether defendants’ disciplinary actions were
“necessary,” given that the Public Health Order did not dictate how to enforce its
requirements and imposed no penalties for noncompliance. Relatedly, plaintiff argues
the trial court erred by treating the Public Health Order as superseding the CMIA when
the Order was not intended to do so. Plaintiff appears to assert these arguments as a basis
to revive both causes of action, only addressing the distinct language of
section 56.20(c)(1)’s exception in her supplemental briefing at our request.
       Plaintiff also repeatedly argues that the trial court improperly sustained the
demurrer because the necessity argument was not raised by defendants in their demurrer.
There is no merit to this argument, as defendants’ notice of motion and supporting points
and authorities expressly argued that they “took such action as [was] necessary in the

                                             10.
absence of medical information due to [p]laintiff’s refusal to sign an authorization,” with
respect to section 56.20(b), and that section 56.20(c)(1)’s exception applied because the
Public Health Order was a “specific provision of law” that “compelled” the challenged
action. Indeed, plaintiff’s opposition brief in the trial court acknowledged and responded
to these very arguments. We therefore reject this unfounded procedural argument and
turn to plaintiff’s substantive contentions.
       A. Section 56.20 of the CMIA
       The CMIA, as amended and reenacted in 1981,7 “is intended to protect the
confidentiality of individually identifiable medical information obtained from a patient by
a health care provider, while at the same time setting forth limited circumstances in
which the release of such information to specified entities or individuals is permissible.”
(Loder, supra, 14 Cal.4th at p. 859.)
       The CMIA mostly governs disclosures of patient medical information by health
care providers, but one chapter governs the use and disclosure of employee medical
information by employers. (See Civ. Code, div. 1, pt. 2.6, ch. 3.) The substantive
employer prohibitions—and their relevant exceptions—are found in the four subdivisions
under section 56.20. The present complaint asserts violations of subdivisions (b) and (c)
of section 56.20. Although plaintiff’s briefs appear to subsume her arguments on the
section 56.20(c) claim within her discussion of the section 56.20(b) claim, we find it
more appropriate to address each claim separately.

7       The original CMIA enacted in 1979 met with heavy criticism and was blocked from
taking effect until its repeal and reenactment as amended in 1981. (See Pettus v. Cole (1996)
49 Cal.App.4th 402, 425.)

                                               11.
           1. The Section 56.20(b) Discrimination Claim
       Section 56.20(b) consists of two sentences—the first a prohibition on
discrimination, and the second a “necessity” exception:

       “(b) No employee shall be discriminated against in terms or conditions of
       employment due to that employee’s refusal to sign an authorization under
       this part. However, nothing in this section shall prohibit an employer from
       taking such action as is necessary in the absence of medical information
       due to an employee’s refusal to sign an authorization under this part.”
       (§ 56.20(b).)
The term “authorization” features heavily in the CMIA, and it is defined as a written
document permitting a health care provider8 or an employer to disclose one’s medical
information to others.9 (See §§ 56.05, subd. (a), 56.11 [providers], 56.21 [employers].)
Thus, as explained by our Supreme Court:

       “An employer ‘discriminates’ against an employee in violation of
       section 56.20, subdivision (b), if it improperly retaliates against or
       penalizes an employee for refusing to authorize the employee’s health care
       provider to disclose confidential medical information to the employer or
       others (see Civ. Code, § 56.11), or for refusing to authorize the employer to
       disclose confidential medical information relating to the employee to a
       third party (see Civ. Code, § 56.21).” (Loder, supra, 14 Cal.4th at p. 861.)
               i.     The Limited Case Law on Section 56.20(b)
       The only two published cases substantively addressing a section 56.20(b)
discrimination claim are our Supreme Court’s decision in Loder, supra, 14 Cal.4th 846
and the First Appellate District’s decision in Kao, supra, 229 Cal.App.4th 437.

8       The CMIA’s proscriptions for health care providers also apply to health care service
plans, pharmaceutical companies, and contractors, but for simplicity we refer only to health care
providers in this decision.
9       To be valid, a provider authorization must be signed by the patient (except in
circumstances not applicable here), identify the parties authorized to disclose and receive the
medical information, specify an end date for the permissive disclosure, and advise that the signer
has a right to receive a copy of the authorization. (§ 56.11.) “Medical information” is also
specifically defined in the CMIA (§ 56.05, subd. (i)), but its definition is more relevant to our
analysis, post, of the section 56.20(c) cause of action.

                                               12.
       Loder was a taxpayer’s suit to enjoin the City of Glendale’s policy requiring drug
testing of all city job applicants and current city employees seeking promotion. (Loder,
supra, 14 Cal.4th at pp. 852, 856.) Under the policy, job or promotion seekers were
automatically disqualified from consideration if they refused to sign a form authorizing
the physician conducting the drug testing to inform the city of the test results. (Id. at
p. 860.) Despite sustaining certain constitutional challenges to the policy, the Supreme
Court rejected the plaintiff’s statutory claim that the policy violated section 56.20(b).
The court explained:

       “[A]n employer who disqualifies an employee or job applicant for refusing
       to permit the employer to be informed of the ultimate results of an
       employer-mandated medical examination or drug test, like an employer
       who disqualifies an employee or applicant who fails or refuses to take the
       required examination or test, has not ‘discriminated’ against the employee
       or applicant for refusing to sign an authorization of disclosure, but instead
       simply has taken ‘such action as is necessary in the absence of medical
       information due to [the] employee’s refusal …,’ as specifically authorized
       by section 56.20, subdivision (b).” (Loder, supra, 14 Cal.4th at p. 861.)
The court viewed the city’s disqualification of those refusing to authorize disclosure as
necessary because the testing policy “obviously would be totally ineffective if an
employer could not treat an individual who refuses to permit the employer to learn the
ultimate results of the examination in the same fashion as an individual who refuses to
complete the test.” (Loder, supra, 14 Cal.4th at p. 861.) Rejecting the plaintiff’s
argument that employers must justify the necessity of their actions under a “ ‘compelling
interest’ ” standard (ibid.), the court concluded that, “so long as an employer-mandated
medical examination or drug testing program is otherwise lawful, section 56.20,
subdivision (b), does not prohibit an employer from disqualifying an applicant or
employee who refuses to authorize disclosure to the employer of the ultimate results of
the examination or test” (id. at p. 862).

                                             13.
       Many of Loder’s statements of law regarding section 56.20(b) appear helpful to
defendants’ efforts to show that they were not discriminating against plaintiff for failure
to authorize disclosure but rather acting as necessary in the absence of information about
plaintiff’s COVID-19 vaccination or testing status.10 However, until our request for
supplemental briefing, defendants did not argue that any of the above language in Loder
dictated the outcome of the section 56.20(b) claim; and their supplemental brief offers
just one paragraph of argument that because the Public Health Order was legal,
section 56.20(b) did not prohibit the School from disqualifying plaintiff from
employment for refusing to share her vaccination status or weekly PCR/antigen test
results.
       As plaintiff argues in her supplemental brief, there are several distinguishing
features of Loder that might minimize its impact on this case. Loder was a taxpayer’s
facial challenge to a testing policy (Loder, supra, 14 Cal.4th at p. 856), whereas this is an
employee’s as-applied claim; Loder involved a policy testing for illegal drugs and alcohol
(id. at p. 852), whereas this case involves testing for a virus; the policy in Loder required
applicants to sign an actual authorization form thereby allowing the court to conclude the
city was treating non-authorizing applicants the same as non-testing applicants (id. at
pp. 860–861), whereas here there is no allegation that plaintiff was asked to sign an
authorization for disclosure (see fn. 11, post); and the section 56.20(b) claim in Loder
was rejected after a full evidentiary hearing (Loder, at pp. 857–858), whereas the claim
was dismissed on demurrer here. We are not confident all of these distinctions truly
make a difference, but we also are not persuaded that Loder necessarily precludes
plaintiff’s section 56.20(b) claim.

10      For instance, in addition to the above quoted passages, Loder also states that
section 56.20(b) “cannot reasonably be interpreted to regulate the circumstances under which an
employer may require job applicants or current employees to submit to a medical examination or
drug test.” (Loder, supra, 14 Cal.4th at p. 862.)

                                              14.
       Based on the arguments presented, we are not prepared to treat Loder as
establishing a standard that an employer-mandated medical exam/testing policy is only
subject to section 56.20(b)’s discrimination prohibition if the program is shown not to be
“otherwise lawful.” (Loder, supra, 14 Cal.4th at p. 862.) We also decline to rest our
decision on the other potentially significant passages from Loder in the absence of
substantial briefing of their impact.
       Turning to the second of the published section 56.20(b) cases, the First Appellate
District’s decision in Kao, supra, 229 Cal.App.4th 437 comes closer to the facts of our
case but contains fewer pronouncements of CMIA law. Kao offers an example of the
necessity exception being successfully invoked to defeat an individual employee’s
section 56.20(b) claim challenging his termination as discriminatory. In Kao, a
university directed the plaintiff professor to undergo a fitness-for-duty examination after
colleagues reported that his behavior was frightening them, and the university terminated
his employment when he refused to participate in the examination. (Kao, at pp. 439–
440.) The Court of Appeal upheld the jury’s adverse verdict on each of the professor’s
statutory claims, including those under the CMIA and the Fair Employment and Housing
Act (Gov. Code, § 12900 et seq.). Citing the professor’s multiple instances of threatening
behavior, the court concluded the jury had ample evidence to find the medical
examination “ ‘job related and consistent with business necessity’ ” as required to defeat
his Fair Employment and Housing Act claim and therefore also “ ‘necessary’ ” within the
meaning of section 56.20(b). (Kao, at pp. 451, 453.)
              ii.    Application
       Before reviewing the necessity exception’s application to the present case, we
pause momentarily to express some doubt as to whether plaintiff adequately pleaded the
first two elements of a prima facie section 56.20(b) claim: that defendants asked her to
sign an “authorization” (§§ 56.05, subd. (a), 56.11) and she refused to do so. (See CACI
No. 3071.) The trial court assessed Loder, supra, 14 Cal.4th 846 and Kao, supra,

                                            15.
229 Cal.App.4th 437 as indicating “that a refusal to take a test or release medical
information are akin to refusing to sign an authorization.” Although defendants do not
challenge this assessment, we do not read Loder and Kao that way.11 Still, we are willing
to overlook any deficiency in the prima facie section 56.20(b) allegations because we
agree with the trial court that the necessity exception applies here in any event.

11       Loder does not say that a refusal to take a medical test is the same as a refusal to
authorize disclosure of medical information for purposes of satisfying the first two elements of a
section 56.20(b) claim. Rather, in addressing the third element, “discrimination,” and the
necessity exception, the Loder court identified two groups of job/promotion applicants:
(A) those who refuse to take the test; and (B) those who take the test and refuse to authorize
disclosure of their results. (Loder, supra, 14 Cal.4th at p. 861.) Our Supreme Court then held
that there was no impermissible discrimination because the employer was treating these two
groups the same—by disqualifying both groups in favor of the third group, (C) those who take
the test and authorize disclosure. (Ibid.) The court reasoned that treating groups A and B the
same was necessary to avoid rendering the whole testing policy ineffective, and therefore fell
within section 56.20(b)’s necessity exception. (Loder, at p. 861.)
         However, the policy at issue in Loder did in fact require job/promotion applicants to sign
a literal authorization form presented to them before the physician conducted the drug tests.
(Loder, supra, 14 Cal.4th at p. 860.) Therefore, we are reluctant to view Loder as endorsing the
sufficiency of a prima facie section 56.20(b) claim that does not involve a request for the
employee to authorize the employer to obtain medical information about the employee from the
employee’s health care provider.
        Kao provides slightly more support for accepting a refusal to take a test as a refusal to
sign an authorization to make out a section 56.20(b) claim. The plaintiff’s claim in Kao indeed
went to a jury and was adjudicated on its merits, despite him simply refusing to undergo the
fitness-for-duty examination. Professor Kao was, however, presented with a “consent form”
related to the requested examination even though that fact does not feature heavily in the
decision (Kao, supra, 229 Cal.App.4th at p. 444); and in any event, the Court of Appeal was not
deciding an issue related to the prima facie elements of the claim, but rather the sufficiency of
the evidence to support the necessity exception (id. at p. 453).
        We do not wish to imply that a literal authorization form is always required to state a
section 56.20(b) claim; what is important is that there be allegations that the employer was
actually seeking the plaintiff’s permission to obtain her medical information from a healthcare
provider. (See §§ 56.05, subd. (a), 56.11.) Here, plaintiff alleges that she was instructed to
personally provide proof of vaccination to her employer; and although that document would
include medical information derived from a health care provider, there is no allegation that the
School defendants ever requested that plaintiff authorize her health care provider to disclose that
information to defendants. The gap is even larger when it comes to plaintiff’s refusal to undergo
weekly PCR or antigen testing, since there are no allegations that a health care provider would
necessarily be involved in such testing.

                                                16.
       Plaintiff argues Loder and Kao show that the question of whether an employer’s
action was “necessary” is an inherently factual question which must be left for the fact
finder to answer—and therefore cannot be resolved on a demurrer. We disagree.
Although the necessity exception might generally require factual determinations, it does
not always require them. Where, as here, an employer demonstrates that it acted out of a
legal necessity to comply with a lawful order—as opposed to acting based on a general
business necessity—the exception’s application can be determined as a matter of law.
Plaintiff is correct that, in general, “reasonable minds can differ about what constitutes
necessity.” In the typical case, as exemplified in Kao, supra, 229 Cal.App.4th 437, the
fact finder will be the one to decide whether the employer provided enough evidence to
show its actions were “necessary in the absence of medical information” or were simply
discriminatory (§ 56.20(b)).
       But neither Kao nor Loder addresses the scenario presented in this case, where the
employer was acting not out of a general sense of duty or business efficiency but so as to
comply with a lawful order of the State Public Health Officer. Notwithstanding
plaintiff’s passing disparagement of regulations issued by “an unelected executive branch
bureaucrat/agency,” it is undisputed the Public Health Order carried the full force of law
while it was in effect, owing to the active state of emergency during its lifespan. (See
Gov. Code §§ 8567(a), 8627; Governor’s Proclamation of Feb. 28, 2023, supra [noting
dates of state of emergency].) Contrary to plaintiff’s assertion, the lack of any express
enforcement provisions within the Order, such as imposing penalties for noncompliance,
does not change the Order’s legal effect. Plaintiff cites a completely separate doctrine
requiring “ ‘certain and severe … penalties’ ” to establish a de facto reimbursable state
mandate under article XIII B, section 6 of the California Constitution. (See Department
of Finance v. Commission on State Mandates (2003) 30 Cal.4th 727, 754.) The present
case has nothing to do with reimbursable state mandates, and in any event our case
involves an actual (de jure) order mandating certain action by schools like the one where

                                             17.
plaintiff worked. No penalty provisions were needed to make the Order fully binding on
its covered entities and individuals.
       Plaintiff’s principal contention on appeal, however, is that the Public Health Order
did not specify “what to do with individual employees not complying” and did not
mandate their termination; she argues defendants’ disciplinary actions were therefore
undertaken at their discretion, not necessitated by the Order. This argument requires
interpreting the Order’s provisions, a quintessential legal inquiry properly conducted by
the court—not a factual one for the jury. In this rather unique case, the question is
whether defendants took “such action as [was] necessary [to comply with the Public
Health Order] in the absence of medical information.” (§ 56.20(b).) This is a purely
legal question, one which we answer in the affirmative, like the trial court.
       The Public Health Order required “full compliance” by facilities and mandated
that all K-12 schools “must verify vaccine status of all workers” and that those schools
with workers who must test (i.e., with workers not reporting complete vaccination) “must
report results to local public health departments.” (Italics added.) Notably, the School
could not fulfill either of these requirements without the cooperation of plaintiff (and all
School workers). The administration could not verify her vaccination status on its own,
and it could not transmit test results it did not have. Although the Order did not literally
state that unvaccinated and non-testing workers could not be present on school campuses,
the Order’s prefatory text makes clear that its goal was to “minimize the risk that
[workers] will transmit [COVID-19] while on K-12 school campuses,” to prevent
endangering their students—the majority of whom were not yet vaccinated and the
youngest of whom were not yet vaccine eligible. (Italics added.) Faced with plaintiff’s
refusal to allow defendants to comply with either their verification or test-reporting
obligations, defendants had no choice but to impose disciplinary consequences
precluding plaintiff from working in person until she at least started reporting test results
weekly. Plaintiff argues a fact finder might reasonably conclude that other reasonable

                                             18.
accommodations could have been reached besides putting her on unpaid leave and
ultimately firing her—positing “plexiglass [or] physical distancing” as other possible
solutions. However, we do not see how other potential arrangements like these would
allow defendants to bring the School into “full compliance” with the Public Health Order.
Even if defendants allowed plaintiff to return to work in the classroom from behind a
plexiglass shield, that would not allow them to either verify her vaccination status or
report all unvaccinated-worker test results to local health departments. There is no room
for factual debate about how else defendants could have complied with the Order’s
requirements without directing plaintiff to stay home until she provided test results—and
terminating her when it was clear she was never going to test.
       In reaching this conclusion, we reject plaintiff’s corollary argument that this
interpretation of the Public Health Order allows it to “supersede” the CMIA without any
indication the Order was meant to do so. As the trial court noted, section 56.20(b)
expressly provides a necessity exception. Thus, the Order—giving rise to the necessity in
this case—operates within the framework contemplated by the CMIA, not over and
above it.
       The trial court properly sustained the demurrer as to plaintiff’s section 56.20(b)
discrimination claim.
            2. The Section 56.20(c) Unauthorized Use Claim
       We likewise conclude that the demurrer was properly sustained for the second
cause of action, under section 56.20(c), but not for the reasons stated by the trial court.
       Section 56.20(c) provides that “[n]o employer shall use, disclose, or knowingly
permit its employees or agents to use or disclose medical information which the employer
possesses pertaining to its employees,” unless the employee signs an authorization
permitting such disclosure, or one of several statutory exceptions applies. The first of the
statutory exceptions, and the only one asserted in this case, is found in
section 56.20(c)(1), which states: “The information may be disclosed if the disclosure is

                                             19.
compelled by judicial or administrative process or by any other specific provision of
law.”
        Interpreting these provisions on a nearly blank judicial slate,12 we understand
section 56.20(c) and its compelled disclosure exception to apply differently in this case
than did the trial court. The trial court was incorrect in finding section 56.20(c)(1)’s
exception applied to defendants’ actions; however, dismissal of plaintiff’s
section 56.20(c) cause of action was still proper because plaintiff failed to state a prima
facie claim for defendants’ unauthorized use of her medical information.
               i.     Section 56.20(c)(1)’s Compelled Disclosure Exception Does Not
                      Cover Defendants’ Actions
        As the basis for dismissing the section 56.20(c) claim, the trial court adopted one
of defendants’ two arguments put forth in their demurrer: that the section 56.20(c)(1)
compelled disclosure exception applied. The trial court found that, for the same reasons
discussed for section 56.20(b), “[d]efendants were compelled to take the actions
described in the complaint by the Order.” The trouble with this reasoning is that “the
actions described in the complaint” with respect to section 56.20(c) do not involve any
“disclosure” of plaintiff’s medical information by defendants, and section 56.20(c)(1)’s
exception applies only to disclosures—not uses.
        Section 56.20(c)’s prohibitory clause forbids both unauthorized “use[s]” and
“disclos[ures]” of employee medical information by an employer. However, the four
exceptions laid out in the paragraphs that follow this prohibition do not all uniformly
apply to both uses and disclosures. As just mentioned, paragraph 1 allows information to
be “disclosed if the disclosure is compelled by judicial or administrative process or by

12      We have found only one published case by a California court that substantively discusses
section 56.20(c), and that case did not involve the compelled disclosure exception. (See Pettus v.
Cole, supra, 49 Cal.App.4th at p. 451 [addressing exceptions under § 56.20, subd. (c)(2), (3)].)
Loder, supra, 14 Cal.4th 846 and Kao, supra, 229 Cal.App.4th 437 solely address discrimination
claims under section 56.20(b), not unauthorized use claims under section 56.20(c).

                                               20.
any other specific provision of law.” (§ 56.20(c)(1), italics added.) Paragraph 2 permits
relevant parts of medical information to be “used or disclosed” in connection with legal
disputes between the employer and employee where the employee’s medical history,
condition, or treatment is in issue. (§ 56.20, subd. (c)(2), italics added.) Paragraph 3
permits medical information to be “used” for specific purposes like administering
employee benefit plans and determining eligibility for medical leave. (§ 56.20,
subd. (c)(3).) And paragraph 4 permits medical information to be “disclosed” to health
care providers to aid in patient diagnosis or treatment where the patient is unable to
authorize the disclosure. (§ 56.20, subd. (c)(4).) Given the Legislature’s differential use
of the verbs “disclosed” and “used” in each of the four exception paragraphs, we cannot
conclude that it intended the exception in paragraph 1 to permit both “disclosure” and
“use” whenever compelled by judicial process or other provisions of law.
       The legislative history of section 56.20 confirms that section 56.20(c)(1) permits
only disclosures compelled by law, not uses compelled by law. The CMIA bill (Sen. Bill
No. 889) (1981–1982 Reg. Sess.) underwent various pre-enactment amendments, some in
the Assembly and some in the Senate, before being chaptered in September 1981.
(Stats. 1981, ch. 782, § 1, p. 3040.) The bill was introduced in the Senate and went to the
Assembly in June of 1981, where it headed first to the Assembly Committee on Health.
(Sen. Bill No. 889, approved by Governor, Sept. 25, 1981, Sen. Final Hist. (1981–1982
Reg. Sess.) p. 561.) When it arrived at the Assembly, the section of the bill that would
become section 56.20(c)(1) read as follows:

             “(1) The information may be disclosed when the employer
       reasonably believes that disclosure is compelled by judicial or
       administrative process or by any other specific provision of law.” (Sen.
       Amend. to Sen. Bill No. 889 (1981–1982 Reg. Sess.) May 14, 1981.)
       On August 24, 1981, the Assembly Committee on Health amended that provision
of Senate Bill No. 889 by removing the “reasonable belief” reference and adding a “use”
component of the exception. The deletions and additions are reflected here:

                                            21.
              “(1) The information may be disclosed when the employer
       reasonably believes that if the disclosure is compelled by judicial or
       administrative process or by any other specific provision of law, and may
       be used to comply with other requirements mandated by law.” (Assem.
       Amend. to Sen. Bill No. 889 (1981–1982 Reg. Sess.) August 24, 1981.)
Three days later, however, the Assembly Committee on Health again amended this
provision and largely returned it to its original text (while still omitting the “reasonable
belief” qualifier) as follows:

              “(1) The information may be disclosed if the disclosure is compelled
       by judicial or administrative process or by any other specific provision of
       law, and may be used to comply with other requirements mandated by law.
       other specific provision of law.” (Assem. Amend. to Sen. Bill No. 889
       (1981–1982 Reg. Sess.) August 27, 1981.)
There were no further amendments to this provision of Senate Bill No. 889.
       This chronology shows the Legislature actively considered and then rejected
adding an exception to permit employers to use employee medical information “to
comply with other requirements mandated by law.” We will not rewrite this statute by
interpreting it in a way that would override the express legislative intent to limit the scope
of section 56.20(c)(1)’s exception to permit employer disclosures of employee medical
information when compelled by law.
       The complaint pleads a section 56.20(c) cause of action arising purely from
defendants’ unauthorized use of plaintiff’s purported medical information (that is, her
presumed unvaccinated status) to terminate her employment. There is no allegation that
defendants disclosed her vaccination status to any third party.13 Again,
section 56.20(c)(1)’s exception states: “The information may be disclosed if the
disclosure is compelled by judicial or administrative process or by any other specific
provision of law.” (Italics added.) In their supplemental brief, defendants do not argue

13      Indeed, plaintiff’s opposition brief in the trial court confirmed that “the ‘disclosure’ of
[her] information is not, at this time, being alleged,” and instead “the [section] 56.20(c) cause of
action is based on the use, rather than the disclosure, of [her] medical information.”

                                                22.
how their actions could constitute a disclosure, nor do they argue for a broader reading of
section 56.20(c)(1). We conclude that defendants’ challenged conduct does not fall
within section 56.20(c)(1)’s compelled disclosure exception, and the trial court erred by
concluding otherwise.14
               ii.     Affirmance Is Warranted on an Alternative Ground
       Nevertheless, defendants’ other ground for dismissal asserted in their demurrer—
their primary argument, which the trial court rejected—still provides a basis to affirm.
(See Bichai v. Dignity Health, supra, 61 Cal.App.5th at p. 877 [Courts of Appeal must
affirm if dismissal is correct on any ground stated in the demurrer, independent of the
trial court’s reasoning].) In our view, the complaint fails to adequately plead the prima
facie elements of a section 56.20(c) cause of action because there are no allegations from
which we can infer that defendants used “medical information which [they] possesse[d]
pertaining to [plaintiff].” (§ 56.20(c).)
       Defendants argued in their notice of motion and in their points and authorities
supporting their demurrer that because plaintiff never provided her vaccination status,
they could not have used that medical information when they never possessed it. The
trial court, somewhat equivocally, rejected this argument, reasoning that plaintiff’s
refusal to provide her vaccination status resulted in a determination that plaintiff was
unvaccinated, “which is, to a degree, ‘medical information’ [regarding] [her] medical
history or treatment as it was in Loder and Kao.” Defendants did not renew this

14       Defendants do not identify any other applicable exception under section 56.20(c), nor do
we see how any of its other three subparagraphs would apply. We note, however, that the
language of section 56.20(b)’s necessity exception indicates that it applies across all subdivisions
within section 56.20. (See § 56.20(b) [“nothing in this section shall prohibit an employer from
taking such action as is necessary in the absence of medical information due to an employee’s
refusal to sign an authorization under this part” (italics added)].) There was no discussion either
in the trial court or in the appellate briefs of the potential application of section 56.20(b)’s
necessity exception to preclude liability under section 56.20, subdivision (c), and because we are
able to affirm on a fully briefed ground instead, we do so.

                                                23.
argument on appeal until we ordered supplemental briefing on it. After considering the
parties’ supplemental arguments, we conclude defendants were correct from the start:
The complaint does not allege their use of plaintiff’s “medical information” as that term
is defined in the statute.
       “Medical information” is defined in the CMIA as “any individually identifiable
information, in electronic or physical form, in possession of or derived from a provider of
health care … regarding a patient’s medical history …, mental or physical condition, or
treatment.” (§ 56.05, subd. (i).) If plaintiff had alleged that she gave the employer
defendants proof of her COVID-19 vaccination from a health care provider and that
defendants used that information to her detriment (without her authorization), she would
state a section 56.20(c) cause of action. To use a scenario closer to the actual allegations,
if plaintiff had alleged that she gave defendants electronic or physical information from a
health care provider confirming her lack of such vaccination and that defendants used
that information to her detriment, she would also state a section 56.20(c) cause of action.
However, what the complaint actually alleges is that, due to plaintiff’s failure to inform
defendants of her vaccination status one way or the other, defendants presumed that
plaintiff was “unvaccinated,” as they were required to do by the Public Health Order.
(See Public Health Order, supra, part II.C. [“Workers who are not fully vaccinated, or for
whom vaccine status is unknown or documentation is not provided, must be considered
unvaccinated.” (Italics added.)].)
       Plaintiff directs us to no allegation that defendants “possesse[d]” (§ 56.20(c))
“individually identifiable information, in electronic or physical form, in possession of or
derived from a provider of health care … regarding [her vaccination status]” (§ 56.05,
subd. (i)). Her administrative classification as “unvaccinated” was not based on any
information defendants received about plaintiff from any medical source. It was simply
the default administrative classification required under the Public Health Order. We

                                             24.
cannot agree with the trial court that this automatic classification was, to any degree,
“medical information” as defined under the CMIA.
       In her supplemental brief, plaintiff argues it was not defendants’ act of classifying
her as unvaccinated that constituted a violation of section 56.20(c), but rather their act of
firing her based on her refusal to comply with a coercive scheme that served as an “ ‘end
run’ ” around the statute. That is, according to plaintiff, defendants were able to skirt the
CMIA and obtain the information they “wanted to use” by asking a binary medical
question and then treating a failure to answer as a negative answer. We are not
persuaded. First, verification of plaintiff’s vaccination status was something the Public
Health Order required defendants to obtain, not something they simply “wanted to use.”
And, in any event, plaintiff’s argument on this score is better directed to the Legislature,
which defined “medical information” very specifically for purposes of the CMIA as (in
relevant part): “any individually identifiable information, in electronic or physical form,
in possession of or derived from a provider of health care … regarding a patient’s
medical history.” (§ 56.05, subd. (i).) That definition simply does not encompass an
employer’s presumption regarding an employee’s medical status, especially not a
presumption the employer was required to make by a lawful government order.
       Without any factual allegations that defendants received any “medical
information,” such as medical records, a medical certification, or other information in
“electronic or physical form … derived from a provider of health care”
(§ 56.05, subd. (i)), the complaint fails to state a cause of action for unauthorized use of
such information under section 56.20(c). (See Erhart v. Bofi Holding, Inc.
(S.D.Cal. 2017) 269 F.Supp.3d 1059, 1077–1078.) Despite our invitation, plaintiff offers
no argument on appeal as to how she could amend the complaint to show use of her
“medical information.” (See Yvanova v. New Century Mortgage Corp. (2016) 62 Cal.4th
919, 924 [leave to amend is warranted when “on the pleaded and noticeable facts there is
a reasonable possibility of an amendment that would cure the complaint’s legal defect or

                                             25.
defects”].) Indeed, the complaint asserts that plaintiff repeatedly expressly refused to
provide any medical information to defendants.
       Accordingly, dismissal of plaintiff’s section 56.20(c) unauthorized use claim,
without leave to amend, was also warranted.
                                     DISPOSITION
       The order of the trial court is affirmed. Defendants are awarded their costs on
appeal.

                                                                                 HILL, P. J.
WE CONCUR:

LEVY, J.

FRANSON, J.

                                            26.