Court of Appeal rules on Information Practices Act protections: Wentworth v. Regents of the University of California

In Wentworth v. Regents of the University of California (2024) 105 Cal.App.5th 580, the Court of Appeal (First Appellate District, Division Four) held that personal information need not be “confidential” or “private” to be protected from disclosure by the Information Practices Act (IPA).

Plaintiff, a professor with bipolar disorder, disclosed his condition to defendant. After a suicide attempt and hospitalization, Defendant engaged in the interactive process and provided an accommodation. Following student complaints regarding Plaintiff’s behavior and a faculty letter, Defendant shared the letter with media outlets, who linked it to Plaintiff. Plaintiff was placed on leave and terminated following an investigation. He sued, alleging FEHA violations and invasion of privacy. The trial court granted summary adjudication on some claims, and a jury found for defendant on the rest. Plaintiff appealed, challenging the court’s discovery, summary adjudication, trial, and post-trial rulings but not the jury verdict. 

On appeal, the Court of Appeal upheld summary adjudication of Plaintiff’s interactive process and accommodation claims because the claims overlapped with the jury’s verdict on discrimination, which Plaintiff did not challenge. However, the court reversed dismissal of the invasion of privacy claim, holding that medical or employment information linked to Plaintiff need not be “confidential” or “private” to violate the IPA and that the faculty letter and a discussion about Plaintiff during a student-faculty meeting were potentially in violation. The court upheld the denial of Plaintiff’s motion to compel discovery, finding the requested communications were protected by the reporting privilege. It also upheld the denial of a retrial, finding Plaintiff forfeited the issue by not objecting to jury instructions he later alleged were defective. The case was remanded for reconsideration of attorney’s fees under Civil Code § 1798.48(b) in light of the reinstated privacy claim.

Full opinion

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