Court of Appeal clarifies “severe and pervasive” hostile workplace sexual harassment standard: Carranza v. City of Los Angeles

In Carranza v. City of Los Angeles (2025) 111 Cal. App. 5th 388, the Court of Appeal (Second Appellate District, Division Seven) affirmed a judgment for a hostile work environment sexual harassment plaintiff, clarifying FEHA’s “severe or pervasive” standard.

Employees of Defendant distributed a nude photo of an individual resembling Plaintiff.  Defendant refused Plaintiff’s requests to stop the photo’s circulation and clarify she was not the subject, and no employees were disciplined post-investigation. After suffering significant distress impacting her work, Plaintiff successfully sued for hostile work environment sexual harassment. A jury awarded her $4 million in non-economic damages and over $600,000 in attorney’s fees. Defendant appealed after its new trial motion was denied.

The Court of Appeal affirmed the judgment against Defendant and denial of motion for retrial. It  rejected Defendant’s argument—based on cases predating Gov. Code § 12923 (guiding FEHA’s construction)—that the “severe or pervasive” standard requires “extreme” conduct or direct harassing interactions. Following Thomas v. Regents of University of California (2023) 97 Cal.App.5th 587, the court held that a plaintiff need not experience direct harassing interactions or sexual hostility in the day-to-day work environment to prevail.

The court also rejected Defendant’s juror misconduct claims. It found juror discussions on attorney’s fees did not warrant reversal as they formed no express or implied agreement to inflate the award. A juror’s assumption of wider photo distribution than indicated at trial was deemed a reasonable inference, not undisclosed bias. Another juror’s comments on future medical costs stemmed from common knowledge and trial evidence, not specialized training. Finally, citing Sonoma Land Trust v. Thompson (2021) 63 Cal.App.5th 978, the Court of Appeal affirmed the attorney’s fees award, finding the trial court properly applied the Ketchum factors when it considered different facets of counsel’s “experience” in both the lodestar and multiplier.

Full opinion

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