Court of Appeal rules no CMIA violation in firing over COVID-19 test refusal: Frayo v. Martin

In Frayo v. Martin.,           Cal.App.5th           (June 25, 2024), the Court of Appeal (Sixth Appellate District) held that an employer did not violate the Confidentiality of Medical Information Act (CMIA) by terminating an employee for refusing a third-party COVID-19 test.

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In 2021, Plaintiff informed defendant he was ill. Defendant, following its COVID-19 guidelines, requested a third-party administered test. Plaintiff refused, and Defendant ultimately terminated him. Plaintiff sued, alleging violations of CMIA § 56.20(b) and (c). The trial court found that Defendant did not ask Plaintiff to sign a medical release authorization (§ 56.20(b)) and did not possess his “medical information” (§ 56.20(c)), and sustained Defendant’s demurrer.

On appeal, the Court of Appeal affirmed. Citing Rossi v. Sequoia Union Elementary School (2023) 94 Cal.App.5th 974, it rejected Plaintiff’s argument that refusing a COVID-19 test is equivalent to refusing to sign an authorization. The court declined to address whether the “necessary action” exemption in § 56.20(b) applied. Regarding the § 56.20(c) claim, the court held that the statute applies only to employers already possessing the employee’s medical information. Because Plaintiff conceded he never took the test, Defendant could not possess related medical information. The court declined to rule on whether the CMIA applies to individual co-defendants.

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