By Anthony J. Oncidi
Anthony J. Oncidi is a partner and the Chair of the Labor and Employment Department of Proskauer Rose LLP in Los Angeles, where he exclusively represents employers and management in all areas of employment and labor law. His telephone number is (310) 284-5690 and his email address is aoncidi@proskauer.com. (Tony has authored this column without interruption for every issue of this publication since 1990.)
Allstate terminated Michael Tilkey, a 30-year employee who sold life insurance, after Tilkey's arrest in Arizona following a domestic dispute with his girlfriend; he was arrested for "criminal damage deface, possession or use of drug paraphernalia and disorderly conduct, disruptive behavior." Domestic violence charges were attached to the criminal damage and disorderly conduct charges. Following an investigation, Allstate terminated Tilkey's employment for "engaging in threatening behavior and/or acts of physical harm or violence to any person, regardless of whether he/she is employed by Allstate." Tilkey sued Allstate for wrongful termination, violation of Labor Code § 432.7 (which prohibits an employer from considering as a factor in employment decisions "any record of arrest . . . that did not result in a conviction") and compelled, self-published defamation.
The jury awarded Tilkey $2.7 million in compensatory and $16 million in punitive damages. The court of appeal reversed in part, holding that Allstate had not violated § 432.7 because Tilkey had appeared before a court in...