CHARLES KANE v. PUBLIC SERVICE ELECTRIC GAS

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                                                        SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
                                                        APPELLATE DIVISION
                                                        DOCKET NO. A-5021-16T1


CHARLES KANE,

         Plaintiff-Appellant,

v.

PUBLIC SERVICE ELECTRIC &
GAS and CALVIN LEDFORD,

     Defendants-Respondents.
_______________________________

                   Argued September 20, 2018 – Decided January 31, 2019

                   Before Judges Fuentes, Accurso and Vernoia.

                   On appeal from Superior Court of New Jersey, Law
                   Division, Essex County, Docket No. L-1292-15.

                   Robyne D. LaGrotta argued the cause for appellant
                   (LaGrotta Law, LLC, attorneys; Robyne D. LaGrotta,
                   of counsel and on the briefs).

                   Michael T. Kenny argued the cause for respondents.

PER CURIAM
      Plaintiff Charles Kane appeals from two orders, the first entered in

November 2015, dismissing his claim for intentional infliction of emotional

distress and rejecting application of the continuing violation theory to his

retaliation claim under the Conscientious Employee Protection Act (CEPA),

 N.J.S.A. 34:19-1 to -14, and the second entered in June 2017 granting summary

judgment on the CEPA claim. Finding no error in either order, we affirm. 1

      The essential facts are undisputed. Plaintiff was hired by defendant Public

Service Electric & Gas in 1987 and remains in its employ as an energy analyst.

In March 2011, he reported a problem with transmitting certain data to

Pennsylvania Jersey Maryland Interconnection (PJM), which operates the power

grid. PSE&G reports energy load data to PJM in the form of a "preliminary load

profile" generated each day of the energy and capacity used on an hourly basis

two days earlier. A "final load profile" providing a more accurate assessment is

generated on a monthly basis. Reconciliation of any differences between the

preliminary and final profiles is reported monthly to establish final settlements


 1 As part of the 2015 order, the trial court also dismissed plaintiff's claims for
trade libel, tortious interference and negligent infliction of emotional distress.
Plaintiff has not briefed those claims on appeal. We accordingly deem them
abandoned. See Bacon v. N.J. State Dep't of Educ.,  443 N.J. Super. 24, 38 (App.
Div. 2015); see also Pressler & Verniero, Current N.J. Court Rules, cmt. 5 on R.
2:6-2 (2019) ("It is, of course, clear that an issue not briefed is deemed
waived.").
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                                        2
between PJM and the third-party suppliers responsible for procuring the energy

required. Following an upgrade to PSE&G's website, plaintiff learned that

although the final profile data was updating correctly on PSE&G's public site,

its retail office system was not receiving those updates.

      Plaintiff reported the problem to his supervisor, defendant Calvin Ledford,

who directed plaintiff to have the vendor look into it. Two months later, in May

2011, the vendor reported it had diagnosed the problem and advised it would

require approximately ten hours to fix. Plaintiff reported the news to Ledford,

who, after conferring with his supervisor, put it on a list to be addressed when

time and resources permitted. The problem was finally corrected in March 2012.

      In the meantime, however, plaintiff received a mid-year performance

appraisal from Ledford on August 18, 2011, rating plaintiff as "partially

meet[ing] expectations," which plaintiff characterized as his "first bad appraisal

in twenty-three years."     Plaintiff claimed he immediately felt dizzy and

experienced chest pains. He left work early that day and commenced a six-

month paid medical leave "for hospitalization and treatment for mental health

problems."

      When he returned to work in March 2012, plaintiff elected to appeal his

2011 mid-year appraisal.      Following a meeting with human resources in


                                                                         A-5021-16T1
                                         3 September 2012 about his appeal, plaintiff sent Ledford an email saying he

needed a co-worker to finish certain work for him because he had just "met with

HR and am shaking like a leaf." Plaintiff wrote he had "taken two different pills

but am feeling worse" to which Ledford replied, "go home and contact your

doctor immediately! Don't worry about the work." Although plaintiff testified

at deposition he was confused and dizzy and "could not find the letters on the

keyboard," he refused Ledford's offer to call him an ambulance. Ledford finally

had security escort plaintiff to his car. Plaintiff again went out on paid medical

leave for four months.

      When he returned to work in March 2013, plaintiff pursued his appeal of

his 2011 mid-year performance appraisal "for therapeutic reasons." Plaintiff

told the appeal panel he was obsessed with thoughts of his appraisal, being

escorted out of the building and ethical issues he thought were being ignored by

PSE&G. He advised the panel that he and his psychiatrist hoped a change to his

rating would let him move on with his life. Plaintiff argued the mistakes he

made, if any, were minor, compared with the profile problem managed by

Ledford. The appeal panel declined to change the "partially meets expectations"

rating and found no error in Ledford's decision to have security escort plaintiff




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                                        4
out of the building in 2012. The panel did determine plaintiff would receive his

$1900 bonus for 2011.

      Refusing to accept the panel's decision, plaintiff sent a certified letter,

written with the assistance of a lawyer, to PSE&G's ethics counsel in October

2013 rehashing his complaints. Following a meeting with ethics counsel on the

same topics ten months later in August 2014, plaintiff sent counsel an email on

September 2 requesting a meeting with the president and the CEO of PSE&G.

Plaintiff related he had been unable to sleep the night before "despite tak[in g]

several sleeping pills and tranquilizers." He wrote he had "stated and written

numerous occasions my efforts to change my midyear 2011 appraisal had

numerous purposes, especially therapeutic with hopes and anticipation of

resolving obsessive compulsive thoughts and other mental illnesses and trying

to move on with my life without [further psychiatric] treatment."

      Plaintiff stated the "email is just another example of obsessive thinking

'put to paper.'" He wrote "[t]hese thoughts are often continuous on a daily basis"

and that he could "spend hours talking non-stop" about them, which he believed

the president of PSE&G "would like to hear." He closed the email noting he

had "just seen [his] boss 5 minutes ago. It is late at night and nobody else




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                                        5
around. I hope to be in my car in 10 minutes and go home to prepare for our

meeting," which he "would try to be available [for] anytime, 24 hours a day."

      Ethics counsel immediately forwarded the email to human resources,

which referred the matter the next day to Dr. Binetti, PSE&G's behavioral health

manager.   After meeting with plaintiff on September 3, Binetti noted that

plaintiff was suffering from ongoing psychological problems and ordered him

out of work. Binetti required plaintiff to produce a note from his treatment

provider that his psychiatric condition was in remission and he was capable of

performing at work before he would be allowed to return.               Plaintiff's

psychologist agreed plaintiff should not be at work and he again went out on

medical leave, returning fourteen months later in November 2015. Plaintiff filed

this suit in February 2015 during that leave.

      The trial court granted defendants' motion to dismiss plaintiff's complaint

for intentional infliction of emotional distress, finding the only act occurring

within the two-year tort limitations period was Dr. Binetti placing plaintiff on

medical leave in September 2014, a decision with which plaintiff's own

psychologist concurred and thus one clearly not actionable. The court further

found that even considering plaintiff's negative performance appraisal in 2011

and being escorted out of the building in 2012, those acts, considered singly or


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                                        6
in combination, were simply not so outrageous and extreme that no reasonable

human being could be expected to endure them. See Buckley v. Trenton Saving

Fund Soc'y,  111 N.J. 355, 368 (1988).

      The court also limited plaintiff's CEPA claim to events occurring during

the one-year statutory limitations period, rejecting plaintiff's continuing

violation theory. The court ruled the two events plaintiff claimed were part of

a continuing tort, his 2011 performance appraisal and his 2012 escort from the

building, were both clearly discrete acts, for which a cause of action accrued on

the day they occurred. See Shepherd v. Hunterdon Developmental Ctr.,  174 N.J.
 1, 21 (2002). The court ruled those two claims were thus time-barred. The court

permitted plaintiff to proceed on his CEPA claim for acts occurring within the

one-year period preceding his complaint.

      Following discovery, a different judge granted summary judgment to

defendants on plaintiff's CEPA claim, finding plaintiff failed to establish the

first prong of his prima facie case under  N.J.S.A. 34:19-3(a), namely that he

reasonably believed that PSE&G's conduct in not reporting the final load

profiles to PJM violated either a "law, or a rule or regulation promulgated




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                                        7
pursuant to law." 2 N.J.S.A. 34:19-3(a)(1); see Kolb v. Burns,  320 N.J. Super.
 467, 476 (App. Div. 1999). Plaintiff's counsel conceded at argument that she

could not identify a specific law or regulation PSE&G violated, and that in the

course of discovery defendants produced manuals making clear "there is no

obligation for them to do certain things." She argued, however, that at the time

plaintiff "reported it to the company, he believed it was illegal" and that "public

policy should stand for proper recording."

      The court noted plaintiff alleged in his complaint that PSE&G's failure to

use final load profiles in its retail office system "means billing could be incorrect

for every hour of every day for every supplier of electricity to customers residing

in the PSE&G territory." When questioned at his deposition, however, plaintiff

explained he did not "get involved with PJM . . . and how they charge the

electrical suppliers and how they credit electrical suppliers," and that he had "no

idea what the financial implications are . . . by choosing not to use the final

profiles." Because the judge concluded plaintiff could not establish the first




2
   We note the Supreme Court has recently granted certification to consider
whether a plaintiff in a CEPA action was "required, as part of his prima facie
case, to identify a specific law, regulation, or other authority that he reasonably
believed had been violated." See Chiofalo v. State, No. A-2349-16 (App. Div.
June 21, 2018) (slip op.), certif. granted, __ N.J. __ (Dec. 17, 2018).
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                                         8
prong of his prima facie case, she did not address plaintiff's proofs on the

remaining elements.

      Plaintiff appeals, arguing the trial court erred in dismissing his claim for

intentional infliction of emotional distress, in ruling there was no continuous

tort connecting the adverse employment actions taken against him and in

dismissing his CEPA claim. We reject those arguments as without merit.

      First, we agree with the trial court that whether one considers the two acts

plaintiff now identifies as falling within the two-year limitations period for an

intentional infliction of emotional distress claim, PSE&G's 2013 refusal to alter

plaintiff's 2011 performance appraisal and Dr. Binetti placing plaintiff on

medical leave in 2014, or the two additional acts falling outside the statute, the

2011 appraisal and plaintiff being escorted out of the building in 2012, they do

not, singularly or in combination, meet Buckley's test of being “so outrageous

in character, and so extreme in degree, as to go beyond all possible bounds of

decency, and to be regarded as atrocious, and utterly intolerable in a civilized

community.” Buckley,  111 N.J. at 366 (citation omitted).

      As we have noted elsewhere, "[e]xcept for the kind of aggravated

discriminatory conduct involved in Taylor [v. Metzger,  152 N.J. 490 (1998)],

'it is extremely rare to find conduct in the employment context that will rise to


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                                        9
the level of outrageousness necessary to provide a basis for recovery for the tort

of intentional infliction of emotional distress.'" Griffin v. Tops Appliance City,

Inc.,  337 N.J. Super. 15, 23-24 (App. Div. 2001) (quoting Cox v. Keystone

Carbon Co.,  861 F.2d 390, 395 (3d Cir. 1988)). "By circumscribing the cause

of action with an elevated threshold for liability and damages, courts have

authorized legitimate claims while eliminating those that should not be

compensable." Id. at 23 (quoting Buckley,  111 N.J. at 367). Appropriately

applying that elevated threshold here, the trial court correctly determined

plaintiff failed to adduce sufficient evidence to sustain an intentional infliction

of emotional distress claim.

      Second, we also agree plaintiff's 2015 CEPA complaint was properly

dismissed on summary judgment, and the continuing violation theory could not

be invoked to revive plaintiff's stale claims regarding his 2011 performance

appraisal, his 2012 escort out of the building and PSE&G's 2013 refusal to alter

or rescind the 2011 appraisal.

      In order to succeed on a CEPA claim, an employee must demonstrate:

            (1) he or she reasonably believed that his or her
            employer's conduct was violating either a law, rule, or
            regulation promulgated pursuant to law, or a clear
            mandate of public policy; (2) he or she performed a
            "whistle-blowing" activity described in  N.J.S.A. 34:19-
            3[]; (3) an adverse employment action was taken

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                                       10
             against him or her; and (4) a causal connection exists
             between the whistle-blowing activity and the adverse
             employment action.

             [Dzwonar v. McDevitt,  177 N.J. 451, 462 (2003).]

      Our Supreme Court has characterized a CEPA plaintiff's obligation to

identify a law, rule, regulation, or clear mandate of public policy "that bears a

substantial nexus to his or her claim" as "a pivotal component of a CEPA claim."

Hitesman v. Bridgeway, Inc.,  218 N.J. 8, 32 (2014). "[T]he plaintiff must

identify the authority that provides a standard against which the conduct of the

defendant may be measured." Id. at 33. The Court has directed that a "trial

court can and should enter judgment for a defendant when no such law or policy

is forthcoming." Dzwonar,  177 N.J. at 463; see also Pierce v. Ortho Pharm.

Corp.,  84 N.J. 58, 73 (1980) ("If an employee does not point to a clear expression

of public policy, the court can grant a motion to dismiss or for summary

judgment."). As plaintiff conceded he knew of no law or any mandate of public

policy, other than "proper recording" he contends PSE&G violated by its failure

to transmit final load profiles to PJM, we agree his CEPA claim foundered on

the first prong.

      We also conclude plaintiff could not establish the third prong, that he

suffered an adverse employment action within the statute's one-year limitations


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                                       11
period.   See  N.J.S.A. 34:19-5.   CEPA prohibits an employer from taking

"retaliatory action against an employee" because of whistle-blowing activity.

 N.J.S.A. 34:19-3. The statute defines "retaliatory action" as "the discharge,

suspension or demotion of an employee, or other adverse employment action

taken against an employee in the terms and conditions of employment."  N.J.S.A.

34:19-2(e). "Adverse employment action" is defined broadly in light of the

remedial purposes of the statute and may include such things as "making false

accusations of misconduct, giving negative performance reviews, issuing an

unwarranted suspension, and requiring pretextual mental-health evaluations."

Donelson v. DuPont Chambers Works,  206 N.J. 243, 257-58 (2011).

      Further, an adverse employment action need not take the form of a "single

discrete act," but can be "many separate but relatively minor instances of

behavior directed against an employee that may not be actionable individually

but that combine to make up a pattern of retaliatory conduct." Green v. Jersey

City Bd. of Educ.,  177 N.J. 434, 448 (2003). Our Court has adopted the United

States Supreme Court's formulation of "a continuing violation as 'a series of

separate acts that collectively constitute one unlawful employment practice.'"

Roa v. Roa,  200 N.J. 555, 567 (2010) (quoting Nat'l R.R. Passenger Corp. v.

Morgan,  536 U.S. 101, 117 (2002)).


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                                     12
      Critically, however, "the continuing violation theory cannot be applied to

sweep in an otherwise time-barred discrete act." Id. at 569. As Justice Long

explained in Roa:

            [T]he continuing violation theory was developed to
            allow for the aggregation of acts, each of which, in
            itself, might not have alerted the employee of the
            existence of a claim, but which together show a pattern
            of discrimination. In those circumstances, the last act
            is said to sweep in otherwise untimely prior non-
            discrete acts.

                  What the doctrine does not permit is the
            aggregation of discrete discriminatory acts for the
            purpose of reviving an untimely act of discrimination
            that the victim knew or should have known was
            actionable.

            [Ibid.]

      The application of those principles here means that plaintiff's CEPA claim

alleging retaliation based on his 2011 performance appraisal is time-barred,

whether or not the continuous violation theory is applied. There can be no doubt

on this record but that plaintiff believed as soon as he received his mid-year

appraisal in August 2011 that he was the victim of retaliation by defendants.

Accordingly, he had to file suit on that claim by August 2012, or not at all.

      Moreover, because plaintiff did not file his complaint until February 2015,

the only alleged retaliatory act he identifies occurring within the limitations


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                                      13
period is Dr. Binetti placing plaintiff on medical leave in 2014. Plaintiff's own

doctors, however, agreed he was not fit to work at that time and should be on

medical leave. Accordingly, we do not see how PSE&G placing plaintiff on

medical leave could possibly qualify as retaliatory under the statute.           See

Donelson,  206 N.J. at 258 (including only "pretextual mental-health

evaluations" among adverse employment actions constituting reprisal); cf.

Beasley v. Passaic Cty.,  377 N.J. Super. 585, 607 (App. Div. 2005) (noting that

where "the affected party does not deny committing an infraction that resulted

in discipline, the discipline cannot be considered 'proscribed reprisal'"); see also

Breaux v. City of Garland,  205 F.3d 150, 158 (5th Cir. 2000) (requiring a

plaintiff to undergo a psychological evaluation does not, on its own, constitute

an adverse employment action). Even assuming plaintiff's claim consists of a

series of discriminatory non-discrete acts, which we do not, because he cannot

show that "at least one of those acts occurred within the statutory limitations

period," Shepherd,  174 N.J. at 7, the continuing violation theory is not available

to render any aspect of his CEPA claim timely. Accordingly, the claim was

appropriately dismissed on summary judgment for that reason as well.

      Affirmed.




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