New CA Employment and Tort Cases

Uncategorized Apr 05, 2026

New Published California Employment and Tort Cases

Employment Case: 
Did plaintiff’s service retirement while under investigation for misconduct constituted a complete severance of the employer-employee relationship?

The California Court of Appeal Court addressed this issue last month. Below is my one-paragraph case summary from my online publication California Case Summaries™

Monroe v. Cal. Public Employees' Retirement System (2026) _ Cal.App.5th _ , 2026 WL 458134: The Court of Appeal affirmed the trial court’s order denying plaintiff’s petition for a writ of mandate seeking to overturn defendant’s denial of his disability retirement application. While under investigation for on-duty misconduct, plaintiff (a parole agent) applied for service retirement, pending a claim for disability retirement. His application was accepted, and he was thereafter found ineligible for a disability retirement because his departure was not related to a disability and occurred while he was under investigation for misconduct.  Defendant’s CalPERS Board of Administration affirmed the denial because a prerequisite for a disability retirement was lacking: the right to return to service. The trial court denied plaintiff’s writ petition, agreeing that plaintiff was barred from applying for disability retirement benefits after he service retired while under investigation for on-duty misconduct. The Court of Appeal held that plaintiff’s service retirement while under investigation for misconduct constituted a complete severance of the employer-employee relationship, eliminating the necessary prerequisite for disability retirement — the right to potential reinstatement — and therefore rendered him ineligible for disability retirement benefits regardless of whether his departure was characterized as a service retirement or a termination for cause. (C.A. 2nd, filed February 28, 2026, published March 11, 2026.)


Tort Case:  
Did the trial court properly admit evidence of prior branch failures from other Bradford pear trees of the same species in the same vicinity? 

The California Court of Appeal Court addressed this issue last month. Below is my one-paragraph case summary from my online publication California Case Summaries™

Yan v. City of Diamond Bar (2026) _ Cal.App.5th _ , 2026 WL 685371: The Court of Appeal affirmed the trial court’s entry of judgment for plaintiff, following a jury trial where the jury awarded plaintiff $750,000 in noneconomic damages as a result of injuries he sustained when a tree branch fell on him while walking on a public sidewalk. The Court of Appeal held that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in admitting evidence of prior branch failures from other Bradford pear trees of the same species in the same vicinity to establish the defendant city’s actual or constructive notice of the dangerous condition, and that the testimony of a neighborhood resident who reported those prior branch failures to defendant was also properly admitted, as no special expertise was required to report a fallen limb for purposes of establishing notice. (C.A. 2nd, March 11, 2026.)

 


 

Civil Trial Services

I handle a few select civil cases where I represent plaintiffs or defendants in business, insurance bad faith, personal injury, real property and wrongful death actions. Using my experience as a California civil trial lawyer since 1980, and a member of the American Board of Trial Advocates since 1995, my goal is to get each client the best possible result. My clients get the benefit of big firm experience with small firm attention and reasonable rates. To discuss a potential case, email me at monty@montymcintyre.com, or call me at (619) 990-4312. 


 

Do well and be well.  


Best regards,
Monty A. McIntyre, Esq.
Business, Insurance Bad Faith, Real Property and Tort Litigation. 
Trial Mentoring™: Trial training & preparation
Podcaster: Trial Alchemy
Publisher: California Case Summaries™
CA attorney since 1980. ABOTA Member Since 1995
Past President San Diego County Bar Assn., SD ABOTA Chapter
Phone: (619) 990-4312.
Email: monty@montymcintyre.com

To Discuss a Potential Case With Monty:
Email Monty at monty@montymcintyre.com
or call Monty at (619) 990-4312. 

Close

50% Complete

Two Step

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua.