Trevor Joseph Decloedt worked for Radnet Management, Inc. and related entities (collectively, Radnet) alongside supervisor Joe Zambrano and coworker Susana Ceballos. According to Decloedt’s complaint, beginning in early 2022 Ceballos subjected him to repeated derogatory comments about his sexual orientation, telling him he “shouldn’t be gay” and that it was “sinning.” Decloedt alleged Ceballos also grew aggressive toward him at work, at one point saying she was so angry she could kill him and, on more than one occasion, pulling his hair — including a November 2022 incident in which she grabbed his hair with enough force that he fled to the restroom. Decloedt alleged he repeatedly reported Ceballos’s conduct to Zambrano and another lead employee, but no action was taken; when Ceballos later complained about him to human resources, he told HR about the harassment and said it had led him to contemplate suicide, but HR again took no action. Decloedt was terminated in February 2023.
In October 2024, Decloedt sued Radnet, Zambrano, and Ceballos, alleging eleven causes of action, including hostile work environment and sexual harassment under California’s Fair Employment and Housing Act (FEHA; Gov. Code, §12900 et seq.). Radnet moved to compel arbitration under an agreement Decloedt had signed at the start of his employment. The trial court denied the motion, holding that Decloedt had adequately pleaded a FEHA sexual harassment claim, which triggered an exemption from arbitration under the federal Ending Forced Arbitration of Sexual Assault and Sexual Harassment Act of 2021 (EFAA; 9 U.S.C. §401–402), a 2022 amendment to the Federal Arbitration Act (FAA; 9 U.S.C. §1 et seq.) that lets a person alleging sexual harassment opt their entire case out of a predispute arbitration agreement. Radnet appealed.
The trial court found Decloedt had alleged a viable FEHA sexual harassment claim and, on that basis, held the EFAA exempted his case from arbitration under the FAA. It did not resolve any disputed facts in reaching that conclusion, and it did not reach Decloedt’s separate argument that the arbitration agreement was independently unconscionable.
In the published case of Decloedt v. Radnet Management, Inc., No. B343963 (Cal. Ct. App., 2d Dist., Div. 1, July 2026) — the Court of Appeal affirmed the trial court’s order denying Radnet’s motion to compel arbitration.
Reviewing the question de novo because no disputed facts were before it, the panel first addressed whether harassment based on sexual orientation qualifies as sexual harassment under FEHA at all. Radnet argued that FEHA treats sexual orientation harassment as a separate category from sexual harassment, pointing to statutory language that defines “harassment because of sex” to include sexual harassment, gender harassment, and harassment related to pregnancy or childbirth, without separately listing sexual orientation.
The court rejected that reading, explaining that the word “include” in the statute is a term of enlargement, not an exhaustive list, and it declined to infer that omitting sexual orientation from that illustrative list meant harassment based on sexual orientation falls outside FEHA’s prohibition on harassment “because of sex.” Drawing on the U.S. Supreme Court’s reasoning in Bostock v. Clayton County (2020) 590 U.S. 644, which held that firing someone for being gay or transgender necessarily involves discrimination based on sex under Title VII, the court held that the same logic applies to FEHA’s parallel “because of . . . sex” language, since California courts routinely look to federal Title VII case law when interpreting FEHA’s antidiscrimination provisions, citing Hall v. County of Los Angeles (2007) 148 Cal.App.4th 318. The court found this conclusion reinforced by a recent sister-panel decision, Quilala v. Securitas Security Services USA, Inc. (2025) 117 Cal.App.5th 75, which had treated a plaintiff’s allegations of harassment based on his perceived sexual orientation as stating a sexual harassment claim under FEHA.
The court then considered whether Decloedt’s specific allegations were severe or pervasive enough to state a hostile work environment claim, assuming without deciding that the federal pleading standard governing motions to dismiss applied. The panel rejected Radnet’s argument that Decloedt’s complaint drew a sharp line between Ceballos’s verbal comments about his sexual orientation and her separate outbursts of anger and hair-pulling, holding that the complaint could reasonably be read as alleging both forms of conduct were part of the same pattern of harassment motivated by her disapproval of his sexual orientation.
The court explained that a hostile work environment claim does not require every incident to include an explicit anti-gay remark, citing Miller v. Department of Corrections (2005) 36 Cal.4th 446, and that Decloedt’s allegation that Ceballos “continually” made such comments was a factual assertion the court had to accept as true at the pleading stage, not an impermissible legal conclusion. Because Decloedt alleged the harassment caused him to flee for his safety and to contemplate suicide, the court held these allegations plausibly showed conduct that disrupted his emotional tranquility and interfered with his ability to do his job.
Having concluded Decloedt adequately alleged a FEHA sexual harassment claim, the panel held the EFAA’s exemption applied and affirmed the order denying arbitration, following the reasoning of Liu v. Miniso Depot CA, Inc. (2024) 105 Cal.App.5th 791 that the statute’s plain language exempts a plaintiff’s entire case, not just the individual harassment claim. The court did not reach Decloedt’s alternative argument that the arbitration agreement was independently unconscionable.