A new dispute grew out of Vaughn v. Tesla, Inc. (Alameda County Super. Ct. No. RG17882082), a 2017 class action alleging that Black employees suffered racial discrimination and harassment — including regular use of racial slurs by coworkers and supervisors — at Tesla’s production factory, in violation of the Fair Employment and Housing Act (Gov. Code, § 12940, subd. (a)). The complaint alleged Tesla maintained a policy of tolerating a hostile work environment and a pattern or practice of ignoring and inadequately investigating harassment complaints.
In Vaughn, the trial court granted class certification only in part — certifying three common “pattern or practice” liability issues but declining to certify a class for individual liability or damages, and ordering that each worker seeking damages file a separate lawsuit. The court later denied leave to add 531 class members as individual plaintiffs, and ultimately decertified the class after the plaintiffs conceded they could not produce the 200 class-member witnesses their stipulated trial plan required.
Acting on the court’s own instruction to sue separately, 440 former Vaughn class members filed five complaints in mid-2025, each joining between 54 and 98 individual plaintiffs. All alleged FEHA claims for racial discrimination, harassment, and failure to prevent — asserting they worked at the same Tesla factory, were subjected to similar race-based mistreatment, and were harmed by Tesla’s common practice of failing to systematically address racist conduct.
Weeks after the complaints were filed — and before Tesla filed any demurrer — the trial court issued its own order to show cause why it should not find “inappropriate joinder.” After argument, the court found misjoinder and ordered that in each of the five cases “all Plaintiffs except for the first name on the complaint must be dismissed” and must refile as single-plaintiff complaints. The court reasoned that different workers experienced different harassment in different locations at different times, that there was “virtually no scenario” for a common trial with over 50 plaintiffs, and that its experience in complex litigation let it anticipate the problems these complaints would cause. It also cited concerns about discovery burdens and the loss of filing fees. The plaintiffs sought writ relief; the Court of Appeal stayed proceedings, consolidated the five petitions, and issued an order to show cause.
The Court of Appeal granted the petitions and directed issuance of a peremptory writ of mandate ordering the trial court to vacate its misjoinder order and allow the five original complaints to proceed in the published case of Smith et al. v. Superior Court (Tesla, Inc., Real Party in Interest) – Case No. A174789 (June, 2026). The court took up the matter by writ because the issues were likely to recur and presented legal questions of significant importance.
Because the court dismissed at the pleading stage before discovery (and conceded its OSC was “in essence a demurrer based on misjoinder”), the Court of Appeal reviewed the ruling de novo, assuming the truth of the complaints’ allegations and drawing all reasonable inferences in favor of joinder. Whether misjoinder was proper was a question of law, not a matter of discretion.
The permissive-joinder statute (Code Civ. Proc., § 378) lets plaintiffs join if their relief arises from the same transaction or series of transactions and shares a common question of law or fact. Joinder statutes are liberally construed, and a right to relief arises from the same transaction so long as there is “any factual relationship between the claims” (Petersen v. Bank of America Corp. (2014) 232 Cal.App.4th 238). Applying that breadth, the court relied on Anaya v. Superior Court (1984) 160 Cal.App.3d 228 (200-plus employees exposed to chemicals at one facility over decades were properly joined) and Petersen (965 borrowers harmed by one lender’s common deceptive scheme were properly joined based on commonality of liability, despite widely varying damages). Here, the plaintiffs alleged a single company-wide policy or practice of ignoring racist conduct at one factory — enough to satisfy section 378. That the harassment occurred at different times and places did not defeat joinder; “the salient point is that liability is amenable to mass action treatment.”
The court found Moe supportive: just as an employer’s negligent hiring and supervision was a “series of transactions” exposing multiple assault victims to harm, Tesla was the common entity alleged to have let known harassment persist. It distinguished the cases Tesla cited — David v. Medtronic, Inc. (2015) 237 Cal.App.4th 734 (a medical device with no single scheme; different surgeries, surgeons, and representations), Aghaji v. Bank of America, N.A. (2016) 247 Cal.App.4th 1110 (mortgage plaintiffs with no overarching plan), and Coleman v. Twin Coast Newspaper, Inc. (1959) 175 Cal.App.2d 650 (separate trespasses on separate premises) — as all lacking the common-policy allegation present here. It held the Vaughn decertification did not bind these individually represented plaintiffs (that ruling turned on a witness-production failure, and the court there expressly disclaimed any suggestion that a pattern-or-practice trial is inherently unmanageable), and that federal Rule 20 cases were inapposite given both their lack of a common-policy allegation and the more demanding federal pleading standard.
Section 379.5 does not authorize dismissal. The court rejected the argument that section 379.5’s case-management authority let the court order single-plaintiff filings. Section 378 commits the joinder decision to the plaintiffs, not the judge; section 379.5 lets a court sever trials or make just orders after parties are joined, but not undo a proper joinder. Drawing on Estrada v. Royalty Carpet Mills, Inc. (2024) 15 Cal.5th 582, the court reasoned that trial courts lack inherent authority to strike claims on manageability grounds, and that broad “interests of justice” language (there, § 128; here, § 379.5) does not supply it. That the Legislature authorized dismissal for misjoinder by demurrer (§ 430.10, subd. (d)) but included no such power in section 379.5 — and enacted a counterpart to federal Rule 20 but not to Rule 21 (which allows dropping parties) — confirmed the omission was deliberate. Filing fees, too, are set by the Legislature (Gov. Code, §§ 70611, 70616), not the court, and section 379.5 protects parties from undue expense, not the court itself.
The court acknowledged the trial court’s “formidable” challenge managing 440 plaintiffs and pointed to legitimate tools — separate trials by party or claim (§§ 379.5, 1048), tracking spreadsheets, and the case-management measures endorsed in Estrada and Petersen. But any broader limits on permissive joinder, it held, must come from the Legislature. It also found the recent decision in J.O. v. Superior Court (2026) 19 Cal.5th 753 inapposite, concluding the situation came nowhere near an unconstitutional interference with a core judicial function.
