The Employment Law Landscape in El Monte
California wrongful termination falls into four categories: discrimination (FEHA-protected class), retaliation (for protected activity like complaining about harassment or wage theft), whistleblowing (reporting suspected illegal conduct), and public policy violations (firing for jury duty, voting, refusing to break the law, exercising a right). Damages are uncapped and attorney's fees are mandatory.
- Auto sales and service. FEHA-covered employer concentration in El Monte.
- Manufacturing. FEHA-covered employer concentration in El Monte.
- Warehouse/logistics. FEHA-covered employer concentration in El Monte.
- Biotech laboratory. FEHA-covered employer concentration in El Monte.
- Construction. FEHA-covered employer concentration in El Monte.
What We See in El Monte
- Longo Toyota-Lexus (the #1 Toyota dealership in the US by volume) and the Penske Motor Group campus generate significant workplace injury and wrongful termination exposure with a large hourly sales and service workforce
What a El Monte Wrongful Termination Lawyer Recovers For You
- Back Pay: Wages and benefits from the firing through the date of trial.
- Front Pay: Future lost earnings when reinstatement is not feasible, often calculated to retirement age.
- Emotional Distress: Uncapped under FEHA. Job loss creates documented anxiety, depression, and identity disruption.
- Punitive Damages: Available when the employer acted with malice, oppression, or fraud. LA juries return significant punitive verdicts.
- Attorney's Fees and Costs: Mandatory for prevailing FEHA plaintiffs. Your fees come out of the employer, not your recovery.
Where El Monte Cases Are Filed
FEHA wrongful termination cases for El Monte workers are filed in Los Angeles County Superior Court at Stanley Mosk Courthouse (111 N Hill St). Common law wrongful termination claims (without FEHA) can be filed in the regional courthouse with jurisdiction. We litigate both tracks where appropriate.
Local courthouse: El Monte Courthouse, 11234 E Valley Blvd, El Monte, CA 91731. Northeast Judicial District - limited civil, small claims, traffic, misdemeanor criminal for El Monte and West San Gabriel Valley communities.
Distance from our office: ~25-35 minutes from Glendale via I-210 east to I-605 south or via SR-134 to I-10 east.
Why El Monte Clients Choose Noble Attorneys
Wrongful termination cases turn on pretext: proving the stated reason for the firing was not the real reason. That takes comparator evidence, documentation, witness interviews, and a thorough investigation of the employer's HR file. We file the FEHA administrative complaint within days of retention to preserve the deadline, then build the case for trial.
- Direct attorney access. You work with Michael Chakrian and his team, not a paralegal you never meet.
- Three languages. English, Español, Հայերեն. We serve El Monte in the language you actually speak at home.
- No fees unless we win. Contingency fee. You pay nothing upfront.
- Over $75M recovered. Real cases, real clients, real outcomes across Greater Los Angeles.
El Monte Wrongful Termination Lawyer FAQs
The questions we hear most from El Monte clients. Click to expand.
Can I be fired in El Monte for no reason at all?
Yes, in the abstract. California is an at-will state. But the firing cannot be for an illegal reason. The absence of a stated reason often helps the employee's case because it removes the employer's ability to point to a legitimate justification at trial.
How long do I have to file a El Monte wrongful termination lawsuit?
FEHA: three years to file an administrative complaint with California's Civil Rights Department, then one year to file in court after the Right-to-Sue notice. Common law wrongful termination: two years from the firing. Labor Code section 1102.5 whistleblower: three years. Missing any of these is generally fatal to the case.
My employer said I was "laid off." Could it still be wrongful termination?
Yes. "Layoff" is not a legal category that immunizes the employer. If the layoff selection was driven by discrimination, retaliation, or whistleblowing, it is actionable. Pretextual layoffs that target older workers, pregnant employees, or recent complainers are common patterns.
Should I sign the severance agreement my El Monte employer is offering?
Not without an attorney reviewing it. Severance agreements typically waive every claim you have. If you are over 40, federal law gives you 21 days to consider and 7 days to revoke. Many wrongful termination cases are won precisely because the employer made the severance offer before they understood the strength of the case against them.
What if my firing was retaliation for a complaint I made?
Senate Bill 497 created a 90-day presumption: if your employer takes adverse action within 90 days of a protected complaint, the law presumes retaliation, and the employer must prove by clear and convincing evidence it would have taken the same action anyway. Most LA wrongful termination cases involve retaliation as either the primary theory or a stacking claim.