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Home / News / Business / Former Kat Von D store manager doesn’t have to arbitrate lawsuit

Former Kat Von D store manager doesn’t have to arbitrate lawsuit

by City News Service
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A wrongful termination case brought by the ex-manager of Kat Von D’s former High Voltage Tattoo store in West Hollywood will head to court.

After hearing arguments, Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Kevin Brazile said Thursday he will not require the plaintiff to arbitrate her claims that she was wrongfully fired in 2020 for expressing concerns about her boss’ alleged disregard for coronavirus mandates and health concerns, assuring the case will be heard by a jury.

Brazile finalized a tentative ruling he issued Wednesday denying the tattoo artist’s bid to force plaintiff Stephanie Davidson’s case into arbitration.

Davidson says that while she did sign an agreement to arbitrate any work disputes with Von D art gallery Wonderland Inc. in 2013 or 2014, that company was later dissolved after a 2014 fire and she did not sign an arbitration agreement when she returned to work for Von D at her West Hollywood tattoo shop, High Voltage Tattoo, in 2017.

The judge noted that distinction in his ruling.

“While the agreement states that it encompasses disputes as to plaintiff’s termination, that is not the same as stating that the agreement encompasses disputes relating to subsequent employment,” the judge wrote.

Because the arbitration agreement does not apply to Davidson’s employment with High Voltage Tattoo, the motion to compel arbitration must be denied, the judge further wrote.

Davidson had worked as Von D’s personal assistant when she was employed by Wonderland Inc., then she left for other jobs before being rehired by the tattoo artist as HVT’s general manager, according to the plaintiff’s court papers. Davidson’s primary duties in her new job consisted of general shop maintenance, answering phone calls and inquiries, booking and coordinating walk-in appointments, setting up tattoo stations, ordering and organizing inventory, handling client payments and pay-outs at the end of the day, and handling the shop’s social media account, according to her court papers.

Davidson says she believes Wonderland and HVT are separate entities.

In their court papers, lawyers for Von D and High Voltage Tattoo argue that Davidson is bound by the terms of the Wonderland arbitration agreement.

“Defendant HVT and Wonderland were both owned by Von Drachenberg,” the defense attorneys state in their court papers. “HVT and Wonderland were located right next to each other and were connected by a doorway.”

The arbitration agreement’s wording states that it applies to Davidson’s employment with Wonderland or any of its affiliated entities, the defense lawyers further argued.

Davidson’s lawsuit allegations include wrongful termination, discrimination, retaliation, failure to provide reasonable accommodation, and various state Labor Code violations. Davidson seeks unspecified compensatory and punitive damages in the suit brought on Jan. 18.

Von D’s real name is Katherine Von Drachenberg and she is the former longtime girlfriend of 52-year-old reality television personality Jesse James, the founder of West Coast Choppers.

High Voltage Tattoo closed in March 2020 due to the coronavirus pandemic. When California began allowing the reopening of nonessential personal care businesses three months later, Davidson wanted to ensure everyone’s safety, the suit states. But her concerns were quickly dismissed by Von D, who “made it clear to Ms. Davidson and other employees that she refused to enforce any of the mandate rules, including the use of face coverings, and continued to go as far as dismissing the COVID-19 pandemic as a whole,” according to the complaint.

Von D asked one employee who wore a mask, “You’re going to wear a maxi pad on your face?” and also told another worker that the person’s choice to don a face covering was influenced by “a state of fear-based on mainstream media narrative,” the suit states.

Davidson, who is diabetic, felt it was unsafe to return to work after the June 2020 reopening and unsuccessfully tried to reason with Von D regarding her “extremist views on COVID-19 safety precautions,” the suit states. The plaintiff later conveyed her health concerns about High Voltage Tattoo to the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health and to Gov. Gavin Newsom’s office, the suit states.

Despite a second shutdown order announced in July 2020 for indoor personal care establishments, High Voltage Tattoo “remained illegally open,” the suit states. That same month, Von D retaliated against Davidson by firing her because she disclosed information to authorities about High Voltage Tattoo’s alleged non-compliance with local, state, or federal health rules, the suit alleges.

Von D also failed to pay Davidson a minimum hourly wage or pay her the overtime rate, the suit alleges.

Last October, the 40-year-old Von D announced she was closing High Voltage Tattoo, which was featured on the TLC reality show “LA Ink,” and moving with her family to Indiana.

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