Quid Pro Quo Harassment
Quid pro quo harassment is when a supervisor or someone else with authority over your job conditions a benefit (a promotion, a raise, continued employment, a desirable shift) on submission to a sexual demand, or threatens an adverse action if you refuse. The phrase is Latin for "this for that," and the legal harm comes from the link between the demand and the job consequence.
KEY TAKEAWAYS
- Quid pro quo harassment is a workplace power tied to a sexual demand: a benefit promised for submission or an adverse action threatened for refusal.
- Controlling California case is Mogilefsky v. Superior Court (1993) 20 Cal.App.4th 1409, putting the claim under FEHA at Gov. Code §12940(j).
- Unlike hostile-work-environment cases, a single incident can be enough; the harasser must have real or apparent authority to follow through.
- Employers are strictly liable for supervisor quid pro quo harassment under California law; the harasser was using delegated employer power.
The controlling California decision is Mogilefsky v. Superior Court (1993) 20 Cal.App.4th 1409, which confirmed that quid pro quo claims fall under FEHA at Gov. Code §12940(j). Unlike hostile-work-environment claims, a single incident can be enough for quid pro quo. The plaintiff has to show the harasser had real or apparent authority to follow through on the threat or promise.
Example: A junior associate at a marketing agency is told by her creative director, in a closed-door meeting, that her contract renewal "depends on how friendly she's willing to be" at out-of-town pitches. Two weeks later, after she avoids the next pitch trip, the creative director marks her review "needs improvement" and lets her contract lapse. The retaliation tied directly to the rejected demand. That sequence is the textbook quid pro quo fact pattern.
Employers are strictly liable for quid pro quo harassment by supervisors under California law because the harasser was using delegated employer power. Filing window: three years to file with the CRD under Gov. Code §12960. A California sexual harassment lawyer can preserve evidence and the filing window.
From our practice: Quid pro quo cases settle quickly when the documentary trail is even modestly preserved: a text exchange, a calendar invite to a closed-door meeting, a contemporaneous note to a friend. The cases that struggle are the ones where the employee waited months before telling anyone. We push for preservation the day a client first calls, regardless of whether the case is signed yet.
Attorney Advertising. Page reviewed by David M. Safvati, CA Bar #326605. This advertisement is the responsibility of Westview Law PC.



