Tesla was liable, but the price of that liability was cut by 89 percent
In the long struggle to assign worth to human dignity, a federal judge in San Francisco has upheld a jury's finding that Tesla permitted racial harassment against Owen Diaz, a Black elevator operator at its Fremont factory, while reducing the jury's $137 million award to $15 million on grounds of excess. The case, rooted in nine months of slurs and racist symbols endured by Diaz in 2015 and 2016, now stands as both a legal vindication and a reminder that the law's measure of suffering is not always the same as a community's. It raises an enduring question: who holds the authority to say what a person's dignity is worth?
- Owen Diaz spent nine months surrounded by racial slurs and swastikas at one of America's most celebrated factories, and Tesla knew — and did nothing.
- A jury of his peers looked at that record and answered with $137 million, one of the largest workplace discrimination awards in recent memory.
- Federal Judge William Orrick upheld Tesla's liability but wielded his judicial authority to slash the award by nearly 89 percent, to $15 million.
- The reduction exposes a fault line in employment law: the gap between what ordinary citizens believe harm is worth and what the legal system is willing to enforce.
- Tesla's culpability is now a matter of settled record, even as the company escapes the full financial consequence the jury intended.
- For Diaz, the ruling is a partial vindication — his suffering recognized, his compensation diminished, the question of justice left open.
Owen Diaz worked as an elevator operator at Tesla's Fremont factory for nine months in 2015 and 2016. During that time, coworkers directed racial slurs at him and defaced shared bathroom spaces with swastikas and racist epithets. He sued, and last October a jury found that Tesla had created and tolerated a hostile work environment, awarding him nearly $137 million in damages.
On Wednesday, U.S. District Judge William Orrick upheld the core finding — Tesla was liable, having known about the harassment and failed to stop it. But he concluded the jury's award was excessive and reduced it to $15 million.
The decision lays bare a tension at the heart of employment law. A jury had looked at what Diaz endured and placed a value on it. A federal judge, reviewing the same evidence, found that number unreasonable and exercised his legal authority to override it. The reduction amounts to roughly 89 percent of what the jury had determined.
Tesla's liability is not in question. The company did not dispute the underlying facts. What remained contested was the price — and on that question, the court and the jury arrived at very different answers. For Diaz, the outcome is a legal vindication and a substantial, if diminished, settlement. For the broader conversation about workplace culture at major manufacturers, the ruling confirms that accountability is possible, even when its full measure proves elusive.
Owen Diaz worked as an elevator operator at Tesla's Fremont factory for nine months in 2015 and 2016. During that time, he was subjected to racial abuse from coworkers—slurs directed at him in conversation, racist symbols and epithets scrawled across bathroom walls. He sued. Last October, a jury agreed that Tesla had created and tolerated a hostile work environment, and awarded him nearly $137 million in damages.
On Wednesday, U.S. District Judge William Orrick in San Francisco upheld the jury's core finding: Tesla was liable. The company had known about the racism Diaz faced and failed to stop it. But the judge believed the jury's award had gone too far. He reduced the damages to $15 million.
The decision illustrates a tension that runs through employment law. A jury of peers had looked at what Diaz endured—the daily indignity of slurs, the deliberate defacement of shared spaces with swastikas and racial epithets—and assigned a monetary value to it. They arrived at $137 million. A federal judge, reviewing that same evidence, concluded the number was excessive. Under the law, judges have the power to override jury awards when they believe damages are unreasonable. Orrick exercised that power here.
What remains clear is that Tesla's liability is established. The company did not dispute the facts of what happened to Diaz. The dispute was over the price. A $15 million judgment is still substantial. It is also, by the measure of what the jury thought the harm was worth, a reduction of roughly 89 percent.
The case has drawn attention because it involves a major manufacturer and because it touches on questions of workplace culture that have become more visible in recent years. Tesla has faced other discrimination complaints. This ruling, while reducing the award, does not erase the finding that the company allowed racism to persist on its factory floor. For Diaz, the outcome is a vindication of his complaint and a financial settlement, though not the one the jury had determined.
Citas Notables
Tesla subjected Owen Diaz to a hostile environment at the factory by allowing and failing to stop the racism he faced— Judge William Orrick's ruling
La Conversación del Hearth Otra perspectiva de la historia
Why did the judge think the jury got it wrong on the amount?
He didn't say the jury got the facts wrong. He said $137 million was disproportionate to the harm. Judges have that authority—to say a jury's number is excessive even when the liability is clear.
But how do you measure what racial harassment is worth?
That's the hard part. The jury tried to account for the emotional damage, the violation, the fact that his workplace was hostile. The judge looked at similar cases and thought the number didn't fit the pattern.
Is $15 million still a real consequence for Tesla?
It's significant money. But it's also a signal that even when you're found liable, the financial penalty might be much less than what a jury initially thinks you owe.
Did Diaz have any say in this reduction?
Not really. Once the judge decided to reduce it, that was the ruling. He could appeal, but the judge's authority here is broad.
What does this tell other companies about workplace discrimination?
That liability is real—Tesla couldn't escape that. But the financial exposure might be less than the worst-case scenario a jury imagines. That's a complicated message.