CYNTHIA M. RUFE, District Judge.
After being terminated from employment by the Philadelphia Housing Authority ("PHA"), Plaintiff filed this action alleging violations of various state and federal laws against the PHA and his union. Defendants have filed Motions to Dismiss the Amended Complaint. In response to the Motions, Plaintiff voluntarily dismissed several of his claims, but opposed the Motions with regard to other claims. For the reasons set forth herein, the Motions to Dismiss will be granted.
Plaintiff alleges that, until November 17, 2009, he was employed as a plasterer with Defendant Operative Plasterers' and Cement Masons' International Association Local 008 ("Union"). Plaintiff was earning $24.80 per hour for forty hours of work per week in a "prevailing wage job." Plaintiff's union benefits included health benefits, an annuity account, and a pension.
Beginning around November 17, 2009, Plaintiff began working as a provisional employee of the PHA. The PHA has a residency requirement which requires in-house employees to live in Philadelphia County. Provisional employees are not subject to the residency requirement. The PHA has an agreement with his Union governing certain conditions of employment (the "CBA").
On or around September 2, 2012, Plaintiff became an in-house employee of the PHA, working as a plasterer maintenance man, rebuilding chimneys. He was told that if he did not agree to work in-house, he would lose his job, and he agreed rather than lose his position. Beginning later that month, he complained at union meetings about becoming an in-house employee for PHA, as it affected his benefits. Union leaders were hostile and told him he had no right to speak because of his status as a journeyman.
Beginning in 2013, Defendants started advising Plaintiff that he needed to comply with the PHA's residency requirement. In January 2014, he was told that he needed to provide a letter explaining why he could not move to Philadelphia County. Plaintiff responded, stating that he has joint custody of his daughter and, pursuant to a Superior Court of New Jersey order, he is not permitted to have parenting time in Philadelphia. In April 2014, he was eligible for a raise, but did not receive one. That month, his Union informed him that he had received a residency waiver from the PHA. However, in June 2014, Union business agent Billy Taylor told Plaintiff that the Union needed to provide PHA with the documentation to support the waiver. Because Billy Taylor passed away soon after this conversation, he did not send the supporting documents to the PHA. Plaintiff provided another copy of the documents to the Union president, Thomas Kilkenney, who assured him that the documents supporting the waiver would be sent to the PHA.
In September 2014, Plaintiff and ten other in-house employees were fired by the PHA for failure to comply with the residency requirement. Five were quickly rehired as provisional employees, but Plaintiff was not. After he was terminated, the Union failed to file a grievance on Plaintiff's behalf. Plaintiff argues that he was terminated as an in-house employee, and not rehired as a provisional employee, despite having a legitimate reason why he could not fulfill the residency requirement, in retaliation for having verbally opposed his employment change to "in-house" status. He argues that the PHA used the residency requirement as a pretext for firing him.
Dismissal of a complaint pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6) for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted is appropriate where a plaintiff=s plain statement does not possess enough substance to show that plaintiff is entitled to relief.
In response to the Motions to Dismiss, Plaintiff asked the Court to voluntarily dismiss certain claims set forth in the Amended Complaint, including: 1) his claims for breach of fiduciary duty (in Count I); 2) his claims for violation of Pennsylvania wage laws (Count II) and the federal Fair Labor Standards Act (Count IV), and 3) the ERISA claims against the PHA defendants for terminating him to avoid paying benefits (Counts VI and VII).
He opposed the Motions to Dismiss with regard to the following claims: 1) a breach of contract claim for failure to raise his salary and failure to provide a residency waiver (Count I); 2) an unjust enrichment claim for failure to provide a pay raise to which Plaintiff believes he was entitled (Count III); 3) §1983 claims for retaliation for exercising rights under the First Amendment, asserted against the Union and PHA (Count V); and 4) an ERISA claim against the Union for failure to provide unspecified contractually defined benefits (Count VI).
With regard to these claims, Defendants argue: 1) that the state common law claims for breach of contract and unjust enrichment set forth in Counts I and III are preempted as a matter of law by Section 301 of the Labor Management Relations Act, as a collective bargaining agreement covers the terms and conditions of Plaintiff's employment; 2) that the § 1983 claims in Count V must be dismissed because Plaintiff has not pled facts indicating that he was engaged in protected speech, or that his termination was connected to any speech; and 3) that the ERISA claim against the Union in Count VI must be dismissed for failure to state a claim.
Plaintiff brings claims for breach of contract, alleging that PHA failed to provide him with a raise to which he was entitled under the terms of a contract, and that PHA failed to provide him with a residency waiver to which he was entitled by contract. In the alternative, he pleads that PHA was unjustly enriched by the failure to pay him raised wages.
To the extent that Plaintiff's state law claims require the Court to interpret the CBA between the Union and PHA, state law is preempted.
Plaintiff's first breach of contract claim in Count I, and the unjust enrichment claim in Count III, are based on the same factual allegation: that in April 2014, he did not receive a raise to which he was entitled. Although Plaintiff does not expressly state that he was entitled to this pay raise under the terms of the CBA, he fails to point to any other agreement or contract which gave rise to the alleged obligation. Therefore, the Court would have to interpret the terms of the CBA to determine whether PHA was in breach of contract (or, in the alternative, that PHA did not breach the contract but was nevertheless unjustly enriched by the failure to pay Plaintiff a salary increase), and both claims must be dismissed as preempted by federal law. To the extent that Plaintiff believes he was entitled to a pay raise based on some agreement other than the CBA, the breach of contract claim must be dismissed for failure to indicate the source of the alleged contractual obligation.
Count I also alleges that PHA breached some contract when it failed to waive the residency requirement for Plaintiff. Plaintiff fails to indicate whether the CBA creates a duty to issue waivers, or whether he is alleging the breach of some other, unspecified contract. To the extent that the CBA governs this issue, the state law breach of contract claim is preempted; to the extent that it does not, the claim must be dismissed for failure to indicate the source of the alleged contractual obligation to provide a waiver. For these reasons, the Court will grant the defendants' motion to dismiss Counts I and III of the Complaint.
Plaintiff also asserts a § 1983 claim, alleging that he was denied a residency waiver and terminated in retaliation for voicing opposition to his change in status from provisional employee to in-house employee of PHA.
The Union Defendants argue that they are not governmental entities, and thus are not capable of infringing Plaintiff's First Amendment protections and are not subject to suit under § 1983. The Court holds that Plaintiff has alleged no facts from which the Court can find that the Union Defendants acted under color of state law in dealing with Plaintiff. Thus, the retaliation claims against the Union Defendants must be dismissed. However, even if the Union were considered a state actor, pursuant to the symbiotic relationship test or some other theory,
To state a § 1983 claim for retaliation for exercising his First Amendment rights, a plaintiff must allege facts demonstrating that 1) he engaged in activity which is protected by the First Amendment; 2) the defendants retaliated against the plaintiff in a manner that would be sufficient to deter a person of ordinary firmness from exercising his constitutional rights; and 3) the protected activity was a substantial factor in the adverse employment action.
Here, Plaintiff claims that he complained, at Union meetings, about the change in his status from a provisional to an in-house employee of PHA.
As additional support for this ruling, the Court notes that, in order to demonstrate the requisite causal link, plaintiffs typically must allege either "(1) an unusually suggestive temporal proximity between the protected activity and the allegedly retaliatory action, or (2) a pattern of antagonism coupled with timing to establish a causal link."
Plaintiff alleges that the Union and Union president breached fiduciary duties to provide contractually defined benefits to Plaintiff, in violation of ERISA.
Plaintiff attached a proposed Second Amended Complaint to his brief in response to the Motions to Dismiss. The Court will grant leave to amend the breach of contract/unjust enrichment, retaliation, and ERISA claims, but wishes to give Plaintiff the opportunity to address the pleading deficiencies discussed in this Memorandum Opinion in any amendment. Therefore, Plaintiff may choose to rely upon the proposed Second Amended Complaint which was provided to the Court as an exhibit, or he may choose to redraft and submit a revised Second Amended Complaint. In either case, the Second Amended Complaint must be filed of record as a new docket entry by March 21, 2016.
Plaintiff has conceded that Counts II, IV, and VII of the Amended Complaint, as well as the Breach of Fiduciary Duty claims set forth in Count I, and the ERISA claims against the PHA in Count VI must be dismissed. The Court, accordingly, dismisses these claims with prejudice.
For the reasons set forth herein, the Court will dismiss the remaining claims in Counts I and VI and the claims in Counts III and V without prejudice. Plaintiff may file a Second Amended Complaint, to attempt to remedy the pleading deficiencies with regard to the breach of contract/unjust enrichment claims, the retaliation claims, and the ERISA claim against the union, on or before March 21, 2016. Failure to do so will result in the dismissal of these claims with prejudice.